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They did make a floatplane version of the Roc but it was so slow it kept going into a stall when put into a turn. It didn't enter service.I thought the Blackburn Roc was briefly flown from carriers during the Norway campaign? Unlike the Seamew the Roc was not a dangerous aircraft,!
I thought the Blackburn Roc was briefly flown from carriers during the Norway campaign? Unlike the Seamew the Roc was not a dangerous aircraft, it was just a useless one. The Roc was basically just a Skua with a turret on it's back, and to think that somebody was actually paid to come up with that idea! as though the Skua wasn't bad enough without putting a turret on it!
Blackburn Roc aircraft profile. Aircraft Database of the Fleet Air Arm Archive 1939-1945
" The aircraft operated from shore bases only, alongside Skua squadrons, and its front line career ended in June 1940"
Sorry Shortround6, I am rubbish at computers and I don't know how to do links but if you go to the page you linked and click Blackburn Roc in the further information column at the bottom of the page it mentions the Roc flying from Ark Royal and possibly Glorious during the Norwegian campaign, there was only a few of them though.
I see many people bash the zero for that. But i don't understand. It beat evrything in it's way, the first few months. So it did everything expected an more. That it should have been replaced later is not the fault of the aircraft.Im going to have to nominate the Zero. Of course it was a great dogfighter as far as being extremely maneuverable and adequately armed. It also had great range. But the lack of armor and self sealing fuel tanks (though contributing to its light weight), were fatal flaws, as was the failure to develop more powerful engines to "keep up with the Joneses".
Im saying the IJN failure to update it with evolving technology led to disastrous results for its own operations.
A third category could be "failed because they were kept in service too long," which may be a bin into which one can throw aircraft like the Zero, I-15, CR.32, and Gladiator.
Yes, but that was not a failure of the aeroplane. I would even disagree with swampyankee's assertion that the Zero failed because it was kept in service for too long; the Zero was, right until the very end a competent warplane and in the hands of a good pilot could still hold its own - although there were fewer of these as the war went on for the Japanese. It's just that there were far better aircraft being fielded by the Allies. The failure was with the IJN for not recognising that the Zero's design was obsolescent and that with technological advances abroad, something should have been done to rectify the situation sooner.
These aircraft mentioned did not fail because they were kept in service for too long, they were overtaken by technology; this is not a failure of the aeroplane, but a failure of the operator.