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Morgan (Hardcover)
Harry Holmes; Illustrated by Maryana Kachmar
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R441
Discovery Miles 4 410
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The story of A V Roe and Company Ltd (Avro) begins in the very
earliest years of aviation, only three years after man's first
powered flight. Alliot Verdon Roe was one of Britain's pioneer
aviators and in 1910 he founded the company that bears his name.
Famous for well-designed, reliable aeroplanes, Avro's greatest
achievements were two bombers - the Lancaster and the Vulcan, which
captivate public imagination to this day. Avro expert Harry Holmes
has written the complete history of this much-loved manufacturer,
from the earliest years to the revival of the Avro name by BAe.
First published in 1994, Avro - The History of an Aircraft Company
has been updated and completely re-illustrated for this edition.
The Avro Anson was born from the germ of an idea in 1933, when G.
Woods Humphrey, managing director of Imperial Airways, met Sir John
Siddeley, chief executive of the Armstrong Siddeley Development
Company, to discuss his ideas for a new aircraft. Sir John passed
the specification to A.V. Roe & Co. Ltd, where chief designer
Roy Chadwick began work on the first of many Avro designs. That
first design, approved by Imperial Airways and brought into
production in 1934, was for a four-passenger, mail-carrying
aircraft, powered by two Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah V engines. As
the Avro 652 it was one of the first British aeroplanes to feature
a retractable undercarriage. An Air Ministry requirement for a
coastal patrol aircraft almost matched the specification of the
mailplane and, with the addition of a gun turret and other military
equipment, the Avro Anson was born. The Anson played an important
role in Britain's coastal defences during the early part of the
war, before it was withdrawn from the front line and used for
aircrew training. The Anson's reliability and low accident rate
earned it the nickname 'Faithful Annie' among servicemen, and it
had been in continuous production for seventeen years when the last
one was built in 1952. Ansons continued to serve in the RAF until
they were officially retired in 1968. Carefully compiled by Harry
Holmes, this book features more than 200 photographs, many
previously unpublished, which tell the story of the Anson. It will
provoke interest and nostalgia among aviation enthusiasts,
historians and servicemen who flew in the Anson, as well as
providing a fascinating insight for those unfamiliar with this
distinctive British aircraft.
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