yulzari
Tech Sergeant
As a different route to a better Sea Hurricane how about this. Has the space and larger wing area to lift more fuel off the deck and the airframe was used to test both the Griffon and the Vulture.
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This a Henly variant I've not seen.As a different route to a better Sea Hurricane how about this. Has the space and larger wing area to lift more fuel off the deck and the airframe was used to test both the Griffon and the Vulture.
View attachment 793335
Month | Gladiator I | Gladiator II | Gladiator II Met | Gladiator Sea Interim | Gladiator Sea | Henley | Hurricane I |
Oct-38 | 4 | 2 | |||||
Nov-38 | 3 | ||||||
Dec-38 | 3 | 11 | 5 | ||||
Jan-39 | 13 | 11 | 5 | ||||
Feb-39 | 20 | 2 | 13 | ||||
Mar-39 | 4 | 42 | 17 | ||||
Apr-39 | 17 | 16 | 16 | ||||
May-39 | 47 | 4 | 17 | ||||
Jun-39 | 45 | 3 | 17 | ||||
Jul-39 | 39 | 18 | |||||
Aug-39 | 27 | 18 | |||||
Sep-39 | 19 | 21 | |||||
Oct-39 | 4 | 14 | 2 | ||||
Nov-39 | 7 | 8 | 13 | ||||
Dec-39 | 7 | 17 | |||||
Jan-40 | 7 | 9 | 34 | ||||
Feb-40 | 4 | 4 | 34 | ||||
Mar-40 | 2 | 2 | 56 | ||||
Apr-40 | 3 | 2 | 69 | ||||
May-40 | 79 | ||||||
Jun-40 | 144 | ||||||
Jul-40 | 120 | ||||||
Aug-40 | 140 | ||||||
Sep-40 | 2 | 132 | |||||
Total | 4 | 261 | 7 | 22 | 60 | 200 | 840 |
Agreed. American radios frankly sucked. I was very surprised when I found from Lundstom's books that the USN was still using obsolete HF radios at Midway. The British had introduced VHF two years earlier. In fact the USAAF was pressing for production of British radios before Pearl Harbor. When the first P-47s arrived in the UK in 1943 they were equipped with ineffective American HF sets that were quickly replaced with British supplied VHF radios.Many of the American radios of the time were British radios manufactured under licence as the British had invented many new avionics as a result of their actual experience at war.
As a quick thread drift, may I suggest the dingeraviation.net site for their P-39 British experience. Informative of the problems the British saw in it's use, however the cockpit heater was not one of them.It is hardly surprising that dimensionally the Henley and the Fulmar were so similar. Both had their origins in Spec P.4/34 for a light bomber. When the Spec for an "Interim" fighter arose in O.8/38, Fairey's starting point was its P.4/34 prototype which it modified by taking about a foot out of the wingspan, amongst other changes.
Fairey P.4/34 Fairey P.4/34 - Wikipedia
Fairey Fulmar Fairey Fulmar - Wikipedia
Commentry here on Henley and some reasons for building those 200 Henleys as target tugs.
Hawker Henley target tug and dive-bomber.
dingeraviation.net
Production was from about Nov 1938 to June 1940 (so an average of about 10 per month). Initially that was alongside Gladiator II (270 built 1938/39 plus the 2 emergency batches of a total of 98 Sea Gladiators in Dec 1938-Feb 1939 intended for the FAA - 16 retained by RAF) and later Hurricanes. Gloster delivered 500 Hurricanes from Nov 1939 to April 1940 in its first contract, at an average rate of 3 per day.
Gladiator was still in RAF front line service in the Med and Middle East until mid-1941 due to a lack of Hurricanes. Any more Hurricane production availability would be going to them not the FAA. Priorities again.
Ya, do thisNow if this thing had been canceled outright and Gloster (actual production site) had built 200 folding Hurricanes with deliveries starting in 1940 you might have something
HiWhen the British brought the secret of the high power magnetron to the US they initially were rather skeptical of the US enthusiasm for the development. But one month after the British revealed the magnetron the US knew everything the British did about radar. A month after that the new factory for the new airborne radar set had been completed. And a month after that the factory was in full production. The British decided it was pointless to build the sets themselves, although later realized if they did not build at least a few they would forget how.
HiHi
I presume you are talking about the SCR-720 (AI Mk.X) which became the standard set post-war in the RAF, after being used from 1944. Bill Gunston's book, 'A Development and Combat History' is rather light on detail over the introduction into service by the RAF of this very good set, it was not without its problems and it took rather longer than a few months from the Tizard mission to full production. The official RAF narrative on radar in 'Signals Vol. V: Fighter Control and Interception', 1952, Chapter 10, has the following:
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To be contd.
Mike
We'll need to get FAA to accept tricycle gear*,
but VVS certainly won't want to operate nose wheel gear airplane for short grass/snow covered fields.
601 squadron converted to the P-39 Airacobra in Aug 1941 at Duxford. 350th FG USAAF also flew P-39s from there in late 1942. At that time it was a grass airfield. Only later in WW2 was a PSP strip laid. The single concrete runway wasn't laid until 1949-1951.RAF is sort of in middle - they have some hard surface runways where tricycle gear would be OK, but would they want mixed types (and tricycle gear would be a little heavier = lower performing)
Why do you need ramps? The Sea Hurricane was operated quite happily from both US (440ft flight deck) and British (500ft flight deck) built CVE between 1942 and mid 1944. This is Avenger in 1942.
*Tricycle gear works well with ramp; doesn't need to be full blown version like jets use, even a couple degrees makes significant difference = operation from CVLs
HiYes, and many British trainer aircraft had no radios of any kind. They even sent large flights of trainer aircraft overseas with only the lead aircraft equipped with a radio.
Many of the RAF fighters in the BoB had not VHF sets but battery powered short range HF sets.
Yes, and many British trainer aircraft had no radios of any kind.
Separating the forward undercarriage leg into left and right sides around the intake (carburetor) isn't impossible engineering task - you just don't see that from a side view.But what performance benefit does it provide? It represents an even greater redesign of the Hurricane airframe, if it is even possible. Your forward undercarriage leg is in the engine bay just where the intake for the supercharger sits. If you want tricycle undercarriage then you need a clean sheet of paper design.
OK, I admit I cocked up with the Soviets, but I'll stick with taildragger is safer to operate from grass fieldP-39 & P-63? How many thousands did they accept?
601 squadron converted to the P-39 Airacobra in Aug 1941 at Duxford. 350th FG USAAF also flew P-39s from there in late 1942. At that time it was a grass airfield. Only later in WW2 was a PSP strip laid. The single concrete runway wasn't laid until 1949-1951.
Neither the Soviets nor the RF nor the USAAF seem to have had problems operating this tricycle engined fighter from grass.
CVE have squared off edges to flight deck, so even if pilot allows the plane to drift a few feet port or starboard there is still deck under plane during takeoff roll. This allows pilot to be aggressive with throttle = adequate speed. Pre-war RN CVLs have flight decks which follow the hull; if pilot allows the plane to drift, there's only ocean under plane. As a result, the pilot need to be careful with throttle to ensure he says straight = slower.Why do you need ramps? The Sea Hurricane was operated quite happily from both US (440ft flight deck) and British (500ft flight deck) built CVE between 1942 and mid 1944. This is Avenger in 1942.
HMS Avenger (D14) - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
The last on British built CVE Vindex & Nairana were finally replaced in Sept 1944.
I stand by the real problem is: Any Sea Hurricane built in '38-41 will be commandeered by RAF/AM and never get to land on FAA carrier to test benefit of folding wings.The real problem to solve is the folding wings to increase the numbers that can be stowed.
The problem with the Seafires at Salerno was when they landed on, not when they took off. So a ramp doesn't help. Or do you want to turn the clock back to the 1920s and use ramps to slow landing aircraft down?Salerno will issues of wind over deck for Seafires would be why I'd like option of using ramps.
I was thinking more the conditions - hot and no breeze, than the specifics of landing vs taking off.The problem with the Seafires at Salerno was when they landed on, not when they took off. So a ramp doesn't help. Or do you want to turn the clock back to the 1920s and use ramps to slow landing aircraft down?
Well said, and thanks. One thing I try my best to do is whenever I feel my own contrarianism rearing up I instead focus on how we can overcome whatever barrier I'm about to suggest. So yes, we can all tell each other why a proposal could not, would not or should not have been feasible - that's easy. But we should strive to follow up with the next part... here's what reasonably-feasible actions or occurrences are needed to overcome whatever barrier(s) we just suggested. Just my two pennies.You should never stop coming up with alternative scenarios, but to expect that there should be no counter to them is naïve, bearing in mind how much of past situations are known and understood. Many of the what-if ideas proposed by people have a kernel of truth in them, and in some cases were actually considered, such as a more detailed navalised Hurricane than the traditional Sea Hurricane was, but for some reason or another that the what-if has overlooked or not considered, the proposal was not carried out.
As for the Sea Hurricane or any single-seat fighter instead of a two-seater, one twist in history that might have helped is at the Air Ministry. Hindsight wasn't needed, just cross department knowledge and a little informed foresight. For example, instead of compromising the FAA's fighter capability with a reliance on two seaters, in the late 1930s have the Air Ministry tell their aircraft procurement department to walk down the hall to the radar department and ask them what they think radar will do for naval aviation in a year or so. Break up the departmental silos.
That has been brought a number of times and it is pretty much pure bunk.I recall reading somewhere, I forget where, that one reason for wanting two-seater fighters was that when the FAA was under the RAF, the observer was the RN's way of getting "their man" up there. The observer was the crew member that was supposed to understand naval things, (hyperbolically) the pilot was just a glorified chauffeur driving the observer around. So, maybe, if we hypothesize that the RN gets control of the FAA sooner, maybe they also sooner acquire a new-found interest in single-seater fighters?