Shortround6
Major General
The Skua was an excellent divebomber that also had front guns, just like the SBD and Val - and the Skua also had folding wings, unlike the other two, and was in service before either. Why doesn't the RN get any Kudos for this triumph of naval strike aircraft design?
It never got a MK II version. 1939/40 SBDs and Vals weren't that hot either.
The British had a hole in their engine supply you could drive a Thorncroft truck through in 1938-40.
By that I mean there were too many engines of 800-1000hp size and then the big jump to the Sabre, Vulture, Centaurus. Only the Merlin and Hercules fell in between and the Hercules was running late. Griffon being something a back burner engine at that time.
There was no easy upgrade for any planes powered by the Bristol 9 cylinder engines. The AS Tiger should not have been allowed to fly over water (and in Whitleys was not). The Taurus didn't offer enough improvement and had problems of it's own early on.
The Hercules was under 1400hp to start ( and heavy) compared to the Wright R-2600 which was being delivered at 1500hp in 1938 and giving 1600hp in 1940 in full production with the promise of 1700hp being made in 1940. The Avenger (and competitors ) and the SBC2 (and competitors ) had the promise of 300-400hp more than any Hercules powered Naval aircraft in this time period.
The Merlin was fine engine but everybody and their brother ( and cousins) wanted some form of Merlin because there simply wasn't much of an option.
Getting back the Skua, Had an 1100-1200hp engine been available at a not too great an increase in weight, a MK II might have had better performance and/or a greater payload. But their wasn't one, or at least not in any sort of a useable time frame.
The 3 big British engines all stumbled and fell, for various reason and while they later got up, dusted themselves off and and went on to greater or lesser success the British still faced that gap for too long. The Griffon filled in and with the development of better fuels reached powers that were probably not anticipated in 1939-40.
I have mentioned it before but the British had two classes of carriers in the late 30s. Long and fast (although 3 of the long ones didn't have full length decks) and short and slow, out of 7 carriers 3 were of the short, slow and limited capacity type. Think escort carriers only slightly better (at least as far as speed/deck length) so some aircraft designs may have been compromised in order to operate of all carriers. Also please note the much maligned Douglas Devastator only went into squadron service in 1937 with these claimed firsts.
It was the first widely used carrier-based monoplane
the first all-metal naval aircraft,
the first with a totally enclosed cockpit,
the first with power-actuated (hydraulically) folding wings.
Many other countries naval aircraft of 1937-40 were already somewhere in the design process when the Devastator was reveled.
comparing many of the British 1938-40 aircraft to American aircraft of 1942 is comparing different generations.