The Bristol Tourer was a British civil utility biplane produced in the years following the First World War, using as much as possible from the design of the Bristol Fighter aircraft. Bristol Tourers were delivered with a variety of engines, subject to availability and customer desires; these included the Rolls-Royce Falcon, Siddeley Puma, Hispano-Suiza 8, and Wolseley Viper. Many Tourers were fitted with a canopy to cover the one or two passenger seats in the rear cockpit, giving the type its original name of Coupé. The pilot's cockpit, however, remained open.
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"The "Bristol" Tourer". Flight. XI (45): 1452. 6 November 1919. No. 567. Retrieved 13 January 2011. Contemporary brief technical description of the Type 27 Tourer with photograph.
"The "Bristol" Coupé". Flight. XI (43): 1390–1391. 23 October 1919. No. 565. Retrieved 13 January 2011. Contemporary technical description of the Type 28 (Coupé) with photographs.