[1] The fuselage had its maximum diameter near the nose, where the long, multipiece canopy blended in smoothly, ending at the wing leading edge.
This aircraft crashed at Camphill, Derbyshire in the British National Championships of July 1939, killing its pilot, the speedway rider Frank Charles.
[2] One of them was a competitor at the 1953 British National Championships, held again at Camphill, by then known as Great Hucklow, after being bowled over in transit by a Rotherham trolley-bus.
It flies regularly at Vintage Glider Club meetings and has been displayed at Old Warden on Shuttleworth Collection open days.
[4] Data from Ellison 1971, p. 183 and The World's Sailplanes:Die Segelflugzeuge der Welt:Les Planeurs du Monde [5]General characteristics Performance