NAC Fieldmaster

Fieldmaster
The prototype Fieldmaster at the 1984 Farnborough airshow, 9 September 1984
Role Agricultural Aircraft
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer NDN Aircraft
First flight 17 December 1981
Number built 10


The NAC Fieldmaster was a British agricultural aircraft of the 1980s. A turboprop powered single-engined monoplane, it was built in small numbers and used both as a cropsprayer and a firefighting aircraft.

Development and design

NDN Aircraft, which was set up in 1976 by Desmond Norman, one of the founders of Britten-Norman, the manufacturers of the Islander, to build the Firecracker trainer, designed a new agricultural aircraft. The resulting aircraft, the NDN-6 Fieldmaster was a large single-engined low-winged monoplane with a fixed tricycle undercarriage, powered by a Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6 turboprop engine, the first western-built agricultural aircraft to be designed for turboprop power.[1] Novel features included an integral hopper made of Titanium to carry its chemical payload, which was dispersed via spray nozzles built into the flaps under the aircraft's wings.[2]

The first prototype flew on 17 December 1981 at NDN's airfield at Sandown, Isle of Wight. TNDN moved the premises to Cardiff, Wales in 1985, renaming itself the Norman Aeroplane Company (NAC). Production finally started in 1987.[3] It was intended that parts would be produced by UTVA in Pančevo, Yugoslavia (now in Serbia) to be assembled in Cardiff.[4]

NAC went into receivership in 1988, after the production of six Fieldmasters, including the prototype.[5] Brooklands Aerospace attempted to continue production, rebuilding one of the Fieldmasters with a more powerful engine as a specialised firefighting aircraft as the Firemaster 65,[6] but these attempts were stopped by the outbreak of civil war in Yugoslavia.[7]

A final attempt at production was made by the Turkish Aeronautical Association (Türk Hava Kurumu - THK) who started licensed production in 1997. This ended in 1999 after completion of two complete aircraft and a further two airframes lacking engines.[8]


Variants

NDN-6 Fieldmaster
The initial designation for the prototype; one built.
NAC Fieldmaster
Designation of production aircraft after the formation opf the Norman Aeroplane Company (NAC); five built.
Brooklands Aerospace Firemaster 65
A rebuilt Fieldmaster with more powerful engine and firefighting equipment; one conversion.
THK Fieldmaster
Production in Tukey by Türk Hava Kurumu (THK); four built

Specifications (NAC 6)

Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1988-89 [9]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

Notes

  1. Barnett 1980, p.800.
  2. Barnett 1981, p.649-652.
  3. Taylor 1988, p.299.
  4. Flight International, 19 March 1988, p.12
  5. Flight International 6 August 1988, p.11.
  6. Flight International 6–12 December 1989
  7. Donald 1997, p.673.
  8. Deniz, Tuncay. "THK" Turkish Aircraft Production. Retrieved 5 September 2008.
  9. Taylor 1988, pp.299-300.

Bibliography

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