Woe Canada
The only thing that kept Canada from beating the U.S. to a jet airliner was Canada.
- By Graham Chandler
- Air & Space magazine, March 2009
Even though the rugged airplane had survived an emergency nosewheel landing on its second test fight, the Jetliner’s days were numbered. Not even interest from Howard Hughes (opposite, top) was enough to save it. Instead, Avro ramped up production of its CF-100 fighters (left).
Collage: Ted lopez; photographs and newspapers courtesy Mabel Baker family, George Evans, Avro of Canada
(Page 5 of 5)
The airplane spent six months at Culver City, most of the time parked.
Hughes rented for Rogers and his family a former ambassador’s house in Coldwater Canyon with a swimming pool and fruit trees. While Rogers and the crew occasionally enjoyed a little of Hughes’ renowned Hollywood party life with the ever-present starlets, Hughes made a proposal for Convair to manufacture 20 or 50 Jetliners under license for TWA’s more prestigious routes. Convair completed detailed plans that summer to deliver the first airplane by May 1954. Some say Howe intervened to quash the deal, but historian Jonathan Vance isn’t so sure. “I suspect it was equal parts economic nationalism and a kind of tit-for-tat because the U.S. had put restrictions on out-of-country, defense-related manufacturing,” he says. The Convair license from Avro would certainly have qualified as “out-of-country” manufacturing. Floyd said the plan was killed when the U.S. government decided that its own military commitments must take priority in Convair’s plants.
Hughes’ final attempt was offering to finance Avro to build him 30 Jetliners. Howe would have no part of that. According to Floyd’s book, Howe wrote to Avro, “…any such use of your floor space cannot be tolerated.” The Hughes MG2 fire control system never did get installed, and Rogers was told to bring the airplane back to Toronto.
For the next few years the Jetliner became Avro’s house airplane, photographing CF-100 weapons tests or pilot ejection tests. But before long, the lack of spares and the long-term maintenance issues made the Jetliner increasingly useless.
On November 23, 1956, Rogers signed out the Jetliner and took off with three passengers for a 35-minute hop out of Malton. It was his only trip that day, and before he left the office, he sat at his desk and made his logbook entry. Seventeen days later Floyd received an interoffice memo from Avro’s president, ordering with great regret that “the Jetliner is to be dismantled, in an appropriate fashion, as quickly and as quietly as can be done, every precaution being taken to attract as little attention as possible, and with the avoidance of any fanfare.” That day, Rogers updated his recent logbook entry, adding in the Remarks column “Last Flight.”
A graduate of the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School, Calgary-based writer Graham Chandler can be reached through his Web site, www.grahamchandler.ca.
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Comments (8)
Thank you for this well written article.
Posted by Lorenzo on January 22,2009 | 06:29 PM
Interesting to read about Avro's early leadership in jets both in airliners and military aircraft. I was calling on them in 1957 to meet their flight testing requirements in instrumentation(multichannel tape recorders). Deifenbaker was prime minister at the time and had promised the farmers of Canada a subsidy for certain crops so he became an "Instant Ace" by shooting down the CF-105 program and destroying all five planes! This despite the outstanding performance of their new aircraft. He settled for the Lockheed F-104 more commonly known as "The Widow Maker", an interceptor that demanded skillful pilots for landings.
Posted by Cliff Barber on January 24,2009 | 10:10 AM
An article on just how many great and potentially great aircraft never made it past government ineptitude would probably be a fascinating read.
Include aircraft that were built, but never progressed,(TSR2, etc) as well as aircraft that were forced to be redesigned for roles they were never intended for (ME262, etc)and, I suppose the list would be huge. Of course, you could then go on to the repercussions of those decisions, which in some cases were huge.
It would probably take up a full edition.
Posted by Jim Trewin on January 24,2009 | 07:40 PM
Excelletnt article on a truly great Candian Aircraft that had so much potential. It is really to bad that politicians end up destroying the future because it does not fit with their agenda. The Avro Arrow was a follow up to the Jetliner that had it's potential cut short bu short-sighted politicians. It makes one wonder where aviation in Canada and the world would really be if these two aircraft had been allowed to grow to maturity.
Posted by Bob Geoghegan on February 2,2009 | 07:35 PM
This brings back old memories. I was an observer on one of the first Jetliner demonstration flights for U.S. airlines. Dixon Speas, an old friends from my MIT days, invited my boss, Andre Priester, VP&Chief Engineer of Pan Am to participate on an early flight. Priester sent me.
This was in November 1950. We were then talking with Lockheed, Douglas, and Boeing about a jet transport capable of flying our tranoceanic routes across the Atlantic and the Pacific. The Jetliner did not have this capability, but we wanted to be educated. I flew up to Toronto on a Trans Canada DC-4M (equipped with Rolls-Royce Merlin engines -- very noisy) one Saturday, met Dixon and visited the AVRO plant. Next morning we flew to Chicago. It was a very smooth quiet flight of about an hour. When the airplane returned to Toronto I flew back to New York on a UAL DC-6,
slower and lower. Unfortunately my notes on that flight are long gone.
We continued our search for a transoceanic jet. In 1952, when no U.S. (or Canadian) manufacturer was ready to commit for one, Juan Trippe sent Frank Gledhill to England to sign a letter of intent for an advanced version of the Comet, the Comet III. In December 1952 I was on a Pan Am team sent to de Havilland to work on the specification. That airplane was cancelled by de Havilland after a series of Comet I and II crashes.
By then the Boeing prototype Dash 80 was flying and in October 1955 we reached agreement with Boeing to become launch customer for the Boeing 707. Then just over fifty years ago on October 26, 1958 Pan Am Flight 114 from New York to Paris inaugurated U.S. jet service to Europe.
That was long ago, but I still remember that 1950 flight in the AVRO Jetliner.
Robert Wallace Blake, Pan Am retired
Posted by Robert Wallace Blake on February 16,2009 | 04:47 PM
The genius of Canadian Design has always been subject to the Uk or the USA. Avro and its designers and pilots have always suffered at the hands of the industrial magnets of there friends. Let us hope Nafta, will allow Canadian ingenuity,to triumph.
Posted by Richard Shenton on February 19,2009 | 06:59 PM
I had never heard of the C-102 jetliner , until I saw the
article in Airpower Magazine , and then I read Jim Floyds
book on the subject , I was appalled by the Canadian governments incompetence in the whole affair -- they had a world beater (as the old saying goes -- " Build a better mouse trap & the world will beat a path to your door " ) and yet they showed stupidity.
Posted by Raymond G. Wiles on October 12,2010 | 09:05 PM