G-AGRE Avro 688 Tudor 1
(c/n 1253)
The following is a brief dissertation
on the Avro Tudor saga......................:
The Brabazon Committee, set up during WW II to
decide what types of transport aircraft would be
be
needed in the late 1940s, had issued, as one of its requirements, a
blueprint for a long distance air-
liner capable of serving the North Atlantic routes. A.V. Roe
& Company came up with the type 688
which was
based on the wings and engines of the Lancaster bomber/York transport
designs. The new
aircraft had a circular fuselage cross section and was
pressurized. While the program was in progress
a
series of events occurred which basically ended the life of the Tudors
as regards employment with
the state
controlled airlines (BOAC, BSAA) was concerned. (Several of the
later marques were to go
on
and lead useful lives with private carriers, whilst four of them
performed admirably during the Berlin
Air
Lift).
Anyway, the events
were: (i) The original design was deemed not to have the
capacity BOAC
required
for its trans-Atlantic routes. (ii) The prototype of the
stretched version, G-AGSU, was
lost in a tragic crash at the company's airfield. (iii) On 30
January 1948 a Tudor Mk 1, G-AHNP
"Star Tiger" of British South
American Airways mysteriously disappeared in the infamous "Bermuda
Triangle"
while on a flight from the Azores to Bermuda. No trace was ever
found. (iv) One year later,
on 17
January 1949 the aircraft depicted above in BOAC Speedbird livery
before being seconded to
BSAA, (who
named it "Star Ariel") also
disappeared in the same general area whilst flying between
Bermuda
and Kingston, Jamaica. Again, no trace was ever found.
These disasters, along with a less
than
sparkling economic performance, led to the Tudors not being pursued by
BOAC. BSAA did
operate
the Mark IV model, but that airline was dissolved in 1949 and merged
into BOAC who, by
that time, had
committed to American and Canadian aircraft.