Tudor I The Tudor I was intended for use on the North Atlantic route. At the time, the United States had the Douglas DC-4 and
Lockheed Constellation, which could both carry more passengers than the Tudor which only carried 12, and also weighed less than the Tudor weight of . The Tudor tailwheel layout was also obsolete. Despite this, the
Ministry of Supply ordered 14 Tudor I aircraft for
BOAC, and increased the production order to 20 in April 1945. The Tudor I suffered from a number of stability problems, which included longitudinal and directional instability. The problem was handed over to the
Royal Aircraft Establishment at
RAE Farnborough, where an extensive programme of testing was carried out, the
test pilot being
Eric Brown. Following the RAE's recommendations, a larger tailplane was fitted, and the original fin and rudder were replaced by larger vertical surfaces. BOAC added to the delays by requesting more than 340 modifications, and finally rejected the Tudor I on 11 April 1947, considering it unacceptable for North Atlantic operations. It had been intended that 12 Tudors would be built in Australia for military transport, but this plan was abandoned. Twelve Tudor I aircraft were built, of which three were scrapped, while others were variously converted to the Tudor IVB and Tudor Freighter I configurations. As a result of all the Tudor I delays, BOAC – with the support of the Ministry of Civil Aviation – sought permission to purchase aircraft with known performance and reliability, such as the Lockheed Constellation and the
Boeing Stratocruiser, for its Atlantic routes instead of the Tudor. Despite BOAC's reluctance to purchase Tudors, the Ministry of Supply continued to subsidize the aircraft.
Tudor II The passenger capacity of the Avro 688 was considered unsatisfactory, so a larger version was planned from the outset. Designated the Avro 689 (also Avro XXI), the Tudor II was designed as a 60-seat passenger aircraft for BOAC, with the fuselage lengthened to compared to the Tudor I's and the fuselage increased by to diameter, making it the largest UK airliner at the time. At the end of 1944, while it was still in the design stage, BOAC, Qantas and South African Airways decided to standardise on the Tudor II for Commonwealth air routes, and BOAC increased its initial order for 30 examples to 79. at
London Stansted Airport in 1955 The prototype Tudor II
G-AGSU first flew on 10 March 1946 at
Woodford Aerodrome. The changes in design had however resulted in a loss of performance and the aircraft could not be used in hot and high conditions which resulted in Qantas ordering the Constellation and South African Airways, the Douglas DC-4 instead, with the total order reduced to 50. During further testing, the prototype was destroyed on 23 August 1947 in a fatal crash on take off from Woodford which killed Roy Chadwick; air accident investigators later discovered that the crash was due to incorrect assembly of the aileron control circuit. The engines on the second prototype were changed to
Bristol Hercules radials and the aircraft became the prototype
Tudor 7, which did not go into production. Unimpressed by the type's performance during further tropical trials, BOAC did not operate the Tudor II and only three production Tudor IIs were built. Six aircraft were built for
British South American Airways (BSAA) as the
Tudor V. The third of the pre-production Tudor 2s, initially G-AGRZ, was used for pressurisation tests as
VZ366 at RAE Farnborough. The second Tudor II to be completed, G-AGRY, went to Nairobi for tropical trials as
VX202, but these were unsatisfactory and Tudor II orders were reduced to 18. Eventually, only four Tudor IIs were completed including the prototype. From 1946 on, the potential purchase of US aircraft by operators such as BOAC led to criticism of government policy, because of the damage that could potentially be caused to Britain's civil aircraft industry by a failure to buy the Tudor. L.G.S. Payne,
The Daily Telegraph's aeronautical correspondent, said that British government policy had led to the development of aircraft which were uncompetitive in price, performance and economy. He blamed the Ministry of Supply's planners for this failure, since the industry had effectively been nationalised and argued that the government should pursue the development of jet aircraft instead of "interim types" such as the Tudor. BOAC cancelled its order for Tudors in 1947, instead taking delivery of 22
Canadair North Stars which they renamed C-4 Argonauts, and used them extensively between 1949 and 1960. Six aircraft ordered as Tudor IIs were intended to be modified with tricycle landing gear, for use by BSAA as freighters, and designated the
711 Trader. They were not built, but a parallel design using the same landing gear was produced as the jet-powered
Avro Ashton.
Tudor III Two Tudor Is, G-AIYA and G-AJKC, were sent to
Armstrong Whitworth for completion as VIP transports for cabinet ministers. They could accommodate 10 passengers and had nine berths. They were re-registered as
VP301 and
VP312, and both were acquired by
Aviation Traders in September 1953,
VP301 being reconverted into a Tudor I. In 1955, G-AIYA and the Tudor I G-AGRG were lengthened to Tudor IV standard. Together with the un-lengthened Tudor I G-AGRI, which had become a 42-seat passenger aircraft, they were used on the Air Charter Ltd Colonial Coach Services between the UK, Tripoli and Lagos.
Tudor IV To meet a BSAA requirement, some Tudor Is were lengthened by , powered by 1,770 hp (1,320 kW) Rolls-Royce Merlin 621s and 1,760 hp (1,310 kW) Rolls-Royce Merlin 623s. With 32 seats and no flight engineer position, these were known as Tudor IVs, and when fitted with a flight engineer's position and 28 seats, as Tudor IVBs. BSAA's new flagships received mixed reviews from pilots. Some greeted it with enthusiasm, such as Captain Geoffrey Womersley, who described it as "the best civil airliner flying." Others rejected it as an unsound design. BSAA's chief pilot and manager of operations, Gordon Store, was unimpressed: The Tudor was built like a battleship. It was noisy, I had no confidence in its engines and its systems were hopeless. The Americans were fifty years ahead of us in systems engineering. All the hydraulics, the air conditioning equipment and the recircling [sic] fans were crammed together underneath the floor without any thought. There were fuel-burning heaters that would never work; we had the floorboards up in flight again and again. The Tudor IV's fuel-burning heaters were made by Janitrol and were also used on the US-built passenger aircraft – such as the Lockheed Constellation – as well as later on US-ordered variants of the
Vickers Viscount. The first example, G-AHNJ
Star Panther, first flew on 9 April 1947. The Tudor IV received its
Certificate of Airworthiness on 18 July 1947, and on 29 September, BSAA took delivery of G-AHNK
Star Lion, the first of its six Tudor 4s to be delivered. It departed the next day from Heathrow on a flight to South America, and on 31 October began flights from London to Havana via Lisbon, the Azores, Bermuda and Nassau. On the night of 29–30 January 1948, Tudor IV G-AHNP
Star Tiger, with 31 people on board, disappeared without trace between
Santa Maria in the Azores and Bermuda. Tudors were temporarily grounded and while the cause of the accident was never determined, the type returned to service on 3 December 1948, when a weekly service was begun from London to Buenos Aires via Gander, Bermuda, and other stops, returning via the Azores. at
Manchester's Ringway Airport in June 1955 Disaster struck again on 17 January 1949, when Tudor IV
G-AGRE Star Ariel also disappeared, this time between Bermuda and
Kingston, Jamaica, with the loss of 20 people, and the Tudor IVs were once more grounded. The subsequent fleet shortage led to BSAA being taken over by BOAC. Pressurisation problems were suspected to be the cause of the two accidents, and the remaining aircraft were flown as unpressurised freighters under the designations Tudor Freighter IV and IVB. A Tudor IV was tested at De Havilland's Hatfield Airfield on 1 April 1949 to check "no lift angle" and flown to Heathrow on 8 April. After storage for some years at
Manchester Airport, four ex-BSAAC Tudor IVs were bought by
Air Charter Limited in late 1953. They were fitted with by cargo doors aft by Aviation Traders and designated Super Traders IV or IVB, receiving their Certificate of Airworthiness in March 1955. These were operated by Air Charter Ltd on long distance freight flights as far as
Christmas Island. Some remained in service until 1959, until
G-AGRH Zephyr crashed in Turkey on 23 April 1959.
Tudor V in 1953 The Tudor V was a modified version of the stretched Tudor II equipped with 44 seats. BSAA acquired five which never entered passenger service with the airline. They were instead stripped of their fittings and used as fuel tankers on the
Berlin Airlift. They completed a total of 2,562 supply sorties in 6,973 hours, carrying 22,125 tons (20,071 tonnes) of fuel into Berlin. On 12 March 1950,
G-AKBY, which had been returned to passenger service with Airflight Ltd, on a charter flight from Ireland, crashed at
RAF Llandow, South Wales, with the resulting death of 80 of its passengers and crew. In 1953, Lome Airways leased an ex BSAA Tudor 5 from Surrey Flying Services as CF-FCY for freight operations in Canada. It was retired at Stansted and scrapped in 1959.
Tudor VI The Tudor VI was to be built for the Argentinian airline
FAMA for South Atlantic service, with 32–38 seats or 22
sleeper berths, but none were built.
Tudor VII The Tudor VII was the first production Tudor II fitted with Bristol Hercules air-cooled radial engines in an attempt to give better performance. The sole example built, G-AGRX, made its first flight on 17 April 1946, and was later fitted in June 1948 with shorter landing gear with the engines repositioned (inclined) to give better ground clearance. G-AGRX was used for cabin temperature experiments, and was finally sold for spares in March 1954.
Tudor 8 The second prototype Tudor I was rebuilt to Tudor IV standards. It was later fitted with four
Rolls-Royce Nene 4 turbojets in under-wing paired nacelles. Given the serial
VX195, The Tudor 8 carried out its first flight at Woodford on 6 September 1948, and a few days later, it was demonstrated at the
SBAC Show at Farnborough. Later, the Tudor 8 was used for high-altitude tests at
Boscombe Down and RAE Farnborough before being broken up in 1951.
Tudor 9 Following tests of the Tudor 8, the Ministry of Supply ordered six Tudor 9s, based on the Tudor II but powered by four
Rolls-Royce Nenes and utilizing a
tricycle undercarriage. The original design was then modified and the type was produced as the Avro 706 Ashton with the first Ashton flying on 1 September 1950. ==Variants==