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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2017}}
{{Use British English|date=January 2017}}
{|{{Infobox Aircraft Begin
{|{{Infobox Aircraft Begin
| name=S.7 Mussel
| name=S.7 Mussel
| image=
| image=Mussel-chb192.jpg
| caption=
| caption=Short Mussel II, Felixstowe, June 1929
}}{{Infobox Aircraft Type
}}{{Infobox Aircraft Type
| type=Experimental and trainer
| type=Experimental and trainer
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}}
|}
|}
The '''Short S.7 Mussel''' was a single engined two seat monoplane built by [[Short Brothers]] to test the performance of their [[duralumin]] monocoque floats. Two were built.
The '''Short S.7 Mussel''' was a [[Single engine sea planes|single-engined]] two-seat [[monoplane]] built by [[Short Brothers]] to test the performance of their [[duralumin]] monocoque floats. Two were built.


==Development==
==Development==
Having demonstrated the watertightness and corrosion resistance of duralumin monocoque flying boat hulls with the [[Short Cockle]], Shorts became leaders in the design of metal floats for seaplanes. The floats for both the [[Supermarine S.4]] and [[Gloster III]] [[Schneider Cup]] seaplanes were built by Shorts.<ref name="Barnes">{{Harvnb|Barnes|1989|pages=187-95}}</ref> They had built their own hydrodynamic testing canal at their [[Rochester]] base to explore the performance of floats on the water and decided to build a small aircraft to test them in flight.<ref name="Barnes"/> This was the Short S.7 Mussel; the name was a natural complement to the Cockle but also a nod to "Mussel Manor", the clubhouse on Shorts' first airfield at [[Sheppey]].
Having demonstrated the watertightness and corrosion resistance of duralumin monocoque flying boat hulls with the [[Short Cockle]], Shorts became leaders in the design of metal floats for seaplanes. The floats for both the [[Supermarine S.4]] and [[Gloster III]] [[Schneider Cup]] seaplanes were built by Shorts.<ref name="Barnes">{{Harvnb|Barnes|1989|pages=187–95}}</ref> They had built their own hydrodynamic testing canal at their [[Rochester, Kent|Rochester]] base to explore the performance of floats on the water and decided to build a small aircraft to test them in flight.<ref name="Barnes"/> This was the Short S.7 Mussel; the name was a natural complement to the Cockle but also a nod to "Mussel Manor", the clubhouse on Shorts' first airfield at [[Isle of Sheppey|Sheppey]].


It was a two seat, single engined low winged monoplane, mounted originally on twin floats.<ref name="Barnes"/> Like the slightly earlier Short Cockle, [[Short Satellite|Satellite]] and [[Short Springbok|Springbok]], it had a duralumin monocoque fuselage of oval cross section.<ref name="Barnes"/><ref name="Flight1">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1926/1926%20-%200163.html ''Flight'' 11 March 1926 pp. 141-5]</ref> There were a pair of tandem open cockpits over the wing fitted with dual controls.Contemporary commentators<ref name= "Flight1"/> regarded the mounting of the upright four cylinder 60 hp (45&nbsp;kW) [[ADC Cirrus|ADC Cirrus I]] engine as particularly neatly done, in a U-shaped extension of the monocoque which initially left the top of the engine exposed. This engine was changed for an 85 hp (63&nbsp;kW) [[ADC Cirrus|Cirrus II]] in January 1928.<ref name="Barnes"/> The fuel tank was immediately behind the fire wall, high enough to gravity feed the carburettor.<ref name= "Flight1"/> There was a direct reading fuel gauge above the tank, just in front of the forward cockpit, enclosed a in variety of fairings over the Mussel's lifetime.
It was a two-seat, single-engined low-winged monoplane, mounted originally on twin floats.<ref name="Barnes"/> Like the slightly earlier Short Cockle, [[Short Satellite|Satellite]] and [[Short Springbok|Springbok]], it had a duralumin monocoque fuselage of oval cross section.<ref name="Barnes"/><ref name="Flight1">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1926/1926%20-%200163.html ''Flight'' 11 March 1926 pp. 141-5]</ref> There were a pair of tandem open cockpits over the wing fitted with dual controls. Contemporary commentators<ref name= "Flight1"/> regarded the mounting of the upright four cylinder {{convert|60|hp|kW|abbr=on}} [[ADC Cirrus|ADC Cirrus I]] engine as particularly neatly done, in a U-shaped extension of the monocoque which initially left the top of the engine exposed. This engine was changed for an {{convert|85|hp|kW|abbr=on}} [[ADC Cirrus|Cirrus II]] in January 1928.<ref name="Barnes"/> The fuel tank was immediately behind the fire wall, high enough to gravity feed the carburettor.<ref name= "Flight1"/> There was a direct reading fuel gauge above the tank, just in front of the forward cockpit, enclosed a in variety of fairings over the Mussel's lifetime.


The constant chord wings were gimbal mounted to the lower fuselage,<ref name= "Flight1"/> with pairs of streamlined compression struts from about 30% span to the upper fuselage just ahead of each cockpit. The wing spars were duralumin structures, though the first of the two Mussels had spruce ribs. The wing section was the untried, thick RAF 33.<ref name="Barnes"/> The wings and empennage were fabric covered; the fin and unbalanced rudder had a shape not unlike the de Haviiland vertical tail and the horizontal tail was externally braced from below.
The constant chord wings were gimbal mounted to the lower fuselage,<ref name= "Flight1"/> with pairs of streamlined compression struts from about 30% span to the upper fuselage just ahead of each cockpit. The wing spars were duralumin structures, though the first of the two Mussels had spruce ribs. The wing section was the untried, thick RAF 33. The wings and empennage were fabric covered; the fin and unbalanced rudder had a shape not unlike the de Haviiland vertical tail and the horizontal tail was externally braced from below.<ref name="Barnes"/>


The all-important floats were similar to those Shorts had made for the Gloster III, single stepped, small heeled and long enough that the Mussel sat in flight position on the water, not on a tail float like their many earlier seaplanes.<ref name="Barnes"/> This first set of floats was mounted with two pairs of struts to the lower fuselage fore and aft, with a pair of cross bracing struts between the floats. The Mussel also had a built in tail skid in anticipation of a landplane configuration.<ref name= "Flight1"/>
The all-important floats were similar to those Shorts had made for the Gloster III, single stepped, small heeled and long enough that the Mussel sat in flight position on the water, not on a tail float like their many earlier seaplanes.<ref name="Barnes"/> This first set of floats was mounted with two pairs of struts to the lower fuselage fore and aft, with a pair of cross bracing struts between the floats. The Mussel also had a built in tail skid in anticipation of a landplane configuration.<ref name= "Flight1"/>


The performance of the Mussel on its first flight, piloted by [[John Lankester Parker]] on 6 April 1926 was disappointing, but the problem was traced to wing-root interference and solved with fabric root fillets.<ref name="Barnes"/><ref name="Flight2">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1926/1926%20-%200614.html ''Flight'' 26 August 1926 pp. 538-9, where the fillets can be clearly seen]</ref> Thereafter it seems to have been a pleasant machine to fly and one that met its original objectives. The first Mussel was lost when [[Eustace Short]] flew clipped a mast in August 1928; Short was unhurt but the Mussel was damaged beyond economic repair.<ref name="Barnes"/> Its replacement, the Mussel II<ref name="Barnes"/> first flew on 17 May 1929. It was similar to the first machine, but had metal ribbed wings of NACA M.12 section; a flat sided fuselage near the wing roots to avoid the need for filleting and water rudders on the floats. It was powered by a 90 hp (67&nbsp;kW) Cirrus III engine until August 1930, when it was replaced with a [[de Havilland Gipsy|de Havilland Gipsy II]].<ref name="Barnes"/>
The performance of the Mussel on its first flight, piloted by [[John Lankester Parker]] on 6 April 1926 was disappointing, but the problem was traced to wing-root interference and solved with fabric root fillets.<ref name="Barnes"/><ref name="Flight2">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1926/1926%20-%200614.html ''Flight'' 26 August 1926 pp. 538-9, where the fillets can be clearly seen]</ref> Thereafter it seems to have been a pleasant machine to fly and one that met its original objectives. The first Mussel was lost when [[Eustace Short]] flew clipped a mast in August 1928; Short was unhurt but the Mussel was damaged beyond economic repair.<ref name="Barnes"/> Its replacement, the Mussel II<ref name="Barnes"/> first flew on 17 May 1929. It was similar to the first machine, but had metal ribbed wings of NACA M.12 section; a flat sided fuselage near the wing roots to avoid the need for filleting and water rudders on the floats. It was powered by a {{convert|90|hp|kW|abbr=on}} Cirrus III engine until August 1930, when it was replaced with a [[de Havilland Gipsy|de Havilland Gipsy II]].<ref name="Barnes"/>


==Operational history==
==Operational history==
On its first flights<ref name="Barnes"/> the Mussel I was congfigured as a seaplane, then spent a fortnight at the end of September 1926 as a landplane, appearing unsuccessfully in the Grosvenor Challenge Cup. In October it was back on floats of a different design. This pattern repeated through to the final accident; during that time the Mussel flew with floats for the [[Short Crusader]] Schneider Trophy racer and for the de Havilland Moth. Shorts set up a production line for the successful Moth floats.
On its first flights<ref name="Barnes"/> the Mussel I was configured as a seaplane, then spent a fortnight at the end of September 1926 as a landplane, appearing unsuccessfully in the [[Grosvenor Challenge Cup]]. In October it was back on floats of a different design. This pattern repeated through to the final accident; during that time the Mussel flew with floats for the [[Short Crusader]] Schneider Trophy racer and for the de Havilland Moth. Shorts set up a production line for the successful Moth floats.<ref name="Barnes"/>


The Mussel II also spent time as both landplane and seaplane.<ref name="Barnes"/> Until March 1930 both Mussels had used what was in the UK at least the standard two float configuration. In that month a single long central float arrangement, similar to one built by Shorts for a [[de Havilland Gipsy Moth]] the previous summer. The single float required wing tip stabilising floats, and these were strutted to the outer wing and braced with a another pair of struts inboard, meeting the underside of the wing at the same point as the wing compression struts above, so running almost co-linearly with them and giving a shallow cross like look to the aircraft from the front.<ref name="Barnes"/><ref name="Flight3">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1930/untitled0%20-%200408.html ''Flight'' 4 April 1930 p. 384]</ref> In its original form this undercarriage was amphibious, with main wheels mounted on a streamlined cross piece on the float,as on the Moth.<ref name="Flight4">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1929/1929-1%20-%200203.html ''Flight'' 11 July 1929 pp. 628-30]</ref> The main axle could be rotated from the cockpit by turning a handwheel and hence raising or lowering the mainwheels.<ref name="Flight3"/> The water rudder on the float was reinforced to act as a small tailskid for use on land.<ref name="Flight4"/>
The Mussel II also spent time as both landplane and seaplane.<ref name="Barnes"/> Until March 1930 both Mussels had used what was in the UK at least the standard two float configuration. In that month a single long central float arrangement, similar to one built by Shorts for a [[de Havilland Gipsy Moth]] the previous summer. The single float required wing tip stabilising floats, and these were strutted to the outer wing and braced with another pair of struts inboard, meeting the underside of the wing at the same point as the wing compression struts above, so running almost co-linearly with them and giving a shallow cross like look to the aircraft from the front.<ref name="Barnes"/><ref name="Flight3">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1930/untitled0%20-%200408.html ''Flight'' 4 April 1930 p. 384]</ref> In its original form this undercarriage was amphibious, with main wheels mounted on a streamlined cross piece on the float, as on the Moth.<ref name="Flight4">[http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1929/1929-1%20-%200203.html ''Flight'' 11 July 1929 pp. 628-30]</ref> The main axle could be rotated from the cockpit by turning a handwheel and hence raising or lowering the mainwheels.<ref name="Flight3"/> The water rudder on the float was reinforced to act as a small tailskid for use on land.<ref name="Flight4"/>


In June 1932 the Mussel II began flying as a landplane again with a central single wheel undercarriage, with wing tip and tail skids. It flew, but was hard to handle on the ground and reappeared in October with the central float but no land wheels. During 1933 it gained attention in races against speed boats. Its last flight was in September 1933.
In June 1932 the Mussel II began flying as a landplane again with a central single wheel undercarriage, with wing tip and tail skids. It flew, but was hard to handle on the ground and reappeared in October with the central float but no land wheels. During 1933 it gained attention in races against speedboats. Its last flight was in September 1933.<ref name="Barnes"/>


One other significant event in Short Brothers' history involved the Mussel. Eustace Short had come to fixed wing flying had come quite late in life, and he learned on the Mussel I and continued on the Mussel II. One day he landed tidily on the [[Medway]], but failed to turn the engine off, crossed the river and slid gently into the mud. It seems he died of a heart attack moments after touching down.
One other significant event in Short Brothers' history involved the Mussel. Eustace Short had come to fixed wing flying quite late in life, and he learned on the Mussel I and continued on the Mussel II. One day he landed tidily on the [[Medway]], but failed to turn the engine off, crossed the river and slid gently into the mud. It seems he died of a heart attack moments after touching down.<ref name="Barnes"/>
<!-- ==Variants== -->
<!-- ==Units using this aircraft/Operators (choose)== -->


==Specifications (Mussel I, seaplane) ==
==Specifications (Mussel I, seaplane)==
[[File:Short S.7 Mussel 3 view NACA Aircraft Circular No.5.png|thumb|Short S.7 Mussel 3 view drawing from NACA Aircraft Circular No.5]]
{{Aircraft specs
|ref=<ref>{{Harvnb|Barnes|1989|page=195}}</ref><!-- the reference for the data given -->
|prime units?=imp
<!--
General characteristics
-->


{{aerospecs
|ref=Barnes 1989 p.195<!-- reference -->
|met or eng?=eng<!-- eng for US/UK aircraft, met for all others. You MUST include one or the other here, or no specifications will show -->
|crew=2
|crew=2
|capacity=
|capacity=
|length m=7.3
|length m=
|length ft=24
|length ft=24
|length in=0
|length in=0
|span m=10.97
|span m=
|span ft=36
|span ft=36
|span in=0
|span in=0
|swept m=<!-- swing-wings -->
|swept ft=<!-- swing-wings -->
|swept in=<!-- swing-wings -->
|rot number=<!-- helicopters -->
|rot dia m=<!-- helicopters -->
|rot dia ft=<!-- helicopters -->
|rot dia in=<!-- helicopters -->
|dia m=<!-- airships etc -->
|dia ft=<!-- airships etc -->
|dia in=<!-- airships etc -->
|width m=<!-- if applicable -->
|width ft=<!-- if applicable -->
|width in=<!-- if applicable -->
|height m=
|height m=
|height ft=
|height ft=
|height in=
|height in=
|wing area sqm=18.6
|wing area sqm=
|wing area sqft=200
|wing area sqft=200
|empty weight kg=
|swept area sqm=<!-- swing-wings -->
|empty weight lb=1030
|swept area sqft=<!-- swing-wings -->
|gross weight kg=
|rot area sqm=<!-- helicopters -->
|gross weight lb=1576
|rot area sqft=<!-- helicopters -->
|fuel capacity=
|volume m3=<!-- lighter-than-air -->
<!--
|volume ft3=<!-- lighter-than-air -->
Powerplant
|aspect ratio=<!-- sailplanes -->
-->
|wing profile=<!-- sailplanes -->
|empty weight kg=467
|empty weight lb=1,030
|gross weight kg=715
|gross weight lb=1,576
|lift kg=<!-- lighter-than-air -->
|lift lb=<!-- lighter-than-air -->
|eng1 number=1
|eng1 number=1
|eng1 type=ADC Cirrus I 4-cylinder water cooled upright inline
|eng1 name=[[ADC Cirrus]] I
|eng1 kw=48<!-- prop engines -->
|eng1 type=four-cylinder air-cooled inline engine
|eng1 kw=<!-- prop engines -->
|eng1 hp=65<!-- prop engines -->
|eng1 hp=65<!-- prop engines -->

|eng1 kn=<!-- jet/rocket engines -->
|eng1 lbf=<!-- jet/rocket engines -->
|prop blade number=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|prop name=
|eng1 kn-ab=<!-- afterburners -->
|eng1 lbf-ab=<!-- afterburners -->
|prop dia m=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|prop dia ft=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|eng2 number=
|prop dia in=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|eng2 type=

|eng2 kw=<!-- prop engines -->
<!--
|eng2 hp=<!-- prop engines -->
Performance
|eng2 kn=<!-- jet/rocket engines -->
-->
|eng2 lbf=<!-- jet/rocket engines -->
|perfhide=
|eng2 kn-ab=<!-- afterburners -->

|eng2 lbf-ab=<!-- afterburners -->
|max speed kmh=132
|max speed kmh=
|max speed mph=82
|max speed mph=82
|max speed kts=
|max speed mach=<!-- supersonic aircraft -->
|max speed mach=<!-- supersonic aircraft -->
|cruise speed kmh=<!-- if max speed unknown -->
|cruise speed kmh=<!-- if max speed unknown -->
|cruise speed mph=<!-- if max speed unknown -->
|cruise speed mph=<!-- if max speed unknown -->
|cruise speed kts=
|stall speed kmh=<!-- aerobatic and STOL aircraft -->
|stall speed mph=<!-- aerobatic and STOL aircraft -->
|range km=
|range km=
|range miles=
|range miles=260
|range nmi=
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|endurance min=<!-- if range unknown -->
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|ceiling m=
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|ceiling ft=
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|climb rate ftmin=
|climb rate ftmin=
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|avionics=
|armament1=
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|armament3=
|armament4=
|armament5=
|armament6=
}}
}}

==See also==
==See also==
{{aircontent
{{aircontent
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|similar aircraft=<!-- similar or comparable aircraft -->
|similar aircraft=<!-- similar or comparable aircraft -->
|lists=<!-- related lists -->
|lists=<!-- related lists -->
*[[List of seaplanes and amphibious aircraft]]
*[[List of flying boats and floatplanes]]
}}
}}

==References==
==References==

===Notes===
===Notes===
{{commons category|Short Mussel}}
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

===Bibliography===
===Bibliography===
*{{cite book |title= Shorts Aircraft since 1900|last= Barnes|first=C.H. |coauthors =James, D. N.|year=1989 |publisher=Putnam Publishing |location=London |isbn= 0 87021 662 7}}
*{{cite book |title= Shorts Aircraft since 1900|last= Barnes|first=C.H. |year=1989 |publisher=Putnam Publishing |location=London |isbn= 0-87021-662-7}}
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}
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<!-- ==External links== -->
<!-- ==External links== -->
{{Short Brothers aircraft}}
{{Short Brothers aircraft}}
{{Aviation lists}}


[[Category:British experimental aircraft 1920-1929]]
[[Category:1920s British experimental aircraft]]
[[Category:Short Brothers aircraft|Mussel]]
[[Category:Short Brothers aircraft|Mussel]]
[[Category:Single-engined tractor aircraft]]
[[Category:Low-wing aircraft]]
[[Category:Aircraft first flown in 1926]]
[[Category:Floatplanes]]

Latest revision as of 00:42, 4 December 2022

S.7 Mussel
Short Mussel II, Felixstowe, June 1929
Role Experimental and trainer
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Short Brothers
First flight 6 April 1926
Retired 15 September 1933
Number built 2

The Short S.7 Mussel was a single-engined two-seat monoplane built by Short Brothers to test the performance of their duralumin monocoque floats. Two were built.

Development[edit]

Having demonstrated the watertightness and corrosion resistance of duralumin monocoque flying boat hulls with the Short Cockle, Shorts became leaders in the design of metal floats for seaplanes. The floats for both the Supermarine S.4 and Gloster III Schneider Cup seaplanes were built by Shorts.[1] They had built their own hydrodynamic testing canal at their Rochester base to explore the performance of floats on the water and decided to build a small aircraft to test them in flight.[1] This was the Short S.7 Mussel; the name was a natural complement to the Cockle but also a nod to "Mussel Manor", the clubhouse on Shorts' first airfield at Sheppey.

It was a two-seat, single-engined low-winged monoplane, mounted originally on twin floats.[1] Like the slightly earlier Short Cockle, Satellite and Springbok, it had a duralumin monocoque fuselage of oval cross section.[1][2] There were a pair of tandem open cockpits over the wing fitted with dual controls. Contemporary commentators[2] regarded the mounting of the upright four cylinder 60 hp (45 kW) ADC Cirrus I engine as particularly neatly done, in a U-shaped extension of the monocoque which initially left the top of the engine exposed. This engine was changed for an 85 hp (63 kW) Cirrus II in January 1928.[1] The fuel tank was immediately behind the fire wall, high enough to gravity feed the carburettor.[2] There was a direct reading fuel gauge above the tank, just in front of the forward cockpit, enclosed a in variety of fairings over the Mussel's lifetime.

The constant chord wings were gimbal mounted to the lower fuselage,[2] with pairs of streamlined compression struts from about 30% span to the upper fuselage just ahead of each cockpit. The wing spars were duralumin structures, though the first of the two Mussels had spruce ribs. The wing section was the untried, thick RAF 33. The wings and empennage were fabric covered; the fin and unbalanced rudder had a shape not unlike the de Haviiland vertical tail and the horizontal tail was externally braced from below.[1]

The all-important floats were similar to those Shorts had made for the Gloster III, single stepped, small heeled and long enough that the Mussel sat in flight position on the water, not on a tail float like their many earlier seaplanes.[1] This first set of floats was mounted with two pairs of struts to the lower fuselage fore and aft, with a pair of cross bracing struts between the floats. The Mussel also had a built in tail skid in anticipation of a landplane configuration.[2]

The performance of the Mussel on its first flight, piloted by John Lankester Parker on 6 April 1926 was disappointing, but the problem was traced to wing-root interference and solved with fabric root fillets.[1][3] Thereafter it seems to have been a pleasant machine to fly and one that met its original objectives. The first Mussel was lost when Eustace Short flew clipped a mast in August 1928; Short was unhurt but the Mussel was damaged beyond economic repair.[1] Its replacement, the Mussel II[1] first flew on 17 May 1929. It was similar to the first machine, but had metal ribbed wings of NACA M.12 section; a flat sided fuselage near the wing roots to avoid the need for filleting and water rudders on the floats. It was powered by a 90 hp (67 kW) Cirrus III engine until August 1930, when it was replaced with a de Havilland Gipsy II.[1]

Operational history[edit]

On its first flights[1] the Mussel I was configured as a seaplane, then spent a fortnight at the end of September 1926 as a landplane, appearing unsuccessfully in the Grosvenor Challenge Cup. In October it was back on floats of a different design. This pattern repeated through to the final accident; during that time the Mussel flew with floats for the Short Crusader Schneider Trophy racer and for the de Havilland Moth. Shorts set up a production line for the successful Moth floats.[1]

The Mussel II also spent time as both landplane and seaplane.[1] Until March 1930 both Mussels had used what was in the UK at least the standard two float configuration. In that month a single long central float arrangement, similar to one built by Shorts for a de Havilland Gipsy Moth the previous summer. The single float required wing tip stabilising floats, and these were strutted to the outer wing and braced with another pair of struts inboard, meeting the underside of the wing at the same point as the wing compression struts above, so running almost co-linearly with them and giving a shallow cross like look to the aircraft from the front.[1][4] In its original form this undercarriage was amphibious, with main wheels mounted on a streamlined cross piece on the float, as on the Moth.[5] The main axle could be rotated from the cockpit by turning a handwheel and hence raising or lowering the mainwheels.[4] The water rudder on the float was reinforced to act as a small tailskid for use on land.[5]

In June 1932 the Mussel II began flying as a landplane again with a central single wheel undercarriage, with wing tip and tail skids. It flew, but was hard to handle on the ground and reappeared in October with the central float but no land wheels. During 1933 it gained attention in races against speedboats. Its last flight was in September 1933.[1]

One other significant event in Short Brothers' history involved the Mussel. Eustace Short had come to fixed wing flying quite late in life, and he learned on the Mussel I and continued on the Mussel II. One day he landed tidily on the Medway, but failed to turn the engine off, crossed the river and slid gently into the mud. It seems he died of a heart attack moments after touching down.[1]

Specifications (Mussel I, seaplane)[edit]

Short S.7 Mussel 3 view drawing from NACA Aircraft Circular No.5

Data from [6]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Length: 24 ft 0 in (7.32 m)
  • Wingspan: 36 ft 0 in (10.97 m)
  • Wing area: 200 sq ft (19 m2)
  • Empty weight: 1,030 lb (467 kg)
  • Gross weight: 1,576 lb (715 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × ADC Cirrus I four-cylinder air-cooled inline engine, 65 hp (48 kW)

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 82 mph (132 km/h, 71 kn)
  • Range: 260 mi (420 km, 230 nmi)

See also[edit]

Related lists

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Barnes, C.H. (1989). Shorts Aircraft since 1900. London: Putnam Publishing. ISBN 0-87021-662-7.