On leaving the
Army Balloon Factory at Farnborough in 1909,
J. W. Dunne set up the Blair Atholl Aeroplane Syndicate Ltd., to continue developing his unusual tailless swept-wing aircraft, none of which had yet flown under power. The D.5 was his first design for them and it followed the general layout of the earlier
D.4 Army machine in having a tailless, swept biplane wing with pronounced wash-out and endplates, and driven by twin pusher propellers. However it differed in having a streamlined central nacelle or fuselage housing the pilot and engine. The control surfaces were, like the wing, similar to the D.4.
Elevons on the upper wing tips were the only movable surfaces. However on the D.5 they were operated independently by two levers on either side of the cockpit. There was no rudder, with turning being coordinated by the aerodynamic design of the swept and washed-out wings. Unlike most aircraft, they were arranged such that raising an elevon both reduced lift and increased drag, while lowering it had the opposite effects. Thus, the wing being lowered would be dragged back (a phenomenon known as proverse yaw), automatically coordinating a banking turn. Endplate fins were fitted to the wings to improve efficiency, with square cutouts to avoid fouling the elevons. Construction of the main airframe was contracted to
Short Brothers, who occupied sheds alongside the Syndicate's at the
Aero Club of Great Britain's new flying ground at Shellbeach on the
Isle of Sheppey. The engine was a
Green C.4 35 hp water-cooled, four-cylinder inline type, significantly more powerful than those the Army had allowed. Twin radiators were fitted on either side, standing up and aligned with the airflow in order to minimise drag. The mid-mounted engine chain-drove twin pusher propellers, mounted on outriggers behind the wing. As before, the propellers rotated in opposite directions to cancel out their torque.{{cite journal Following construction at Leysdown, the D.5 was taken to Eastchurch, the new site of the (now Royal) Aero Club and the Syndicate located a short distance away on Sheppey. Early trials were not encouraging, with the machine in its original form proving too heavy. Dunne undertook extensive lightening to Short's construction. ==Operational history==