Charles H Lowe-Wylde was the first person in Britain to earn the
F.A.I. "A" gliding certificate, on 30 March 1930, flying a
primary glider of his own design, built in five weeks by members of the Kent Gliding Club and named "Columbus". The glider was first flown at
Detling on 23 February 1930. Lowe-Wylde set up the British Aircraft Company in mid-1930, with works in an old brewery at Lower Stone Street,
Maidstone. ;B.A.C. I: The first true B.A.C. aircraft was another primary, the
B.A.C. I, again used by the Kent Gliding Club. ;B.A.C. II: The
B.A.C. II was also a primary, but instead of an open girder-type frame, it had a box spar fuselage. This first flew at
Lenham on 21 September 1930 and about fifteen were sold, including one in
Jamaica. Lowe-Wylde would deliver the gliders personally and demonstrate them at the club's site (and if necessary take the pieces home for repair the same day). ;B.A.C. III: The
B.A.C. III consisted of the wings and tail from the B.A.C. II combined with a fuselage enclosing the pilot. First flying at Lenham on 12 October 1930, two went to the Glasgow and Accrington gliding clubs, while three further clubs had their B.A.C. II primaries delivered along with alternative B.A.C. III fuselages, so they could be flown in either configuration. ;B.A.C. IV: An improved version of the B.A.C. III appearing in April 1931 was the
B.A.C. IV with longer, tapered wings. One was sold to Mr C M C Turner of the Channel Gliding Club. For an intended channel crossing. it was towed to 10,000 ft by Sqn Ldr Probyn in his
Westland Widgeon G-EBRQ on 18 June 1931, but this was not high enough for the planned flight. ;B.A.C. V: The
B.A.C. V was simply a B.A.C. III equipped with a pair of wheels for auto-towing. One was built for the Border Gliding Club, while the Preston & District club converted their B.A.C. III for towing off the beach at Middleton Sands,
Heysham. However this aircraft crashed there fatally on 15 May 1932. ;B.A.C. VI: When the B.A.C. IV was fitted with wheels, it was known as the
B.A.C. VI. One was soared by
Wolf Hirth at
Balsdean on 1 April 1931 for 2hrs 13min. The Taunton & West Somerset Gliding Club was presented with a B.A.C. VI by their president, Lt. Col. Hamilton Gault, M.P., which was first demonstrated for the club by Mr Lowe-Wylde on 9 July 1931. ;B.A.C. VII: On 12 April 1931 the first two-seat
B.A.C. VII flew, still using the 40 ft 10in span wings of the B.A.C. IV and VI, but with a new fuselage and an aircraft-type twin-wheel undercarriage for aero- or auto-towing. A B.A.C. VII sponsored by novelist
Barbara Cartland was intended to compete for the
Daily Mail cross-channel competition prize, but in trials, flown by Edward Mole and towed by DH.60 Moth G-AAPA of
National Flying Services, the combination was unable to get above 6,000 ft, insufficient height for a crossing, so instead a towed flight was made from
Maidstone to
Reading on 20 June 1931. (
Robert Kronfeld made a successful channel crossing the same day.) The RAF Pageant held at
Hendon on 25 June 1932 included a display by three B.A.C. VII gliders. At the
British Gliding Association meeting at Huish/Pewsey Hill, G E Collins – the BGA instructor, made the first thermal-soaring flights in the UK, with a cross-country flight of 6 miles in a B.A.C. VII on 3 July 1933. Some B.A.C. VIIs were sold as kits, including one built in
Palestine, and a replica was built by Michael Maufe in the 1980s, using the wings from a Drone. ;B.A.C. VIII: The
B.A.C. VIII was a two-seat flying boat glider using B.A.C. VII wings and tail. Nicknamed the "Bat-Boat" after similar craft described in a short story by
Rudyard Kipling, it was tested in August 1931 by being towed behind a speed-boat on the
River Medway at
Rochester. On 7 December that year it was demonstrated from the
Welsh Harp reservoir at
Hendon. ;B.A.C. XI: The last of Lowe-Wylde's glider designs was the
B.A.C. IX, a lightweight sailplane designed for possible home building. One only was built, first flown at Balsdean on 4 Oct 1931. The Kent Gliding Club were hoping to acquire it in 1933, but nothing more is known. ==Powered aircraft==