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The Wren, designed by W. O. Manning, was a lightweight motor-glider. Manning was a designer of flying boats and decided to try a simpler project.
The Wren was a single-engined high-wing monoplane with an empty weight of only 232 lb (105 kg). The first aircraft (Serial Number J6973) was built in 1921 for the Air Ministry. Interest in building very light aircraft was encouraged at the time by a £500 prize offered by the Duke of Sutherland (who was the Under-Secretary of State for Air).
The entrants had to build the most economical light single-seat aircraft. Another incentive was a £1,000 prize offered by the Daily Mail for the longest flight by a motor-glider with an engine of not more than 750 cc. Two aircraft were built for the 1923 Lympne light aircraft trials in October 1923.
The Wren shared the first prize with the ANEC I when it covered 87.5 miles (140.8 km) on one Imperial gallon (4.5 litres) of fuel.
In 1957 the third aircraft was rebuilt using parts of the second aircraft. It is still airworthy and is on public display at the Shuttleworth Collection at Old Warden Aerodrome in Bedfordshire.
The Wren was a single-engined high-wing monoplane with an empty weight of only 232 lb (105 kg). The first aircraft (Serial Number J6973) was built in 1921 for the Air Ministry. Interest in building very light aircraft was encouraged at the time by a £500 prize offered by the Duke of Sutherland (who was the Under-Secretary of State for Air).
The entrants had to build the most economical light single-seat aircraft. Another incentive was a £1,000 prize offered by the Daily Mail for the longest flight by a motor-glider with an engine of not more than 750 cc. Two aircraft were built for the 1923 Lympne light aircraft trials in October 1923.
The Wren shared the first prize with the ANEC I when it covered 87.5 miles (140.8 km) on one Imperial gallon (4.5 litres) of fuel.
In 1957 the third aircraft was rebuilt using parts of the second aircraft. It is still airworthy and is on public display at the Shuttleworth Collection at Old Warden Aerodrome in Bedfordshire.
KEY FEATURES
- 3D model built from scratch
- 3D propeller blur
- Custom engine sounds from the real aircraft
- Custom dirt & grime decals
- Eleven paints (Eight fictional, but in keeping with the era)
- Three different rudder configurations
PRODUCT GALLERY
FULL FEATURES LIST
- 3D model built from scratch
- 3D propeller blur
- Custom engine sounds from the real aircraft
- Custom dirt & grime decals
- Eleven paints (Eight fictional, but in keeping with the era)
- Three different rudder configurations
- Hidden GPS and Radio stack
- Two launch methods (Winch, and standard take-off) winch were never an option, but it has been bungeed
- Fully VR compatible
- Animated clipboard with "pilots notes"
- Animated control cables (internal & external)
- Propeller click starter
- Full PBR textures
- Engine vibration animations
- Engine pushrod animations
- Landing gear bungee animations
- Tail skid animations
- Custom bump mapping of wing ribs and internal structure
- Pocket compass with pitch and roll animations
- Oil pulsator (visual only)
- Custom cockpit gauges
- ABC engine made from scratch
- Accurate interior modelling (Access to the real plane, Shuttleworth Collection)
- 100 Years old (October 1923)