Cushioncraft

Cushioncraft Ltd was a British engineering company, formed in 1960 as a division[1] of Britten-Norman Ltd (manufacturer of aircraft) to develop/build hovercraft.[2] Originally based at Bembridge Airport on the Isle of Wight, Cushioncraft later moved to the Duver Works at St. Helens, these works gave ready access to the sheltered water of Bembridge Harbour.

History

In 1960 Britten-Norman Ltd began trials of their new "Cushioncraft"—their name for an air-cushion vehicle built for Elders and Fyffes.[3] It was used to study the potential of this type of vehicle for the carriage of bananas from plantations in the Southern Cameroons. Together with its associated company, Crop Culture (Aerial) Ltd, Britten-Norman studied the potential for the Cushioncraft in many different countries. These investigations revealed the possibility of a break-through in transportation techniques by the use of air cushion vehicles which could accelerate the pace of development in territories where roads are nonexistent and costly to build and rivers are seasonally unnavigable[4]

Cushioncraft was reconstituted as a separate company in 1967 to permit British Hovercraft Corporation (BHC) to take a minority share holding, and it revived the name under which Britten-Norman's initial ACV endeavours were launched. Cushioncraft has an authorised capital of £500,000 and issued capital of £450,000, BHC paid Britten-Norman £90,000 for a 20 percent stake in the company's hovercraft activities. The board of Cushioncraft comprised Messrs F. R. J. Britten, Desmond Norman, J. M. McMahon and F. H. Mann (all directors of Britten-Norman), Peter Winter (technical director), and A. R. B. Hobbs, BHC's nominee.

In 1971, Britten-Norman encountered financial problems, and one result was that the Cushioncraft company was sold in 1972 to the British Hovercraft Corporation.

Production

Between 1960 and 1972 Cushioncraft designed 6 models of which 5 were produced.

CC1

CC1 was the "second" hovercraft to lift off in 1960. The ground clearance of the CC1 was 12 to 15 inch.

CC2

The 11 passenger CC2 was originally designed without a skirt and using air deflection within the cushion for propulsion. The CC2 was heavily developed over the years with the addition of a skirt and two external engines each driving a propeller for propulsion. The "bodywork" was also heavily modified.[5]

CC4

The CC4[6] was developed by Cushioncraft jointly with Hovercraft Development. It was intended to be the first car sized craft to be put into production - this never happened. Subsequent to development use by Cushioncraft, the CC4 was sold to the NPL for future research, HDL renamed it HU-4.

CC5

One 6/8 seater CC5 was built, during tests off Priory Bay (Isle of Wight) it capsized and was written off in October 1966.

CC6

The CC6 concept hovercraft was designed circa 1966. This was to be a small vehicle/passenger craft (4 to 6 cars and 30 to 40 passengers) using the quiet centrifugal fan configuration for lift and propulsion developed from the CC4 and CC5. The Cushioncraft CC-6 18-ton mixed-traffic ferry craft was to be built jointly by the Vosper Thorneycroft shipbuilding group at Portsmouth. This was the effect of an agreement between Vosper and Cushioncraft, under which Vosper were to be major sub-contractors in the construction of the craft. Development was to be financed jointly by Cushioncraft and the National Research Development Corporation (NRDC). Cushioncraft's facilities at St Helen's, IoW, were considered inadequate for CC-6 production.

CC7

The CC7 was a development of the CC5, built in aluminium with inflatable side decks - the first Cushioncraft to use a gas turbine engine (all previous being piston). A stretched version offering 17 passenger places was proposed after the company was taken over by BHC.[7]

  • Power Plant Lift and thrust engine: one United Aircraft of Canada ST-6B60DK marine gas turbine (a modified Pratt & Whitney Canada ST6) developing 390 b.h.p. at 6,000 r.p:m.
  • Dimensions Overall length 24 ft 4in; overall beam 15 ft 2in; beam with sidebodies deflated 7 ft 6in; height 7 ft 8in. The craft, with spares, will fit a standard air-freighting crate 30 ft X 8 ft X 8 ft in size.
  • Accommodation Seats for two crew and six passengers plus two extra folding seats for passengers in doorways.
  • Weights Empty 2,880lb; payload 2,120lb; all-up weight 5,000lb.
  • Performance Max speed 50kt; max gradient 1 in 6; max endurance with standard HOgal tank 2hr; hard structure clearance lft.

Later years

After Cushioncraft was taken over by BHC, the "unique" fan lift/propulsion arrangement design of the later quiet Cushioncraft vehicles was discontinued.

The Duver Works has since been used by Hovertravel/Hoverwork as a maintenance centre and in the 1980s/90s was used to fit out the AP1-88 craft.

References

  1. "1960 | 0891 | Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  2. Barton, Antony (26 November 2013). "Hovercraft of Cushioncraft Ltd". www.bartiesworld.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 November 2020. Retrieved 2020-11-18.
  3. "CUSHIONCRAFT; A new vehicle; by Britten-Norman". Flight: 868, 869, 870. 24 June 1960. Archived from the original on 25 September 2009.
  4. "1960 | 0860 | Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  5. Keiller, I. L (1965). Performance and handling trials of britten-norman CC2-001 cushioncraft, XR 814. Farnborough: RAE. OCLC 1109562336.
  6. http://www.flightglobal.com/AIRSPACE/photos/hovercraftcutaways/images/13917/cushioncraft-cc4-cutaway.jpg
  7. Miles, M; National Research Council of Canada; National Research Council of Canada; Division of Mechanical Engineering (1969). Cushioncraft CC-7 performance trials, 2-4 June 1969. Ottawa, Canada: National Research Council Canada, Division of Mechanical Engineering. OCLC 61553820.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.