Title
Minutes of meetings on the early development of jet propulsion and gas turbine units
Reference
MS/0507
Production date
-06-1940 - -01-1947
Creator
- Ministry of Aircraft Production, Technical CommitteeBiographyBiography
The Ministry was created on 17 May 1940 to relieve the Air Ministry of responsibility for the procurement of supplies. It became responsible for the supply, inspection, and repair of aircraft, their armament, and for storage pending issue to operational squadrons. In August 1945 a combined Minister of Aircraft Production and Supply was appointed. The Ministry itself was disbanded on 1 April 1946 and its functions passed to the Ministry of Supply.
Scope and Content
The meetings relate to the Gloster-Whittle Project of the Ministry of Aircraft Production Technical Committee and the Gas Turbine Collaboration Committee.
Extent
1 file
Language
English
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Whittle, FrankBiographyBiography
(1907-1996) Knight, aeronautical engineer and inventor of the jet engine
Frank Whittle was born on 1 June 1907 in Coventry. After attending a local school, he went on to higher education at Leamington College. As a child, Whittle spent hours in the library reading about astronomy, physiology and engineering. His first attempts to join the RAF failed as a result of his lack of height, but on his third attempt he was accepted as an apprentice in 1923. He qualified as a pilot officer in 1928.
As a cadet Whittle had written a thesis arguing that planes would need to fly at high altitudes, where air resistance is much lower, in order to achieve long ranges and high speeds. Piston engines and propellers were unsuitable for this purpose, so he concluded that rocket propulsion or gas turbines driving propellers would be required. Jet propulsion was not in his thinking at this stage. By October 1929, Whittle had considered using a fan enclosed in the fuselage to generate a fast flow of air to propel a plane at high altitude. A piston engine would use too much fuel, so he thought of using a gas turbine. After the Air Ministry turned him down, he patented the idea himself.
In 1935, Whittle secured financial backing and, with Royal Air Force approval, Power Jets Ltd was formed. They began constructing a test engine in July 1936, but it proved inconclusive. Whittle concluded that a complete rebuild was required, but lacked the necessary finances. Protracted negotiations with the Air Ministry followed and the project was secured in 1940. By April 1941, the engine was ready for tests. The first flight was made on 15 May 1941. By October the United States had heard of the project and asked for the details and an engine. A Power Jets team and the engine were flown to Washington to enable General Electric to examine it and begin construction. The Americans worked quickly and their XP-59A Airacomet was airborne in October 1942, some time before the British Meteor, which became operational in 1944.
The jet engine proved to be a winner, particularly in America where the technology was enthusiastically embraced. Whittle retired from the RAF in 1948 with the rank of air commodore. He was knighted in the same year and went to work in the US shortly afterwards, becoming a research professor at the US Naval Academy at Annapolis. Whittle died on 9 August 1996.
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
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