Hi Folks, the third Classic Aircraft Walkaround features the Bristol Beaufighter; an aeroplane that needs little introduction. A perennial favourite among researchers, enthusiasts and modellers alike, Bristol's Big Bruiser oozes charisma in the flesh and looks bigger than it actually is owing to its high nose attitude. Sadly, not many examples of this iconic aircraft survive, so the opportunity to get close to one is not high. There are two known examples currently undergoing restoration to flying condition, but it will be some time before either of these, both in the UK, will grace the skies again. There are museum examples in the UK, USA, Canada, Israel and Australia, where Beaufighters were manufactured under licence.
The subjects of this photographic survey are TF.X RD235 at the RAF Museum, Hendon, DAP Beaufighter Mk.21 A8-328 at Moorabbin, Victoria, Australia and the RAF Museum's forward fuselage section, provenance unknown, which at the time these images were taken was at East Fortune, Scotland to publicise the arrival of the remains of Beaufighter TF.X RD220 (a sister to RD235 built in the same facility in Weston-super-Mare and serving with the Portuguese Navy post war) from South Africa. Whilst not a comprehensive look at every aspect of the Beaufighter, the images were taken of specific details.
RD235:
A8-328:
Fwd fuselage:
A8-328's nose, the distinctive hump present on many Australian Beaufighters housed the Sperry autopilot. Also visible are the 20 mm cannon ports and DF loop in its perspex bubble aft of the cockpit.
Nose underside showing cannon ports and pilot's entry door. The square panel on the extreme nose housed a gun camera. Note the yellow IFF aerial.
LH engine inboard, note carburettor intake on top of the nacelle, exhaust collector ring and support struts bracing the engine gearbox casing.
RH engine outboard, showing exhaust tube and cowling gills. Note the carburettor intake filter, location of the small fairings on each engine cowl, also the small strut between the end of the exhaust tube and the wing underside.
More cowling detail showing cowling gills, oil cooler on wing leading edge and bulge in undercarriage door.
Leading edge oil cooler, note that the horizontal vanes are aerofoil shaped with a lipped leading edge.
Pitot tube under left hand wing.
Rear of underside of engine nacelle showing drain fairing.
Interior detail of outboard undercarriage door, inboard door is the same. Note rubber curtain seal around the lower edge of the door.
Main undercarriage assembly.
RH inboard wing trailing edge.
Observer's cupola; the aft section could be slid open on the rails visible inside the cupola to enable a .303 Vickers 'scare gun' to be used. Radio aerial also visible at right.
Left hand wing trailing edge showing location of flare tube (drift sight?) opening on underside.
Right hand fuselage side showing trailing aerial lead opening.
Rear fuselage and fin area with tail wheel visible. Note deflected trim tab on elevator trailing edge.
Tail section rear view, note where the tailplane butts against the fuselage has no dihedral, also note rudder deflection cutouts on tailplane trailing edge.
Lower rudder detail showing trim tab and position light.
Cockpit. The white plaque is a display board written in English and French. The lever on the control wheel is the park brake, the button on the control wheel is a press-to-talk button; the firing button for the guns is the gated switch on the right side of the control wheel.
Cockpit left side console showing power levers in board and condition levers outboard and flap and undercarriage levers. The Beaufighter had automatic mixture controls as indicated on the throttle box. The vertical gauges show rounds left per magazine. The two gauges to their left show fuel quantity, with oxygen quantity and regulator gauges to their left.
Left hand cockpit console showing colour coded fuel tank selection wheels and fuel **** lever. The two colour coded pull switches are emergency fuel cut-off levers. Ahead of these is the propeller feathering buttons, press and hold to feather and press and hold to unfeather. Feathering the propellers was done electrically by a solenoid switch.
Left hand cockpit.
Right hand cockpit console with compass, rudder trim wheel and morse keys visible. Note also the rocket projectile firing panel at top left.
Right hand cockpit showing auxiliary fuel tank quantity gauges. The colour coded circular switch is aileron trim. The red lever is for emergency canopy window opening.
Interior of the forward fuselage looking forward.
20 mm Hispano cannon ammunition magazines.
First aid box and oxygen economiser in right hand centre fuselage looking forward.
Left hand centre fuselage ceiling looking aft, showing hydraulic fluid tank.
Crew entry and escape door looking forward.
Forward fuselage interior, note white asbestos covered air ducting to the right.
A beautifully presented Bristol Hercules on display at IWM Duxford, allegedly from a Bristol Beaufighter. Note the generally neat appearance of the Hercules unit.
Thats all for now, folks. The next Classic Aircraft Walkaround will feature the Lockheed SR-71A Blackbird.