Parnall
{{Short description|British aircraft manufacturer}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2011}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2016}}
{{Infobox company
| name = Parnall
| native_name = George Parnall & Co. Ltd.
| former_name = George Parnall & Sons
| type = Private limited company (initially), Public limited company (later)
| industry = Aircraft manufacturing, later domestic appliances
| founded = 1916 (as aircraft manufacturer), 1935 (amalgamation)
| founder = George Parnall
| defunct = 1967 (acquired by TI Group)
| fate = Acquired
| successor = TI Group (parent company)
| hq_location = Bristol, England (initially), Yate, South Gloucestershire (later)
| hq_location_city =
| hq_location_country =
| key_people = Harold Bolas, Basil B. Henderson
| products = Aircraft (Scout, Panther, Puffin, Plover, Possum, Pixie, Perch, Peto, Pike, Pipit, Imp, Elf, Prawn, Parasol, G.4/31, Heck, 382), gun turrets, domestic appliances
| parent = Radiation Ltd. (after 1958), TI Group (after 1967)
}}
Parnall was a British aircraft manufacturer that evolved from a wood-working company before the First World War to a significant designer of military and civil aircraft into the 1940s.{{cite web|title=Avro 504K|url=http://www.gregorie.org/gregories/history/avro_504k.htm|publisher=David Gregorie|access-date=4 December 2015}}{{cite book|last1=Sutherland|first1=Jonathan|last2=Smith|first2=Alistair|title=Royal Flying Corps|date=2012|publisher=Casemate|isbn=9781848848894|page=132|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gtrvnUKYlXoC&q=Parnall+Short+Type+827&pg=PT132}} It was based in the west of England and was originally known as George Parnall & Co. Ltd.{{cite web|title=George Parnall and Co|url=http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/George_Parnall_and_Co|publisher=Grace's Guide|access-date=4 December 2015}}
History
File:Yate.parnall.memorial.arp.jpg]]
In 1916, the Bristol based Parnall & Sons shopfitters started to manufacture aircraft at the Colliseum Works at Park Row in Bristol.{{cite magazine|magazine=Flight|page=600|date=30 May 1935|title=Formation of Parnall Aircraft, Ltd|url=https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1935/1935%20-%201324.html}} During the First World War, the skilled staff were moved to sites around the city and in neighbouring South Gloucestershire producing planes to their own designs and, under contract, those of other companies.
In 1919, the aircraft business was split from the parent company Parnall & Sons as George Parnall and Company.{{cite magazine|magazine=Flight|page=688|date=25 June 1926|title=Death of Mr. George Parnall|url=https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1936/1936%20-%201701.html}} In the 1920s, aircraft manufacture was centralised at a factory in Yate close to an airfield used by the Royal Flying Corps.{{cite web|title=The Factory Age|url=http://www.yateheritage.co.uk/history-of-yate/the-factory-age.htm|publisher=Yate Heritage Centre|access-date=6 February 2016}} In the 1930s, gun turrets for bomber aircraft were produced. The site was a strategic target for Luftwaffe bombing and during 1941, over fifty people were killed during the raids.{{cite web|title=Yate wartime aircraft factory bombing is remembered|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-12592018|publisher=BBC|access-date=6 February 2016}}
In 1935, Parnall Aircraft Limited was formed when George Parnall and Company amalgamated with the Hendy Aircraft Company and Nash and Thompson Limited.Jackson 1974, p. 89 After the Second World War as aircraft component manufacture reduced, domestic appliances were built at the site.{{cite news|title=The Parnall story|url=http://www.bristolpost.co.uk/Parnall-planes/story-11240567-detail/story.html|access-date=6 February 2016|work=Bristol Post|date=1 September 2008}} To reflect this move away from aviation the company changed its name to Parnall (Yate) Limited in 1946. This was acquired by Radiation Ltd. in 1958 and TI Group in 1967.{{Cite web |title=Parnall (Yate) - Graces Guide |url=https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Parnall_(Yate) |access-date=2023-01-09 |website=www.gracesguide.co.uk}}{{Cite web |title=Radiation - Graces Guide |url=https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Radiation |access-date=2023-01-09 |website=www.gracesguide.co.uk}}{{Cite web |title=Parnall (Yate) Ltd. {{!}} Science Museum Group Collection |url=https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/people/cp46510/parnall-yate-ltd |access-date=2023-01-09 |website=collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk |language=en}}
Aircraft
The Parnall Scout was a prototype single-seat anti-airship wooden biplane fighter aircraft developed in the 1910s. It was too heavy and slow and never went into production.{{cite web|title=Mivart Street, Bristol: How War Transformed British Industry|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p029yn25|publisher=BBC|access-date=6 February 2016}}{{cite web|title=Parnall Aircraft|url=http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Parnall_Aircraft|publisher=Grace's Guide|access-date=6 February 2016}}
The Parnall Panther was a carrier-based wooden, single-bay biplane spotter and reconnaissance aircraft designed by Harold Bolas,{{cite web|last1=Webb|first1=Alan|title=Section 1 - Woodworking contracts, then Scout and Panther|url=http://www.chew76.fsnet.co.uk/parnall/chap1.html|website=PARNALL - Bristol's Other Plane-maker|publisher=Alan Webb|access-date=6 February 2016}} who had joined Parnall and Sons after leaving the Admiralty's Air Department. It had a 230 hp Bentley BR2 rotary engine. Following contractual disputes production was transferred to the Bristol Aeroplane Company.
The Parnall Puffin was an experimental amphibious fighter-reconnaissance biplane.
The Parnall Plover single-seat naval fighter aircraft of the 1920s for use off the Royal Navy's aircraft carriers, was ordered into small-scale production, but after extensive evaluation, the Fairey Flycatcher was preferred for large-scale service.
The Parnall Possum was an experimental triplane, with a single, central engine driving wing-mounted propellers via shafts and gears. Two of these aircraft were built in the mid-1920s.
The Parnall Pixie was a low-powered single-seat monoplane light aircraft originally designed to compete in the Lympne trials for motor-gliders in 1923, where it was flown successfully by Norman Macmillan. It had two sets of wings, one for cross-country flights and the other for speed; it later appeared as a biplane which could be converted into a monoplane.[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1923/1923%20-%200653.html "Pixie."] Flight, 25 October 1923, pp. 653-654. Parnall Pixie IIIa G-EBJG is still in existence with the Midland Air Museum, Coventry, England. The remains are in deep store and are not generally on view to the public without prior arrangement.
The Parnall Perch was a single-engined, side-by-side-seat aircraft designed as a general-purpose trainer. No contract on this specification was awarded and only one Perch was built.
The Parnall Peto was a small seaplane with folding wings for use as a submarine-carried reconnaissance aircraft.[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1929/1929-1%20-%200196.html Flight 1929]
The Parnall Pike was a two/three-seat biplane reconnaissance aircraft, capable of operating off carrier decks or from water, built in 1927.[http://all-aero.com/index.php/54-planes-p-q-e-r-s/7650-parnall-pike "Parnall Pike"] All-Aero. Retrieved 5 March 2015. Only one was constructed.
The Parnall Pipit was a single-engine, single-seat naval fighter designed to an Air Ministry specification in 1927. Two prototypes were built but both were destroyed by tail flutter.
The Parnall Imp was an unusual single-engine, two-seat biplane built in 1927. It had a straight cantilever lower wing which supported the markedly swept upper wing. Only one was built.Jackson 1974, p. 280
The Parnall Elf was a two-seat light touring biplane, three being built at Yate between 1928 and 1932. The Elf was the last aircraft designed by Harold Bolas before he left the company to go to the United States.
The Parnall Prawn was an experimental flying boat built in 1930. Its single engine was fitted on a tilting mounting in the nose, so that the propeller could be kept clear of the water on takeoff and landing. Only one was built and it is not known whether it was ever flown.
The Parnall Parasol was an experimental parasol winged aircraft design to measure the aerodynamic forces on wings in flight. Two were built and flown in the early 1930s.
The Parnall G.4/31 was a 1930s general purpose aircraft which could operate as a day and night bomber as well as the reconnaissance, torpedo and dive-bombing roles. It was a large angular biplane powered by a 690 hp (515 kW) Bristol Pegasus IM3 with a Townend ring.
The Parnall Heck was designed by Basil B. Henderson as a single-engined, conventional low-wing cabin monoplane, built of spruce with a plywood covering, initially a two-seater in tandem layout. The prototype was originally flown as the Hendy Heck but by the time of its first public demonstration in July 1935, the companies had merged and the aircraft was renamed as the Parnall Heck.
The Parnall 382 (also known as the Heck III), was a single-engined wooden monoplane trainer aircraft with two open cockpits. It first flew in 1939.
References
{{Reflist|35em}}
- {{cite book|title=British Civil Aircraft since 1919|volume=3|first=A.J.|last=Jackson|year=1974|publisher=Putnam|location=London|isbn=0-370-10014-X}}
Further reading
- Jarrett, Philip. "Parnall's Final Fling: The Parnall Type 381 Gunnery Research Aircraft". Air Enthusiast, No. 55, Autumn 1994, pp. 16–20. {{ISSN|0143-5450}}
- {{cite book |title= Parnall Aircraft since 1914|last=Wixey|first=Kenneth |year= 1990|publisher= Naval Institute Press|location=Annopolis|isbn= 1-55750-930-1}}
External links
{{commons category|Parnall Aircraft Limited}}
- [http://www.chew76.fsnet.co.uk/parnall/chap1.html PARNALL - Bristol's Other Plane-maker], Alan Webb
{{Parnall aircraft}}
{{Aerospace industry in the United Kingdom}}
Category:Defunct aircraft manufacturers of the United Kingdom