The
Crested Wren was the first of the series, its design influenced by contemporary German practice. It was built by Manuel. Its two-piece wings had single
spars which, together with
plywood wing coverings forward of them, formed D-shaped
box girders. The wooden
ribs were produced in batches with a method devised by Manuel. Behind the spar the wings were
fabric covered. The wings, which were slightly swept about the spars, had a constant-
chord centre section, tapering outboard with
ailerons and rounded
tips. There were no
flaps or
airbrakes. The wings were mounted on a
fuselage pylon and had
lift struts from the lower fuselage. Two
flying wires from the nose assisted with drag or torsional loads. The Crested Wren's fuselage was a plywood-skinned hexagonal structure, its vertical faces longer than the others. It curved to a point at the nose, where the flying wires and tow rope were attached, and tapered gently towards the tail. The open, unscreened cockpit was under the wing
leading edge immediately forward of the pylon. A rubber-sprung
ash landing skid with a steel sole ran from the nose to below the
trailing edge. There were no fixed tail surfaces: separate rounded
elevators were mounted on a little pedestal and a roughly D-shaped
rudder moved between them. The elevator control wires emerged from the fuselage midway between the wing and the tail. The first flight of the Crested Wren was in July 1931. After soaring flights over the
South Downs, Manuel designed and built a developed version named the
Willow Wren. This was very similar to the Crested Wren but had a deeper cockpit which left the pilot less exposed. The tail surfaces were also revised, with a single-piece elevator with a straighter leading edge and a taller, deeper rudder. The elevator modification allowed the control wires to run within the fuselage. The deeper rudder added 35 mm (1.4 in) to the glider's length but all other dimensions were the same. The redesign increased the empty weight by about 20 lb (9 kg). The Willow Wren prototype first flew in December 1932. The Willow Wrens built from plans most acquired individual names based on their colour schemes:
BGA 202, for example, was the
Golden Wren. Different constructors introduced their own modifications; the
Golden Wren had an enclosed cockpit, ailerons with prominent rounded trailing edges and fuselage stiffening; the
White Wren had
dihedral. Both had also a transparency in the leading edge to provide an upwards view from the cockpit. Manuel too made changes to his second Willow Wren, the
Blue Wren, giving the outer wing
washout to improve the stall behaviour. A final development was the
Dunstable Kestrel, with the same wing as the
Blue Wren, a fuselage 4 in (102 mm) shorter and 35 lb (16 kg) heavier empty. It built by
The Dunstable Sailplane Company which Manuel now had joined. ==Operational history==