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Cierva Autogyros
by Tom Hiett
All photographs © Tom
Hiett
Juan de la Cierva
was born in 1895, he became fascinated with aviation as a schoolboy. In
1918 he built a Bomber which crashed and so Cierva became interested in
designing a craft which would fly at very low speeds and would not
stall and kill the pilot.

Juan
Cierva with
C19 at Hamble in 1929
Autorotation
is
best
described as four wings flying into wind at the same time. The
principle can be seen in a Sycamore seed which rotates whilst
descending. Cierva applied the name Autogyro and registered the name.
Only his Autogyros should carry the name.
The first
successful machine was the C4 first flown in Spain on January
22nd 1923. The rotor was started by rope which was wound round cleats
fitted to each rotor blade and run out by a gang of strong young men.
When the end of the rope came off opening the throttle bought a nice
short run, or it didnt, anyway it usually worked. The C6 was
demonstrated successfully in 1925 in Spain. Cierva was invited to
demonstrate the machine at Farnborough in October 1925, the pilot was
Frank T Courtney. Tests were carried out successfully and a top speed
of 67 mph were found. Control could be carried out as low as 20 mph.
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Cierva C6 testing at
Farnborough in 1925 with
F. Courtney at the
controls.
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The Company
Cierva Autogyro Ltd was set up on
March 24th 1926. The
works was at A V Roe Hamble and the man with the money was James G Wier
of Glasgow. The rotor was built up on an S3 steel tube with ply ribs,
the whole blade assembled in a concrete jig. The fuselages were built
up on an Avro 504 base.
The C6D
was
demonstrated at Tempelhof, Berlin in September 1926 in
front of Crown Prince Kaiser Wilhelm. Following success with the C6D
orders came in for the C8 which was to fly in 1927. In 1927 there was a
spectacular crash at Hamble and as a result Courtney left for the USA,
test flying subsquently being carried out by Bert Hinkler and later
Sqdn Ldr A H Rawson. C8L J 8930 was flown by Bert Hinkler, it made the
first rotating wing cross country flight to Farnborough September
1927.
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Cierva C6D
demonstration
before Kaiser Wilhelm at Tempelhof, Berlin in 1926.
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Success with
C8L was
followed by the C9, C10 and C11 and a new design the C17. Next was a
useless machine the C12, an Avian fuselage on floats. It was tried at
Hamble beach in April 1930, apart from giving the chaps a paddle it did
nothing.
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First ever Hydrogyro
Cierva
C12 unsuccessful test. Hamble April
25th 1930.
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The C19 was
next built, it had a deflecting
tailpane tilted up to
deflect the slipstream up into the rotor disc to give it a start. The
C19 was built with a host of sub-types, Mk II, Mk III and IV were built
and the Prince of Wales came down to inspect the machine, 28 were
built. C19 was a much different machine, it had a short stubby
fuselage, the Mk IVP had a handle in the cockpit for direct control of
the rotor.
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Cierva C19 at Hamble
with
Prince of Wales alongside cockpit, 1929.
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Cierva C19 MkIII K1696 at Hamble,
1926.
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Cierva
C19 MkIII G-ABFZ during
demonstration at Hamble, 1930.
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In 1932 Cierva
moved
to Hanworth and the ultimate design the C30 was built. It had a direct
control rotor and a clutch start to the rotor. It had a short turned up
tailplane and a long fixed fin/rudder. Power came from a 140hp Genet.
The C30 had orders for 100 machines with some delivered to the British
Army. It was a highly successful machine with lots being in use
for traffic control, and lots of use in films etc. There was one in the
RAF museum and several are flying in the USA.
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Cierva Autogyro CBL
Mk1 Hamble 1928.
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Cierva
Autogyros set up for
filming a newsreel. Hamble 1930 . |
In December
1936
Cierva was killed returning to Spain on a KLM DC2
which crashed on take off at Croydon, a great designer was gone. Cierva
license was taken up by Wier (Glasgow), Avro (Manchester), Parnell,
Westland, De Havilland and in the USA Pitcairn and Kellet, Focke Wulf
in Germany & Kayaba company in Japan. In 1940, all available Cierva
Autogyros and pilots went to Duxford where they later went to the RAF
to form 529 Squadron based at aptly named Crazies Farm. They were used
throughout the war for radar calibration. Whilst so engaged one was
intercepted by two FW 190s, the pilot cleverly managed to avoid both
and landed safely at Hawkings.
All autogyros were stood down in the UK in October 1945. The biggest
user was Japan who used some of their 24 autogyros on submarine
spotting during WWII. Cierva Autogryos began building helicopters at
Cunliffe Owens factory at Eastleigh in 1943 only seven miles from
Hamble
where the first Autogyros were built.
Lots of autogyro ideas were used in helicopter design which is still
ongoing today,eighty years on.
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