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Image
Has Image
11
Non-Commercial Use
11
Category
Aeronautics
14
Maker
A V Roe and Company Limited
5
De Havilland Aircraft Company Limited
1
On Display
Science Museum
1
Mathematics: The Winton Gallery
1
Object type
aeroplane
14
Place
Manchester
2
Aldringham, Surrey
1
Brighton
1
Chadderton, Greater Manchester
1
Chadderton, Greater Manchester; Bracebridge Heath, Lincolnshire
1
Hatfield
1
Marlborough
1
Newton Heath
1
Ossun, France
1
Rishworth, Yorkshire, United Kingdom
1
Material
wood (unidentified)
9
metal (unknown)
8
paint
8
rubber (unidentified)
8
textile
7
plastic (unidentified)
5
glass
3
paper (fibre product)
3
aluminium (metal)
2
leather
2
Date
From
To
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Avro Shackleton A.E.W. 2
Aeronautics
1954
Avro 707A Aeroplane
Aeronautics
1952; 1952
Avro 594 Avian Mk IIIA
Aeronautics
1928
Socata Rallye MS 880B G-AYTA
Aeronautics
1971
1909 Roe I Triplane
Aeronautics
1952
Handley Page H.P. 39 "Gugnunc" Aeroplane
Aeronautics
Volmer VJ 23E powered hang-glider
Aeronautics
1973
Mignet HM 14 Aeroplane
Aeronautics
1936
Avro 504K Plane
Aeronautics
1930
Dragon Rapide
Aeronautics
1935
Pegasus Quantum Microlight
Aeronautics
1999
Skyhook Safari powered hang glider built by Len Gabriels and used by him for a 1979 attempt to fly from London to Paris, sponsored by Blue Bird Toffees. This is a Skyhook Safari powered hang glider. It was designed by len Gabriel and used by him in an attempt to fly from London to Paris. Len Gabriel was born in 1926 and became interested in hang gliding in 1972 after reading an article in the children's magazine 'Look and Learn' about the sport in America. At the time he was engineering director of Frastans, a company that produced machines for making wallpaper, and so had the skills and finance to investigate designing and building his own hang gliders when his request for a set of plans for an established design was met with a refusal . He set up Skyhook, and soon began to look at developing of powered hang gliders. In 1979 Gabriel was asked by Brian Milton to develop a power hang glider for a proposed flight from London to Paris. The flight was to be sponsored by Bluebird toffees. Gabriel built a Skyhook Safari single surface wing powered by a 123cc McCullough 101 engine. This gave a cruising speed of about 25 mph, with fuel for about 2 hours and 15 minutes flying. Milton suffered a broken arm in a crash following a test flight in Wiltshire, and Bluebird toffees asked Gabriel to make the flight instead, on 27 August, 1979. The flight across the Channel was uneventful, but there were problems with the French authorities who had not granted permission for the flight beforehand. Gabriel continued as far as Abbeville at which point it seemed that the French Gendarmes were determined to delay his progress indefinitely. News reached Gabriel of the assassination of Earl Mountbatten. This confirmed that there would be no media coverage even if he did manage to resume his flight on to Paris, so the flight was aborted.
Skyhook Safari Powered Hang Glider
Aeronautics
1979
Rogallo wing hang-glider, made by Flexiform Skysails, Manchester, c.1982.
Rogallo Wing Hang-Glider
Aeronautics
1982
Spectrum hang-glider, made by Hiway Hang Gliders Ltd, Brighton, c.1980.
Spectrum hang-glider, 1980
Aeronautics
1980