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By: J Boyle - 23rd October 2013 at 20:54

But if you want 100 per cent British oddities, just go for a stroll round Cosford.

Stroll around any high street. 🙂

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By: Rat Acc - 23rd October 2013 at 20:05

I wasnt refering to Cosford’s “exhibits”…

🙂

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By: nibb100 - 23rd October 2013 at 19:39

neither is the Smithsonian’s collection all oddities, to say we didn’t experiment with strange Aircraft in the 50s is totally wrong

I just don’t understand why it was so American, perhaps the Telegraph picked it up from the US and ran with it,

one thing, the flying saucer was made in Canada by Avro Canada,

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By: Rat Acc - 23rd October 2013 at 19:28

But if you want 100 per cent British oddities, just go for a stroll round Cosford.

I appreciate that most of the visitors to Cosford come from the West Midlands…

but they’re not ALL oddities….:dev2:

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By: Jon H - 23rd October 2013 at 00:52

The Telegraph headline is a tad misleading as the article is actually “a selection of the experimental flying oddities dreamed up by aeronautical engineers SINCE the 1950s” rather than solely from that period.

Jon

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By: Scouse - 23rd October 2013 at 00:38

The Boeing X-48 was sort of British, built in the UK by Cranfield Aerospace. But if you want 100 per cent British oddities, just go for a stroll round Cosford.

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By: Malcolm McKay - 22nd October 2013 at 10:13

The X3 – the sleekest slowest aircraft that ever was.

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By: nostalgair2 - 22nd October 2013 at 10:03

The Shorts SC1 always looked like it should be on the Inventory of Thunderbirds!

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By: nibb100 - 21st October 2013 at 13:38

what about the flying bedstead and other VTOL projects

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By: plough - 21st October 2013 at 13:14

The caption of the first picture refers to “experimental flying oddities” – do any of the British experimental aircraft you have in mind class as ‘oddities’?

Some of thos pictured are certainly very odd; most of them I was not previously aware of.

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By: nibb100 - 21st October 2013 at 12:40

sadly no British Aircraft, what about Fairey, Saunders Roe, Avro and all the others that built experimental Aircraft

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