Cobham plc
 
 
Search 

Sir Michael Cobham

Alan Cobham's son Michael Cobham, later Sir Michael, joined the company in 1954 and steered it through a phase of diversification and expansion that has resulted in today's successful Cobham plc. Sir Michael passed away in 2006.

 

Right Menu

 

Evolution and Enterprise

The early 1950s saw Cobham facing a difficult and uncertain future. With additional sources of funding urgently required, it was decided, in 1954, that Flight Refuelling Ltd should 'go public' and that FR (Holdings) Ltd would be formed to become the first 'parent company'.

Sir Alan's younger son, Michael, newly qualified as a barrister, (and fully expecting to pursue a career at the Bar) was 'persuaded' by his father to join the company as Contracts Manager. Thus began a somewhat enforced business association which nevertheless worked well enough to ensure 60 years of unbroken family leadership of the organisation. It continued until the coincident announcements, in 1994, of Sir Michael's retirement and the renaming of the group to Cobham plc.

Flight Refuelling Ltd pulled itself through a particularly bad period of project cancellations with new ventures, including nuclear engineering, commercial electronics and establishing a leading position in the design and supply of fuel system components for European aircraft. Other major contracts involved repair and overhaul of RAF and foreign air force jet fighters and operating the RAF's No 210 Advanced Flying School.

The timely acquisition of aircraft maintenance and conversion work included the modification of large numbers of Meteor fighters into unmanned 'drones', gaining the company a foothold in the general target market that was to significantly affect its future. In 1961 a licence agreement was signed with the Hayes International Corporation based in Birmingham, Alabama, to manufacture a series of towed aerial targets. This led, in turn, to FRL designing and manufacturing its own highly successful Rushton winch and target system.

FRL relocated its design, manufacturing and administrative facilities to Wimborne in the early 1960s. Its core business remained the supply of standard fuel system components and air refuelling equipment capable of meeting the operational requirements of advanced jet aircraft, which, later, were to play such a crucial role in the 1982 Falklands Campaign. This culminated in the 'Black Buck' series of raids on Port Stanley by RAF Vulcans dependent on the supporting Victor tanker force.

Flying activities remained at Tarrant Rushton until late 1980, when the company's lease on the airfield expired, whilst the Wimborne site, in addition to being FRL's main production centre, now also provided a central headquarters for the expanding organisational network.

From 1985 all the piloted flight operations previously carried out by FRL's Airfield Division became the responsibility of FR Aviation Ltd, then newly formed at Hurn Airport, near Bournemouth. This arrangement left unmanned projects such the Falconet subsonic aerial target and the Phoenix target acquisition air vehicle under Wimborne's control. It soon brought a significant increase in towed-target and coastal surveillance work. Based on the freshly introduced 'contractor-owned, contractor-operated' principle, this led to FR Aviation purchasing a fleet of some 20 Dassault Falcon aircraft from the USA. By this time, FR (Holdings) Ltd had become restructured as FR Group plc.
Cobham 061

Production of the American Hayes aerial target led to the company's own design and manufacture of the Rushton winch and target system (shown here fitted to a Canberra aircraft), which entered service in the early 1970s.

Cobham 065

Cobham has produced unmanned aerial vehicles, including the Falconet jet powered aerial target and the Phoenix Unmanned Aerial Vehicle, shown here, which served with the UK military.