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Skyhook Sailwings
By Everard Cunion, 2001, 2014, and 2020
The modern sport of hang gliding is normally associated with sunny California and equally sunny Australia. However, individuals with the right stuff in Britain and other countries were quick to copy the pioneers in the USA and Australia. One early British hang glider manufacturer was Skyhook Sailwings, based in what had been a cotton mill in industrial Lancashire in the north of England.
The photo in Motorcycle News of bike racer Stewart Hodgson flying an early Skyhook caught my and others’ attentions. My own Skyhook IIIA arrived as a kit, created by the hyper-intelligent northerner with a curious accent, Len Gabriels, in September 1974.
Len provided most of the following photos and information on this page in 2001.
Len Gabriels 1926 — 2020
Skyhook chief engineer Len Gabriels started his aviation career in his teens during World War 2. He flew free flight model aircraft in his time off from working in an aircraft factory. “First they were powered by rubber band motors” he says, “but rubber was scarce during wartime so we used to strip old inner tubes in desperation.”
Changing to tow-launched free-flight gliders, he found that thermals – pockets of rising air – sometimes carried them upwards…
If you were very lucky it would come out of the thermal without having drifted very far from the launch point. Usually however there was a breeze and the model would drift down wind which resulted in a cross country chase after it, sometimes for two or three miles.
Like a number of individuals who contributed to the technology of hang gliding, Len had little formal engineering education…
World War Two arrived just before I left school at fourteen. I had to go straight into work in an aircraft factory, therefore I didn’t have any academic qualifications. However, I don’t regret this at all. An engineering apprenticeship and four years night school three times each week helped of course.
Before hang gliders and powered ultralights, Len built his own miniature tape recorders, black-and-white televisions, aero diesel engines, and radio control units. By 1971, he was engineering manager of a firm based in the Hollinwood district of Oldham, a suburb of the industrial city of Manchester in the north of England. For an example of his work, see U.S. patent 3,750,510 under External links.
Hang gliding
In 1972 I heard about hang gliding which originated in California. I had to have a go. As I couldn’t find anyone who was doing it in the UK I had to design and make my own — based on the meagre information which trickled across from the USA and my own knowledge of aerodynamics. After a few false starts a successful design was produced. Others became interested and as a result I sold hundreds of sets of plans. I supplied materials and eventually got into full manufacture along with a couple of partners.
— Len Gabriels
Len named his wing and his hang glider manufacturing business Skyhook, after the large metal hooks suspended from overhead beams in the heavy engineering workshops for which Manchester was known at the time.
He is included in the list of Hanglider Manufacturers Association associate members in the Jan-March 1974 edition of Ground Skimmer. That was the magazine of the USHGA, which — to indicate how early this was in our history — only a few months before was the Southern California Hang Glider Association. Len was the only British manufacturer in that list of 23 full members (manufacturers in north America) and 20 associate members. (Pete Brock of Ultralight Products was president of that association.)
Among a variety of experimental hang gliders flown at the British Championships held at Mere, Wiltshire, in August 1975, was the Skyhook monoplane.
While experimental hang gliders with rigid sails looked promising, the simpler Rogallo flexwing was what most pilots flew and it continued to be improved. The Wills Wing Swallowtail, made by Sport Kites of California (nowadays known simply as Wills Wing) was the first major improvement over the standard Rogallo and it was widely copied. The Skyhook Cloud 9 was one of the earliest British swallowtail types. It had a 100 degree nose angle when 90 degrees was normal for swallowtails. Like the Skyhook standard Rogallo, it had sail clearance towers — small upright struts on the ends of the crosstubes – to which the upper side flying wires were attached, preventing them from digging into the sail. As well as giving a ‘cleaner’ sail, it allowed a shorter king post. (My research indicates that manufacturers Pacific Gull and Chandelle were the first to use sail clearance towers.)
The V-shaped hang strap on the Cloud 9 was attached to the keel tube fore and aft of the (virtual) hang point. At the time it was felt by some that, in swallowtail type Rogallos, the ‘feel’ of pitch control was too light. A lower hang point, as used on many standard Rogallos, provided a sort of artificial pitch stability but at the same time made roll control heavier. The Cloud 9 hang strap side-stepped the latter problem. It also provided an easy adjustment of ‘hands off’ airspeed (pitch trim).
The Cloud 9 also featured an innovative control frame that folded without the need to detach any cables. Extraordinarily, the base tube folded in half. Yet in the air, it was safe and solid. Their next wing, the Sunspot of 1977, retained that clever feature.
For a color photo of a Sunspot in flight and a painting based on this photo, see under External links later on this page.
Canards
In 1977, Skyhook built a wing with a bowsprit and front rigging instead of crosstubes. A bowsprit-rigged wing lends itself to a tail-first configuration, which is how the Skyhook differed from its contemporary in Britain, the Gryphon (designed by Miles Handley).
Why put the tailplane in front of the wing? Firstly, to confer vital pitch stability, the foreplane must be set at a slightly more nose-up angle than the main wing. One result is that the foreplane stalls before the main wing. The foreplane having stalled, losing lift, the glider pitches nose-down (a characteristic of any stable aircraft) thereby preventing the main wing ever from stalling.
Therefore a canard hang glider is, in principle, virtually stall proof. In practice, there are several drawbacks to the canard configuration, not least of which is complexity.
For a color photo of the Skyhook canard flex-wing in flight, see under External links later on this page.
See also the Flex-wings with tails related topics menu.
Len’s enclosed cockpit lightweight glider of 1983 was also of canard configuration. It might have been inspired by the UP Arrow. See Arrow in Hang gliding early 1980s part 1. Testing of the Orion showed disappointing performance and, like its weight-shift controlled predecessor, the project was abandoned.
Power
Len Gabriels flew an early powered Skyhook Safari hang glider from London to a field sixty miles short of Paris in 1979. In the photo taken over London, Tower Bridge is visible. (Hmmm…) The authorities in France refused Len permission to continue to Paris.
The propeller shaft lay alongside the back of the keel tube at an angle. The vertical strut in front of the propeller braced the propeller shaft to the keel tube. It also served as a landing skid and propeller guard.
Unfortunately, if you stalled the wing on that configuration of powered hang glider (it was not unique to Skyhook) the high thrust line caused the whole thing to pitch nose-down strongly. It happened to newsman and hang glider pilot Brian Milton (in life-jacket in the photo) – and film of the resulting crash appeared on British television news. Luckily, he landed on top of the inverted wing in a recently ploughed field and he survived. (He was still not fully recovered by the time of the cross-channel flight: He was originally scheduled as the pilot.) For more detail about the problem of this high thrust line configuration, see the Soarmaster powered Seahawk 2 and Moonraker 78 in Early powered ultralights part 1.
Partly because of that shortcoming, fixing the engine and propeller to the wing was abandoned in favour of mounting it behind the pilot’s seat in a three-wheeled buggy. The buggy – the trike – was attached to the hang glider where, in un-powered (gliding) flight, the harness is attached.
The Skyhook twin engine contra-rotating propeller power unit solved the problem that, at the time, there were no engines with enough power to get two people into the air, which caused a problem in pilot training.
The Pixie power unit started out as suitable for Britain’s lightly regulated sub 70kg microlight category.
From these beginnings, the modern flex-wing powered ultralight (microlight) evolved.
In 1984 Skyhook was saved from failing financially by making sails for nearby powered ultralight manufacturer Mainair, whose Flash was then becoming a mainstay of that branch of aviation in Britain.
More hang gliders
Skyhook Sailwings continued to develop hang gliders into the 1980s. The Skyhook Gipsy was a popular lightweight, single-surface hang glider.
The single surface Gipsy was developed into a double surface version, the Gipsy CFX. These photos are from Mark Bailey. The flying site is Shining Tor in the peak district, England. Photos taken in 1987 or 1988.
Closure
When it ceased trading in 1997 Skyhook Sailwings was Britain’s longest established hang glider manufacturer. Yet it had always been a part time business. Len was by that time managing director of the specialist engineering firm, Franston.
By 2001, Len had retired, but he remained active in a sailing club and looked after their web site. “I can say that I’ve had a very full and interesting working life,” he concludes. “And all because of my hobbies.”
Len died at home in Oldham at age 93 in February 2020 after a long illness.
A last line, copied from Len’s web site (no longer online in March 2022):
It should be Government policy, both National and local, to encourage all hobbies.
Related
Cronk works: David Cronk’s hang gliders
Early powered ultralights part 1
Flying squad, a short history of the east coast U.S. hang glider manufacturer Sky Sports
External links
Graham Hobson flying a Skyhook Sunspot in 1977. Photo by Roger Middleton.
Graham Hobson (again) on the prototype Skyhook canard at Pandy, south Wales, in 1977. Photo by Roger Middleton.
Len Gabriels 1926-2020, SkyWings (BHPA magazine) April 2020
Len Gabriels, ‘Unknown Pioneer’, by David Bremner
Skyhook Sunspot, 1977, painting on Brave Guys and Beautiful Dolls
U.S. patent 3,750,510 Cutting apparatus for paper and like webs
Thanks for the essays on Sky Sports and Skyhook. They brought back some memories!
When I was working with Flight Designs, Pacific Windcraft and Pacific Airwave, we made sails for a few British companies, including of course Airwave. I was able to meet John Ivers of Hiway, and worked closely with Graham Deegan and Rory Carter. I’d be interested in you writing about those companies at some point.
And I was pretty good friends with Bob England. He and I worked on the Pacific Windcraft Eclipse, and often flew together at Marina Beach. I loved his sense of humor, and I guess he liked mine; he turned me on to the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, and I introduced him to the Firesign Theater. I miss him a lot.
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Thanks John. (I intended to reply sooner!) I recently added the following section to the hang gliding main menu. It covers some manufacturers in a small way: Hang gliding related topics menus. I am still collecting notes that I plan to add some time. For example, yesterday I read in an old copy of Glider Rider that the Flight Designs Demon, although based on the Hiway Demon, was re-engineered by Jean-Michel Bernasconi and Bill Pain to pass HGMA testing. (That’s kinda worrying in that it makes me wonder what was wrong with BHGA testing!)
I too am a fan of the Hitch Hikers’ Guide to the Galaxy, despite the obvious faults of the television series.
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Yes, the original Hiway Demon failed to pass HGMA certification in its original form, and while the sails were identical in function, the airframe had to be beefed up considerably. The result was a glider that weighed about eighty pounds.Bill Pit remarked that the glider would have to be sold with an accompanying truss. I seem to remember that the problem was that the British version failed in the negative loads test, but I could be wrong about that. Maybe John Ievers or Bill would know, if they’re still around. (Jean-Michel passed away a couple of years ago.)
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