On 1 January 1911 Vickers, Sons and Maxim (which would be renamed
Vickers Limited later that year), entered into a license agreement to build aircraft and aero-engines designed by the Frenchman
Robert Esnault-Pelterie (hence R.E.P.), and sell them in Britain and its
Empire. Following the agreement, Vickers purchased a French-built R.E.P. monoplane for use as a demonstrator together with an R.E.P.-built rear
fuselage. The design was redrawn from
metric to
imperial measurements by Vickers, while the first example was built at the Vickers factory at
Erith,
Kent (now part of
Greater London), using the French-built rear fuselage and a French-built engine, but was otherwise the rest of the components were Vickers-built. It made its maiden flight from Vickers' new airfield at
Joyce Green, near
Dartford in July 1911, piloted by Captain
Herbert F. Wood, the manager of Vickers' aviation department. which was the basis for the Vickers R.E.P. Type Monoplane The aircraft was a
shoulder-winged
monoplane, with a deep but narrow fuselage of
fabric-covered steel-tube construction, accommodating two people in
tandem. A single five-
cylinder air-cooled R.E.P. "fan" (or "semi-radial") engine rated at driving a two-bladed
propeller was fitted in the aircraft's nose, while the aircraft had a
conventional landing gear, with both wheels and skids. The wings were of wood and steel construction, with lateral control by
wing-warping, with the pilot operating a
joystick. The first five monoplanes were basically similar, and were powered by R.E.P engines, with the fifth one having a deeper fuselage. The sixth aircraft, built for the 1912
British Military Aeroplane Competition was noticeably different, with side-by-side seating for its two crew, a shorter
wingspan ( rather than for the earlier aircraft), while a
Viale radial engine was fitted. The seventh aircraft reverted to the tandem layout and longer wingspan of the first five aircraft, but replaced the R.E.P. engine with a
Gnome rotary engine, while the eighth, and final example, was similar to the sixth aircraft, with a 70–80 hp Gnome rotary. == Operational history ==