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	Roger T
	 Torksey  | 
	 
	1 of 15 
	Mon 8th Sep 2014  11:53pm  
	 
	As the name suggests an aeroplane developed after the end of WW2, in the shape of a wing.
Can anybody remember them flying over Coventry approx 1947-51
I think there were three, then there were two,then there was one, then they were gone.
I have seen a drawing of one in one of the members gallery photos, included in a book of about twenty adverts I think.
Does anybody know a history? manufacturer?purpose? 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	2 of 15 
	Tue 9th Sep 2014  2:22am  
	 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Greg
	 Coventry  | 
	 
	3 of 15 
	Tue 9th Sep 2014  4:36pm  
	 
	I remember seeing a flying wing come over our house in Wycliffe Grove. It would have been 1947/48 time. 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	DBC
	 Nottinghamshire  | 
	 
	4 of 15 
	Tue 9th Sep 2014  4:39pm  
	 
	Same here, flying over my grandmother's house in Stoke Aldermoor. It must have been the early late 40's or early 50's . 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Midland Red
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	5 of 15 
	Tue 9th Sep 2014  5:10pm  
	 
	Just as an aside, here is a memorial stone to William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong - the Armstrong in "Armstrong Whitworth" - photo taken at Bamburgh Castle recently
Wiki entry   
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Kerbstone
	 Auckland NZ  | 
	 
	6 of 15 
	Fri 31st Oct 2014  2:55am  
	 
	I don't remember any flying wing but I do remember a mass of aircraft flying over Coventry, in the 50's I think.  I was only a kid but I remember that they looked like WW2 bombers, each had a projection jutting out from under the fuselage, they were flying fairly low and filled the sky, seemed like hundreds of them and they were flying north.  Anyone with any ideas of what it was all about?   
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Dreamtime
	 Perth Western Australia  | 
	 
	7 of 15 
	Fri 31st Oct 2014  2:40pm  
	 
	Kerbstone, do you think it could have been anything to do with The Festival of Britain ?  Just a wild guess.  
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Roger T
	 Torksey Thread starter 
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	8 of 15 
	Fri 31st Oct 2014  8:41pm  
	 
	Could they have been flying to an assembly point for scrap?
or were any used in the Berlin Air Lift? 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	bohica
	 coventry  | 
	 
	9 of 15 
	Sat 1st Nov 2014  9:19am  
	 
	Could they have been Coastal Command Shackletons? (Lancasters with a large bird strike prone radome at the front) 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Kerbstone
	 Auckland NZ  | 
	 
	10 of 15 
	Mon 3rd Nov 2014  1:46am  
	 
	Hi everyone, I feel that if they had been part of some air show there wouldn't have been so many, I mean they filled the sky and were low enough to pick out details of them quite clearly.  It was a long time ago and the memory gets a bit hazy but I'm pretty sure that they had camouflage colours but the thing that stuck in my mind was this thing jutting down from under the fuselage, my small mind thought that the bombs came out of it but may have been a gun turret without the glass dome.  The idea that they were being flown somewhere for scrap sounds the most logical, I'd like to know where so many planes would put down though, I bet that was a sight.  Cheers  
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	argon
	 New Milton  | 
	 
	11 of 15 
	Mon 5th Jun 2017  10:10pm  
	 
	I have a memory of seeing the AW52 flying wing flying just after the war. I know that it crashed in Leamington but cannot be sure that I actually saw it. Can anyone remember seeing it flying over Coventry or read of it having done so?  
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Roger T
	 Torksey Thread starter 
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	12 of 15 
	Mon 5th Jun 2017  11:58pm  
	 
	Hi Argon,
Actually, I did see some flying wings, but whether it was that particular one I don`t know.
I remember where I was also - King Henry VIII school playing field / edge of playground, behind the classroom huts. 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Annewiggy
	 Tamworth  | 
	 
	13 of 15 
	Tue 6th Jun 2017  8:38am  
	 
	The Western Morning News of 31st May 1949 reported that an AW52 Flying Wing worth £200,000 crashed at Leamington Hastings near Rugby the day before. The pilot ejected and landed safely. It was one of two flying wings built for the Directorate of Science Research of the Ministry of Supply.
 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	argon
	 New Milton  | 
	 
	14 of 15 
	Tue 6th Jun 2017  1:34pm  
	 
	Thank you Roger and Annewiggy for your replies. I looked for any previous items on the forum about the flying wing but obviously missed them, old age you know. Its nice to know that my memory of the viewing isn't a false one.
As I get older I become more unsure of the accuracy of my memory and and hesitate to assert  anything  as a true memory. Nice to have it confirmed. 
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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	Roger T
	 Torksey Thread starter 
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	15 of 15 
	Tue 6th Jun 2017  2:43pm  
	 
	On 9th Sep 2014  2:22am, dutchman said: 
Armstrong Whitworth flying wing
 
I think it is worth reviving this posting, purely for the explanation given by "rojwhittle"
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| Industry, Business and Work - Armstrong Whitworth Flying Wing | |
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