In 1912, the
Short S.36 tractor biplane, built for
Francis McClean, was loaned to the Royal Navy for use at its Naval Flying School. Impressed by the S.36, the Admiralty ordered two similar
tractor biplanes, capable of operating on either wheels or floats, the smaller
Short S.45, like the S.36, powered by a 70 hp (52 kW)
Gnome Lambda, and the larger
Short S.41 powered by a 14-cylinder, twin-row 100 hp (75 kW)
Gnome double Omega rotary engine. The S.41 was an unequal-span
two bay tractor biplane with a slim rectangular section
fuselage mounted between the wings. Following the operational flights made during 1912, S.41 was returned to the factory for an overhaul and the fitting of folding wings, which were hinged so that they folded back horizontally alongside the fuselage, reducing storage space required for stowage aboard ship. At this time it was given the RNAS number "10". In November 1913 it underwent further modifications, being used to perfect a development of the folding mechanism which allowed the wings to be unfolded from the cockpit: at the same time new wings, similar in pattern to those of the
Short Admiralty Type 81 were fitted. The
folding wing mechanism for shipborne aircraft had been designed by Horace Short, and was the subject of a series of
patents ==Operational history==