In 1904–1906 the Army Balloon Factory, which was part of the Army
School of Ballooning, under the command of Colonel
James Templer, relocated from
Aldershot to the edge of Farnborough Common in order to have enough space to inflate the new "dirigible balloon" or
airship which was then under construction. Templer's place was taken by Colonel
John Capper and Templer himself retired in 1908. Besides balloons and airships, the factory also experimented with
Samuel Franklin Cody's
war kites and aeroplanes designed both by Cody and
J. W. Dunne. In 1909 Army work on aeroplanes ceased and the Factory was brought under civilian control. Capper was replaced as Superintendent by
Mervyn O'Gorman. Its first new designer was
Geoffrey de Havilland who later founded his own company. Later colleagues included
John Kenworthy who became chief engineer and designer at the
Austin Motor Company in 1918 and who went on to found the Redwing Aircraft Co in 1930 and
Henry Folland – later chief designer at
Gloster Aircraft Company, and founder of his own company
Folland Aircraft. One of the designers in the engine department was
Samuel Heron, who later went on to invent the sodium-filled
poppet valve, instrumental in achieving greater power levels from piston engines. While at the RAF, Heron designed a
radial engine that he was not able to build during his time there, however upon leaving the RAF he then went to
Siddeley-Deasy where the design, the RAF.8, was developed as the
Jaguar. Heron later moved to the United States where he worked on the design of the
Wright Whirlwind. Other engineers included Major
F. M. Green, G. S. Wilkinson, James E. "Jimmy" Ellor, Prof. A .H. Gibson, and
A. A. Griffith. Both Ellor and Griffith would later go on to work for
Rolls-Royce Limited. In 1918 the Royal Aircraft Factory was once more renamed, becoming the Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) to avoid confusion with the
Royal Air Force, which was formed on 1 April 1918, and because it had relinquished its manufacturing role to concentrate on research. During WWII the
Marine Aircraft Experimental Establishment, which had moved from
Felixstowe to a safer location at
Helensburgh in Scotland, was under the control of the RAE. In 1946 work began to convert
RAF Thurleigh into RAE Bedford. Engineers at the Royal Aircraft Establishment invented high strength
carbon fibre in 1963. In 1961, the world's first
grooved runway for reduced
aquaplaning was constructed. In 1965, a US delegation visited to view the new surfacing practice and initiated a study by the
FAA and
NASA. On 1 May 1988 the RAE was renamed the Royal Aerospace Establishment. On 1 April 1991 the RAE was merged into the
Defence Research Agency (DRA), the
MOD's new research organisation. Then, on 1 April 1995 the DRA and other MOD organisations merged to form the
Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA). The Bedford site was largely shut down in 1994. In 2001 DERA was part-privatised by the MOD, resulting in two separate organisations, the state-owned
Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL), and the privatised company
QinetiQ. ; Aircraft The unit used various aircraft such as : Hawker Hunter,
English Electric Canberra B.6 WK163 & B.6 WH953,
BAC One-Eleven Series 402 XX919,
Hawker Siddeley HS.125 XW930, and
Douglas Dakota ZA947. During February 1988 the last
Westland Wessex left after 30 years of trials work. ==Royal Aircraft Factory==