To read this content please select one of the options below:

The 24 th S‐B‐A‐C SHOW: A Report on a Selection of the Exhibits Displayed at this year's Society of British Aerospace Companies‘ Flying Display and Exhibition at Farnborough

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology

ISSN: 0002-2667

Article publication date: 1 October 1964

165

Abstract

TO say that the Twenty‐fourth S.B.A.C. Show was an unqualified success is perhaps to gild the lily. True there were disappointments— the delay which kept the TSR‐2 on the ground until well after the Show being one—but on the whole the British industry was well pleased with Farnborough week and if future sales could be related to the number of visitors then the order books would be full for many years to come. The total attendance at the Show was well over 400,000—this figure including just under 300,000 members of the public who paid to enter on the last three days of the Show. Those who argued in favour of allowing a two‐year interval between the 1962 Show and this one seem to be fully vindicated, for these attendance figures are an all‐time record. This augurs well for the future for it would appear that potential customers from overseas are still anxious to attend the Farnborough Show, while the public attendance figures indicate that Britain is still air‐minded to a very healthy degree. It is difficult to pick out any one feature or even one aircraft as being really outstanding at Farnborough, but certainly the range of rear‐engined civil jets (HS. 125, BAC One‐Eleven, Trident and VCIQ) served as a re‐minder that British aeronautical engineering prowess is without parallel, while the number of rotorcraft to be seen in the flying display empha‐sized the growing importance of the helicopter in both civil and military operations. As far as the value of Farnborough is concerned, it is certainly a most useful shop window for British aerospace products, and if few new orders are actually received at Farnborough, a very large number are announced— as our ’Orders and Contracts' column on page 332 bears witness. It is not possible to cover every exhibit displayed at the Farnborough Show but the following report describes a wide cross‐section beginning with the exhibits of the major airframe and engine companies.

Citation

(1964), "The 24 th S‐B‐A‐C SHOW: A Report on a Selection of the Exhibits Displayed at this year's Society of British Aerospace Companies‘ Flying Display and Exhibition at Farnborough", Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, Vol. 36 No. 10, pp. 310-329. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb033938

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1964, MCB UP Limited

Related articles