Britain’s Tailless Fighter That Squatted Like a Bird

di | Jun 22, 2026 | Storia e leggende, Aviazione militare | 0 commenti

It had no tail. It squatted on its undercarriage like a startled bird. It was named after a flying reptile, and in the buttoned-up world of 1930s British aviation it looked like a practical joke. The Westland-Hill Pterodactyl was none of those things. It was a deadly serious attempt to solve the problem that was killing more pilots than the enemy: the stall and the spin.

That it ended up as a tailless fighter with a rear gunner who could shoot in almost any direction was simply where the logic led.

QUICK FACTS

Aircraft: Westland-Hill Pterodactyl (series)

Designer: Captain Geoffrey T. R. Hill

Builder: Westland Aircraft

Era: 1925–1934

Mk V: Two-seat tailless fighter, 600 hp Rolls-Royce Goshawk

Outcome: Flew well; never put into production

A safety idea, not a stunt

Geoffrey Hill had flown in the Royal Flying Corps in the Great War, and he had watched too many friends die not in combat but in the spin — that vicious, often unrecoverable corkscrew that followed an unintended stall. Hill became convinced that a tailless aircraft, with swept wings and controllers at the tips, could be made inherently resistant to stalling and spinning. Fly it badly, and it would simply refuse to bite.

Through the late 1920s and early 1930s, working with Westland, he built a series of these tailless machines and steadily refined the idea. They were strange to look at and stranger to explain, but they flew — and they flew safely, which was precisely the point.

Westland Pterodactyl two-seat tailless flying wing
A two-seat Pterodactyl. The high, gull-set wing and absent tail gave the type its unmistakable “squatting” stance. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

The tailless fighter

The idea reached its sharpest form in the Pterodactyl Mk V of 1934, a two-seat fighter built to an Air Ministry specification. It carried a 600-horsepower Rolls-Royce Goshawk driving a propeller at the front, and a small lower wing that made it, technically, a sesquiplane. And because there was no tail to get in the way, its rear gunner enjoyed a field of fire that a conventional fighter simply could not match — he could swing his guns through arcs that on any normal aircraft would have meant shooting off your own tailplane.

Hill Pterodactyl I preserved at the Science Museum
An early Pterodactyl preserved at the Science Museum in London — proof that the strangest idea of the 1920s really did fly. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

On the numbers, it was no embarrassment. Its performance was reckoned to rival the conventional Hawker Hart, one of the standard combat aircraft of the day. Hill even envisaged mixed formations of front-firing and rear-firing Pterodactyls covering each other’s blind spots — a genuinely original tactical idea.

Why it never flew in anger

And yet the Pterodactyl was never ordered into production. The Royal Air Force of the 1930s was conservative, the conventional designs were good enough and far better understood, and a tailless fighter — however clever — was a risk no one in authority wanted to take. The programme was wound up.

But the idea did not die. Hill’s tailless experiments fed into a stream of thinking that would, decades later, surface in the flying wings of the jet age — right up to the stealth bombers of today. The Pterodactyl looked like a curiosity. It was actually an early, serious draft of an idea the rest of aviation would take half a century to catch up with.

Sources: Wikipedia (Westland-Hill Pterodactyl); Military Matters; Aviastar; Royal Aeronautical Society

Related Questions

What was the Westland-Hill Pterodactyl?

The Pterodactyl was a series of British tailless aircraft built by Westland between 1925 and 1934, designed by Geoffrey Hill. The final Mk V was a two-seat tailless fighter. The designs flew well but were never put into production.

Why did Geoffrey Hill design a tailless aircraft?

For safety, not spectacle. Having seen fellow pilots die in unrecoverable spins during World War I, Hill believed a tailless design would be far more resistant to the dangerous spin — making the aircraft inherently safer to fly.

Was the Pterodactyl successful?

It was aerodynamically successful — the Pterodactyls flew well and proved the tailless concept could work, including a 600 hp Rolls-Royce Goshawk-powered fighter version. But the Royal Air Force stuck with conventional designs, and the type never entered production.

Who built the Pterodactyl?

It was designed by Captain Geoffrey T. R. Hill, a former Royal Flying Corps pilot, and built by Westland Aircraft. The series ran from 1925 to 1934, exploring tailless layouts for safety and efficiency.

What engine did the Pterodactyl Mk V have?

The two-seat Pterodactyl Mk V fighter was powered by a 600 hp Rolls-Royce Goshawk engine. Despite performing well, it remained a prototype, as the RAF favoured conventional tailed fighters.

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