Some weeks after the report from the First Committee, it was decided to form a Second Committee with more comprehensive and detailed terms of reference. The Second Committee began meeting on 25 May 1943 • (i)
Avro York (developed from the
Avro Lancaster) • (ii)
Avro Tudor (developed from the
Avro Lincoln, itself a development of the Lancaster), the Tudor I being an interim transatlantic airliner pending the introduction of the Brabazon Type I, and the Tudor II being an interim Brabazon Type III airliner with shorter range and greater capacity for the
British Empire routes. • (iii)
Handley Page Hermes, a civil development of the
Halifax, first flown in 1945 but did not enter limited service with BOAC until 1950, having evolved through several iterations to be the Hermes IV. • (iv)
Short Sandringham (an improved conversion of the Short Sunderland Mark V) These were all produced in some numbers in due course, although the Tudor I and Tudor II never entered service. They were all too late to compete (for example) with the earlier and much more capable
Douglas DC-4 which had been in service since 1942 and could carry more passengers further and faster. The final report in December 1945 ignored all these interim types •
Type I was for a very large
transatlantic airliner serving the high-volume routes like
London-
New York, seating its passengers in luxury for the 12-hour trip. The Type I design developed into
Air Ministry Specification 2/44. •
Type IIA, originally a short-haul
feederliner intended to replace the
Douglas DC-3, was for a piston-powered aircraft, to Air Ministry Specification 25/43, as originally intended. •
Type IIB was for an aircraft using the new
turboprop engine, to Air Ministry Specification 8/46. This came about because
Vickers favoured the move to turboprop power. There was some scepticism on the part of the committee, and in the end they decided to divide the specification in two, allowing the turboprop design to go ahead as Type IIB while at the same time ordering a "backup" piston design as the Type IIA. A parallel alternative specification 16/46 was subsequently raised to cover later changes. •
Type III called for a larger four-engined, medium-range aircraft, to Air Ministry Specification 6/45, for various multi-hop routes serving the British Empire, the "Medium Range Empire" (MRE) routes. This was at one time two separate requirements, IIIA and IIIB, but these had merged again in the Final Report. •
Type IV was a
jet-powered, 100-seat high-speed transport, to Air Ministry Specification 22/46. This was added at the personal urging of one of the committee members,
Geoffrey de Havilland, whose company was involved in development of both Britain's first jet fighters and jet engines. The Type IV could, if the whole concept of a jet airliner could be made to work, be able to replace the Type III outright and assume many of the duties of the other planes in shorter routes. •
Type VA (initially Type V) was effectively the original Type II fourteen-passenger, feederliner aircraft to Air Ministry Specification 18/44 after the Type II had evolved into larger designs. •
Type VB was an eight-seat aircraft as a
de Havilland Dragon Rapide replacement, to Air Ministry Specification 26/43, added as a further split in the Type V requirement. The normal method for government aircraft production was that an
Air Ministry Specification was issued and aircraft companies tendered designs to meet the specification. It was customary then to order prototypes of one or two designs for evaluation (though at times aircraft were ordered "off the drawing board"). In some cases manufacturers brought designs to the Air Ministry and a specification was written for the design. This process did not allow for companies to propose solutions which were, in their view, better, neither did it necessarily reflect the requirements of the planned operator who may have wanted something different. Additionally, other government bodies such as the
Royal Aircraft Establishment had input to the process and these often conflicted with the designers being given contradictory instructions. One example of this is the trouble that
Miles Aircraft had with the Ministry of Aircraft Production in relation to the design of the
Miles Marathon. In 1944, the Ministry of Aircraft Production started the process for contracts for all of these planes with individual companies; this role was taken over by the newly created
Ministry of Supply in 1945. The view of Sir Cyril Musgrave, the
Permanent Under-Secretary in the Ministry of Supply, was that "Only I can order civil airliners!" This attitude was a source of considerable difficulties in this process. ==The aircraft==