HAWKER HURRICANE
HOMEPAGE PARRY THOMAS HENRY SEAGRAVE JOHN COBB M CAMPBELL D CAMPBELL C BREEDLOVE K WARBY R NOBLE D VESCO INDEX
In 1928 Vickers Aviation took over Supermarine. In 1938 Supermarine and Vickers were taken over by Vickers-Armstrong. The first Supermarine landplane to go into production was the famous Spitfire, which proved to be a successful design and, along with the Hawker Hurricane, entered into legend after its role in the Battle of Britain.
In 1936 the Air Ministry called for new fighter
aircraft A fighter aircraft is a
military aircraft designed primarily for attacking other aircraft. Compare with
bomber. Fighters are comparatively small, fast, and highly manoeuverable, and
have been fitted with increasingly sophisticated tracking and weapons systems to
find and shoot down other aircraft.
At one time, just before the opening of World War II, there were two types of
fighters. Smaller single-engine planes were used as interceptors and day
fighters,
The Hurricane destroyed more enemy aircraft than the rest of the RAF together. It was a much more stable gun-platform, it could out turn an Me-109.
The Hawker Hurricane
Often
underrated in favor of the Spitfire
, the Hurricane was the main victor of the Battle of Britain. The Royal Air
Force had at that time 32 Hurricane squadrons, compared with 19 Spitfire
squadrons. This meant that 620 Hurricane and Spitfire
fighters (with another 84 assorted fighters like the Gloster Gladiator)
had to face the German air threat of 3,500 bombers and fighters. During the
"Battle of Britain", along with the Spitfire
, it helped to force the Luftwaffe to use the Bf
109 to protect the poor performing twin engine Bf
110 escort fighter.
The synthesis of many years' intimate experience of fighter biplane design
translated into the modern formula; a compromise between tradition and
requirements born of a new era in air warfare--such was the Hawker Hurricane.
The first fighter monoplane to join the Royal Air Force and the first combat
aircraft adopted by that arm capable of exceeding 300 m.p.h. in level flight,
the Hurricane shouldered the lion's share of Britain's defense during the "
Battle of Britain", and was largely responsible for the successful outcome
of this conflict for the defending forces, equipping more than three-fifths of
R.A.F. Fighter Command's squadrons. The Hurricane also proved to possess an
astounding propensity for adaptation, and the multifarious roles that it
undertook earned for it the distinction of being the most versatile of single
seat warplanes to emerge from the Second World War.
The Hurricane was the work of Sydney Camm, who began its design in 1934. The
prototype first took to the air on November 6,1935, at Brooklands, and the
initial production Hurricane I entered RAF service in December 1937, with No 111
Squadron. Powered by the famous Rolls-Royce Merlin engine, it became the
first RAF monoplane fighter with an enclosed cockpit and retractable
undercarriage, its first fighter capable of a level speed in excess of 483 km/h
(300 mph), and its first eight-gun fighter.
Under the command of Sqn. Ldr. J. W. Gillan, No. 111 Squadron quickly settled
down with its new monoplanes, and on February 10, 1938, the commander personally
demonstrated the prowess of the Hurricane by flying from Edinburgh to Northolt
at an average speed of 408 m.p.h. Even with a stiff tail-wind this was a
remarkable performance. Squadrons were rapidly equipped with the
Hurricane--thanks to the foresight of the Hawker Aircraft directors--and at the
time war was declared, on September 3, 1939, just short of 500 Hurricanes had
been delivered and eighteen squadrons had been equipped. These were all of the
Mark I type, armed with eight 0.303-in. machine-guns but having alternative
propeller installations: a Merlin II engine driving a Watts two-blade
fixed-pitch wooden propeller, or a Merlin III of similar power having a
standardized shaft for de Havilland or Rotol three-blade metal propellers. The
Hurricane I, at 7,127 Ib. all-up weight, possessed a maximum speed of 325 m.p.h.
at 17,500 feet, a range of 700 miles at 200 m.p.h. at 15,000 feet, a service
ceiling of 36,000 feet, and the ability to climb to 20,000 feet in 9 minutes.
The
early history of the Hurricane is an interesting parallel in many ways with that
of the Supermarine
Spitfire with which it was to form an immortal partnership; but while the
Spitfire was an entirely new conception based on specialized experience, the
Hurricane was the logical outcome of a long line of fighting aircraft. Thus,
although the two airplanes met broadly the same requirements, they represented
entirely different approaches to the same problem. The two approaches were
reflected to an interesting degree in their respective appearances; the
Hurricane workmanlike, rugged and sturdy, the Spitfire
slender and ballerina-like. One was the studied application of experience,
the other a stroke of genius.
Early in 1934 Sydney Camm, chief designer of Hawker Aircraft, learned of the
work being undertaken by Rolls-Royce to develop a powerful new engine, then
known as the PV-12. At that time the Hawker design team had been working
on a fighter project known as the Fury Monoplane which had been designed
around the 660 h.p. Rolls-Royce Goshawk steam-cooled engine. As the new
engine offered a substantial improvement in performance, the projected fighter
was re-designed for the new power plant. In view of Air Ministry interest,
project design work was rapidly completed, stressing commencing in March 1934,
and work on detail drawings beginning in May.
On October 23,1935, the prototype fighter, bearing the serial number K5083, was
moved from Kingston to Brooklands for its first flight, which was effected on
November 6 with P. W. S. "George" Bulman, the company's chief test
pilot, at the controls. As measured at Brooklands, the prototype's loaded weight
was 5,416 lb. The Hawker monoplane was a clean aircraft. Its tubular metal
construction and fabric covering were similar to those of the earlier Fury
fighter biplane, and many of its contours, particularly the tail surfaces,
were characteristic of earlier Camm designs. The continued adherence to fabric
covering was viewed with misgivings by some, and was, in fact, soon to be
supplanted by metal skinning for the wings; but this seemingly dated feature was
linked with what were for that time ultra-modern items such as a fully
retractable under-carriage and a sliding cockpit canopy. For its first flight
the fighter was powered by a Merlin "C", the name that had
earlier been bestowed upon the PV-12, which drove a Watts two-bladed,
fixed-pitch wooden propeller.
During the Battle of Britain, which began in earnest on August 8,1940,
Hurricanes concentrated mainly on the destruction of the German Heinkel He
111 and Dornier Do 17 bombers. These were the aircraft that would
cause the most damage if allowed to get through. The only Victoria Cross ever
awarded to a Fighter Command pilot was won by Ft Lt James Nicolson, a Hurricane
pilot of No 249 Squadron who, on August 16,1940, while attacking a German
aircraft in front of him, was pounced on from above and behind by other German
aircraft. Nicolson's aircraft caught fire, but he continued his attack until he
had shot down his original target, then parachuted to safety. The highest
scoring Allied pilot of the battle - a Czech named Sergeant Josef Frantisek, who
claimed 17 victories - was also a Hurricane pilot.
|
Specifications: |
|
|---|---|
|
Hawker Hurricane II B |
|
|
Dimensions: |
|
|
Wing span: |
40 ft. 0 in. (12.19 m) |
|
Length: |
32 ft. 3 in. (9.82 m) |
|
Height: |
8 ft. 9 in. (2.66 m) |
|
Weights: |
|
|
Empty: |
5,658 lb (2,566 kg) |
|
All up: |
8,470 lb. (3,841 kg) with two 500-lb. bombs. |
|
Performance: |
|
|
Maximum Speed: |
340 m.p.h. (547 km/h) @
21,000 ft. (6,400 m) clean |
|
Service Ceiling: |
40,000 ft. (12,192 m);
clean |
|
Range: |
460 miles (740 km) at 178
mph (286 km/h) normal fuel. |
|
Powerplant: |
|
|
One Rolls-Royce Merlin XX
twelve-cylinder 60 deg. Vee liquid-cooled engine |
|
|
Armament: |
|
|
Twelve 0.303-in. browning
machine-guns and |
|
When
it became clear that the Hurricane was becoming outclassed as a pure fighter,
other duties were assigned to it. In October 1941 the 'Hurribomber'
fighter-bomber came into being, carrying either two 113 kg (250 lb) or two 226
kg (500 lb) bombs under its wings. The Mk IID of 1942 was fitted with two 40 mm
cannon for tank busting and two machine-guns, and was operated mainly in North
Africa against Rommel's desert forces and in Burma against the Japanese. Other
Hurricanes carried rocket projectiles as alternative ground attack weapons.
The year 1943 saw two important developments in the Hurricanes history--the
introduction of the Mark IV and the adoption of the Hurricane to fire rocket
missiles or, as they were initially known, "unrifled projectiles". The
Hurricane IV differed from the Mark II in two respects: it used a Merlin 24 or
27 which developed 1,620 h.p. for take-off, and it featured "low
attack" or universal armament wings. These wings were derived from those
fitted to the Hurricane IID and could carry the 40-mm. Vickers or Rolls Royce
cannon, bombs, drop-tanks or rocket projectiles. The Hurricane IV was in service
by March 1943 and was operational in the Middle and Far East theatres until the
end of the war, and in Europe until the end of 1944. The development of the
aircraft rocket had introduced a new factor in the use of aircraft as
ground-assault weapons, and the Hurricane IIB and IIC were the first single-seaters
to employ the rockets operationally. After extended trials at the A. & A.E.E.
and elsewhere with rockets launched from Hurricanes (commencing with Z2415 which
was fitted with three launching rails under each wing early in 1942), No. 137
Squadron took its rocket carrying Hurricanes into action for the first time at
the beginning of September 1943. Hurricane IIBs, IICs, and IVs were fitted with
four rockets under each wing.
Perhaps the most important sub-variant was the Sea Hurricane. This operated from
aircraft carriers, being fitted usually with catapult spools and arrester hook.
However, most Sea Hurricanes were not newly-built fighters but converted RAF
types, and were deployed originally not for aircraft carrier operations but to
protect merchant shipping. To combat German maritime-reconnaissance bombers,
some ships were converted into CAMs (catapult aircraft merchantmen) which meant
that a Hurricane fighter could be launched from the ship when danger approached.
The biggest problem was that the fighter could not re-land on board, and so the
pilot had to ditch it in the sea. The main areas of operation for the 'Catafighters'
were in the Mediterranean and Baltic, but by 1943 the Sea Hurricane had all but
disappeared from service.
Of the 14,533 production Hurricanes built, some had gone for service with other air forces. In particular, nearly 3,000 were dispatched to the Soviet Union to aid its fight against the Germans on the Eastern Front. The first Hurricane sorties in Russia were made on September 11,1941 in defense of Murmansk, pilots from France, Britain and America helping the Soviets in their task.
All Wood Wings - quality model airplanes handcrafted from wood
[ Buccaneer ] [ Canberra ] [ Ercoupe ] [ Gannet ] [ Harrier ] [ Hunter F.51 ] [ Hunter T.7 ] [Jaguar] [ Lightning ] [ Meteor ] [Pembroke ] ] [ Provost ] [ Sea Hawk ] [ Sea Prince ] [ Sea Vixen [ Shackleton ] [ Venom ] [ Victor Nose ] [ Whirlwind ] [ Engines ] [Models] [Links]
An aircraft is any machine capable of atmospheric flight. The origin of engineering was the working of engines. There is an overlap in English between two meanings of the word "engineer": 'those who operate engines' and 'those who design and construct new items'.
The Bluebird-Electric story 1991-2004 Copyright © 2004 Bluebird Electric Racing Limited and Electrick Publications.
Contacts:
ip@bluebird-electric.net The
bird
logo is a trademark of B.E.R. Ltd. All rights
reserved.