Design and development Beta 1 used the
gondola of the British Army Airship No.3
Baby, with a new
envelope of rubberised fabric. Rectangular horizontal stabilisers were fitted either side of the tail together with a fixed fin with a rudder mounted on the trailing edge below the tail. A long uncovered framework suspended below the envelope held the 35 hp
Green water-cooled engine, which drove a pair of 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) diameter two-bladed propellers. An
elevator was mounted on the front of this structure to provide pitch control. After repairs a second flight lasting 70 minutes was made on 8 April, and on the night of 3–4 June 1910 it made a flight from Farnborough to London and back, setting off at 11:39 pm and returning at dawn the following morning. A second flight to London was made on 12 July under the command of Captain W. P. L. Brooke-Smith, setting off from Farnborough at 3:40 pm and, flying against a headwind, reaching central London at about six o'clock. After circling
St Paul's Cathedral it returned to Farnborough, making a short diversion to demonstrate the machine to the King and Queen, who were at
Aldershot. Under the command of Colonel
John Capper, Beta was flown in the British Army manoeuvres on Salisbury Plain in September, proving its utility by observing troop dispositions and dropping a sketch map of their dispositions to General
Horace Smith-Dorrien. In 1911 the first trials with radio communication were made after a return flight from Farnborough to
Portsmouth. Although two-way radio contact was established, practical communication was made difficult by the noise of the engine. ==Beta II==