Bristol Aeroplane Company
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Bristol Aeroplane Company logo |
The
Bristol Aeroplane Company (formerly British and Colonial Aeroplane Company) was a major
British aircraft company which, in 1959, merged with several major British aircraft companies, to become the
British Aircraft Corporation, later part of
British Aerospace, now
BAE Systems.
The BAC works were located in Filton, about 4 miles north of
Bristol city centre.
The British and Colonial Aeroplane Company began building primitive
Bristol Boxkites in a former
tram shed at Filton in 1910. A few years later, during the
First World War, the more advanced
Bristol Fighter was in mass production for the
Royal Flying Corps (RFC), later the
Royal Air Force (RAF).
In 1920, BCAC became The Bristol Aeroplane Company. A major product during the interwar years was the
Bristol Bulldog.
Later the Company became famous for the production of two military aircraft that were used by the RAF and Commonwealth units in the Second World War; the
Bristol Blenheim light bomber and the
Bristol Beaufighter heavy fighter. A shadow factory was built at
Weston super Mare during the Second World War which produced these aircraft as well.
By the end of the Second World War, the Filton site was one of the largest aviation complexes in the world, certainly in Europe. In 1946, with surplus capacity left from wartime expansion, the company started an offshoot,
Bristol Cars, using pre-war
BMW designs as the basis for a new car, the
Bristol 400. The car company became independent in
1960, around the same time as the consolidation the British aircraft industry, but is still based at the Filton site. Pre-fabricated buildings and composite materials were also early post-war activities, but these were eventually sold off.
Bristol was involved in the post war renaissance of British civilian aircraft as inspired by the
Brabazon Committee report. In 1949, the
Bristol Brabazon airliner prototype, at the time one of the largest aircraft in the world, first flew. The Brabazon airliner project was a step in the wrong direction and ultimately cancelled in 1953. At the same time the
Bristol Britannia turboprop-powered airliner proved a success and it and
Bristol Freighter transport aircraft were produced in quantity during the
1950s. Bristol was involved in helicopter development with the
Bristol Belvedere and
Bristol Sycamore helicopters going into quantity production. The whole of the helicopter side was later transferred to
Westland Aircraft.
Another post-war activity was
missile development, culminating in the production of the
Bristol Bloodhound anti-aircraft missile. The guided weapons division eventually became part of Matra BAe Dynamics Alenia (
MBDA).
In the late 50's the Company undertook supersonic transport (SST) project studies, which were later to contribute to
Concorde.
In 1959 BAC was forced to merge with
English Electric,
Hunting Aircraft and
Vickers-Armstrongs to form the
British Aircraft Corporation, later itself to merge with the remaining large British aircraft companies to become
British Aerospace, now
BAE Systems.
A research aircraft, the
Bristol 188, was constructed in the 1950s to test the feasibilty of stainless steel as a material in a Mach 2.0 airframe. By the time the aircraft flew in 1962, the Company was already part of the British Aircraft Corporation.
Bristol Engine Company
The
Bristol Engine Company was originally a separate entity,
Cosmos Engineering, in turn formed from the pre-First World War automobile company, Brazil-Straker. In 1917 Cosmos was asked to investigate air-cooled
radial engines, producing what would become the
Bristol Mercury, a 14 cylinder two-row (helical) radial, which they launched in 1918. This engine saw little use, but a smaller and simpler 9 cylinder version known as the
Bristol Jupiter was clearly a winning design.
With the post-war rapid contraction of military orders Cosmos Engineering went
bankrupt, and the
Air Ministry let it be known that it would be a good idea if the Bristol Aeroplane Company purchased them. The Jupiter competed with the
Armstrong Siddeley Jaguar through the 1920s, but Bristol put more effort into their design, and by 1929, the Jupiter was clearly superior. In the 1930s they developed a new line of radials based on the
sleeve valve principle, which would develop into some of the most powerful piston engines in the world, and could continue to be sold into the 1960s.
In 1956 the division was renamed
Bristol Aero Engines, and then merged with
Armstrong Siddeley in 1958 to form
Bristol Siddeley as a counterpart of the airframe-producing company mergers that formed BAC. In 1966 Bristol Siddeley merged with
Rolls-Royce, leaving only one major aero-engine company in England,
Rolls-Royce (now
Rolls-Royce plc)
 | UK Ministry of Defence Bristol Britannia makes a visit to the maker's factory at Filton (Bristol, England) in 1983. As a civil airliner it had flown for BOAC, British Eagle and Air Spain. |
|  | The Bristol Type 192 Belvedere twin-blade helicopter. The Belvedere was a twin rotor helicopter designed to meet a requirement by the Royal Air Force for a general purpose land-based helicopter. Twenty six were built. |
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Bristol Aeroplane designs include:
pre WWI types:*
Bristol BoxkiteWWI types:*
Bristol Scout*
Bristol F.2Binter-war:*
Bristol Bulldog*
Bristol Bombay*
Bristol Type 143 Lord Rothermere's Britain First
*
Bristol BlenheimWWII types:*
Bristol Beaufort*
Bristol Beaufighter*
Bristol Bolingbroke*
Bristol Brigand*
Bristol Buckingham*
Bristol Buckmaster*
Bristol Baltimorepost-war types:*
Bristol Brabazon*
Bristol Freighter*
Bristol Britannia*
Bristol 188helicopters:*
Bristol Belvedere*
Bristol SycamoreBristol Engine designs include:
original series:*
Bristol Jupiter*
Bristol Titan*
Bristol Mercury*
Bristol Pegasus*
Bristol Phoenix*
Bristol Hydrasleeve-valve series:*
Bristol Perseus*
Bristol Aquila*
Bristol Taurus*
Bristol Hercules*
Bristol Centaurusturbine-based types:*
Bristol Theseus turboprop with heat exchanger
*
Bristol Proteus 2 shaft turboprop
*
Bristol Olympus 2 spool turbojet
*
Bristol Orpheus single spool turbojet
*
Bristol Orion 2 shaft turboprop
*
Bristol Pegasus 2 spool vectored thrust turbofan
ramjet types:*
Bristol BRJ.801*
Bristol ThorBristol missile designs include:
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Blue Envoy - project only, never entered production
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Bloodhound*
Bristol 182 - also known as "Blue Rapier"
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Bristol Aerospace, the Canadian subsidiary company
*
The Bristol Aeroplane Company (the founder's family's website)
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Bristol Aircraft and Engines*
Bristol Aircraft Engines