- Free Shop Manual
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- Free Shop Manual
JANUARY 1983 70p www.carburetor-manual.com Would you like some Free Manuals? http://carburetor-manual.com/free-shop-manual-club-t-13.html Also visit http://freeshopmanual.com for more Free Manuals Also Visit my website for 7 FREE Download Manuals starting with this one. "The ABC's of Carburetion" Click Here Now file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Tim/Desktop/carburetor-manual-welcome/index.htm[4/25/2009 11:42:20 AM] AIR WITH Internatianal Vo l ume 24 Number l Managing Editor CON T ENTS FRO NT COVER The first production example of the EMBRAER EMB-312 Tucano, now on the point of entering service in Brazil. 7 EMBRAER' S TRACTABLE TUCANO John Fricker flies, for AI R INTER · NATIONAL, Ihe latest product of Brazil's dynamic aircraft industry, the T -27 Tucano high - performance turboprop Irainer. January1983 15 TIENTSIN TIME CAPSULE A first hand account, by M ajor Lennart Berns (of the Roval Swedish Air Force), of a visit to a Chinese air base, w here modernisation, it would appea r, has been marking time. William Green Editor Gordon Swanbo(ough Modelling Editor Fred J Henderson Contributing Artist Dennis Punnett Contributing Photographer Stephen Pel tz Editorial Representative. Washington Norman Polmsr Managing Director Donald Syner Publisher Keith Attenborough Financial Director Claire Sille tte Advertising Director Elizabeth Baker Advertising Manager RogerJewBrs Subscription Manager Sheilagh Campbell Circulation Manager 22 MOSQUITO - DH ' S BEAUTIFUL BOMBER Developed in the face of much official apathy if not outright resistance, the deadly Mosquito was among the most elegant of World War II's combat aircraft. The bomber variants are described in this " Warbird s" feature. 36 A VERY DIFFERENT CORSAIR Among the more noteworthy of the aeroplanes competing in the 1982 Reno National Championship Air Races was a newlv reslorad and modified Chance Vought F4U -1 Corsair, here described and illus trated by Frank B Mormillo. William Streek Editoria l Offices: The AIR INTERNATIONAl, PO Box 16, Bromley. Kent BA2 7RB. Subscription, A d vertising and Ci rculat ion Offices: The AIR INTERNATIONAL. De Warde House, 283 Lonsdale Road, London SW13 90W. Telephone 01-878 2454. US and Canadian readers maV address subscriptions and general enquiries to AIR INTERNATIONAL, PO Box 353, Whitestone, NY 11357-0353 fo r onward transmission to the UK, from where all correspondence is answered and orders despatched. MEMBEROFTHEAUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS The Hawk is unrivalled in its class. An advanced trainer and a weapons trainer all in one. It's a powerful ground attack fighter too. Better still, it needs very little maintenance, so it spends more time in the air, keeping your pilots' morale high, and your costs low. That's why it's top of its class. HAlNK .afl&IWH .AER1OSr'C£ ~/'-dhr/"'~~_ • prog"~. Richmond Road, Ki ngston upon Thames, Surrey KT2 5QS. IABC I Subscription rates, inclusive of postage, direct from the publishers, per year: United Kingdom £8·75 Overseas £9·25 USA $23·00 Canada $26·00 Rates for other countries and for air mail subscriptions available on request from the Subscription Department at the above address. 2 AJRSCE N E The monthlv round -up of news and background to the news presenled under section headings for Military Affairs, Aircraft and Industry, Civil Affairs and new Civil and Military Aircraft Contracl S. 31 SIGHT FOR BLIND MEN The first in a series of articles in which M ike Hirst. BTech, M RAeS, sets out to analyse the r61e of avionics in cOnlemporary aviation . 39 MODEL ENTHUSIAST Modelling comments, the latest kits reviewed and two pages of colour profiles on the Supermarine Spil f;re VIII -XI. 43 TALK BACK Readers of AIR INTERNATIONAL offer comments of general interest. 44 FIGHTER A TO Z Continuing the AIR INTERNATIONAL encyclopaedia of the world's fi ghter aircraft, from the 1.A.A. 14 to the IAR.93. 48 IN PRINT New avial ion literature noted. 50 AIRDATA FilE Technical data, photographs and general arrangement drawings for the Australian Basic Trainer, HA L Ajee t Trainer, PZL-21 Mini Dromader, Slingsbv Firefly 160M and SOKO Super Galeb. WREND EZVOUS WITH WREN The AlA INTERNATIONAL is published monthly bV Fine Scroll Limited, distributed by Ducimus Books Ltd and printed by Will iam Caple & Company ltd, Chevron Press, Leicester, England. Editorial contents © 1983 by Pilot Press Limited . The views expressed by named contributors and correspondents are their own and do not necessarily refl ect the views of the editors. Neither the editors nor the publishers accept responsibility for any loss or damage, however caused, to manuscripts or illustrations submined to the AIR INTERNATIONAL Second Class postage approved at New York, NY. USA Maili ng Agents: Air-Sea Freight Inc, 527 Mad ison Avenue, New York. NY 1 0022. ISSN 0306-5634 '"Hellol Hello!" AIRSCENE M.ILITARY AFFAIRS ABU DHABI The Abu Dhabian element of the United Arab Emirates Air Force has reportedl y placed an o..der with M:rospatiale for an unspecified quantity o f AS 332F Supet' Puma helicopters apparently intended for the dual utility trans port/anti-shipping role. It may be assumed that these helicopters will be a rmed with either AS I SIT o r AM 39 Exocetanti-shipping missiles. Abu Dhabi has now received its full complement of 14 Pilatus PC-7 Turbo Trainers and was scheduled to accept delivery of the last two of four CASA C-212 Aviocars al the time of closing for press. ARGENTINA Deliveries of Dassault-Breguet Super Etendard shipboard strike fighters to the Comando de A~iQcjon Naval were resumed in November, when, on the 18th of that month, the Bahia San Bias left SI Nazaire for Buenos Aires with five a ircraft aboard. together with an unspecified number of AM 39 Exocet missiles. The Super Etendards, which are destined for the 2° EscuodTiJla AeT()II(Jvol de Caza y A/aque, bro ught to 10 deliveries of this strike fighter against the 14 ordered by Argentina prior to the Falklands conflict. The final four ai rcraft were shipped to Argentina early in Dec:ember aboard the Cabo de Hornos. Fn.JICe has reportedl y agreed to 50pply Argentina with IS Aerospaliale AS 332 Su,Ptt Pama bdkopters, three of which will be dehvered to the Conwndo An/arc/ico and the remainder to the Comando de A viocion del Ejercito to make up helicopter attrition suffered during the Falklands conflict Eleven ex-F6r{:a Airea Brasileira EMBRAER EMB-326 Xava..tes have re portedly been sold to Argentl..a for approximately USS2Om, these presumably being destined for the Comando de Aviacion Na~al. CANADA Thecurrent McDonnell Douglas CF-1 8 Hornet delivery nte of one aircraft monthl y will shortJy build up to two per month and this rate is to be s ustained until September 1988 when deliveries are scheduled to be completed. Since delivery of the first two CF-18s to CFB Cold Lake, Al berta, late October, CAF maintenance personnel have taken over first line mai ntenance from the contractor, and the first aircraft are shortl y to be assigned to No 410 Sqn which will develop pilot and maintenance trai ning programmes before the first operational pilots commence C F-18 transition in January 1984. No 410 Sqn will have a secondary operalional role and the fi rst fully operational CAF squadron will be commissioned in June 1984. C FB Bagotville will be the second base to receive CF- 18s late in 1984, and mid- 198S the first C F-18s will a rrive at BadenSOllingen in Federal Germany. By 1986, both the C F- IOI and CF-I04 will have been replaced by the CF- 18, and when the latter supplan ts the CF-S this will be retained in the inventory for the trai ning role with No 419 Tactical Fighter Training Sqn at Cold Lake. CHlLE Three refurbished CanbHn PR Mk 9 reconnaissance aircraft are being supplied to the Fuerzo Airea de Chile from RAF surplus Slocks as the first Canberras to be operated by the FACand the first examples of the PR Mk 9 version to be exported. CH lNA The Chinese ddeccor, Wu Jung-chien, who PAGE 2 landed his J-6 (MiG-19) at an airfield south of Seoul on 16 October, stated that he flew to the South Korean base "only to refuel so that I can defect to Taiwan". When he was refused fuel by the ROKAF, he req uested that the Taiwa nese Embassy in Seoul be contacted and political asylum be requested on his behalf. Asylum was duly granted and altho ugh his fighter was retained in South Korea, Wu Jungchien received the going rate fo r a J-6 o f USS2·7m in gold when he arri ved in Ta ipei about S 150 per pound of ai rcraft gross weight - and was made a major in the Nationalist Chinese Air Force on the spot! DUBA.I The Oubai Air Wing of the United Arab Emirates Air Force has placed an order with Siai Marchetti for six turboprop-powered SF.260TP basie trainen, plus spares and suppo rt equipment. Delivery of the SF.260TPs is expected shortly at a unit price reportedly between USS450,OOO and USSSOO,OOO. Siai Marchetti has now received orders fo r some 30 SF.260TPs, Dubai being the third customer (the o thers being Ghana and Haiti, the laner having ordered the trainers for civil use). EGYPT Despite earlier reports of Egyptian dissatisfaction with the serviceability of its two squadrons of F-4E Phantoms equipping the 222nd Tactical Fighter Brigade a t Cairo West a nd the return of the aircraft to the USA during the course of 1982, the Egyptian Air Force has now appa rentl y discarded proposals to transfer the Phantoms to Turkey and the aircraft have been ferried back to Cairo West after overhaul. FEDERAL. GE RMANY The first two Atlantic maritime patrol aircran to unders.o upgndlng unde r the OM 200m (£49'26m) KWS programme have now been restored to Marinejliegtrgesch,,",ader 3 at Nordhol z by Dornier, and the remaining 12 Atlantics will all have rotated through the programme by late 1983. The K WS programme involves the installation of longerranging Texas Instrumen ts radar, imprOVed data I?rooessing, a new Bell & Howell acoustIcs-data tape recorder, Loral's EWIOl7A electro nic support measures equipment and an adjunct to the ex.isting sonar processing system increasing frequency spectrum, range and directio n-finding aa:uracy. The Ministry of Defence has now extended the deadline fOf' the replacemeat of the F-4F Pha ntoms of the LMftwaffe by a dedicated air superiority fighter to the mid-'nineties. The F4Fs will now be updated under the SCH:alled Peace Rhine programme which will include stretching airframe life from 4,000 to 6,000 hours, installing either the Hughes APG-6S or Westinghouse Improved APG-66 look-down radar and fining a quartet of Hughes Advanced Medium-Range AAMs. FRANCE The first production Miralile F ICR reconnaissance a ircraft was scheduled to be delivered to the Armie de fAir late last month (December) and the 33~ Escadre tk Reconnaissance at Strasbourg will commence conversion from the aged Mirage III R during the course of this yea r, initial deliveries going to ER 1/ 33 Bel/ort and ER 2/33 Savoie. with the Mirage III RD-equipped ER 3/33 Mostlle following in 1984. Each FI C R squadron is to be equipped with a self-conta ined airtransportable tactical reconnaissa nce ground station developed by MATRA's Electro- AIR INTERNATIONAl/JANUARY 1983 I Optics Systems Division and offeri ng faci lities for mission preparation and flight director systems, operational and command communications, and image reception systems and interpretation equipment. A total o f64 Mirage FICRs - including the two prototypes, the first o f which flew on 20 November 1981 - is to be procured by the Armiede fAir, the basic components of the FICR recon naissance system including Omera medium·altitude vertical and horizon-to-horizon cameras, an Omera 360 data recorder, a Sagem Uliss 47 inertial guida nce system, Thomson-CSF Cyrano 4 radar a nd infra-red sensors. The Mirage FICR may be fiued with the Harold reconnaissance pod (long-focus highresolution camera with a maximum rangeof 62 mls/ lOO km) and while this has not so far been ordered for the Armee de fAir versio n, it is to be filted to the Mirage Fl EQ, a newclectronic countermeasures/attack derivative ordered by Iraq. G REECE A cle<:isioo cooceming procurement of a new fi2bter for the Hellenic Air Foroe, o riginally pfanned for the end of 1982, has now been officially dela)'ed until the end of March, but mOSt sources in Athens suggest that it will not be taken until September and possibly as la te as December. The HAFissecking 1()().. 130 new fighters, the contenders being the DassaultBreguet Mirage 2000, the General Dynamics F-16, the McDonnell Douglas F-18A and the Panavia Tornado IDS. The Greek Defence Ministry is currently studying the proposals of the four competing manufacturers, all of which include sizeable offset provisions, including manufacture of a proportion of the proposed aircraft and fi nal assembly. The Mi rage 2000 is considered to possess something o f an edge owing to the politically aligned Socialist administrations of G reece and France; General Dynamics believes its chances to be good in that it is possibly the o nl y competitor that can meet the Greek requirement of deli very of the first 30 aircraft before the end of 1984, while McDonnell Douglas has been unofficially informed that the F-18A most closely meets the HAF's operatio nal requirements. Insofar as the Tornado is concerned, the three nations participating in the programme have o ffered to ma ke Greece a founh partner, and although not an official contender, a joint Northro p and General Electric team has been promoting the F-20 Tigershark. Sources in Athens believe that, for operational, political or economic reasons, the Greek government will split its purchase between two o f the contending aircraft. iNDIA With the delivery of the final two o f 40 newproduction J aguars from Wan on during the fi rst week of November and acceleration of assembly by HAL of the 4S Jagua rs from C KD parts, with the first half-dozen now delivered, the build·up of the Indian Air Force's Jaguar force is gaining momentum and three squadrons will sho rtly have attained operatIonal capability with a fourth squadron scheduled to form during the course of the year. MALAYSIA Announcement by year's end was a nticipated of the selection by the Royal M alaysian Air Foroe Senior Tender Board or LockJteed Aircraft Services as prime conLracto r fOf' the Skyhawk refurbishiDg programme. Lockheed is understood to have been selected o n both technical and cost grounds (sec Mili/(Jrl Affairs/September). The programme, whieh IS scheduled for completion by mid-198S, will involve 40 of the 63 mothballed ex-US Navy A-4L Skyhawks procured by the Malaysian governmen t, plus six of the 2S A-4Cs which will be used for spares, as well as a pproximately half of the 120 J6S-W-20 and -420 turboJets. The first refurbished Skyhawks will be delivered to the RMAF early 1984. The RMAF took deU"ery in November of the fi rst batch of six Pilatus PC7 T urbo Tnlners of the 44 ordered in 198 1 through a USSS I' 7m contract, the remaining aircraft being scheduled for delivery at a rate of about three monthly throughout this year. MOROCCO Aero Maroc Indust rie,·established at Moham med V airport, Casablanca-Nouasse ur, with French assistance in October 1981, has recently filled a Northrop F-SB of the Royal Moroccan Air Force with a flight refuelling nose probe in a proto type installalion for operational trials with the Service's newlyacquired Boeing 707 equipped as a tanke r with Beech underwing pods. Other work now being undertaken by Aero Maroc Industrie on behalf of the Royal Moroccan Air Force includes a stud y programme for the overhaul and Updating of the Service's fleet of 2S Magister trai ners, a nd fo r the design o f a ventral camera pod for the Mirage FICH . P AKlSTAN It is now known tha t the 30 single-scat M irages currently in process of delh'ery to the Pakistan Air Force are, in fact, Mirage 50s powered by the Atar 9K-50 turbojet although referred to as Mirage SPS. Two van a ntsofthe Mirage 50 are included in the current deliveries to the PAF, these bein, designated Mirage SPA2 in optimised alT-air form with Cyrano IV radar similar to that ofthe Mirage F IC and Mirage SPA3 in optimised air-ground form with Agave radar similar to that of the Super Etendard. Two similarl y- powered two-scat trainers are designated Mirage SDPA2. PERU The Fuerza Abea Peruana has recently taken delivery of three MBB DO 105 helicopters to equip a unit referred to as "Commercial Squadron 332", the primary task of this unit being the support of oil exploration in the Amazon from the Haupstadt Lima Airport, near Sebagua. A foll ow-on order for an unspecified quantity of additional Dassault-Breguet M irages has been placed by the Fuerza AirM Perullna. The possibility of a new Mirage purchase was mentio ned in September by Oen Jose Garcia Calderon, the Minister o f Av;a tion, who said that "more of these ai rcraft might be sought". Gen Hernan Bolurie, the Armed Forces Chief o f Staff, subsequently commented that a Mirage rurchase would depend on the provision 0 suitable credit funding and this was al?parently agreed during the recent visit to LIma of French Defence Minister Charles Hernu. It has been uno fficially reponed that sufficient Mirages ha ve been ordered to equip two squadrons and that these a rc basically Mirage SOS (ie, Atar 9K-So.powered), but comprise two single-seat versions referred to as the Mirage SP3 (Cyrano IV rada r) and SP4 (Agave rada r), and two two·seat trainer versions, designated as the Mirage SOP! and SOP4. SINGA PORE The Singapore Air Force accepted deli" ery in October of the firs t of an unspecified number of Aerospatiale AS 350 Ecureuil helicopters that are to be used in the training role. SOUTH AFRICA According to Brig Chris Lombard, OC of Southern Air Command, the five surviving ShackJeton MR M k 3 maritime patrol aircraft operated from 0 F Malan AB by No 3S Sqn are to be finally witbdnwn from service during t.he course of 1984. The Shackletons, which will have secn 27 years SAAF service by the time of their withdrawal, have been resparred and refurbished in recent years. objec:tives in the recen tl y-conducted operational evaluation (OP EVA L) which has aroused considerable controversy. He commented, " There is nothing in the OPEVAL report that requi res us to change our acquisition Slrategy at this time." The three prescribed thresholds that the F-18 failed to meet were in fighter escort radius (380 nmf704 km agai nst the required 400 nm/741 km), minimum approach speed (134 knots/248 kmfh against the required 132 k.notsf24S kmfh) and gross weight (36,710 Ib/ 166S21r.:g in the fighter escort configuration against the required 36,000 Ib/ 16 330 kg). AIRC RAFT AND INDUSTRY SWEDEN In the fi rst of a series o f planned helicopter purchases for the Swedish armed forces, a contract has been placed, via Saab-Scania, by the Defence Material Administration for 10 Hughes 300c light helicopters with a contractual value of some SKr7· Sm (£62S,000). These are to be operated primarily o n training duties as Hkp SBs by the Norrbotten arm y avia tion battalion at Boden in northern Sweden. Parliament has reserved the sum of SKrI ,OOOm (£83'3m) for further helicopter purchases, consisting of 10 for the SA R role and 20 for the a nti-armour mission, a decisio n o n the latter being scheduled for later this yea r to ena ble the Army's dozen Agusta BeIl 204Bs to be replaced around 1985. A longer time scale is attached to acquisition of the SAR helicopters which are intended to replace the VertoI I07-I1-4s operated by F 17 at RonnebyKallinge by the end of the decade. The Navy's 10 V-107- II-S and Kawasak.i-Vertol 107-11 ASW helicopters are expected to remain in service until the end of the century. USA The US Marine COf'PS is planning proc urement of three squadroos of advaDCed attack helicopters commencing in Fiscal 1989, the probable choice being the Hughes A H-64 Apache. The remainder of the USMC attack helicopter force will comprise Bell A H- I HueyCobras, and the Service will procure 44 A H- ITs in Fiscal Years 1984 and 1985. The goal of the USMC is to increase its attack helicopter inventory from three active and one reserve squadron to six active and two reserve squadrons. According to US Navy Secretary John lehman, the McDonnell Douglas F- 18 Hornet failed to meet only three o f 20 perfOmtaDCC FRANCE Aerospatiale's Helicopter Division has given more details o f the potential o f the Super Puma (short-fuselage version) in its AS 332M antlshipping version. Powered by Turbomeca Makila turboshafts, the AS 332M can carry a 9,920-lb (4 SOO-kg) load and has a range of 538 mls (865 km), the maximum speed being 173 mph (279 kmfh). One version carries a pair of AM 39 Exocets with a strike range of 3 1 mls (SO km), and is fined with Orner.! ORB-32 radar; another carries either o ne AM 39 plus three AS I 5Tf missiles, orsix of the latter, and has Thomson-CSF Agrion radar. The AS ISTf, with a strike rangeof9 mls ( IS km), was recently test-fired successfull y for the first time, in preparation for deli veries to Saudi Arabia o n the AS 36SMs ordered by that nation's Navy. The first production Dassa ult-Breguet M irage 2000 made its maiden flight o n 20 November at Bordeawt-MeriJv.lac. The event was on schedule a nd wIll lead to first deliveries being made to the Armel! de fAiT later in 1983. The first production Dassault-Breguet M irage FI CR, a dedicated reconnaissance version of the Mirage FI C-200, flew on 10 November (see separate news item page 2). IN DlA The Soviet Union is to acquire eight Chetak helicopters (licence-built Alouette Ills) from Hindustan Aeronautics. The deal is the fi rst for man y years in which aircran have been acquired from a country not aligned in the Eastern Bloc. Since June 1965, when the first HAL-built Alouette III was Hown, more tha n 260 Chetaks have been built fo r the Indian Air Force, Army and Navy and for government agencies. Examples have also been supplied to Based on theftrst photographs avoilable to Western observers, this prollisjonal three-lliew drawing depicts tM Sukhoi Su-25 Frogfool , one of the new generation of Solliet warplanes now coming into service. More reminiscent ofthe Northrop YA-9pToto /y~s thon 1M Fairchild A-lOA Thunderbolt II with which earlier reports hod associated it, the Su-25 is a dedicated dose-support attack aircraft, recently sun in action agairut Afg han guerillasfrom tM airfield at &ghram. " 'i •• " , SAUDI ARABIA At the time of closing for press, Saudi Arabia was expected to approve a formal letter of offer of a further military .ules packalile valued at S3SOm and designated Peace Hawk 9. This package provides JO Northrop RF-SE Tigereye reconnaissancc ai rcraft for delivery in 1985, and four F-SE Tiger II and one F-SF attrition replacement aircran . PAGE 3 Nepal. the Seychelles and Bangladesh, plus considerable quontities of spares for the Royal Malaysian Air Force. and the sale of six to liberia is under negotiation. INDONESIA P T Nurtanio has expanded its range of aircraft manufacture by signing a liccnce agreement with Bell Helicopter Textron to cover the production in Indonesia of "at least 100" Bell Model 41 Zs. The twin-en$!ned, IS-passenger Bell 412. which was certificated in January 1981. is a derivative of the Bell 212, with fourbladed rotor. Nurtanio will produce Model 412s with the help of components supplied by Bell. and expects this helicopter to meet Indonesian requirements. both military and commercial. for a medium helicopter for offshore and on-shore oil s upport, troop-carrying and inter-island transport. INTERNATI ONA L Right de"elopmcnt of the Airbus AJIO took a fu rther step forward o n 20 October 1982 with thc first fligh t of the fourth example - No 2 10 in the common A300/A3 10 numbe ring sequence. The fift h A3 10joincd the programme in November and is also to contribute to certification of the two-pilot cockpit; the first customer aircraft. for dclivery to Swissoir, was to fly in January. By 22 October. the first four aircrafi. had totalled nearly 700 hrs. made upof 333 hrs 20 min in 118 flights by the first A31O; 216 hrs 55 min in 8 1 flights by the second; 145 hrs 10 min in 48 flights by the third and the single 4 hr 10 min flight by the fourth. The Airbus A300 reached the lOch annh'ersary of its first flight on 28 October. by which date 192 aircraft had been delivered and 188 .....ere in service. Airbus Indus trie is no longer quoting options in its regular monthly listing of orders and deliveries. but records a total of246 A300s and 102 A310s on firm order for 46 customers. Deliveries so far have included two versions of the A300B2. two versions of the A300B4 and the A300c: next to arpea r will be the A300600, fin al assembly 0 which was to begi n at Toulouse this month (Ja nuary). T he first A300-600 is No 252 in the combined A300/A3 10 numbering sequence: scheduled to fly in July, it is powered by JT9D-7R4H I engines and will be company-owned. A second A300·600 will also be used for certification, seheduled for the end of March 1984. The third to fly will be the first for delivery. to Saudia. the launching airline. which has lion order. Tornado prototype P.07 made its first flight after being fitted . ·ith carbon fib« romposite taiierons on 8 November 1982 at Manching. Four such tailerons have been produced. two each by British Aerospace at Warton and MBB in Gennany. One of each. fitted with instrumentation. are used for flight testing, while the other two are undergoing static test. The first starboard taileron made in the UK has so far been tested at room temperature to 88 per cent of its ultimate design load, and this programme win continue up to 188 per cent in the representative environment to clear the components for the full Tornado IDS flight envelope. The fourth taileron. a port unit, is being fa tigue tested at the IA BG tes t establishment in Gennany. and will be subjected to a fu ll Tornado life cycle. are reported to be uprated to a thrust of23.400 Ib(10614 kg). compared with 22.300 Ib (10 115 kg) in the 11-62. The ccntral engine now has a circular intake. compared with the standard oval intake for the NK-8 engine. and the TA12 APU. usually located above the centre engine. has been relocated in the fuselage . The Tu-l64 has a gross weight of 220.460 Ib (100 000 kg). compared with 211.650 Ib (96 000 kg) for the Tu-I54B. and the mnge is reported to be 2.485 mls (4000 km). SWEDEN British Aerospace Warton Division has signed a "launching a~ment" with Saab-Scania Aerospace DiviSIOn covering collaboration in the design and construction of the carbon fibre wing for the JAS 39. The agreement provides for SAc and Saab-Scania engineers to cooperate in the design of the wing. which is of conventional delta planform . BAe will manufac ture the fi rst prototype wings and test specimens, and will participate in thc extensive ground test programme. Saab-Seania will then gradually take over manufacturing responsibility, and will be completely responsible for series production. Earlier. SaabSeania had discussed a similar agreement with Rockwell International, in respect of a more advanced wing of greater span and with aeroelastic properties through controlled twisting under load. This would have represented an application of RockweJrsexperience gained with the Hi-Mat research vehicles. but would have increased the cost of the JAS 39 wing by some 50 per cent without sufficient perfonnance gain to justify this extra cost. UNITED KI NG DOM Rolls- Royce has confirmed that it is studying the de"eloplMnl of a reranned Spey for commercial applications. under the designation RB I83·03. Of potential interest to Fokker and Gulfstream Aerospace for new variants of the F28 and the Gulfstream III respectively. the RB 183-03 combines the high pressure system oftheexisting RB I83 Mk 555, with a new low-pressure system featuring wide-cho rd fan technology; the fan diameter is 44 in (112 cm) and the bypass rat io is 3: I. Subject to sui table commitments bei ng made by FoHer and Gulfstream. the RB I83-03 could be certificated in 1986 and enter service in 1987. It will provide a cruising fuel consumption at least 10 per cent better than the RB I83 Mk 555 and a reduction in noise levels to the point that will allow aircraft using it to comply with FAR Part 36 Stage 3 regulations. Certification of the Shoru 360 by the FAA following British certification in September opened the way for delh'eries to begin on II November. when Suburban Airlines accepted its first aircraft. The second production 360 was in the hands of Simmons Airlines before the end of November. Short Brothers also has arranged a package deal with a group of US banks and National Westminster in the UK, which allows it to arrange financing for any US regional operator purchasing Shorts 330s or 3605, without fu rthe r recou rse to the banks in each individual case. T he scheme, which has an initial ceiling of S80m (£5Om) but can be extended in future, has been negotiated primarily between Shorts a nd Ci ticorp International Bank. with the UK Dep.utment of Trade's Export Credi ts Guarantee Department in part guara nteeing the repayment and funding of the deal. SOVI ET UNIO N The deslgnallon Tu-I64 appea rs to have been adop ted for a re-engined variant of the Tupolev Tu- I54. currently undergoing flight testing. At A new series of flight tests was begun during one time referred to as the Tu- I54 B- I (see November by the British Aerospace J aguar Airscene/January 1982). the Tu-l64 (CCCPACT (Active Control Technology) de85317) is a standard production Tu-154B-2 mons trator. This Jaguar (XX765) is an modified to have Solovlev D-30KU engines in extensively modified GR Mk I filted with an place of the usual KUUletsov N K-8-20 engines. The two fuselage-side engines are in 1l-62-type all-digital quadruplex fl y-by-wi re control nacelles. with thrus t reversers. but the D-30s . system and when it first flew in October 1981 it PAG E 4 AIR INTE RNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 was said to be the first aircraft to be so fitted with no fo nn of re versio nary control. The Jaguar ACT can survive all probable failures. and the c urrent flights follow a punishing series of tests to simulate lightning strikes. with high current pulses well in excess of 100 KA . Extensive testing of new computer software on a ground rig rreceded the Right testing. which at the end of 982 was concerned with proving the total reliability of the latest standard of flight control systems. with a nd without external stores on the aircraft. After confinnation of the stall departure and spin prevention system at high incidence. and demonstration of carefree manoeuvering. unsta ble flights were to begin early in 1983. Right testing is in the hands of Warton's Senior Experimental Test Pilot. Chris Yeo, and the major sub-con tractors are Marconi A vionics fo r the electronic control system and Dowty Boulton Paul for the electro-hydraul ic actuators. USA Right testing of the first Boeing 757 for British Airways (G-BIKA DOl'er Cost/e) began al Renton on 26 October, a few weeks before certification of the 757 was to be confirmed by the FAA. as this issue closed for press. Deliveries to Eastern Airlines began before yea r-cnd and the first delivery to British Airways is to be made on 3 February. with the first commercial operation on the LondonBelfast route set for 9 February. The earlier arrangement for Air Europe 10 lease two 757s from British Airways has now been replaced by an outright purchase deal. with delivery of one aircraft each in March 1983 and later in the year: the BA fleet will thus be reduced to 17. The No 6 Boeing 751. which earlier completed an extensive Asian to ur in August (sec Airscene/November 1982) and appeared at the Farnborough Air Show. was used from 17 October to 9 November for a 67-Right. 121 -hr demonstration that included cities in Europe, Africa, North America and South America. McDonnell Douglas has decided not to continue its famou s " DC' series of designations beyond the DC-IO, but to adopt a new "M D" series of century designations. The firs t application of the new designation system is MD-J(K), for the DC- IO derivath'e that has been variously described over the past two yearsas the DC- IOSuper 10and the MD-EEE. Based on the extended spa n wing of the DC-IO Srs 30, the MD- IOO as now projected has a fuselage shortened by 5 ft (1.52 m) and the twoleg main undercarriage and lighter structure of thc DC-IO Srs 10. The standard mixed-class seating capacity works out at 270. and with a gross weight of 475,000 Ib (215460 kg), the MD-IOO has a range o f more than 5,000 naut mls (9 266 Ion). The choice of power plant lies between the Rolls-Royce RB.2 11-535H4 and Pratt & Whitney PW 2031, offering about 41.500 Ib st (18825 kgp) each. McDonnell Douglas says the MD- IOO will be certificated for operation by acrewoftwo. will have an alldigital cockpit with CRT displays and will use advanced composites in many areas of the struc ture. First deliveries could be made in 1986. and there could be a family of MD-IOOs, including later stre tch versions, with a total ma rket potential in excess of 400 aircraft. The nex t version of the McDonnell Douglas DC-9 Super 80. wit h gross weight further increased to 160.000 Ib (72 576 kg) as reported in Airscelle/September 1982. will bedesignated as the S uper 83. Carrying an extra 1,100 US gal (41641) in tanks in the underfloor holds. it will require uprated JT8D-200 series e ngines rated at about 22,000 lb st (9980 kgp) each and will be able to carry its passenger payload over ranges of up to 2,500 naut mls (4630 km). The Super 83 should be especially attractive to certain European IT operators and to some of the US regionals. If a full go-ahead is permitted soon. deliveries could begin early in 1985. A further DC-9 derivative now under stud y is the S uper 90. which is a combination of Super 80 technology with a fuselage shortened by about 28 ft (8,53 m), to the size o f the DC-9 Series 40. This would provide accommodation for 100-120 passengers. with a 1,500-ml (24 14km )range. CFM56-3enginesare being studied as alternatives to the JT8D-2 17 As. Gulfstream American has changed its name to Gui£stream Aerospaee Corporation. and has announced the sale of design rights in the si ngle-cngined Commander Model 11 2 and 11 4 to Evans-Auch Aircra ft ltd. subject to final agreement this month (January). Production of these (originally Rockwell) hghtplanes was termi nated at Bethan,Y in 1980arteracquisition by Gulfs tream Amencan. although spares and supp'ort programmes have continued to be avallablc. Evans-Auch Ai rcraft has been founded at Cody. Wyoming. fo r the purpose of acquiri ng the Commander 11 2 and 114 programme and reloca ting it in Wyomi ng; president and founder of the company IS Elbert Sowerwine 111. o The .second General Dynamics f -l 6X l . powered by a 29,000 Ib st (13154 kgp) FIOI DFE turbofan. made its Hrst fli ght at Fort Worth on 29 October. Converted from o ne of the F-16A development airframes. this is now a two-seater. whereas the first F-16XL is a single-seater with the standard 25.000 lb st (11340 kgp) FI00-PW-I02. Since its first fiight on 3 July. the latter aircraft had flown 76 times up to the end of October and had been handled by seven pilots. Northrop delivered on 15 October 1982 the I,OOOth example or the F-SE Tiger II (this total including F-5F two-seaters). the recipient bein$ the Mexican Ai r Force. Production is continuing at the rate of4-5 a month against a present backlog of about 150 aircraft. Includ109 the T-38, from which the design of the F-5 was derived. and the earlier F-5A and F-5 S va rian ts. the overall production total now exceeds 3.500. The name Tigcreye has now been adopted by No rt hrop for the latest versio n of the RF-5E with reconnaissance cameras in the nose. Sikorsky Aircraft has recentl y confirmed earlier rumours by announcing that it wil l olTer a version of the S-76 helicopter with Prall & Whitney P'f6B engines. This variant of the S76 Mk II will be available in the autumn of 1984. with 1,020 shp PT6B-36 turboshafts and a Hamilton Standard full-authority dual channel fuel control system incorporating digital technology. Gross weighl will go up to 11 ,000 Ib (4490 kg) from the 10.300 Ib (4672 kg) for the present model of the S-76, which has Allison 250-C30S engines and will remain available alongside the PT6B version. The increased gross weight combined with the engine change gives the new S-76 Mk II a 15 1 per cent increase in useful load that can be carried at 5.000 ft (I 525 m) at a temperature of 77 deg F, a feature that is likely to be of particular advan tage to military operators. Northrop announced on 19 November that its prototype Tigershark tactical figh ter had completed 50 fti Rhls, in the course of which it has reached Mach 1·82 and 50.000 ft ( 15240 m). compared with ultimate limits "in the Mach 2 class" and above 53.000 ft (16 154 m). Other demons trations have included a climb to 40,000 ft ( 12192 m) in 2·4 min from brake release (to be improved to 2· 1 min by production aircraft. with uprated F404 engines). and a ground refuelling in nine minutes from engine sto p to enwne start. The 000 has now designated the Tlgershark as the 1"-20, rather than F-5Gas previo usly used . AIt.hough Northrop has slowed down the pace of T igershark development because of the lack of o rders, the compan y spent S209·6m on the programme in the first nine months of 1982. bringing total expenditure to some S409m since 1978. General Electric's Aircraft Equipment Division has begun fiight testing (on a Douglas C-54) the AN /APG-67 multimode radar developed for the Tigershark. Beech Aircraft has selected the Northro p Seehawk forward-looking infra-red ( F LI R) equipment for installation in the Becchcrart 200T surveillance version o f the Super King Air. A prototype of the Seehawk has recentl y completed more than 1.000 hrs of opera tional testing in a USCG helicopter. and Beech will now tit the system in its 200T demonstrator. Hughes Helicopters began fli ght testing, late in 1982, or the Mode1530E helicopter. a mon th or so after the fi rst production model of the Hughes 500E. Both these new modcls (sec Airsce"e/ May 1982) featu re a reprofiled front fuselage and interior improvements; the 530E also features the uprated Allison 250-C30 engine for beller hot-and-high performance. As well as introducing the LA 250 Renegade (this column last month). Lake Aircraft is offering two new nrsions or the ButtaDeer light am phibian for 1983 delivery. Designated LA 4/200EP and LA 4J200EPR. they both retain the 200 hp Lycoming IO-360-AI B engine. but the propeller shaft has been lengthened by 5 in (12,7 cm) to reduce noise in the cabin and improve efficiency generally; the EPR model also olTers a reversibte-pitch Hartzell twobladed propeller. More than 1,000 Buccaneers have been built and production is currently at the rate of three a month. in addition to one Renegade a month. Deliveries of the laller, which has a lengthened fuselage and a number of other changes, began last month (December) and initial o rders are reported to ha ve come from France. Canada. the USA. Colombia, Venezuela and Australia. Duvid Thursto n, designer of the Lake Buccaneer (see previous item) and of several other light amphibians over the past three or four decades, has developed a new four-seat allmeta l amphibian as the Thurston TA- 16 Seafire. A protolype constructed by International Aeromarine Corporation should be undergoing flight testing by the time this issue appears in print. Configuration resembles that of the Buccaneer and the Thurston Teal, with a high wing. T-tail and pylon-mounted engine: the latter. driving a tractor propeller. is a 250 hp Lycoming 0-54O-A4D5. More advanced aerodynamics. modern construction techniques and new materials give the Seafire a better perfonnance than the earlier sporting amphibians, and it has been sized to suit operators in remote regions who need good load-carrying ability. With a maximum useful load of 1.000 Ib (454 kg), the Seafire can. for example, carry 500 Ib (227 kg) for 500 mls (805 km), land. olT-load, take on 800 Ib (363 kg) and fly back to base without refuell ing. The 60 per cent cruising speed is 145 mph (233 km/h). C IVIL A FFA IRS CANADA Through its subsidiary United Helicopters. Bristow Helicoptl"l'S has acquired a 49 per cent stake in Okanagan Helicopters from the Resource Service Group of Calgary. which itself purchased 90 per cent of the Okanagan shares a year ago. The Canadian helicopter operator. based in Vancouve r. has a fleet of 140 helicopters. the most recent additions being a pair of Bell 214STs delivered in October/November. Options are held on six more Be1l214STs. H ONG KONG Catha y Pacific Airwa ys has become the world's first international seheduled airline to operate airerart exc1usi n~ly po ~'ered by RollsRoyce RR.2 1! turbofans. The Hong Kon gbased airline. privately owned as ~rt of the Swire Group. reti red its last Boeing 707 in October. leaving it flyi ng nine Lockheed l-IOII-IOO TriStars and seven Boeing 747s, with an eighth to be deli vered in April and two more on option. The most recentl y delivered 747-200 B has RB.2 11-524D4 engines, which ha ve demonstrated better fuel economy even than forecast. and which give the 747. in Cathay's 4OO-seat configuration , a beller payload-range than any other 747 va riant currentl y available. The 747 freighter recently acquired by Cathay from British Ai rways has -524C2 engines while others in the fleet have e:trlier -524B25. IS RAEL The troubled S tate-owned ai rline [ I AI. grounded by a labour dispute since 13 September, al?peared to have reached the end of its life with the decision taken by the shareholders on 24 No\'ember thai the company should be liquidated . The airline. which has a fleet of 18 aircraft (Boeing 707s, 737s and 747s) plus four Boeing 767s on order, has suffered some 69 strikes in the past 10 years and has reported losses for the past four ; Ihe 1981-82 results showed accumulated losses of £ 126m. assets of £218m and total obligations of nl8m. S PAIN A new charter airline fonned by fonner employccs of TAE. which ceased to operate late in 1981. has the name Hispania Uneas Aereas. The company is expected to have an initial fleet of four Caravelles. at one time owned by Transeuropa and subsequently acquired by Iberia and Aviaco. UNITED KI NGDOM British Airports A ut hori ty has obtained government approval to proceed with con· structio n o f a second passenger terminal at Gatwick . To be known as No rth Termi nal. it will be opened in 1988 and will inc rease Gatwick's an nual passenger capacity from 16 million to 25 million. Work has already begun ona fourth tenninal at Heathrow. and l ondon Transport has recently confinned that the Piccadilly line of the Underground will be extended to serve this new tenninaL British Caledonian Helicopter's first two Bell 21 4ST Super T ransports ftltered senice on I November immediately following British certification for VMC and IMC operations. First of their type in Europe, the Bell 2 14STs were named Loch Broom and Loch Roag and are now operating under a 12·month contr.!.ct to support BP offshore rigs and platfonns. A third 214ST was bei ng delivered to B.Cal in December and three more are o n option. In an arrangement remi niscent of the Allegheny Commuter system in the USA, Brilish Caledonian has launched a Commuter Services d ivision to promote commuler air services linked to its own operations at Gatwick. The firs t company to join R CaI Commu ter Services is Genair, now adopted as the surviving name from the 24 October me rger between Eastern Airways, Casair and Genair (this column last month). T he Genair fleet of Shorts 330s, 3605 and Bandeimntes is being repainted in B.Cal blue and gold colours (but retaining the Genair name) and the company will be able to take advan tage of RCaI ground handlin$. sales and booking services. The Gatwick hubls served by Genair flights from Bournemouth. Exeter. Plymouth. liverpool, Binningham, leeds Teesside. Humberside, East Midlands and Norwich. PAG E 5 FI The Saab-Fairchild 340 is setting the future standards ... now. Saab-Fairchild 340 - for leadership in Economy, Technology and Availability. In SAAB-FAIRCHILD 340 u.s., Canada and Mexico contact: Fairchild Aircrarl Corporation, Box 32486. San Antonio,1X 78284, USA. Tel: (5 12)824-4262. Telex: 767·3 15. In other counlries contacl: Saab-Fairchi ld HB. $-58188 LinkOping, Sweden. Tel: +46 13 i80000. Telex: 50153. SFHBHQ 5., or: Saab-Fairchi ld S.N.C. , 17 Ave. Matignon, F-75008, Paris, France. Tel: + 3312961632. Telex: 643 137. Bcaringa name that is remembered among the pioneers of air transport in the UK, InSlone Air Lines is now operating two Bristol 170 Freighters on scbeduled all-cargo scrYices between Lydd Airport in Kent and Rotterdam five days a week. The original Instone was founded in 19 19 and was absorbed into Imperial Airways upon the latter's formation in 1924. The new Instone has been formed by Giles and Jeremy Instone, grandsons of the original founder, and its Bristol I 70s have been purchased from the Royal New Zealand Air Force. Sir Freddie Laker has obtained approval from the CAA "in principle" to launch a new tour operating business, less than a year after the collapse of Laker Airways. Following objections raised by the Saga Holidaysgroup, which purchased thc Laker Air Holidays company (ineluding the name) rrom the receiver of Laker Airways, the new company, which has the financ ial backing or the Lonrho Group, has agreed not to use the name "Laker" in its title. Present plans are for the new company which is now to be known as Sky train Holidays - to operate tours rrom the UK to the Mediterranean and the USA, but not to own its aircraft. In an unrelated and surprising development following upon the collapse, the liquidator or Laker Airways has filed a lawsuit in the USA seeking damages of "several hundred million dollars" from British Airways, British Caledonian, Pan American, TWA, Lufthansa, Swissair a nd McDonnell Douglas. Basis of this action is a cha rge that these companies conspired together - illegally under US anti-trust legislation - to lower fares on the North Atlantic below profitable levels, with the sole purpose of pUUlOg Laker Airways out of business. The main ticket hall and the control tower of Airport House, which arc part of the original buildings of Croydon Airport , Britain's first commercial airport, are 10 be renovated and preserved. In a scheme with fi nancial support from Guardian Royal Exchange Assurance, and the active: participation or Ihe Croydon Airport Society under its president Sir Peter Masefield, the buildings will become an important museum of d vUa"latlon bistory. The ticket hall will be reconstructed in the original style, with the counters o f such pioneering airlines as Imperial Airways, KLM. Air France, Lufthansa and Sabena. USA Fifty-five years and one week on from making its first scheduled fl ighl (on 28 October 1927) Pa n American inaugurated what is claimed to be the longest non-stop scheduled commercial senice ever. Once a week. starting on 4 November, a Boeing 747SP nies the 7,487 rnls (12049 km) between Los Angeles and Sydney in each direction; the flight continues to and returns from Melbourne. Flying ti me is scheduled at 14 hrs 30 min; departing Los Angeles on Thursday evenings, the flight crosses the lnternational Date Line to arrive in Sydney on Saturday morning. Northbound the flight departs Sydney mid-afternoon on Saturdays to arrive: in Los Angeles well before midnight, local time, on the same: day. C IVIL CO NTRACTS ANO SAL ES Atrospa.iale AS 332 Super Puma: British Airways Helicopters has taken options on three Super Pumas, for delivery durlDg 1983 if a firm order is confirmed. The helicopters would bridge a gap in the BA H fleet between Chinooks and Sikorsky S-6Is. Atrospa' iale/Aeritalia ATR 42: Al igi ul ia, based ID Trieste, has firmed upanorder for two ATR 425 in 46-seal Dash 200 configuration, PAG E 6 ror delivery April 1986 and January 1987. Boeing 707: American Trans Air purchased another 707-32OC, its seventh, from American Airlines. 0 Cairo·based Zakani Aviation Services acquired a 707 from Air France, for all-cargo operations. Boeing 727: New St Louis-based charter airline Air One bought two 727- 100s from US Air. with prospect of starting scheduled services later. 0 Northwest sold three 727- 100s to Emery Air Freight but bought back from Pacific Southwest five 127- 100s it had sold some years ago, and also purchased two 727200s it had been leasing from a lessor. 0 International Lease Finance sold two 7272005, ex-Singapore Ai rlines, to Cayman Airways, accepting two BAC One· Elevens in part-payment. 0 US Air ordered five more 727-200s to rep'lace 727- 100s: delivery is in January 10 Apnl this year. Boein@737: TheCiviIAviationAdministration of ChiOa (CAAq has o rdered 10 737-200s, including two -200C passenger/cargo convertibles. Built by Boeing for another airline that has deferred delivery, the first CAAC 737s will be delivered next month (February), They will be arranged to seat 129 passengers each and have JTBO- 17A turbofans. Boeing 747: Sale ofa Boeing 747F freighter to JAL has been confirmed by Pan American, at a priceor£4Im. Pan Am will sell one more 747F, keeping four as the nucleus ofilS C'drgo fleet. 8oein ~ 757: Air Europe will now purchase outright, ror about £2Om each, two 757-200s that it was to lease from British Airways. Delivery will be in March and later this year. Boeing 767: Ansen Airli nes announced it would defer acceptance of four 767-200s until J une/July, rrom late 1982 as originally planned. A fifth 767 on order will be delivered latcr. De Havilland DH C-6 Twin Otter: Capitol Air Services o f Manhattan, Kansas, took delivery of a seeond Twin Otter, fo r ,commuter services. The first was delivered in 1980. Fokker F27: Manx Airlines, recently formed joint subsidiary of Air UK and BMA, has leased three F27s ror its scheduled services from the Isle of Man. inaugurated in November.O Horizon Air, operating in the Washington and Oregon states, acquired its sixth F27 from Allegheny, to replace a Metro, McDonnell Doug las DC-9: The TWA lease of 15 Super 80s (this column last month) was confirmed on 27 October. Powered by JT80217A turbofans, these will be of Super 82 standa rd, at a gross weight of 149,500 lb (678 12 kg), with a I42-seat mixed-class configuration. Nine will be delivered in 1983 and six in 1984, for US domestic routes. 0 Alitalia announced on 3 November an option to purchase 30 Super 80s, fo r delivery between December 19B3 and December 1986. The order requires Italian government approval and US Eximbank fund ing, and is likely to involve offset manufacturing contracts for the Italian industry. The aircraft will be Super 81s with JT8D-2I7A engines and 147,000-lb (66679-kg) gross weight. 0 Finnair has become the 21st customer for the Super 80, with an order for three in the Super 82 version. Delivery will begin in spring 1983. Argentine government for 15 AS 332 Super Puma helicopters of which three are for the COII/ando Antarctica and 12 for the COII/ando de A l'iaciOll del £jercito. Canadair CL-600 Challenger: One CL-600 Challenger was scheduled to be delivered to the Royal Malaysian Air Force in December under a previously unannounced contract. YT-2? • 1300 De Havilland Canada DHC-50 Buffalo: The Cameroun Air Force accepted delivery of two DHC-5D Buffalo in November and December respectively, bringing to four the numbc:r of transports of this type in the Service's inventory. Boeing Vertol 4 14 Chinook HC Mk I: On I November an order was placed on behalf of the RAF fo r three Model 414 Chinook helicopters to replace those losl aboard the Atfalllic Conn?yor during the Falklands conflict. The three Chinooks are scheduled to be delivered between June and November 1984. - -- Hughes 300C: Ten Hughes 300C light helicopters have been ordered, via Saab-Seania, ror the Swedish Army in a contract valued at some SKr7'5m (£625,000). Hughes A H~A Apache: The US Army has awarded Hughes Helicopters three contracts totalling S I05·1m for long lead production and support of the AH-64A Apache anti-armour helicopter. Lockheed C-58 Galaxy: The USAF signed a S50m contract at the beginning of November for preliminary production on the C-SB Galaxy stra tegic transport. The contract covers long lead items and the refurbishing of stored tooling in preparation for the 50aircraft programme:. Lockheed Hercules: A contract has been placed by the Royal Thai Air Foree for a single C130H-30 Hercules (its third of this IYpe) which is scheduled for delivery in the second q uarter of 1983. 0 The US Navy is to receive two EC130Q Hercules for communications with submarines early 1984. Northrop F-58: Following the receipt or Northrop F-5Fs, the Royal Malaysian Air Force has sold its two two-seal Northrop F5Bs to the Royal Thai Air Force. Siai Marcheni S F.260T P: The Duba; Air Wing has placed an o rder for six SF.26OTP basic trai ners at a unit price of between USS450,000 and USS500,OOO, Sikorsk y H H~D Night Hawk: On 12 November, Sikorsky Aircraft was awarded a S36·6m contract by the USAF fo r full-scale development of the HH-60D Night Hawk combat rescue helicopter derivative of the UH-60A Black Hawk. Depending on future production contracts, the fi rst deliveries of the H H-60D are expected mid- 1986 with an estimated requirement of 243 helicopters. MIUT ARV CO NTRACTS Sikorsky U H ~ Black Hawk: In a procurement arrangement between the US Army and USAF, I I UH-60 Black Hawk utility helicopters are being delivered to the latter Service. The first Black Hawk was scheduled 10 be produced last month (December) and the last IS to becompleted in June, two remaining with Sikorsky fo r prototype development (as HH6005 - see above) and the remainder going to USAF units for aircrew training and familiarisation. Aerospaliale AS 332 Super Puma: The Abu Dhabi government has placed an order fo r an unspecified quantity of AS 332F Super Puma helicopters. 0 An order has been placed by the Westland Commando Mk 3: Delivery is to begin shortly to the Qatar Emiri Air Force of eight of the new multi-purpose Commando M k 3 helicopters. AIR INTE RNATIONA L/ JANUA RY 1983 JOHN FRICKER FLIES .. . NTERING an inverted spin in a re la tively high-performance turboprop tra ine r at little more than 5,000 ft (I 524 m) might not be considered a desirable recipe fo r longevity. After three such demo nstra tio ns, however, with an even more disorientating lomcel·ak t hrow n in, I needed no fur ther convincing of t he remarkable agility and docility of EMB RAER'selegant Tucano. Some clues as to the ex tent to which we were to explore most of the more ext reme corners of t he T ucano's fl ight envelope in a regrettably brief introduction to this new Brazilia n t rainer should have been apparent from my initial meeting with EMBRAER test pilot Guilherme Cara, wi th whom I was to fl y at Kidlington, Beneath his arm was a copy of Neil William s' classic Aerobalics, the bible fo r all aficionados, including myself, but t his still fo und me u nprepa red for advanced competition manoeuvres not no rmally expected fro m a mi lita ry trainer. Not that th ere is a ny real reason why these sho uld not be d one since, like its contem poraries, the T-27, as the Tucano is designated by t he Brazilian a ir fo rce ( Fiirra Aerea Brasileira ) , is d esigned for load fac tors of plus six a nd minus three g in the clean configuration, Its PT6A -25C t urboprop will contin ue to deliver its maxim um o utput , th rough two collector fuel tanks, fo r up to 30 seconds when inverted, 15 seconds in vertical cl imbs or descents, or seven seconds in zero g condi tions, which in effect ensures uninterrupted power in virtually any attit ude. This is a sim ilar e ngine to tha t fitted to those pio neer turboprop t ra iners, the Beech T-34Can d Pi latus PC-7, both of which I had fl own and enjoyed, so that my acq ua in ta nce with the T-27 was awaited wit h particula r inte rest. Although in a sim ila r category, however, the Brazilian aircraft d iffers in man y res pects fro m its first· generatio n predecessors. Unlike those derivatives of earlier piston-engined types, EMB RAER's EM B-3 12 Tucan o was the first turboprop trainer to have been d esigned as such fro m scratch and to in troduce stepped tandem seating for optimum visibility from the rea r cockpit. A large height differential in sea ting, which E facilitates s uc h visibi lity even for weapon-training, has been achieved witho ut excessive fuselage depth and accompanyin g perfo rm ance penalties with the help of a bea utiful o ne-piece frame less canopy. By incor porating the usual fo rward windscreen sectio n, this offers superb all-round visibility to bot h occupa nts witho ut even the restriction o f canopy a nd screen arches. It hinges sideways to starboard supported by a gas str ut and has m inia ture d etonating cord (MOC) around its edges for e mergency escape on the ground. Ano ther differe nce from con temporar y propeller-driven trainers is the provisio n of ejection sea ts, in the form of twin Marti n-Baker BR8 LC ligh tweight units, wh ich gua rantee sa fe escape at operating altitudes down to sea level a t any speed above 70 knots (J 30 km/h). These might be consid ered something of a lux ury in t he T-27 performance bracket bu t were incl uded in the Fiirra Aerea's 1977 requiremen t fo r a new basic trai ner to replace both its T-23 Uirap urus and Cessna T37Cs. Altho ugh unlike ly to be used much in earnest, the MartinBaker seats a re a useful safegua rd for low-level training and light st ri ke roles. T hey have a lready j ustified their insta lla tio n duri ng the T ucano development programme when the second prototype YT-2 7 ( 1301) was lost late last A ug ust in the course of fina l clearance trials, This occur red during d ivi ng tests to wi thin two kno ts (3,7 km/h) of the desig n limit speed (Vd) of 324 k no ts (600 km/h) when, in accordance with Forra Aerea requirements, full rud der was applied. In normal circumstances, this mi gh t well be expected to overstress the fi n , (as well as the pi lot's leg), but, instead , the high-speed yaw caused the skin beneath the leading-edge of the port tailplane to collapse. This resulted in a nose-down pitching momen t eventually record ed a t minus 30 g which, a t 10 tim es the no rma l negative load limi t, not unna t urally caused wi ng fa ilure, fo llowed rapidly by complete d isintegration of the airframe. Fortuna tely, both Mk 8 sea ts functio ned perfec tl y, using canopy penetratio n as specified , via headrest probes, a nd the c rew escaped witho ut serio us injury. The Tucano's b u bble PAG E 7 When the first prototype YT-27 (1300) emerged for it s first High t on 16 August 1980, it featured a trapezoida l vertical tail without sweep and a less tapered lower fuse lage profi le for increased aft keel surface, presumably to improve its spinhandling prospects. It had a lso lost its cran ked wing leadingedge, but gained slightly in span to maintain a similar wing area . In the course of some 1,200 hr of fl ight development, a dorsal fin was added for still more aft side area , together with ta il pla ne-to-fuselage strakes to achieve unrestricted spi n clea rance. From the cockpit seen Iral'e a total capacity to the FA B will begin future. canopy has an integral centre windshield which effectively divides the two cockpit s and provides slipstream protection to the rear occupant in a n emergency. Export customers for the Tuca no, now being actively sought by EMBRA ER, have the option, at least in theory, of dispensing with the T-27's ejection sea ts, which increase the basic aircraft price of $832,000 (at the end of 1982) to $ 1, I 01,760, including Collins avionics. Their installed weight, including the necessa ry structura l reinfo rcement, contributes towards the Tucano being a ra ther bigger and heavier aircraft than its ea rlier competitors, although also offering somewhat higher perfo rmance. Apart from elegant aerody nam ics, this perfo rmance superiority is achieved by making availa ble the full 750 shp of the PT6A-25C for ta ke-ofTand max continuous power, instead of Ha t-ra ting it at 550 shpas in the T-34C a nd PC-7. The higher output, with an installed rating of 783 eshp incl udin g exhaust thrust, is nevertheless available up to am bient tempera tures of 30·5 deg C, with an sfc of O·595 Ib/eshp/hr, so tha t a t ISA + 15 deg C, the T -27 still has a sligh tly lower power loading at aeroba tic weights than its competi tors. In the third prototype, Hown at KidJington after a ppeari ng at Fa rnborough, the throttle quadran t had an easily overridden check stop limiting engine output to 580 shp if req uired, but this is apparently not used in practice, and is to be removed on production aircraft. The first of these is now at a n adva nced stage a t the sao Jose dos Campos factory, fo llowing recent completion of the fo urth fli ght prototype (Plus two sta tic test airframes) to fi nish the develo pment a nd certification programme, including a repeat of the Vd test with a suitably reinforced tailplane skin. Design evolution Design fea tures of the original EMB-3 12 conform to FAR Part 23 Amendment 23-21 and to US Mil Specs, while consideration has also been given to BCARs Section K. Stress levels are fo r a n initial design fa ti gue life of6,000 hr, and the T27 has ma noeuvering load factors of up to + 4·4 and - 2·2 g with a full load of four 250-kg (55 1-lb) underwing stores when used for weapons training or light ground attack roles. From the sta rt of its design in Ja nuary 1978, by a team led by Ing Joseph Kovacs, to the finalisa tion of its type specification in Februa ry 1979, follow ing awa rd ofa contract for two nigh t prototypes a nd the two sta tic test airframes on 6 December 1978, the EMB-3 12 has cha nged remarkably little in basic concept and only a little in design deta il. As originall y conceived, it had a somewha t slimmer fuselage and stylishlyswept vertical ta il , while its canopy arra ngement included a conventional fixed forward windscreen. Forwa rd sweep was also envisaged for the inner wing leading-edges, together with a small ventral fin beneath the rear fuselage. PAGE 8 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUA RY 1983 Access to the spacious front cockpit of tbe Tucano demo nstra tor PP-ZO K was simplified from a pre-flight briefin g by two Martin-Ba ker technicians on the Mk 8 sea t through a mobile rig at Kidlington. With no rocke t pack a nd a combined harness fo r seat and integral parachute, plus only a single act ua tion point from a central handle on the front of the sea t pan, the Mk 8 req uires only quick-a ttaching garters for its leg-restraint lines to be donned before settling-in , unlike the complica ted connections required with many other ejection seats. It is electrically-adjustable fo r height a nd all you have to ensure is tha t the top of you r bone-dome remains below the two seat probes so that these ra ther than your head will shatter the ca nopy if you have to eject. With the seats con ferring a thoroughl y opera tional environment, cock pit layo ut of the T-27 is neat a nd uncomplicated, offering virtually complete duplica tion for stude nt and instructor. Engine instruments are to the right of the central blind-fl ying group, and arc further fl an ked by a n a nnuncia tor panel with provision for 26 displays and a master a la rm. Standard avionics install ation is a Collins IF R package wi th HSI and R MI, and selector boxes in the lower left-ha nd corner of the panel. Armament switches and selectors a re a longside in the centre. Rudder peda ls incorpora ting toe brakes a re adj ustable for leg length via a knob a t the bottom of the centra l console. On the ground, the nosewheel is steerable through the rudder pedals, fr om which it is a utomatically disconnected on retraction. Undercarriage operation is hydra ulic, the mainwheels foldin g inwa rds a nd the nosewheel rea rwa rds, the doors for the inner wheel wells closing again automatically on extension. These have their own warning light in addition to the standard three undercarriage posi tion lights fl a nking the stalky (and slightly spongy) selector lever on the lower left pa nel. T his incorporates a fl ashing red ligh t, Pi per-style, which operates at low power settings in conjunction with a wa rning horn until the undercarriage is ex tended, and a simila r audio signal is apparently relayed to ground co ntrol. In addition to a rmament release switches, the moulded Page handgrip on the control column has a four-way thum b-switch for eleva tor and aileron trim, via tabs on the a ppropriate surfaces. Rudder trim is from a rocker switch on the satisfactorily solid power control (throttle) lever, which a lso incorporates, fighter-style, a n RT tra nsmit button. Miniature Desynn indica tors display the positions of all three control tabs, and an override cut-out switch is provided for the runaway trim case. Trim settings from the front cockpit can also be overridden from the rear (instructor's) sea t. Tucano airborne Since the T ucano's PT6A is mounted so that its thrust line is offset a few degrees to star board to compensate for full power torque, no rudder trim is required for ta ke-off, for which elevator and aileron tabs also normally remain neutral. PT6 starting is as straightforward as ever, with ignition selection for the gas generator a t 12 per cent Ng, and the power control lever (peL) eased forwa rds from its fuel shu t-off position to the idling stop. Unlike other PT6A trainer installations, tha t in the T ucano dispenses altogether with even limited rpm sele<:tion, with the propeller constant-speedi ng throughout at 2,200 rpm, resulting in total single-lever power control, as in a jet. Such simulat ion , of course, was one of the main objectives of the EM BRAER designers, and the Tucano leaves you in no doubt as to the measure of this success. With the canopy closed , you are seated in a distortion-free bubble, wit h no visible obstruct ion from the front cockpit , apart from the forward coamin g and short and narrow cowling through an a rc of more tha n 180 deg, since you a re seated slight ly forward of thc wing lead ing-edge. View from the rear seat is slightly more restricted, particula rly by the wing, bu t is probably at least as good as a ny other tandem-seat trainer current ly fl ying. Steering foot-loads a rc moderately heavy when taxying, but control is precise and the disc brakes very effective. With the PCL at the idling gate, taxying speeds soon build up on ta rmac, but lifti ng the throttle briefl y back into the beta range provides a n insta nt and effective check. If aft movement of the PC L is continued , of course, the propeller can be put into fu ll reverse pitch if req uired - an unusual feat ure for a tra iner. Wit h all trims neutral and eject ion sea t safety pins withdrawn a nd stowed, rema ining pre·fli ght che<:ks a re concerned mainly wit h veri fying fuel state - 744lb (337 kg) of the avai lable 1,220 Ib (553, 7 kg) max internal capacity in our case - a nd ensuring that all fo ur booster pum ps are on. These are left on throughout flight. The single-slotted flaps can also be selected, if req uired, and operate electrically to a take-oIT selting of23 deg. Maxi mum defl ection is 38 deg. In our clean and rela tively lightl y-loaded conditio n, take-off acceleration was decidedly brisk on opening up to max power of 1,800 ftfl b torq ue. With no propeller speed cont rol, torq ue becomes the prima ry power reference, and a ut omatic li mi tation is to be provided in production aircraft to restrict full -th rottle output to that upper figure , regardless ofDA T. Although amply-powered, the T·27 showed little tendency to swing during the brief take-ofT run and left the ground clea nly after rota ting at about 80 knots ( 148 km/h) a nd a ru n of a round 900 ft (274 m). With gear a nd flaps up after very li ttle change of trim, climb angle was almost uncom fortably steepat the best rate speed of 110 knots (203 km/h), which took the VS I to nearly 3,000 ft/min (15 ,2 m/scc). Time and airspace restrictions resulted in us levelling off al 6,000 ft (1828 m) under the cont rol of Brize Norton radar, bu t in normal training operations, the Tucano will achieve 20,000 ft (6 096 m) in nine min utes fro m take-off, and will then still be clim bing a t more than 1,000 ft j min (5 m/sec). Since most of its operations are likely to be a t lower levels, however, the T-27 is not pressurised, but is provided with oxygen and cockpit ai r cond itioning. At our modest height, throttling back to around 1,400 ft /tb on the lorquemeter resulted in the Tucano settli ng down to indicate a round 190 knots (352 km/h). Cruising fuel flows vary between about 186-200 lb/hr (84,5-9 1 kg/h), according to height and power settin g, but a typical training sortie of about I hr 10 min, comprising a climb to 20,000 ft (6096 m), 20 min cruise for format ion, instrument or nav exercises, a dive at Vne to 10,000 ft (3048 m), 15 min of stalling, spinn ing or acrobatics, and a fu rther descent for four touch-and-go a nd one full-stop landings requires, accordi ng to EMBRAER , just under 400 Ib (18 1 kg) of fu el. With two standard 72·6 Imp ga l (330 I) drop ta nks on the inncr wing pylons, to give a max ferry capaci ty of 2,337 Ib ( I 060 kg) of fuel and a take-off weight of 7,000 lb (3 175 kg) with a crew of two, PP-Z DK was fl own across the South Atlantic for the Farnborough display on a non-stop leg of 1,350 nm (2 501 km) in 7·25 hr a t a block speed of some 186 knots (344 kmjh). Having made its first fli gh t on 16 August, only 10 days before leaving for Europe, the thi rd prototype had not completed its prod uction test schedule and was not entirely representative of the definitive aircraft. In pa rticula r, the PAGE 9 ailerons were said to be rather heavier than on previous T27s, although they appeared reasonably well-ha rmonised with the rudder a nd elevator on initial acquaintance. Ground examination of the ailerons had revea led a blunt trailing-edge profile, capped by a thin metal strip, but this sl ightly curious Tshaped section is apparently nOI to a fina lised standard. Elevato r stick rorces a re currently rairly light, wi th an aft co figure quoted at around 5·7 Ib (2,6 kg) per' g , but the rudder fee ls substant ially more solid, although respon sive at relativel y small deflection s. Thi s furt her contributes to the "jet" feel of the T-27, which ca lls for little usc of the rudder and shows rema rkably low directional trim cha nges. All three trimmers are sensitive and powerfu l, but a re seldom required. In conjunct ion with a ll-altit udes power fro m the PT6, this combination makes Ihe T -27 delightful fo r aeroba tics, which occupied a large pa rt of our sortie from Kidlington. First, however, ca me a look al the low-speed hand ling, which confirmed the fl ight ma nual figu res of 75 knots (139 km/h) in the clean configuration at max aerobatic weight (6,622 Ib/2 550 kg) and 69 knots (128 km/h) with gea r a nd full flap extended. Wit h the clea n airframe , deceleration is slow, and there was a margi n of 5-7 knots (9,2-1 3 km/h) between slight aerodynamic and a udio sta ll warning a nd Ihe wings-level brea kaway. After my standard sta ll approach a t approxi mately one knot per second reduction in airspeed , feeling for continued a ileron effect iveness in the process, a somewhat more dramatic confirmat ion then resulted when my rea r seat mentor pulled Tire T-27 Tucano is clraracterised by a massive single canopy Ol'er the two cockpits, Iringed to open Sideways os shown abow!. The first preproduction aircraft, shown below, made a demonstration rour through Europe and the Middle East after appearing at the Farnborouglt air show in Sep tember. -- EMBRAER EMB-312 (T-27) Tucanocutaway drawing key 1 Hartzellthrae-bl aded conStant -speed pt'opallm 2 Spinner 3 Propaller hub pitch-change mechanism 4 Engine air intaka 5 Nose undercarriaga pivot liking 6 Nosewheelleg str ut 7 TakYing lamp 8 Torquescissorlinils 9 Nosewhael 10 Rear retract ion struts 11 Nosewheelleg doors 12 Intake IIunking 13 bhaust nozzles 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Oil cooler exhaust duct Fuel system filters Underfloor conllol runs Cockpit air cond itioning plan t Pon side console panel Engine throttle lever Forward (student) pilo!"s Martin - Baker Mk 8lC ejection 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Starboard side console panel Circuit breaker panel Control column Rear view mirror Forward instrument panel Instrument panel shroud Stand-by compass _. EM BRAER EM8-312fT-27 Tucano Specification Power Plant: One Prall & Whit ncy Canada PT6A-25C fr«turbine e ngine de velo ping 750 shp fo r la kc-off an~ . max continuo us powe r to 30·5 dcg C at 2.200 rpm . a nd dri Ving a t hree-bladed co nstant-speed fea thering Hartzell HC-BlTN3C{f101 78-8 R propeller of n5 n (2.36 m) dia meter. Internal fuel ca pacity. 152·5 Imp gal (694 1) in fo ur i nt egr~ l .wi ng ta nks lined with a nti-delOnatio n plastic foam. and prOV ISio n fo~ t wo 72·6 Imp gal (3301) capacity fe rry tanks s us pended fro m Inner wing hard points. Performance: (At ac ro batic weight) Max contin uo us speed. 253 kt (469 km{h) a t 9.000 ft (2 743 m): econo m ical cruise. 10.000 ft (3 048 m). 185 kt (345 k.m /h): initial climb. 2.590 fi/ mi n (13. 15 m/scc): service ceiling. 28.500 n (8 686 m): take-off d istance over 50 n ( \ 5.2 m), ISA at sea level. 1,740 fi (533.2 m): landing distance from 50 n ( 15.2 m). ISA at sea leYel. 1.657 ft (505 m): max range. internal fuel , 1.024 nm ( I 897 km): e ndurance. 5·53 h" Weights: Empty equipped. 3.487 1b ( I 582 kg): max internal fuel. 1.220Ib(553.7 kg); max zero-fuel weight, 4.5 191b (2 050 kg): max aerolxa tic tnke-off a nd landing. 5,622 Ib (2 550 kg): max external stores. 2.204 1b ( I 000 kg): max ramp weight . 7.044lb (3 195 kg): max permissible take-off .....eight. 7.000 Ib (3 175 kg). Dimensions: Span. 36·55 ft (11 . 14 m): length. 32·35 n (9,86 m): height. 11 · 15 rt (3.4 m): wing area. 208·82 sq ft (19.4 m2). , 47 S8AT7 >< 37-mmrockel launcher 48 S8AT7 ><70 -mmrocket launcher 49 Starboard w ing pylons 50 Starboard tanding lamp 51 Pylon fixing access panels 52 Aileron hinge control 53 Ventral pitot tube 54 Starboard navigelion lig hts 55 Glass- fibre w ing tip felfing 56 Starboard aileron 57 Fixed tab 58 Aileron tab 59 Flap guide ra il 60 Sterboard single slotted flap (down position) 61 Flap sCrew jack 62 Ejection seat headrest 63 InS!luctor's windsh ield 64 Air systam 10uYres 65 Cockpit coaming construction 66 Rear rudder pedals 67 Wing centre section carry through 68 Wing attachment luselage double frame 69 Rear cont rol column 70 Fuselage/ wing ettachment longeron 71 Cockpit section Irame and stringer construction 78 One- piece ' "meless cockpit cano py 79 Ejection seat ca nopy piercing horn 80 Cockpit ail conditioning system 10UYles 81 Can opy emergency release handle 82 Oxygen bottle 83 Cockpit sloping real bulkhead 84 Radio and electronics equipment bay 85 Cockpit air vent 86 Oxygen bottles '" Fuselage skin panelling 88 Upper VHF aerial 41 Reflex gunsight 42 Cockpit canopy Iraming 43 Starboard main undere&rriage pivot lixing 44 Starboard wing integral fuel tank bays (totalluel capa city 183USgal/ 694 1) 45 Fuel filler cap 46 5 -in (127 -mm) HVAR ground attack rockets PAG E 10 AIR INTERNATIONA L/JAN UARY 1983 72 73 74 75 76 77 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 14 Pralt & Whitney (Canada) PT6A-25C turboshaft engine 15 Engine mounting ring 16 Intakelilterscreen 17 low-voltage lormation l!.Qhting strips 18 0.1 cooler air scoop 19 Nosewheel dOOfl (closed after ektension 01 nosewheel) 20 Oil cooler 21 Engine bay main longeron 22 Accessory equipment compartment 23 Engine bearer S!lUIS 24 Cockpit Iront bulkhead 25 Forward rudder pedals 26 Footboards PILOT PRESS COPYR IGHT DRAWING 100 124 125 126 127 128 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 Whip aerial Rear 'uselage decking Fin root fillet Starboard ta ilplane Starboard eleYa tor Fin leading edge Fin spar attachment Tailfin construction VOR aelial lOw-yoltage fOlmation lighting strips Rudder hOln balance Static dischargers Rudder tab Rudder construction Sternpost Elevator hinge control Pan eleyatO( tab Teil navigation light Pan aileron construction Aileron horn balance Tailplane rib construction Rear fuselage skin doubler Rear thrOllle leyer Canopy extel nal handle Rear instrument panel Starboard side console panel Safety harness Rear (instructor) pilot's Martin- Baker Mk 8lC ejection M" PAGE 11 111 Sloping fin attachment frame 112 Tailplanestrake 113 Rearfuselagelrameand stringer construction 114 Tailconllolcables 115 Oxygen bottle charg ing valve and pressure gauge 116 Hydraulic accumulator 117 Baggage/ radio equipmen t bay door 118 8aggage compartment 119 Ground powel socket 120 Hyd raul ic leservoir 121 Hydraulic equipment bay 122 LowerVHFaerial 123 8081dingstep 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 Wing walkway Pon mainwheel bay Rear spat Flapsclew jack Pon single slotted ttailing edge flap Flap rib construction Aileron tab Aileron control cables Fixed tab Aileron rib construction Wing stringers Glass-libre w ing tip fa iring Port navigation lights Leading edQl nose ribs Main spar Ou ter integral fuel tank bay Pylon mounting struCture Port wing stores pylons Port landing lamp Mainwheelleg door Port mainwheel Torque scissor links Main underca rriage leg strut Fuelfillercap Main undercarriage reg pivot fixing Retraction side Slrut Hydraulic retraction jack Inboard integral fuel tank bay Auxiliary I,ont spar AN / M - 8 machinegunpod Pod attachment spigot Ammunition tank (350 rounds) 12.7 -mm (I>5-in) machine gun Ammunition feed ch ute Cartridge case ejection chute 7,62-mm machine gun pod (500 rounds) 250lb HE bomb 20lbprecticebomb the nose up almost vertically with power and flap. As the nose rell through a t about 40 knots (74 km/h) lAS, he conti nued to hold the stick ha rd back on its stops, maintaining a wings-level attitude by coarse use of ailerons and rudder as the aircraft mushed down, shuddering and buffeting in protest, but remaining under rull and effecti ve control. My spin explora tion to left and right, which shOWed absolutely classic handling, rrom an entry speed of about 80 knots (148 km/h), with the loss or about 700 ft (213 m) per turn, then led to the demonstrations of inveried spins previously mentio ned, all entered rrom between 5,000-6,000 ft (1524-1828 m). Inverted stalling speed or the T-27 is around 90 kno ts ( \66,7 km/h), a nd the resultant spin after rudder application is tight, rast a nd appears less oscillatory than when erect, although characteristics may be varied in either case largely as required by the use or in-spin or out-spin aileron. Since so few advanced combat aircraft are now cleared for any type of spin manoeuvre, which ca n nevertheless often be PAGE 12 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 enco untered inadvertentl y, especiall y at high alti tudes, recognition and recovery procedures relating to inverted spins are becoming an increasingly im portant requirement from military trainers. In tha t respect, the T-27 must be rega rded as outstanding, from its virt ually complete absence of spin limitations and text-book handling. In aerobatics it is equa lly exciting. Looping manoeuVres may be started way below its normal cruise at speeds down to about 135 knots (250 km/h), with no trace of buffet, a nd even the optimum 170 knots (3 15 km/h) requires less than cruising power, as do rolls at around 180 knots (33 3 km/h). Controls a re smooth and precise for all manoeuvres, with a wide margin from Vile of291 knots (539 km/h), but my own tentative effo rts were totally eclipsed by the Farn borough-type display requested of G uilherme from the ground on our return to Kidlington. The to-minute sequence which followed effectively rounded out those few com ers of the fli ght envelope which we had left unex plored, with all the arti stry of a Farnborough display but with none of its restrictions on a 300 ft (9 1,4 m) minimum height. My hoped-for explora tion of the T-27 in the circuit did not, therefore, ma terialise, although I observed with interest the short-la nding which concluded the display. First stage of flap may be lowered at speeds up to 180 knots (333 km/h) lAS, with ( Abo ~'e a sligh t nose-up trim cha nge, full flap and la nding-gear extension limits being 150 knots (278 km/h). About 1,000 ftfJ b to rque is then needed to maintain a circuit speed in the landing configuration of about 120 knots (222 krri/h), reducing to 100 knots (185 km/h) downwind, 90 knots (166,7 km/h) on fi nals and 80 knots (148 km/h) over the hedge. Elevator response for the landing fla re is good ; the undercarriage oleos are welldamped without bein g ha rd; and the normal landing run without beta or reverse pitch is less than 1,000 ft (305 m). According to the cockpit accelerometer, we had not exceeded + 4·5 or - 1'5 g during our somewhat energetic sortie, to which the toppled gyros, ma tched only by my eyeballs, bore additional tes'timony. It had felt much, much more, but such is the appeal of the Tuca no that I would relish the opportunity of a return engagement. This will probably have to wa it unti l CSE take delivery of the three Tuca nos on which they have an option for trainin g military students should sufficient be forthcoming. In the meantime, I envy the class of 1983 a t the F6r~a Aerea Brasileira Air Academy, Pirassun unga , in Sao Pa ulo, due to receive the fi rst of 11 8 T27s on order (plus options for a further 50) ea rly in this New Year. Deli veries a re due to fo llow at the rate offive per month, increasing to ei ght per month by 1984 to fulfil domestic and interna tional orders. While a t Kidlington, the T-27 demonstrator was evaluated by a number of RAF pilots, although Britain has no firm requirement at this stage fo r a new basic militar y trainer. PPZD K then went on for a seven-day tour of the Middle East, wi th particular emphasis on Egypt a nd Sa udi Arabia. EM BRAE R has already reported considera ble interest from potential export customers, a nd is cla iming continuing negotia tions for up to 400 possible foreign orders from Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa. This is a far bigger response than originally en visaged, and even if only half these discussions result in firm contracts, EM BRAE R will , have to expand its pla nned prod uction rate by 50 per cent or more. If its initial prom ise is fulfi lled, the Tuca no has all the makings of becoming a classic trainer of the turbine age. 0 le/l) The tK'0 YT-27 prototypes in/ormation. Both aircraft are shown here in the original configuration, be/ore Ihe dorsa/ jin was added. The production configuration 0/ the T-27 Tucano is depicted In the line drawing belo w. - -- - - - - -- - - - - - - , Tientsin Time Capsule ••• -_ _ - --_.---------_ .. ... - -- - ••• --- a visit to a Chinese air base Two-and-a-half years ago, in surveying Chinese air power, AIR lNTERNATIONAL referred to the Air Force of the People's liberation Army as an obsolescing goliathj the 30 months that have since elapsed have seen this numerically massive air arm sink still further into obsolescence. Deterioration of the Chinese economy has stalled the anticipated infusion of western technology and progress in development of modern combat aircraft of indigenous design has been barely perceptible - the long-awaited F-8 Finback variable-geometry fighter has yet to attain some measure of service status if western intelligence assessments have any validity. Major Lennart Berns of the Royal Swedish Air Force, a former member of the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission, has recently had the opportunity to visit a Chinese fighter division and here recounts his impressions of this visit for AIR INT ERNATIONAL ~ A SERVICE PI LOT from the era of the Viggen, the Eagle and 1. the Tornado. a visit to a Chinese milita ry air base might n PAGE 14 AIR INTERNATI ONA L/ J A NU A RY 1983 ... well instill a feeling of involvement in a time warp; of transportation back from the ea rly 'eighties to the early 'sixties. Here he will fi nd encapsulated a military avia tion scenario unseen in the West for perhaps a score of years, its principal tiramaris personae being jet fi gh ters of 'fifti es technology - their like long withdrawn from major western air fo rces a nd the survivors of their genus now museum exhibits or ga te guardians. These fighters, anachronisms by any standard beyond the bounda ries of China, will be fou nd in the company of braced and bestrutted utility transport biplanes of even more venerable deriva tion, and their venue will also proO'er centrifugal-flow gas turbines dating back in ori gin to World Wa r II and weapons sights but one step removed from those with which that conflict was fou ght. He will encounter on workshop wall s instructional diagrams depicting a level of systems sophistication scarcely more advanced than that commonplace during the jet combat aircraft era 's fi rst decade. He will assuredl y fin d such a visit to be a fasc inating- albeit at times a n unnerving - experience! When, on 16 October, a Chinese pilot, Wu Jung-chien, defected to SOUlh Korea. it was almost inevitable that the aircraft he flew to an airfield south of Seoul be a Type 6 Figh ter· , the Chinese-built MiG- 19 of ea rl y 'fifti es Soviet origin, which, today, is a rguably symbolic of China's ma nifest inability to maintain over the past two decades any sort of pa rity in weaponry development with that ta king place beyond Chinese borders. Despite China's official committal since the death of Chairma n Mao to long-term milita ry re-eq uipment and modernisation, the Air Force of the People's Libera tion Army, or Chung-kuo Slten Min Taie-Fang - Tsun Pu-rai, is unq uestionably weaker, in all senses other than the numerical, tha n when the commitment was made, the bulk of the air defence lha t it provides remaining reliant on the Type 6 Fighter, an ageing relic of pre-ideological-difference Soviet tutelage. Without a major infusion of western technology involving licence-manufacture of weaponry, such as was envisaged some yea rs ago, the continued stagnation of the Chinese air aI m is inevitable. In view of China's chronic economic problems which are dictating cha nges in objectives with military ·In Pinyin. the I\'esternlsed /orm of spelling now adopted, Ihe Chinese equ/l'alent 0/ " Type 6 Fighter ' is Sinshi-liyu ( Type 6) Jianjiji ( Fighter). This is usually abbreviated as 1-6. although on earlier westernised/orm, F-6, also remains in use and both abbreviations are to be/ound in Chinese publications. PAGE 15 ( Aool't'le/l ) Thl' JJ-5 ( FT-5 ) IM'o-seallrainerderh'otil'eo/lheJ-5, alias MiG-1 7, is powered by Ihe Shenyang-manu/aclllred TJ-5D ( Klimo ~ VK-I ). a Rolls-Royu Nt'ne derimlil'e cenlri/ugol-jlow engine dOling back conceptullfl}, 10 WWII. The similarly-powered single-seal J-5, seen below undergoing • maintenance at dispersal, remains an important item in the inl'entory o/the Air Force o/Ihe People 's Liberation Army despite hal'ingjirst entered serriei' with the So~iet Air Force /hirt)' years ago! ( Ph% s courtes)' Giol'onni de Briganti.} PAGE 16 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 PAG E 17 modernisat ion apparently downgraded, this vital infusion now appears unlikely in the foreseeable future. Even programmes already embarked upon, such as ma nufacture of the Rolls-Royce RB.I68-25 R Spey at Xian, have now been discontinued, and economic force majeure is dictating grea ter relia nce on indigenous ra ther than licensed weaponsmanufacturing programmes, with a rather lower key western technology input than was a t one time a nticipated. It would seem inevitable, therefore, tha t, conceptual age notwithstanding, the Type 6 Fighter, alias J-6, will remain the backbone of the Chinese fighter force throughout much of the remai nder of this decade. With this thought in mind, it was with particular interest that I was to examine in Silu Chinesemanufactured examples of this elderly representa ti ve of the late Art yom Mikoyan's aerona utica l a rtistry when the opportunit y arose recently. Few concessions to the 'eighties As an officer of the Swedish contingent of the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission based in the Korean border village of Panmunjom, I was enabled , thanks to the special status of the Commission, to visit with comparative ease and via North Korea the People's Republic of China. The act ual travelling time fro m Panmunjom to the North Korean capital of Pyongyang by car and thence by air to the Chinese capital, Beijing (Peking), occupied only some six hours. Use of this route - which fewer than a score of people a re empowered to utilise, all others travelling the much longer routes via eit her was possible owing to the Hongkong or Tokyo Comm ission's stat us, the convenience of the journey coupled with the warm hospitality of the Chinese making visits to China popular among the Swedes in Panmunjom. It had occurred to me tha t I might combi ne the pleasurable with the instructive if, during a visit to China, I could get myself on the other side of the gates of a Chinese military air base. My expecta tions of putting this idea into practice were, admittedly, not very high , although I was awa re that some western air fo rce personnel had been admitted to Chinese mil itary airfie lds. The Swedish Embassy supported my proposal, however, and this was dul y processed by the Chinese Foreign Office a nd Ministry of Defencc. I had still no idea as to Chinese reactions to the proposal when I left for China and was pleasurably surprised, therefore, to receive, upon my arrival in the People's Republic, an invitation to visi t an air base at Yangtsuon, close to Tientsin and some 80 miles (130 km) south-east of Beijing. Occupied by the 38th Air Defence Division, the principal task of which is to contribute to the air cover of the capital, the Yangtsuon base, to which I was accompanied by Mr Chen Xingneng from the Air StafT in Beijing, could onl y be viewed by occidental eyes as austere! Built in the mid-'sixties a nd initially employed as a fighte r conversion school - the chiefs MiG -19S (J -6) cutawey drewing key 1 Pitottube (hinged) 2 8 ifurcated intake 3 Combat camera (offset to starboard ) 4 Nose intake ring 5 Access panel 6 Nosewheel rellaction cylinder 7 Nudelmann -Rikhter NR -30 revolve, - Jype cannon (starboard lower fuselage) of 30 -mm calibfe 8 Nosewheel doors 9 TaK'(i ng lighl 10 Nosewheellog assembly 11 Axle lork 12 Forward-retracting nosewheel (500"180 mmtyre) 13 Shock absorber 14 Ranging &erial 15 Oxygen bonlel 16 Inlake trunking (port) 17 RSIU -4 (CT- l ) VHF receiver 18 RSIU-4(CT- l) VHF Iransmitter 19 Acc umulator 20 RV- 2 (WG -3) radio altimeter transmitter/ receiver 21 Windscreen 22 AS P- 5N automatic gyroscopic gunlight (coupledwilh SRD raOQafinder ) 23 Instrument panel l hroud 24 Starboard console 25 Con trol column 26 Rudder pedal assembly 27 Intake duct sectio n 28 NR -30cannon muzzle 29 Landing light 30 NR - 30cannon barrel fairing 31 Ejector sea tpan 32 canopy external release/ lock 33 Ejection seat 34 Headrul 35 Single-piece jettilOnable canopy 36 ARK - 5radiocompass antanlUle (in canopy) 37 Cabin pressurisalion compressed air system 38 RSIU -4 ( CT - 1) VHF anlenna 39 Four -spar w ingSlructure (main and three auxmary) 40 Mainspar (inboard section) 41 Slarboatd mid-span full-chord boundary layer fence 42 Wingsk inning 43 Starboard navig ation lighl 44 Starboard aileron 4 5 Fueldumpvents 46 Sl arboard auxiliary fuel tank of 167 Imp gal (7601) capacity 41 Slarboard hydraulically powered Fowler -Jype flap 48 Flap hinge fairing 49 Ramairintakes 50 Dorsal spine housing conllol rod tunnel 51 Fuel filler cap 52 Main (N os 1 and 2) fuel tanks 01 323 Imp gal (1 470 1) and 72·6 Imp gal ( 330 I) ca pacity 53 Intakecut -outframes 54 Hydraulics accumulator 55 Port Tumansky RD -9 8 - 81 1 (Wopen 6A) lurbojet 56 Slot intakes 57 Air condi tioning system 58 Slab-Jype tai lplane conllol rod linkage 59 Fuselage break point 60 A ir inlake 61 Hydraulics 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 Oil tanks Rudder control linkage Fuselage aft frames Filler cap lor aft tanks (Nos3 and 4 ) of 39·6 Imp gal (180 1) and 38·4 Imp gal ( I 751) capacity Air intake Tailplane control hyd raulic aClua tor Tailfinfrontspar Starboard hydraulicallyactualed one· piece tailplane Anti -lluner weight Tailfin struCture ARK - 5 radi o compass mounting Tail wern ing rader amplifier Rudderbalance 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 • of stafT of the Albanian and Vietnamese air forces had. I wa s informed , undergone instruction here - the ba se had become an operational station in 1967. Offerin g a single. 7,550-ft (2 300-m ) cast-west runway. Yan gtsuon possesses ample taxiways. hardstandings and dispersa l areas. and a quite adva nced refuellin g system - even by western standards with the fuel bein g piped dircctly to apron positions. The a ppearance of austerity results from the singular dearth of covered area. Yangtsuon has no hardened shelters and there is but olle hangar, plus workshops. The sole hangar serves for all maintena nce purposes: airframes. engines, instrumentation, elcclrics, avionics, pneu ma tics, hydraulics, sufety equipment and urma ment! Insofar as the aircfOtft a re concerned, they rema in in the ope n under all weather conditions. ensh rouded al most completely by thick . wa terproof canvas covers! My hosts did not apparently co nsider this unusual ; they expect thei r aircraft to function competentl y despite the sort of treatment tha t we, in the West, would on ly mete out to an elderly Vol kswagen, a nd it would seem tha t fu nction they do! Nevert heless, I could not but help reneet on the possible Chinese a pproach to the operution of the sophi sticated fighters of the 'eighties which would scarcely take kindly to the " rough living" accorded China 's 'fifties vintage warpla nes! PI LOT PRESS COPYR IG HT DRAWING Aherburner Aherburn&t" cooling air intaku Tail bumper Slab tailpl8lle I pigot Slab tailplane actuatorlairing Tailplane (fixed) fillet PR · 19 braking chuta packing panel Ventral strake Ah(N04)luel tankof38·4 Imp gal (I 75 1) ca pacity Filler neck A ir brake hydraulic actuating <om 108 Port w ing rOOI cannon bay 109 Cannon cooling louvres 110 Port 30-mm Nudelmann Rikhter NR-30 revolver- type cannon 111 Compressed air bonle ',:, ;;I';;:::~"I::m", / ~ 112 RV- 2 ( WG -3 ) rad io altimeler dipole 113 Perforated venlral air bfake 114 Weapons Pvlon ( port and starboard inboard wing ) 1150RO -57Keight -rocket launcher 116 Frangible nose cap 117 Pon auxiliary fuel tank of 167 Imp gal (760 I) capacity 118 Mainwheellog fai ring 11 9 Levered suspension mainwheel gear assembly 98 99 100 101 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 PAGE 18 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 Rear navigalion light Rudder hinges Tailfi nrear spar Rudder tab Pen -nib exhaust fairing Anti -flu!terweight One -piece tail plane structure Exhaust nozzle (three position) hydraulic cont rol 102 103 104 105 106 107 Port lIap structure Aileron con tr ol linkage M ainspar (inboard section) Port mainwheel relraction cylinder Pon mainwheet w ell Ammunition track Ammuni tion feed Undercarriage door (inboard section) Angled rib Mainspar/ fuselage attachment 12 1 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 Port mainwheel (660 " 200 mmlyre) Mainwheeldoor Auxiliary tank bracing str utS Mainwheellog pivot Port m id -span lull -chord boundary layer fence Auxiliary tank pylon Fuel dump ven ts Port aileron Inspection / access panel A ileron control rod linkage Rad io altimeter dipole Wing ou tboard structure Pon navigation lighl The 38th Di vision is primarily equipped wit h Type 6a nd 6C, or J-6 and J-6C. day fighters. the latter embodying some minor improvements over the form er, including a relocated braking chule in a bu llet fairin g at the base of the rudder. Fundamen tally, th is warplane remai ns unchanged from the licence-built MiG-1 9S that entered Chinese service 20 yea rs ago, but my hosts, whi le wistfully admitting that the Type 6 is out-dated, expressed - perhaps with tongue in cheek - the belief that conceptual age is. in part al least, compensated for by the enthusiasm of its pilots! The aircraft strength of the division is about 120 fi ghters. a nd I was told that the official 'lircraft ami/ability rate of85 per cent is " ha ndsomely exceeded", but ga thered that ami/abiliry does not co nnote wit h ser",·ceability in Chinese parlance: it signifies a n aircraft tha t ca n be ready for operational use wi thin a max. imum of 24 hours. It was unclear as to wha t pro portion of the Division's total in ven tory this req uirement a pplies - it may be assumed tha t, at a nyone time, some 20 per cent of the ai rcra ft arc undergoing major maintenance or overha ul - and I was unable to ascertain what might be interpreted in the West as a n average serviceability ra te. The Di vision comprises three regiments, one of which is deployed to a b'lse north of Beijing a nd its aircra fl being flown to Yangtsuon periodically for overhaul and, occasionall y, for pa rt icipa tion in exercises. Each of the constituent regiments is sub-divided into four bri gades approx imating to RAF squadrons, one brigade bei ng responsible for all maintenance and servici ng a nd the others forming the nying element, these latter each having a statutory slrength of 15 aircraft. The flying brigades are, themselves. divided into four sections of either three or fo ur aircraft, three of these sections fulfilling the primary roles of interception a nd ai r defence, a nd having a secondary attack task. The fourth section combines the lastmen tioned mission wi th that of tactical reconnaissance for which the J Z-6 is employed, this being similar to the J-6C but having ca meras in place of the fuselage-mounted cannon. Only the pilots and ground stafT a re permanently assigned to the brigades and sectio ns, all 'aircra ft on the strengt h of the Di vision being pooled and assigned to sub-units as required . In addition to the J-6 fi ghters a nd a co uple of sturdy Y-5 (An-2) utili ty transport biplanes, in evidence a t Yangtsuon were, incidentally, a number of J-5 (MiG-1 7) fighters of even more venerable vintage and several elaborately painted JJ- 5 (FT-5) tandem two-seat adva nced trainer derivatives thereof. With extensive red striping covering much of their na tural meta l fi nish, these two-seaters apparently belong to the Chinese air ann 's fo rmation acrobatic demonstra tion team , which, incorporated in the Division, consists of 15 aircraft. The sizeable pavilion with characteristic pagoda-like eaves occupyi ng a prominent position on the airfield is a ppa rentl y intended as a "gra ndstand" from which dignitaries can view aeroba tic displays presented by lhis team , doubling up as a centre for monitoring exercises. Past t he first flush of youth I was struck by the fa ct that the pilots at Ya ngtsuon were, on a n average, ra ther older than those that one would encounter on a western fi ghter station. This average is of the order of 30 years, most Chinese fi ghter pilots being transferred to ground dut ies on reachin g the age of 40 years, but particularly talented pilots remaining physica lly fit ca n, in certain circumstances, contin ue fl ying past this age. Indeed, several of the Division's pilots had flow n during the Korea n War! There would seem to be no spe<:ific grades of competence, and pilots wear no special insignia to signify ra nk, nor do their tunics display "wings" . There lire no ra nks in the People's Libera tion Army official/y, these having been abolished at the begi nning of the so-called Cultural Revolution in 1964, although J was told that they a re likely to be offidally revived and their restoration is expected to coincide with the introduction of new and more modern PAGE 19 cloud base and two kilometres (1·25 miles) visibility. Take-oIT a nd landing from na rrow, emergency strips is seldom, if ever, practi sed . The turna ro un d time between missio ns for refu elling, replen ishing the oxygen suppl y, re-a rming, etc, is of the order of 3Om in utes, but this can be reduced to 20 minutes if demanded by opera tional exigencies, and even then compared very un favourab ly wit h the turnaround time possi ble wit h such current generation fi ghters as the Viggen (ie, 10 min). Regrettably, very bad wea ther prohibited a demo nstration fli ght of the J-6 fi gh ter during my visit to Yangtsuon, but I was given am ple opport unity to examine the aircraft on the ground and to discuss its merits a nd demeri ts with both pilo ts a nd ground personnel. This Chinese version of the MiG- 19S fi rst bega n to enter service with the Air Force of the People's Libera tion Army mid- 1962, by which time the original had been phased out of production in the Soviet Union a halfdecade since. Thus, by current combat aircraft standard s, the J-6 is a veritable antique and, conceptua lly at least, older than the vast majority of Chinese pilo ts now fl ying it. Nevertheless, I understand tha t it is still being ma nu factured by the Chinese aircraft ind ustry which has evolved severa l varian ts·. I found the cockpit of the J-6 to be narrow for a pilot of average sta ture. It is, in fact, rather confining in all directions and I ascertained th at, without a helmet and with the sea t in the " down" position, there was only the widt h of two finge rs between the top of my head a nd the roof - and I am only 5 ft 9 in ( 176 cm) tal11 Forward visibility from the cockpit was restricted by the robust framing, whi le the view aft was nearly eq uivalent to tha t of the Hunter. The cockpit ca n perhaps best be described as austere, but its layout is conventional eno ugh. There is the sta ndard g-suit connectio n and a semi-au to ma tic ejection seat with face-blind operation. Instrumentation includes the usual Soviet-style combined artificial ho rizon and turn-and-bank indicator, and a rather odd airspeed indica to r wi th two needles providing indicated and t.rue airspeeds simultaneously. The pedals arc fitted with straps so tha t one's feet do no t slip under negative g, and the hand-opera ted pneuma tic brakes reminded me of those of the Vampire that I used to fl y in the uni form s; those worn a t the present time wou ld sca rcely win a prix d'i!legallce. There is no such thing as fly illg pay and the ra tes of pay enjoyed by the pilots a rc certainly not high by compa ri son with those of o ther groups in Chinese society. but they do not have to worry about messing bills as food and accommodation are free. The annual flying time per pilot is, so I was told, 120 ho urs, which is a bit less than that in most western ai r forces. and it is unsupported by any simu la to r time. However, the Di visio n has about 200 pilo ts a nd o nly some 120 aircraft, as previously related , and I was also told that the a nnual flyi ng hours per aircraft is 70-80! Elementa ry mathematics would indicate tha t few of the pilots arc getti ng their 120 flying ho urs ann ually; that the a ircraft fly many mo re hours than stated, or that there is an immense reserve of aircraft substa ntially larger tha n that of the official strength of the Division! Under normal peacetime circumsta nces, the pilots fl y on three consecutive days, spend ing the fo llowing three days in briefings, evaluation of the previous days' fl ying and poli tica l training. Political instructio n is, of course, a major item in the li ves of Ch inese pilo ts, and political officers are in evidence at all levels, but physical trai ning and spo rt s have important places in their timetable. The flying iti nera ry is divided between navigational exercises at low a nd high altit udes, tactical exercises in collaboration with the ground forces, ground attack practice with both guns and rockets, groundco nt rolled intercept training a nd dog.jightillg practice. Despite the fact that practice in close-in hi gh-g manoeuvering combat has been passe in most other Communist co untries fo r many years, considerable emphasis is still placed o n dog-fighting expertise in the Chinese air a rm ! I was told that the operating minima are 200 met res (660 ft) • The J...(j and J...(jC day figh ters are essentially similar to the origifUJl /If iG- 19Sfrom which fhey Jeril·e. The J...(jA and J...(jB ( alias Jianjiji-6 Jia and Vi) were /imifed all-weal her models superseded some fime ago by fhe so-called J...(j (New]. or Jianjiji...(j Xin, with an indigenous AI radar. The JZ-6 (Jianjiji Zhenchaji...(j) is a fighter-reconnais sance mOllef and the JJ...(j (Jianjljl Jiaolia nji-O,l is a tandem two-seal fighter-frainer mriant. (Abo~'e) Protectedfrolllfhe rain by umbrellas, personnel check fhecockpit ofa J...(jCfighter during the author 's I'isit to the Yangtsuonair base. Note the largefinson the drop tank and the auxiliary power unit. ( Below ) A J...(jC at Yangtsuonparked infront ofajel exhaUSf deflector. I Z/" PAGE 20 AlA INTERNATIONAl/ JANUAAY1983 J early 'sixties. These brakes, activated by a lever on the cont rol column in combination wi th peda l movement for diITerentia l opera tio n, a re fined to the castoring nosewheel as well as the main wheels, but I was told that disc brakes have replaced this dated system o n the J-6C, resulting in improved ground handling and deceleration. Incidentally, the only naviga tio na l aid, besides the clock and the compass, is the radio compass (ADF), a VHF transceiver being provided fo r communication s. The J-6 has duplicated hydraulic systems and if one fai ls the pilot ma nually selects the o ther for ai leron control, while if the tail system fai ls a n elect ric motor can be activated to operate the one-piece tai lplane, the movement of which decreases with increasin g airspeed as a result of variable stick gearing to aITord some measure of " feel". The armament of the J-6 is in keeping with its age. A gyro sight is provided with a radar range back -up and the built-in a rmament consists of a trio of 30-mm Chinese-manufactured copies of the late 'forties Nudelmann-Ri khler NR- 30, two o r these belt-fed weapons being mounted in the wing roots and o ne under the starboard side of the nose. They can be selected individua lly or in pairs, and I was informed that these elderly guns have a low muzzle velocity but pack quite a punch. For the intercept mission, the cannon are complemented by either a pair o r a quartet of Chinese copies of the early Sidewinder AAM on the underwing pylo ns. These pylons can also carry 167 Imp gal (760 I) drop tanks outboard, pods containing 55-mm rockets or iron bombs. Obviously popular with its pilots - who, admittedl y, have little to make a compa rison with - a nd co nsidered very reliable, the J-6 is powered by a pair ofWopen WP-6turbojets which diITer liulc from the Tumansky RD-9B-81I s on which they are based. They each oITer a maximum dry thrust of 4,732 lb st (2 146 kgp) with a military rating or5,843 1b st (2 650 kgp) and rehea t boosts this to 7,165 1b st (3250 kgp), but it would seem that at its clean loaded weight, the J-6 will take-oIT quite happily at maximum dry thrust which may be employed without any time limitatio n. There is a 30 min limitation on military power which is gained by closing the tailpipe nozzle, th is nozzle being opened full y for rehcat. Push buttons close to the throttle kno bs are selected for either military power or reheat. Pilo ts told me that the J-6 is a n easy aircraft to fl y, with good stall behaviour a nd very modest stick forces. The maximum permitted load factor is 8 g positi ve - which is more than permitted for Swedish warplanes - and the climb rate, turning capability and roll rate arc lauded. The J-6, I was informed, provides a stable weapons pla tform, and its largearea Fowler-type fl aps apparently endow it with good lowspeed performance, the normal minimum fli ght speed being about 145 mph (235 km/h). With the use of drag chute a nd braking, the J-6 may be landed within less tha n 900 m (2950 ft) even in high ambient temperatures. The flaps have, incidenta lly, a combat manoeuvre setting for use up to 500 mph (805 km/h) lAS. My a biding impression is tha t the J-6 is a fundame nta lly simple a nd innately robust aeroplane; a great warplane of the early 'sixties. It is this technology of the early 'sixties that is thoroughly understood by the Air Force of the People's Liberation Army, and dramatic must be the changes in operational, maintenance and overhaul a ttitudes and techniques before the Service can hope to operate eITectively sophisticated modern combat aircraft, such as the Tornado a nd Viggen, at least, if the Ya ngtsuo n a ir base provides any sort of guideline. It is perhaps their a pproach to the ma intenance and overhaul of their aircraft that provide the most fascinating insight into the Chinese mentality . A very considerable level of self-sufficiency is apparently encouraged and a diversity of small parts and components for the J-6 are act ua ll y The author in the cockpit of an F...(jC. In the foregro und is Mr Chen Xingnengfrom fhe Air S taffin Beijing and behind ( on fhe right) is one of the 381h Air Defence DMsionpilots. manufactured in the workshops adjacent to the maintenance and overhaul hanga r, but perhaps even more curious to western eyes is the use of the surplus capacity of these workshops to manufacture items for local industry! These items are sold and decisions as to the use to which the proceeds are to be put is that of the majority of the base personnel1 The standard of workmanship in the J-6 seems high, but many parts are virtually handmade a nd Chinese tolerance sta nda rds do not bear too close a scrutiny in consequence if western sta ndards a re sought. There must be spa res intercha ngeability problem s although the existence of such was denied. Overha uls of the aircraft of various levels appea r to be conducted a t 100-, 200-, 400-, 600- a nd 800-hour intervals, and I was told that the WP-6 engines are normally changed during the 4OO-hour overha ul , but other operators of the J-6 (eg, the Pakistan Air Force) have alleged that very short component lives are the principal limitations of this fighter , with the WP-6 having a TBO of a mere 100 hours and a replacement cycle of only 200 hours! The 6OO-hour overhaul, I was informed, occupies nine days and demands between 4,000 and 5,000 working manhours. It is strange to see in various sections of the same hangar overhaul work proceeding in parallel on the radio, the oxygen system, the instrumentation, the gyro sight, the engine, the airframe, the hydraulics ... everything! Theequipment here, as in the workshops, is rela tively primitive but thoro ughly functional, and the technical personnel were obviously both knowledgea ble and competen t, and very keen on flying safety. My visit to the 38th Air Defence Division a t Yangtsuon air base was concl uded with a meal during which it was possible to discuss with my hosts in an informal atmosphere ma ny matters of commo n interest. I fo und them quite well informed on military aviation development beyond Chinese boundaries, a nd they plied me with questio ns as to my opinions of the newer-generation jet trainers, such as the Hawk and Alpha Jet, from which I gathered that decisions concerning major revisio n of their basic training syllabus are close . My hosts were obviously conversan t with Swedish flying material and the Viggen system in particular, a nd the pertinence of their questions indicated that their interest was very real - perhaps o ne reason for the warmth of my reception . They constantly stressed the importance that they attached to self-rel iance and its pre-eminence in the development of the Air Force of the People's Liberation Army, perhaps with uppermost in mind their traumatic experiences after ideological differences severed Soviet aid. When I fina lly bid them farewell , I had reached the conclusion that if time had, in the technological sense, stood and was co ntinuing to stand still at this air base near Tientsin, my hosts were at least thoroughly aware of the fact. 0 PAGE 21 OlIO , ulilul NE OF the undisputed "greats" among the aircraft of World War II , the Mosquito was conceived by the de Havilland Aircrart company along lines that were in direct cont rad iction to the then-prevailing official views o n bomber development. The Air Ministry had become committed, in the years immedia tely prior 10 World War II , to the evolution ora series o f bombers each of which was heavier and more powerfully armed than the type it was intended to succeed. Whether the requirement was for a light day bomber. a medium bomber for day or night use o r a heavy night bomber, the demand of each progressive official Specification was always for a greater bomb load , greater range, more defensive armament and - usually as a resull of this progression larger crews. Higher gross weights inevitably resulted, which could only mean more man-hours per aircraft required for production and ever-escalating demands o n raw-material resources - especially light alloys, which by the late ' thirties had become the basic material for aircraft construction. Although the de Havilland company was not, in the mid' thirties, o ne of the major producers of combat aircraft for the RAF, its designers - C C Walker and R E Bishop, with Captain (later Sir) Geoffrey de Havilland himself also closely involved - were naturally aware of the steps being taken to reequip and expand the RAF. The company's specia lity had been the production of light aircraft and civil transports using advanced wooden constructiona l techniques, and the importance of aerodynamic cleanliness for high speed performance had been well-learned th ro ugh the participation o f DH aeroplanes in a number of important races and sporting events. Co nsequently, when a draft of Specification P.13/36 was received at Hatfield on 24 August 1936 (this being the document that would lead eventually to production of the Manchester, Lancaster and Halifax for the RAF), the de Havilland designers took a somewhat jaundiced view of its O basic premises, that could only result in the development of a heavily-armed all-metal bomber. This disenchantment did not prevent the team at Hatfield from undertaking some project design studies for aircra ft that would comply with P.13/ 36, based upon twin-engined adaptations of the D.H. 9 1 Albatross or armed versions of the D.H.95 Flamingo, the latter being the company's first major excursion into metal construct io n. By the middle of 1938, one of the most favoured solutions studied at Hatfield was a derivative of the AJbatross with two Merlin engines and, of course, all-wood construction. The merits of the latter fea ture were pressed upon the Air Ministry with vigour, the company foreca sting that there would be a surplus of wood-working capacity if war came and "domestic demands tapered off, whereas the metal-working industries were a lready becoming overtaxed by the demands of re-armament. Wooden construction would, moreover, al low a prototype to be built much more rapidly and would reduce the time needed to develop subsequent versions. De Havilla nd was no t alone in pressing the case for using non-strategic materials. The same case had been made by John Lloyd of Armstrong Whitworth as early as February 1938, and before the end of that year the Air Ministry had issued at least one Specification, 8.18/38, for a medium bomber that would make the least possible use of light a lloys in its construction, resultin g in production of the steel-and-wood A W Albemarle. The de Havilland proposals went far beyond substitutin g wood for metal however, by suggesting a small (two crew) high perfonnance bomber in which all defensive annament was sacrificed to achieve speeds and operating altit udes that would put the ai rcraft out of reach of enemy fighters a nd ground defences. The more the idea was stud ied at Hatfield, the more enthusiastic the designers became; their proposed aircraft could be built in fewer man-hours and at lower cost than the current generation of medium bombers. using non-strategic material s and readi ly a vailable production sou rces. Moreover, with a crew of two, it made fewer demands upon RAF manpower and tra ining requirements, and because of its high speed could deli ver a greater tonnage of bombs per month than larger, slower aircraft. These arguments seemed impeccable, but the concept of an unarmed bomber was radical to Air Ministry planners deeply committed to the new famil y of heavy and hea vily-armed bombers under development by mid-1939, a nd the de Havilland proposal might have made little progress if it had nOI found a champion in Sir Wilfrid Freeman , rhe then Air Member for Development a l the Air Mini stry. From September to Ihe end of 1939, he consistently supported the idea of a n unarmed two-seater in the face of severa l attempts to impose upon de Havilland a requi rement to add a gun turret or remotely-ai med gu ns for rea r defence and a third crewman. In this period , the use of Rolls- Royce GrilTon, Napier Dagger and Napier E 112 engines was studied , in place of Merlins, but the twin-Merlin formula wa s consistently favoured by de Havilland and in th is guise the D.H.98 - as the bomber project had become known at Hatfield - was estimated (in a letter from GeolTrey de Havilland to Sir Wilfrid Freeman , dated 20 September 1939) to have a max speed of 405 mph (652 km/h) and a cruising speed of 320 mph (5 15 km/h)at 20,000 ft (6100 m); it would beable to carry a I,OOO-ib (454-kg) bomb load a distance of 1,500 mls (24 14 km), the gross weight bei ng 15,075 Ib (6844 kg). If a twin-gun dorsal turret, a ventra l gun and a third crewman were added , the weight went up to 18,000 Ib (8 172 kg), the max speed wen t down to 355 mph (571 km/h) at 19,000 ft (579 1 m) a nd the cruise to 279 mph (449 km/h) a t 15,000 ft (4575 m). As a bomber, de Havilla nd 's team was co nvinced. the D.H.98 did not need defensive armament; but ojJensilre guns could be carried in place of bombs to make the ai rcraft a potent long-range and escort fighter, a nd its speed and range made it potentia lly of great importance as a photographic reconnaissance aircraft. 8y November 1939, therefore, bomber, fighter and PR variants of the basic project were in hand and from this point on space provision was retained in the design for the installation of four 20-mm ca nnon under the cockpit floor. By the end of the year, despite some revision downwards by the Air Ministry of de Havilland's performance estimates, officia l interest had grown to the point of deciding to order a si ngle prototype of the D.H .98. The role was not clearly defi ned, but the Specifica tion written to cover the contract, 8.1 /40, was nominally fo r a bo mber; the reco nnai ssance potential was also recognised but lillie offi cial interest was evinced in the fi ghter. Eventually, fi ghter versio ns of the D.H .98, for which the name Mosquito was to be proposed by de Ha villand and accepted by the Air Ministry in due course, would become as important ,md numero us as the bom be r version s, but they are o utside the scope of this presc nt account. However, the complex story of prototype develo pment relates to both fi ghter and bomber versions, and is included here al so for the sake of completeness. Prototype development By the ti me contracts had been drawn up to cover the D.H .98 pro totype, it had been decided to order an initia l batch of 50 a ircraft , not just one - all to be built in accordance with Specification B.I /4O as bomber-reconnaissance aircraft - and this contract was received al Ha tfield on I March 1940. Co nstruction, as planned all along, was to be of wood throughout, using a one-piece wing containin g the 10 fue l tanks and a fuselage built in two halves, split longitudinally, to ( A bove) T/U> origillal Mosquilo prolOt)"pe, W4050. af ter il had beell jitled l(lfe ill 1942 with Merlill 77 two-speed, two-stage engines, lI'ilh which iI ad riel'ed a speed of 43 7 mph ( 703 k lll}h) . ( Bdo w) Thejirsl o/Ihe MosquilO bombers, pholographedal Haifield in N OI'ember 1940 when;1 bore manu/aclurer 's serial £0234. Orthochromalicjilm makes Ihe Ql"eralJ y elJowjinish apfH!ar dark. ( A bol'e right ) The protolype in Ihe samejinish, bill wilh Ihe serial W4050 alld Ihe tail l/umber "'5'"/or 'he (lisplay a/new warplanes put on /or Sir WillSIOIl C/lllrchill al Ha ifield early ill 1941 . • WARBIRDS __________I PAGE 22 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 PAGE 23 ( Abol'e (md left) The elegant lines of the Mosquito displayed by B Mk IV Series 2s - respectil'ely " £-&sy " and "J-Johnny " of No /05 Squadron. the fi rst RAF Bomber Command squadron to take the unarmed bomber into combat, in / 942. racilitate installation o r equipment and the systems " plumbing" berore the halves were joined. The ski ns, basically. were o r birch plywood; both the wing and ruselage had inner and o uter skins. separated in the case or the wing by span wise stringers and in the case or the ruselage by a balsa wood filling. Casein glue was first used ror assembly, later replaced by the m uch more satisractory ronnaldehyde cement. With 1,280 bhp Merlin RM 35 M engines and ducted radiators, the D.H.98, it was now estima ted, wo uld have a nonnal gross weight ror PR duty o r 17, 150 Ib (7786 kg) and an overload weight as a bomber or 18,845 Ib (8557 kg); the max level speed was expected to be 397 mph (639 km/h) at 23,700 n (7224 m) and the range with rull tanks wo uld be 1,480 mls (2 38 1 km) a t 343 mph (552 km/h) at 25,000 n (7 620 m). Constructio n or the prototype D.H.98 went ahead in a hangar erected a lo ngside Sal isbury Ha ll, a co untry ho use five miles rrom Hatfield that had become the dispersal home orthe de Havilland design team, and this activity occupied most o r 1940, while jigging and material purchase ror the production a ircraft that were to rollow was put in ha nd al Hatfield . During the sprin g and summer mo nths or 1940, rollowing the appointment or Lord Beaverbrook as the first Minister or Aircraft Production, emphasis was placed on the production or five types or aircraQ. that could most rapidly and userully rein rorce the RAF, and ro r a time the ruture or the Mosquito again seemed to be in doubt. The programme remained intact, however, when de Havilland's genera l ma nager assured the Ministry or Aircraft Production that the 50 examples o n order could be delivered by the end or 1941. This promise was made some rour months berore pro totype first · flight and was credible only because or the simplicity o r the Mosquito's wooden constructio n. During July 1940, conslruction or a D.H.98 fight er prototype was o rdered (and confirmed contractuall y in November) and o ne airrrame was allocated ror this task, with the remainder or the batch still to be bomber-reco nnaissance aircraft. In January 1941 , however, the contract was changed to cover a third prototype, in reconnaissance configuration, with the balance or the batch to comprise 19 PR and 28 fighters, but no bombers! From this time o n, the contract ual situatio n became more and mo re complicated, with new contracts plus amendments to existing ones; eventuall y, the initial 50-aircraft batch was made up or the th ree prototypes (one ror each major ro le), 10 bombers, 28 fi ghters and nine PRs. They were the first o r an eventual to ta l o r 6,411 Mosquitoes built in Britain (contin uing until 1950). to which were added 1, 134 built in Ca nada and 212 in Australia. The first D.H.98 prototype, painted yellow overall and bearing the company experi mental num ber E02 34, was moved by road rrom Salisbury Hall to Ha tfield ea rly in November 1940 and there. on 25 November. the maiden fli gh t was made by Geoffrey de Havilland (eldest son o r the company's rounder), with John Walker a lo ngside in the right-ha nd scat. Less lhan a year had elapsed rrom the start o r design work, and ini tia l fli ght test results quickly gave cause ror optimism. There were some inevitable snags; engine cooling proved a problem and there was some buffe ting or " tail dither", overcome in due course by lengthening the engine nacelles to project a rt or the win g trailing edges. The prototype had reached the A&AEE on 19 February 194 1; there. its handling both on the ground and in the air were viewed with ravour, but it was the sheer speed or the new a ircraft tha t captured the imagination and finally brought security to the rutu re productio n programme. There was a n early set-back , however, when. on 24 February 1941 at the end or the 57th fl ight bu t after only 8t hrs' fl ying at W4072 shown here was the 23rd aircraft in the initial batch of50 Mosquitoes. including the various prototypes. and was completed as a B M k / V Series J, with the original short nacelles. ( Right ) A bomb trolley carries 500-lb ( 227-kg) bombs past No 105 Squadron's '" H-Harry". PAGE 24 AIR INTERNATI ONAL/ JANUA RY 1983 Two views ofa Mosquito B Mk IV ( Special) . DZ594. Oil air testfram the A&A EE Boscombe Dall'1I in August 1943. With blilged bomb-bay to aI/oil' tire cllfriage of a 4,()()()-lb ( J 8/6-kg ) bomb. this I'(JriwlIl'ntl'rl'ci Sl'n'ice with N o 692 Sqlladroll ill February 1944. the A&AEE, the rusela ge railed structurally during taxying when the castering tail wheel jammed. Wit h temporary repairs, the prototype returned to Hatfield . where a new ruselage was fined. As W4050 and with its yellow upper surraces resprayed in the approved green and ea rth camo ufla ge pallern , the prototype ret urned to Boscombe Down on 3 May 194 1. At a weight or 16,767 1b (7 612 kg), the A&AEE measured the speed or the Mosq uito as being 388 mph (624 km /h) a t 22,000 ft (6707 m); the rate or cl imb was 2,880 ft/min (14,6 m/sec) a t 11 ,400 ft (3 475 m) in MS gear a nd 2.240 ft/min ( II ,4 m/sec) a t 18. 100 rt (55 17 01) in FS gear. Still higher speeds were to be achieved berore the end or 1942 by thi s same prototype a rter it had been fitted with two-stage two-speed Merlin 6 1s a nd then Merlin 77s. a nd an extended span wi ng; in this configura tio n, W4050 even tuall y clocked 437 mph (703 km/h) in level fli ght and reached an a ltitude or37,800 rt (II 52 1 m). • Bomber production During September 1941 , the eigh th Mosquito was completed in bomber configuration to serve as a specific prototype ror that ro le, having been laid down as one or the ea rly production PR Mk Is, a nd this aircraft was delivered 10 the A&AEE at Boscombe Down o n 27 September. It was ro llowed to Boscombe on 18 October by the fi rst or the production batch or nine B Mk IV Series Is (also known as PR U/ Bomber Conversio n Type, beca use they had been contracted in the PR ro le a nd were completed as bombers as a result or a con tract amendment in J uly 1941 ). The Series I designation indicated tha I these a ircrart had the early short nacelles; all la ter aircraft had the lengthened nacelles adopted to overcome the "tail dither" and the rema inder or the B Mk IV bombers were Series 2s with this modification a nd provision ror two 50- Im p gal (227-1) flu sh-finin g wi ng drop tanks. These original Mosq uito bomber variants were powered by Merlin 2 1 or Merlin 23 engi nes and in service co uld ca rry a bomb load or 2,OOO-lb (908-kg) internally - eit her two I ,ooo-ib (454-k g) or ro ur 500Ib (227-kg) bombs. Berore the end or 1941. the bomber pro totype was used to develop a wing pylon installation designed, in the fi rst instance, to ca rry a 500-lb (227-kg) bomb under each wing, a nd such a version was proposed ro r production as the B Mk V; it was not built, altho ugh the mod ified prototype was sometimes rererred to by this designatio n. Production or the Mosquit o B Mk IV Srs 2 totalled 300, with deli veries beginn ing in April 1942. although nine of these were com pleted ror other roles and 27 o thers were later converted for PR dut y. No 105 Squadron had been selected as the first to operate the Mosquito bomber, but the need to meel the demands or fi ghter and photograph ic reconnaissance units as well mea nt that del iveries were initially a t o nly a slow rate; between 15 November 1941 and the middle or May 1942, only the nine B Mk IV Series Is were available, and these were used ror crew training and ramiliarisat io n. The first Series 2 was delivered 10 the squadron a t Ho rsham St Faith , No rrolk (now the civil a irport ror Norwich) in mid-May but rour o rt he Series I s were used for the first bombing sorties, fl own as individual missio ns at intervals d urin g 31 May against Cologne, im mediately roll owing Bo mber Comm and's first 1,000bomber raid o n that city. In itial opera tions were not notable ror their success - part ly because the earl y production aircrart were still suffering some teething problems but la rgely beca use the best operatio nal tact ics had yet to be lea rned. Hi gh-level, low-level and shallow-diving attacks were a ll tried by No 105 Squadron in thecoursc ori ts fi rst rew missions, o ne o r which, on 19 September 1942 , was a high-level dayli ght .raid on Berlin, the first o r the War. or six Mosquitoes despatched, only two reached the Berl in a rea and one or these d ive rted to the secondary target, Hamburg, because Berlin was o bscured by cloud . Although the Mosquito was the rastest comba t a ircraft then operationa l, its ma rgin orspeed over tha t o r the Focke-Wulr Fw 190 was no t grea t eno ugh a lways to avoid interception, part icula rl y duri ng high level operations, and several or No 105's aircrart were lost to the Germa n figh ters. By the end or November 1942, No 105 Squadron had lost 24 aircraft in maki ng 282 sorties - a loss ra te higher than that being suffered by Bo mber Command on its night offen sive. A n extra 10 mph ( 16 km/h) was added to the Mosquito's speed when ejector ex haust stubs were adopted in place or the original flame-damping shrouds, but a proposed installation or rearward-fi ring '·sca re·· guns in the nacelles, engineered by Rose Brothers, proceeded no rurt her than ground testing. A second Mosq uito bomber squadron, No 139, became o pera tio nal in November and ror several mo nths these two units in No 2 Group specialised in making pin-point attacks, usua lly at low level a nd al dawn or dusk, on specia lly-selected targets. Thi s phase or operatio ns came to an end when No 2 Group became pa rt or2nd TA F on I June 1943, a nd Ihe two Mosquito sq uadrons were tra nsrerred to No 8 Group, which had become Bomber Comma nd 's Pathfinder Force (PFF); by Iral'e tire standllfd bomb-bay . PAGE 25 .1 De Havilland Moaquit o B M k XVI c uta w ay d raw i ng key Three-bladed de Havilland 33 EleV810r trim hand wheel TVpe 5000 hvdlomatic 34 Pon radialor lam ai, intake propeller 35 Oil and coolanl radiators 2 Spinner 3 Starboard engine cowling 36 Enginethronle leve.s 37 Venlral entry hatch panels, Merlin 73 engine 4 Exhaust stubs 38 Control column hendwheel 39 Folding chart table 5 Starboard oil radiator 6 Coolanl,adialo, 53 Centre section fuellanks (two) , capacity 68 Imp gal (30911 8ach; 46 Imp gal (2091 por1 and 47·5 Imp gal (2161) starboard with 4,000- 70 Plvwood leading edge skinning 71 Wing top skin panelling. double plywood sandWich construcuon Ib (1814-kg) bomb load 54 Wing upper surface attachment joint 55 Centre tueflank fillet cap 7 Radial oreirintake 56 ARI · 5083re<:eiv8. 8 Carbuleno. air intake 57 IFF transmitter/ receiver and guard 58 Signal pisiol aperture 9 fuselage nose skinning 10 Windscreen de-icing lIuid nozzle 11 InSllument panel 12 Parachute siowage 13 JunClion boll 14 Fire axe 59 Cockpit all glazing 60 Rear pressUfe bulkhead 84 85 86 87 Starboard navigation light Wing tip fairi ng Formation light Resin light Starboard aile ron Aileron hinge control Mass balance welghls Aileron tab Underside view showing bulged (increased volume ) bomb-baydoon Venllal entry ha tch wi th drift sight aperture Trailing aerial failing Starboard outer plain flap segment Flap hvdraulic jack Nacelle ta il fairing Flap in board segment Oilliller cap 88 Dinghy access panel 89 Two-man dinghy stowage comperrtment 9() Wing Ilxlng bearer Rear fuselage equipment heater air ducting 92 Long range 011 tank. capacity 10 Imp gal (45.51) 93 Hydraulic reservOir 9. TR1143 Iransmiller/ receiver 95 Mk XIV bombsight computer 96 8altllies 97 Hydraulic and pneumatic systems servicing panel 98 Pneumatic system air bottle 99 De-Icing lIuid reservoir 100 Picketing equipment slowage 101 Camera motor 102 TR 1143 aerial 103 Fuselage stringers. between inner and OUler skin " 150 Undercarrrage leg rear Strut 151 152 153 15' 155 156 157 158 159 mounting Flap hydraulic Jack Nacelle tailiairing Port plain flap segments All -wooden flap construction Port outer fuel lanks Fuel filler cap Retracta ble landing lamp Alillon lab control linkage Rear spa, I 10' canvas 105 ". 106 107 108 109 110 172 Port auxiliary fuel tank. capacity 50 Imp gal (2 271) 173 Fuel filler cap 17' Main undercarriage rear strul 175 Mudguard 176 Mainwheel doon 177 Port mainwheel 178 Mainwheelleg strut 179 Pneumatic brake disc 180 Rubber compression block shock absorber 181 Spring loaded dOOf guides 182 Main undercarriage pivot fixing 183 Engi ne oil tank. capacity 16 Imp gal (731) 18' Cabin heater 185 Fireproof bulkhead 186 Two stage supercharger 187 Inillcooler 188 Heywood compressor 189 Rolts- Royce Merlin 72 liqu id -cooled 12-cylinder Vee engine 190 Exha ust ports 191 Allernat or 192 Engine bearers 193 Carburell or ai r inta ke duct 19. In take guard 195 Inlercooler radiator exhaust 196 In tercooler rad iator 197 Enginemounting block 160 Aileron hinge control 161 Ailllon tab 111 Ferrite aerial rod PI LOT PRESS CO PY RI G HT DR AW ING 15 SYKO appalatus stowage 16 Nose compartmen t side windows 17 Portable oxygen bolll" 18 Mk XIV bombsight 19 Nose glazing 20 Forward navigation/ identification light 21 Temperatule pro~be:,..,....". .,..._",;\ 22 Windscreen de· icing lI uid nozzle 23 OpticallY flat bomb aiming Window 24 Bomb sight mou nting 25 Bomb selector switches 26 Camera remote contlol box 27 Bomb eimers kneeling cushion 28 Signal pistol carttidge racks 29 Rudder pedals 30 Compau 31 Contlollinkag" 32 Oxygen liystem economiser units PA GE 26 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 Wi ndscreen panels Traili ng aerial winch Cock pit loof escape hatch Seat back almour plate Navigator/ bombard ier'sseat Rearward vision blister lal ring Pllofsseat Intelcomsocket Portable li re extinguisher Cabin pressurization and heating air ducts 50 Non-relurn air valve 51 Engine controlluns 52 Wing root rib A IR INTE RN ATI ONAL/ JANUA RY1983 Fuel filler cap Nacelle fairing Starboa rd main unde.cefliage boV ., 65 Hydraulic retractio n jack 66 Outboard fuel tanks. capaCity 34 Imp gal (1551) inl'llrand 24 Imp gal (1091) outer 67 Wing stringers 68 Starboard auxiliary fuel tank. capacity 50 Imp gal (2271) 69 Fuelliller cap 112 Tailiin construction 113 Starboard tailplane Elevator horn balance 115 Pitot tube 116 Rudder horn balance 117 Fabric covered rudder construction 118 Ruddertab 119 Tab operating rod 120 Elevator tabs 121 Tailcone 122 Tail navigation lighls 123 Fabric-covered elevator construction 124 Tallplane construction 125 Fellile aellalrod 126 Elevator operating lin kage 127 Tallwheel housing 128 Tallplane spa.allachment Joml 129 TailwheeilegSlrut 130 Retracting lailwheel 131 levered suspension tailwheel forks 132 Fuselage skin labric covering 133 Identification code lights. while. ambel and gleen 134 Beam approach aerial 135 Camera mounting 136 F.25camera 137 Tai lplane control cables 138 Rear fuselage entry hatch 139 Crew equipment stowage bag 140 Bulged bomb· bay lail failing 141 Bomb door hydraulic jacks 142 Beam app roach receiver 143 Oxygen bollies 144 Flap shlOud ribs , 45 Inboard fuel tank bay ventral access panel 146 Bomb calliers 147 500-l b (227 -kg) short finned HE bombs (four) 148 Port engine nacelle top lailing 149 Main unde.Cllliage hydraulic letraction jack "' 162 Aluminium ailllon construclion 163 Resin lamp 164 Port formation lamp 165 Datachable wing ti p lal ring 166 Port navigation light 167 Leading edge nose ribs 168 Front spar. box beam conlilluction 169 Wing lower surface lingle skin/ winger panel 170 Wing rib construction 171 Plywood leading edge skinning. fabric coveled 198 Coolant header tank 199 Spin ne r armoured back pla te 200 Propeller hub pitch change mec hanism 201 Spinner 202 Intercooler radiator intake 203 Port thlee-bladed de Havilland hvdromatic propeller 204 4.000-lb (1814 -kg) HC bomb De Havilland O.H.98 Mosq uito 8 M k XV I Specification PO¥l"cr Plant: Two Rolls-Royce Merlin 72/13 Jiquid-cooJed 12cylinder Vtt cngines wilh two-speed. two-stage superchargers each rated at 1.290 hp for take-off. 1.680 hp 318,500 n (2 590 m) in "~1"" gear and 1.460 hp at 21.000 n (6400 m) in "S" gear: altcrnativcly. Me rlin 76/77 wit h ra tings of 1.250 hp. 1,7 10 hp and 1.475 hp respc.!('tively. De Havilland th ree-bladed eo nstantspeed . fully-fca th ering propellers. F uel capacity, 536 Imp gal (2 4 371) in 10 prolccted tanks in wings and centre section. between spars; provisio n fo r o ne 50 Im p gal (227 1) o r 100 Imp gal (454 1)drop tank u nde r eac h wi n g. Perform ance ( M erli n 76/77 e ngi nes): Max speeds a t 19. 100 lb (8671 kg) mean weigh t. 400 mp h (644 km / h ) at 15.000 ft (4572 01) and 415 mph (668 k m/ h) a t 28.000 ft (8534 m ); most economical cruising speed . 250 mph (402 km / h ); m ax weak mixt u re cru isi n ~ speed. 358 m ph (576 km/ h ); t ime to 15.000 ft (4572 m). 7·5 m m ; serviccccili ng. 36.000 ft ( 10973 m ); ra nge wit h max bo m b load. 1.370 mls (2 204 km ); ra nge wi th 2.000-lb (908kg) bomb load. 1.795 mls (2 888 km ). Weights: T are. 14.600 lb (6628 kg); em p ty (no fuel. o il . bom bs or ammunitio n). 15.500 Ib{7037 kg): m ax, 23.000 Ib (10 442 kg). Dimensions: Span. 54 ft 2 in ( 16.5 1 m): length. 44 ft 6 in ( 13.56 m ): height. (max. tail down). 15 n 3 in (4 .65 m): u ndercarriage track. 16 ft 4 in (4.98 m): wingarea. 454 sq ft (42. 18 m l); di hed ra l, I deg 24 min constant. Arma ment: No guns. Provision fo r o ne 4.000-lb (l816-kg) or four SOO-Ib (227-kg) bombs in fuse lage bomb-bay a nd o ne S()O.lb (227-kg) bomb under each wing. PA GE 27 the end of May. No 105 Squadron had launched 524 sorties a nd lost 35 aircraft , while No 139 had launched 202 so rties and lost 13. As part o f PFF. these two squadrons took on new roles from the beginni ng of J une. joining No 109 Squadron which had meanwhile been equipped with B Mk IVs in J ul y/August 1942 to develop the use of Oboe as a bombing aid. Development and production of the Mosquito had not. of cou rse. stood still in this period . The cumulative delivery total (for all mark s) reached 250 in September 1942 and 346 by the end of October. with output from the parent factory at Hatfield supplemented by production a t Lea vesden (of fighters on ly) in a new shadow unit known as the Second Aircraft Group. suppl ied by a d iffe rent set of sub-contractors. At this Dc Havilland D.H.98 MOS4Juito B Mk IV S rs 2 SpecificatIOn PO~"Cl Plant: Two Rolls-Royce Merlin 21 liquid-cooled 12cylinder Vee engines each rated at 1.280 hp for take-orr and with a max output of 1,480 hp at 12,250 ft (3734 m). drivi ng de Havilland th ree-bladed constant·speed fully.feathering propellers of 12-ft (3,66-m) diameter. Fuel capaci ty. 536 Imp gal (24371) in 10 protected tanks in wings and centre section. between spars: provision for one 50 Imp gal (227 1) drop tank under each wing. Performance: Typical high speeds at 17.000-lb (7 7IS-kg) mean weight. 322 mph (51 S km/h) al 10.000 ft (3050 m) and 34 1 mph (549 km/h) at 20.000 ft (6 100 m); recommended cruising speed. 305-320 mph (491-515 km /h) at25.000-30.000 ft (7 620-9150 m); operational ceiling. 27,000 ft (S 230 m) loaded. 30.000 ft (9 150 m) unladen : range. 1,110 mls ( 1786 km) at high speed cruise at 25,000 ft (7 620 m). Weights: Typical loaded weigh t. 21.7941b (9S94 kg); weight fully loaded. 22.380 Ib ( 10160 kg); max landing weight. 20.500 Ib (9307 kg), ' Dimensions: Span. 54 ft 2 in ( 16.51 m): length (tail down). 40 ft I I in ( 12.47 m): length (tail up). 41 ft 2 in ( 12.55 m); height. (max. tail down), 15 ft 3 in (4.65 m); undercarriage track, 16 ft 4 in (4,98 m); wing area, 454 sq ft (42. 18 m l); dihedral. I deg 24 min consta nt. Armament: No guns. Internal bomb-bay to carry one J,OOO-ib (454-kg) and two 500-lb (227-kg) or four 5OO-1b (227-kg) or fOUT 250-Jb (114-k g) bombs or (ai rcraft with Mod 473 installed) one 4.000-lb(1816-kg)bomb. time, a total or 2.384 Mosquitoes was already on order fro m Hatfield and Leavcsdcn, with plans under way ror another 1.500 to be built in Canada and ro r Standard Motors to provide a third sou rce ofcomplete ai rcrart in the UK again st an ini tial contract for 500. Later still, Percival Ai rcraft wou ld build more bombers and assembly lines wou ld be established by Ai rspecd al Portsmouth and at de Ha vi lland 's Chester fac tory. New variants Development , so far as the bomber was concerned, related principa ll y to the bomb load a nd the power plant. As already notcd , the first of the 10 bombers in thc initial production batch served as a prototype and int roduced fittings for wi ng bombs in lieu or the 50 Im p gal (227 I) flu sh-fin ing tank s ca rried as a sta ndard fi tlin g by the B Mk IV Series 2, This work led to the introduction of the univers.'ll wing, able to carry 100 Imp gal (454 1) tanks or two 500-lb (227·kg) bombs, but the hi gher weights associated with this bomb load called for addit ional power if the speed adva ntage of the Mosquito was nOI to be sacrificed. The installation of two-stage Merlins offered bOlh an increase in power a nd, equally importa nt , a n increase in effective operating altitude, helping to pu t the Mosquito beyond the reach of the increasingly effective Ge rman ant i-airc raft defences. The origina l Mosquito prototype first flew with Merlin 6 1s on 20 June 1942, as the initial step in introd ucing two-stage Meriins, which requ ired a n addit io nal air intake, localcdj ust beneat h the spinner; a nd a rew days later a Mk IV flew wit h 10 deg of dihedral o n the tai lpla ne. thought to be necessary for the higher weights now being used but in the event found to have no adva ntage over the flat tai lplane, the area o f which was increased after the first few aircraft had been bui lt , A new bomber prototype (with no specific mark number) flew on 8 Augusl 1942 a nd was the first 10 be fitted with a pressurised cabin , bringing 40,000 ft (12 192 m) altit udes wi th in reach of the Mosquito, and in October, Merlin 77s replaced the Merlin 6 1s in the first proto type, which by the end B Mk IV Srs 1 (below) ( Above) M osquitO B Mk XVI " K.King ·· o/No 571 Squadron, oneo/the units attached to NoB ( PFF) Group 's Light Night Striking Force and engaged in intensil'e operations against Berlin in 1945. ( BeloK' right ) Anotlter w'ell' o/a B Mk XV I, showing tlte bulged bomb-bay. of the yea r had recorded a top speed of 437 mpb (703 km /h). bel ieved to be the highest achieved by the Mosquito and probably the fastest a propeller·driven a ircraft designed for operational use had Hown up to the end of 1942. These va rious developments were brought together in two stages, so fa r as production bombers were concerned, the first of these being the B Mk LX, first Hown on 24 March 1943. The Mosquito IX (also prod uced in a PR version), featured the new universal wi ng a nd Merlin 72/73 engines. with maximum rali ngs of 1,680 hp at 8,500 ft (2590 m) in "M" gea r a nd 1.460 hp at 21,000 rt (6400 m) in "S" gear; later, the Merlin 76/77 becam e available, with ratings of 1,7 10 hp at 11 ,000 ft (3353 m) and 1,475 hp a t 23 ,000 ft (70 10 m). These engines incorporated drives fo r cabin blowers, but the pressurised cabin was not fully developed in time fo r the B Mk IX; its introd uctio n was therefore signified by the change of designation to B Mk XVI , as descri bed later in this account , and prod uction of the B Mk IX to talled only 54 a ircraft. Mosquito Pathfinders BMklVSrs2 ~~~~==~ (left) ~~q'l.i'~~~ '~~~==~ t BMklX (above) , B Mk25 (left) B Mk XVI (three -view) PAG E 28 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 Ca rrying six 500·l b (227- kg) bombs and 536 Im p gal (2 4331) of fue l in the perma nent tanks, the Mosquilo B Mk IX weighed 23,000 Ib ( 10442 kg), and weighlS up 10 25,000 Ib ( 11 350 kg) were later reached when additiona l equipment was carried. Delivery of the B Mk IX began during April 1943, initia lly to No 109 Squadron and then to Nos 139 and 105. Thc a ircraft for No 109 Squadron , like its ea rlier B Mk IVs, were fi tted wit h Oboe. the radar a id which allowed an ai rcraft to fo llow signals transmitted by two ground stations to reach its bombin g point without reference to the ground and with considerable accuracy. Sta rting on the night of 20/2 1 December 1942, the PF F Mosquitoes o f No 8 G roup played an ever·more important ro le in target·marking fo r the ma in bomber force. No 109 being joined by No 105 with Oboe-equipped B Mk IXs after the latter squadron was transferred fro m No 2 to No 8 Group in mid-1943. Flying singly, by night and a t alti tudes up to 30,000 ft (9144 m), these PFF Mosquitoes proved almost immune to interception; in more tha n 750 night sorties by the end of 1943, o nl y three ai rcraft had been lost by the two squad rons (a ra te of 0·4 per cent) and the Oboe units went on to become ever more proficient and well-equipped fo r their specialised task un til the end of the war, introducing the Mosquito B Mk XV I in place of the B Mk IX in due course, After its tran sfer to No 8 Group, the third Mosq uito bomber unit, No 139 Squad ron, also took o n a new role, using B Mk JVs and, fro m 3 October 1943 onwards, B Mk IX s to make nuisance raids o r "spoofs" , the purpose of which was to divert attention from the Main Force targets, confuse enemy defences a nd disrupt production through the so unding of air ra id alerts, all ror a relatively smal l expenditure o f aircra ft and man power. Bombs were carried , but inflicti ng bomb damage WaS no longer the primary objecti ve. With the B Mk IXs, No 139 Squad ron also introduced G- H, a radar aid simi lar in efTC(:t to Oboe, but relying upon position plotti ng in the aircraft, whereas in the Oboe system the aircrafi's posi tion was plotted in the ground station. Of greater significa nce, however, was the in troduction of H2S, the a ircraft·mounted radar bomb sigh t tha t was wholly-independent of ground stations and therefore did not have a limited opera tional radius, as did bot h the Oboe a nd G- H. Mosquito B Mk IVs carrying ·H2S became operatio nal with No 139 Squadron in Jan uary 1944 and the device was firs t used for target marking o n I February. over Berlin. As part of the "spoof' activity, No 139 added to its tasks that of dropping Windoll' a head of the Main Force, often then being fo llowed to the target by PFF Mosq ui toes with their specialised radar aids. With the re-equipmen t of the three pioneer Mosqui to bomber squadrons with B Mk IXs and later marks, it became possible to issue B Mk IVs to two new units, No 627 (in November 1943) and No 692 (in January 1944), Operating in No 8 Group in conj unction with No 139 Squad ron, No 692 became the nucleus o f the Light Nigh t Stri king Force that was to prove o ne o f Bo mber Command's most potent wea po ns during 1944/45 , especially when the B Mk XV I and Canadia nbuilt bomber Mosquito versio ns became available, as noted later. No 627 Squadron opera ted alongside No 692 ror a few mont hs, b ut in April 1944 it was tra nsferred fro m No 8 Group to No 5 G roup as a ma rker sq uadron, taking on tC(:hniques developed by No 617 Squad ron (the " Dam busters") with its Lancasters to mark targets by diving on to them from low level. Opera ting the Mk IV, IX, XV I, XX a nd 25 (mostl y in com bi na tio n ra ther than progression), this un it fl ew specialised low-level missions until the end of the war and it was while serving with this squadron th at Wg Cd r Guy G ibson, VC, DSO, DFC,lost his lifeon the night of 19 September 1944. No 617 Squadron itself, which G ibson had com manded for the memo rable attack on the German dams in 1943, la ler also used Mosquitoes for target-ma rking, using the diving technique for PAGE 29 ( A bore lell) A lrial installation of H2S rudor on a M osquito B Mk XVI, as used hy sOllie of tht' MosquilOt's jlown by N o 8 ( PFF) Grollp!or grt!uler occuroc}' illlUrgel mark ing. ( A OOl'" righ, ) A M osquito B Mk 15, lust oflhe UK-bl/ifl bomber ,'er$iOI1$. ( Below left ) The Mosquito IV DKl 90IG on lest a/ the A&AEE in May 1941 carr}'l'/lg mock-ups al ,he Highball weapon , /0 lise which No 618 Squadron was/ormell but did nOl go imO ON ion . markin g evolved by Gp Capt Leonard Cheshire, but for the most pa rt this un it used FB Mk VI fighter-bombers, supplementing a few B Mk IVs. O ne other unit that operated the B Mk IV was No 192 Squad ron, within No 100 (Bomber Su pport) Group. using aircraft specially equipped to detect enemy radio and radar transmissions a s part of the RA F's counter-mea sures elTort . Highballs a nd cookies Two importa nt developments in the offensive load-carrying capability of the Mosquito had mea nwh ile taken place during 1943. one o f which was to prove abortive operationally while the o ther added greatly to the aircraft 's elTectiveness in its attacks a gainst Germany. The first of these developments concerned Highball, a 6OO-lb (272-kg) mine that was designed in parallel with Upkeep (the dam-busting weapon used by No 617 Squadron's Lancasters against the Ruhr dams) for antishipping use. Interest in Highball centred upon its use in a one01T attack on the Tirpil:. and , early in 1943. the Mosquito was selected as the carrier and 15 May set as the target date for the operation (o ne day before 0 6 17's epic operation actually took place). With bomb-doors removed , the Mosquito could carry two flighball stores in ta ndem. with the associa ted gear to spin them backwa rds at 700 rpm, to achieve the bouncing or skippin g effect across the surface of the water that wou ld allow them to jum p over protective nets a nd booms a nd impact against the side of the ship. After a tria l installation in o ne Mk IV. 27 o thers were modified for the Highball role and No 61 8 Squadron was fo rmed to train for the ope ration. but the weapon was no t perfected until late in 1943. after the Tirpilz mission had been abando ned. In July 1944, No 618 Squad ron was detailed to train for anti-shippi ng operations in the Pacific. using Highball, and 29 Mosquito IVs (including most of those previo usly converted) were modified to have Merlin 25 en gines. extra armo ur plate, new windscreens and arrester hoo ks fo r ca rrier- bo rne o perations. 0 618 Squadro n took 25 PAGE 30 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 of these a ircraft to Australia aboard the escort carriers HM S Fell cer and Striker at the cnd of 1944, with 125 Highballs. but the decision was eventually made n OI (0 la unch the sq uadro n into operation, pa rtly through lack of suitable target s a nd partly for fear tha i the weapon would be 100 easily copied a nd employed by the enemy. By April 1943. de Havilland had reached the conclusion that the Mosquito was capable of carryi ng one 4.000-lb ( I 8 16-kg) bomb with relatively little modification, and a B Mk I V was co nverted within two months, fl ying early in July. The modification included slight bulging ofthe lower fu selage. with modified bomb doors. a small fairing behind the bomb-bay and a suitable single-point suspension wi th in the bomb-bay. As an alternative to the single large bomb. the modified aircraft could carry four 500-lb (227-kg) bombs - as well as the two under the wings iflong-ra nge tank s were not carried but the provision fo r carrying two I,OOO-ib (454-kg) bombs was abandoned. The gross weight of the modified Mk IV rose to 22.500 Ib (102 15 kg) and fore-and-aft stability problems were encountered. being on ly pa rtially cured by using larger ' elevato r horn balances. Nevertheless, pla ns went ahead to produce a batch of conversion kits a nd to int roduce the modifica tions o n the productio n line, a nd the modified aircraft. known as B Mk IV (Special), was clea red for operat ion in January 1944. First to drop the 4,OOO-lb "cookie" from a Mosquito was No 692 Sq uadron. which used three of the modified Mk JVs for the fi rst time agai nst Dusseldorf on the night of 23/24 February. Abou t 20 Mk IVs a nd fewer Mk JXs were co nverted to carry the big bomb, pla ns for the entire force to be modified being abandoned because of the stability pro blem . This was overcome. however. in the B Mk XV I. the first of which came olTthe line in October. After the first 12, all B Mk XVls were built with the bulged bomb-bay. the other important feature of this mark being its pressure cabin, giving an operationa l ceili ng of at least 35.000 ft ( I0668 m); the cabin differential was only 2 Ib/sq in (0, 14 kg/cmZ ) , giving a reduction of about 10.000 ft (3050 m) in equivalent altitude, so ox ygen masks were still necessary and crews had to train in decompression chambers to ensure tha t no ne was und uly prone to "bends". The first of the definitive B Mk XV ls with bulged bomb-bays was fl own initially o n the first day of 1944 by Geoffrey de Havi ll and. a nd went to the A&AEE a month la ter. The maxim um weight was now given as 25,9 171b (11766 kg) when carryin g the 4.000-lb ( I 816-kg) bomb and two 100 Imp gal (4551) drop ta nks but it was usua lly ope rated at a slightly lower wei ght fo r safety, achieving an operationa l radius of 550 mls (885 km): max speed was 408 mph (656 km /h) in " S" gea r at 28,500 ft (8687 m) loaded a nd 419 mph (674 km/h) after the bomb had been dropped, these bei ng about 80 mph ( 129 km /h) above the equivalent speeds at sea level. No 139 took the Mosquito B Mk XVI into operation o n the ni ght of 10fl i February 1944 a nd first dropped "cookies" from this mark of Mosquito a t the beginning of March. o n continued on page 46 equipment began to appear on ' mo re E than 70 years ago when, around 1910. radios were felt to be potentially useful for spotter aircraft . Radio techno logy LECTRON IC was still in its infancy, its techniques as unorthodox and unpredictable as many of the a ircraft of that era , a nd although radios proved useful then , nothing really significant happened for another 20 yea rs o r so. In the ea rly 19305, a irlines began to publish timetables, and were star ting to demo nstra te tha t thei r operatio ns were not limited to clear wea ther only. To meet these objecti ves, the firs t " black boxes" were installed, acting as sensors at those times and in those situations when the human crew was being asked to exceed natural capabilities. It is the radio-based sensors, and their relatives, which have evolved fr om those early initiatives, that form the basis for the firs t articles in this series. The unseen common denominator in all radio communication and radio navaid applications is electro-magnetic radiation. In a way, this radiation is not unseen, inasmuch as the radiation collected by o ur visual sensors is also electromagnetic, albeit of ex tremely short wavelength . Colour, as perceived by the eye, is an indica tio n of wavelength, and brightness is a perception of wave amplitude. If radiation of slightly longer wavelength than ligh t is directed towards us, we sense it as heat; this is infra-red radiation . The interpretation of this invisible portio n of the electro-magnetic spectrum is a rela tively new science, compared to that concerned with radiobased systems, and it is a subject to which we will return later in this a rticle. In the accompa nying electro-magnetic spectrum diagram, radio sets, radio navigation-aids (navaids) a nd rada rs are seen to spread across a la rge number of the possible wavelengths. Note that a ltho ugh wavelength has been mentio ned so fa r, we co uld as easil y refer to frequency. As all electro-magnetic radiation travels a t the speed of light (approx 300,000,000 m/sec o r 186,000 miles/sec), the prod uct of freq uency (ex pressed in cycles/sec o r Hertz) and wavelength (in metres), fo r a ny electro-magnetic rad iation, should equal this value. Hence, at a frequency of 100 MH z (100 million cycles/sec) radiation has a wavelength of three metres; at 300 MHz the wavelength is o ne metre, a nd so on. Wavelength characterises how radia tion propagates in the a tmosphere, a nd therefore how dilTerent parts of the spectrum can be used for special tasks. The earliest radio experimenters used what is called highfreq uency (H F) wavelengths. Using the electronic capability avai lable at the turn of the century it was fai rly easy to build powerful amplification ci rcuits which would resonate al these freque ncies. H F rad io freq uencies radia te over the horizon, this lo ngrange capa bility being provided by bands of charged particles, at 100-400 km (62-250 ml) altitude. They are produced by cosmic radiatio n a nd the density of charged pa rticles produced is rela ted to the degree of solar activity. A significa nt co nseq uence is tha t solar acti vit y may seriously disrupt H F radio communica tio ns, but even so, this type of radio is still used fo r lo ng- range communication with aircra ft today. When radio sets were first carried routinely o n aircraft. in the early 1930s, com munication was at H F wavelengt hs. Initially, sets were used to pass messages in morse only, a nd called wireless telegraphy (wIt) radios. Within a decade, radio telephone (r/t) sets, which carry speech information, were already supersedi ng the ea rlier radios, and VHF/ U H F applicatio ns, the most common radios today, were beginning to appear. These operate a t even higher freq uencies than H F radios. Radios used simple antennae, but it was apprecia ted also in the 1930s tha t the orientatio n of a wire-loop antenna in an electro-magnetic fi eld radiated from a ground station could provide an indication of direction to the station. This was the opera ting principle of the first radio direction-finding systems. T hey were relatively sho rt-range devices, but their performance was sufficient to warran t la rge numbers of ground statio ns being introd uced. These a re still used today. the no ndirectio nal beacon (N OB) remaining, even now, the most com mon of a ll radio navaids, altho ugh most aircraft nowadays have suppressed a ntennae instead of protruding loo ps. An NO B emits a continuous radio signal on which is carried a tone which can be detected by any user. Abou t every 30 seconds it will emit a morse-coded three-letter identificat io n. For reasons which can seem rather illogical now the receiver was called an automatic direction finder (A OF). It was PAGE 31 10KHz OMEGA 10km LORAN _C 100 KHz DECCA am NOB 1 MHz 'COm HFRAOIO 10MHz RADIO RANGE >Om MARKER BEACON 100 M Hz VoR V HF RA DIO ILS (10,.11$,,,) ILS (glidu/olH) UHF RAOIO NAVSTAR 'm oME SOR 1 GHz LONG -RANGE RADAR 10em MlS 10GHz half-century of development, the last radio- ra nge has been withdrawn fro m service (the final unit in the UK was opera ted as such at Ou nsfold until 1963). Radio-ranges produced two wide radio beams, one carrying a morse " A" (dot-dash) and the other a morse "N" (dash--dot). There was no cockpit instrument in this case. The pilot tuned in his receiver and Hew left or right, depending whether he heard " A" or "N" in his ea rphones, in order to stay within the beam. In the na rrow band where the beams overlapped he heard a continuous tone, and it was this which defined the centreline of the world 's first airways. In America, hundred s of radio-ranges were set up, acting li ke electronic signposts across the US continent, and NOBs were installed on ai rfields. The practice was copied later in Europe. Using these aids, airliners could Hy day and night , in almost any weather, keeping to regula r timetables. Mysteries of modulation Mention has been made already of "mod ulations'" a nd this is a term which may often hold terror for the non-engineer. An easy way to appreciate the two types of modulation commonly used is available fro m everyday knowledge of light waves. We know that freque ncy cha nges are detected by us as colour variations; this is wha t the radio-man calls frequency modulation (FM). Likewise, we know that amplitude changes are detected by the eye as brightness va riations; and this is the technique used in amplitude modulation (A M). Radio engineers tend to use very regular freque ncy and amplitude variations, therefo re producing "colour" a nd " brightness" variations in rad io signals, as perceived by a receiver, and in looking at how various navigation a nd comm unica tion systems work it will be useful to return occasionally to this a nalogy. RADIO ALTIMETER SHORT. RAN GE RADAR >om DOPPLER RAOAR ' O·6~ 1 · 10··mm LASER (CO , ) 1'06).1 LASE R (VAG) V ISI BLE LIGHT "1 0 ' mm X- RAV S 1·10·' mm FREQUENCY WAVELENGTH Almost the II"holl' of the eleclromagnetic speclmm is used b)' ~'arious rangillgfrom lI"al'elellglhsof aboUi 30 kmfor Omega to aboul 0111' ten-Ihousandth ofa millimelre for some lasers. a~ionic syslems, illogical, in a way, beca use the NOB signal indicates direction to the station - ie, straight ahead, left or right - but there is no precise heading da ta relative to compass orientation. AOF sets were used, however, to drive a needle around wi thin a compass rose which was aligned by a magnetic-compass system, and this truly was "automatic" in its day, and gave an indication of direction of Hight. The instrument was called a radio-magnetic indicator (RM I), and is still used widely today. N OB's sta blemate in the 1930s was a longer wavelength system, called a radio-ra nge. Whereas NOB has survived a PAGE 32 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1 983 ( Abol'e) DUrillg trials 011 Salisbury Plaill on 27 Sep tember 1910. Robert Loraine sem a morse wireless message "'Enemy in sight " while flyillg a Bristol Boxkite. It was receil'ed o~'er a quarter of a mile away. The only earlier recorded airborne wireless transmission look place one month before, in COllado. ( Below) A loop aerial on a Bristol Blenheim V. When alignl'll relali re 10 Ihe electric field sel up by a radio transmission. such an aerial is I'er)' sensitil'e 10 challges in the direction offlight, alld can provide an illdication 10 guide a pilot towards a radio beacon. 11 was widely used in World War 1/ and is still used today. although the loop is 11014' embedded in a dielec tric block which attaches to the aircraft skin to AM~U'UDf .. OOU ... TIQN i!PWlillNl ( A bol'e) Amplitude modulatioll consists of ~'arying the strellgth of an eleclrical sigllal. It is alllllogous to l'arying the brighmess of a lamp . Frequenc)' modulatioll cOIIsislS of I"Oryillg Ihe freque ncy of an eleclrical signal and is analogous 10 I'arying Ihe colour ofa lamp. ( Beloil') This is a VO R ground station al Biggill Hill, in Kent . The grid abore the buildings is called a counterpoise and il prol'ides a perfect reflecling surface for thl' trallsmiller aerials mOllllted abo~'e. The tall antenna in the centre is a DMEaerial. The navigation sensors descri bed so far were in use before World War II , but in the mid-1 940s, the advent of solid-s ta te (tra nsistorised) electronics heralded the introductio n of ci rc uits able to operate a t much higher freque ncies. Communication or navigation opera tion at frequenci es up to several gigahertz (note: 1,000 megahertz = I gigahertz) were therefore possible. Compared 10 valve-based systems, solidstate electronic units were much less susceptible to damage, they brought reliability benefit s, and they tended to occupy less volume and to use less power. This technology made very-high freque ncy (VH F) radio communica tions (in the 11 8-136 M Hz frequency band) standard practice for airliners and general-aviation aircraft, and ultra-high freque ncy (U HF) radio communications (distributed between 250-400 MHz) standard practice in military Hying. These frequencies are too high to be reHected by the ionospheric layers, so both radio types operate within line-of-sight only: out to 200 naut miles (370 km) for high altitude aircraft. To supplement them, H F radio (operati ng in the same frequency ba nd as that used by the pioneers) are still used by lon g-range aircraft when over dese rts a nd oceans. All commercial radios use amplitude modulation (A M) to carry speech data . In the HF case this is modified by delet ing half of the transmitted ca rrier, and the technique is called single-sideband (SS B) modulation. It has the adva ntage of being able to convey infonnation over grea ter range for a given radio transmitter power. An HF radio message ca n be made on anyone of280,OOO cha nnels between 2-20 MH z using a 20Ib (9-kg) radio set which radiates lOOW of power. Typical VHF radio sets provide up to 720 channels between 11 8-136 M Hz, are only half the weight of an HF set, and prod uce 820W of rad ia ted power. Worldwide VHF radio transceiver production for aeronautical use pea ked at about 20,000 sets a nnually in the la te 1970s. As VHF/ UHF radio communication techniq ues were being established, so too were new navaids using radiation in the same wavebands. Three systems in particular a rc still used widely. VOR , an abbreviation for VHF omni-directional range, has replaced the radio-range as the signpost used on all the world's airways. It ope rates on a frequency between 112-1 18 MHz. Any VOR tra nsmission carries morse identification letters. like an NO B, but at a standard frequency (30 Hz) both an amplitude modulation (variation in brightness) and frequency modulation (va riation in colour) is also introduced. This is inaudible to the operator. but by com parin g which "colour" in the regula r cycle coincides with the time of maximum "bri ghtness", bea ring from the beacon can be determined . (In an engineer's terms, one compares the phase shift between the reference and bearing modu lations.) VOR in stalla tions are always set up with the reference modulation aligned to local magnetic north, a nd bearings - called radial s, as they radiate fro m the beacon posit ion - ca n be measured to within ± I deg accuracy. Because of the availabilit y of actual beari ng data, VO R is a much more useful aid than an NOB, and it is usa ble a t li ne-of-sight ranges. large syslems installed on a "',I/-e"';PI"d landillg aircrafl , alld is 01/ the runway centreline. 11 1K'0 lobes which o ~'erlap 011 Ihe e:aended centreline and prol'ide horitomal guidance dllring an approach. ( Below) The second pari of an ILS installation is moullled abeam Ihe rUllway lOuchdol4'lI poim. II emits ' .....0 ~·erlically-stacked beams which m-erlap at a pre-set glidepath allgle and provide I'ertical guidance relalil'e to that glideslope. -, -, -, , k\, \ PAG E 33 This guidance. from the two horizontal beams, is called ILS loca liscr opera tion . Similar guidance fro m two vert icall ydisplac:.:ed beams is ca lled I LS glideslope operation. In this case the beam s use UHF radio freq uencies a nd the overlap coi ncides with a fixcd glideslope, usually set.1( 2} deg to 3 deg fr om thc horizonwl. On one cockpit instrument. both hori zo ntal deviation and vertical deviation indications can be prese nted by two crossed needles. La ter in this series, a closer look wi ll be taken at how this, and other navaid data , arc prese nted in mo re modern cockpits. The inrersection of twO synchronised I\'aves viewedfrom abol'e prot/uces a pattem ofhyperlxJlae. as sholl'n 0/1 the left. On Ihe right. the effect of using twO slm'es with one master illustrates how a grid pailI'm can m' created. A suitable rat/io receil'er can decode emiltell signals and delermine its position in Ihe area of cOl'erage. Distance measuring equi pment (OME) is often co-located with VOR ground stations, and its sole purpose is the provision of range data. OME-equipped aircraft have both transmitter a nd receiver units. The transmitter emits very short pulses (each of 5 microsecond duration) about 20 times every second . As each pulse is received by the ground sta tion it transmits a response, on a sli ghtly different frequency. This is received at the aircra ft after only a few microseconds a nd the lime delay is directly proportional to the distance between the beacon and the aircraft. OM E sets cost £15,000 or so in the early 1960s, a nd were standard items on airliners only. The development in the last decade or so of integra ted circuits has had a dramatic eITect, however, bringing costs down to below £2,000. Many general avia tion pilots a re now familiar with OME. bu t a repercussion of this progress has been that DME ground stations can be interroga ted by more aircraft than they can respond to, and in busy terminal areas the noticeable effect to pilots has been a decrease in the maximum effecti ve range of OM E statio ns. The final important short-range VHF/UHF rad io navaid is instrumem la nd ing system (I LS). It uses the techn ique mentioned in the description of the old radio-range: two beams are overlapped slightly to defi ne a line along which guidance can be provided. Each ILS installation, at the end of an "instrument-eq uipped" runway, emits four bea ms, two arranged horizo ntally and two vertica lly. Each hori zomal beam is at the same VHF frequency, between 108-1 12 MH z, but one has a 90 Hz modulation superimposed, and the other a modulation at 150 Hz. An ILS receiver automatically compares the proportion of 90 Hz and 150 Hz modulations, and computes the differing depth of modulation (DOM). When OOM is zero, the aircraft is on the runway ce nt reline. Long-range syste ms VHF/ UHF radio navaids arc not suitable for long-ra nge operations. which usc HF radio em issio ns. Some widely-used hyperbolic area-navigation systems are avai lable in this part of the radio spc<:trum. Amongst them are the Decca Naviga tor and Lora n (long-range navigation) systems. each developed approximately thirty years ago. A related, but much more recent. innova tion has been the Omega very-low freque ncy (V LF) navigation system . Decca was devised main ly for shipping use and is effective over an area abou t 400 naut mls (740 km) across. Loran is a simi la r system, designed to be effective across 1,500 naut mls (2780 km) or so. Each Decca or Loran installation ha s fou r transmitting-radio sites. One is designated as the master station , a nd the other three are called slaves. These are coded. in Decca , as red, green and purple slaves. The master and each slave emit synchron ised pu lses, which can be visualised as radiating outwa rds like ripples fro m two pebbles dropped in water. The ripples will touch. at just one point initially, then as they co ntinue to expa nd they overlap at two points. If both pebbles were dropped simultaneously, the first ripple from each wo uld meet at the half-way poi nt between where each one entered the wa ter. The poin ts of overlap thereafter, plolted as seen fro m above, would appear on the water's surface like a straigh t line, perpendicular to the line joining the two splashdown poi nts. If the line developed by subsequent ripples from one pebble in tersecting the first ripple from the other was ploned a patlern of curved lines wou ld be produced. These are hyperbolae. They are the reason for calling Decca a nd Loran hyperbolic system s, beca use in a directly a nalogous way the master and slaves of either system emit pulses which radia te a nd intersect to produce similar patterns. To use a particular Loran or Decca chai n (t his term refers to a set offour stations) the operator ha s merely to select the appropriate chain freq uency, and an on-board computer can interpret the received signals to provide an accu rate indicat ion of position, anywhere in the area of coverage. Omega is an extension of the above pri nciple. but sufficient ly different to make it a new method of naviga tion . Eight Omega stmionsore in use worldwille. Trinidad only lemporarily while the last permallellf stalioll in AllSlrolia is commissioned. The wble shows ho w pulses are inlerleavedfrom each station . al djfferelllfrequendel', during a ICII -second illlen ·aI. _ NORWAY LIBER IA HAWAII (0, LA REUNION (" ARGENTINA '" JAPAN PAGE 34 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 '"(" N. DAkOTA TRINIDAD - " ,A} 10·2 ,., ,., ,., ,., ,., ,., ,., ,., - - - - - 10 "CD nd& - - - - -_ 1]·S II ·l3 10·2 n ·ll 10·2 1]·S 11 ·33 10·2 13·S 11 ' 33 10·2 13'S 11 ·33 10·2 (0, 11 ·3l ("' 13" 13·6 13'S ,, ·33 10·2 11 ·l3 1]·S " ' 3l 10'2 13'S Infra-red heat-seeking missiles - such as these MOIra Magics on a Jaguar - detect "hOI-SPOlS " such as aircraft exhausts alld will home onto the rut/imion. Receil'ers are 11011' so sensitil'e Ihat el'en when launchedfrom lillead of the target they will deteci su/fidem radiation to home 01110 lhe exhaust. Omega uses very-low freq uency (VLF) radiation, typically 10- 14 KHz (30-20 km wavelength) a nd as this radiat ion will travel virtually arou nd the world before it decays. only eigh t tra nsmitting sta tion s are used worldwide. Omega synchronises aU of its stations and has only th ree of the eight transmitting simultaneously. There are three operat ing frequencies and at a ny time only one station is operat ing on each freq uency. Over a ten-second period each station transmits on each of the three frequ encies, a nd an ingenious receiver-processor in terprets the signa ls to determine position. Omega has the drawback that ambiguous position-fixes can be obtained. simi la rities occurring at intervals of 70 naut mls (130 km) or so. This is overcome by telling the Omega receiver where it is as its journey begins. The inrormation is correlated wit h received position-fix data and an up-to-date reference is ma intained in each ten-second period of transmitter opera· tions. Compa red to any Olher long-range navaid Omega is cheap, and it is accurate to within ± 5 naut mls (9 km) world wide (in most a reas fa r better, wit hin ± I naut ml/l,S km). it needs no opera tor skill . is easy to install and very reliable. After ba rely haIfa decade of availabi lity, Omega has establ ished itself as a universa l aeronautical navaid. So much for the major radio sensors. All those descri bed so far are used by ai rlines, and by military aircraft of various types too. Military operations can also use a rad io navaid called Tactical Air Navigation (Taca n), which is a UHF ve rsion of VO R/ DM E. To round off this survey of radio electro-magnetic sensors, there are several devices which use other than radio wavelengths and which are increasingly becoming important to military operations. All of them operate in and a round the optica l region of the spectrum. In fra-red hea t was mentioned earlier, a nd the use of hot-spot detection and tracking devices in heat-seeking missi les is fa miliar air-to-air missile technology. As more sensitive detection techniques have evolved, the opportunity has arisen to detect not only hot-spots, but to scan optics and to develop an image based on natural infra-red radiation intensities. This is "thermal-imagi ng", and many of the applica tions al ready operat ional are called forward-looking infra-red (FLI R) sensors. They ca n provide a clear view at night, and to some extent can be used for night-time low-level fiying, even in conditions of modera te haze. Low-light television (LLTV) cameras are not unlike ord inary television cameras, but they are adapted to nighttime use, using photo-detectors which are ex.tremely sensitive so that a n almost daylight-quality view of the scene a head can be produced even under star-lit cond itions. This can be complementary to F LiR as a low-level night-time flying aid in military aircraft. Finall y, whenever light waves are considered as a potential sensor nowadays, one tends to find an a pplication for lasers. T he laser (an abbreviat ion of "ligh t amplificat ion by stimulated emission of radiation" ) has fo und several military applications as an external sensor for militar y aircra rt. It has helped to solve one of the weapon-delivery system designer's biggest problems. Traditional visua l aiming techniques provide accurate posi tion information only during steady manoeuvres, and under these conditions accurate range a nd height data is virtually unobtainable, so bomb scatter tends to be appreciable. If a laser is installed , merely pointing it provides an accurate indication of target-position duri ng any manoeuvres, and ifpulses a re timed out to the ta rget a nd back , dista nce ca n be measured to with in a metre or less. Furthermore, knowing the laser depression angle, actual height above the target can also be derived. This new capab ility has opened a new era in weapon-del ivery techn iq ues, gua ranteeing high·accuracy delivery of simple ord nance, and permitting precision delivery of laser-guided weapo ns. The details of how various laser-based weapon systems are opera ted will be investigated in more deta il , showing their interdependence with other aircraft sensors when military operations a re considered in more detail, later in this series. Meanwhile, this article has covered the majority of the electro-magnetic sensors which aid ai r transport and milita ry operations throughout the world. An omission ha s been the in ternally-mounted laser-ring gyro which threatens to displace the humble gyroscope, and it wi ll also be considered in a later article. The most significant of all elect ro-magnetic ex.ternal sensors is radar. and it is that topic which will follow next in this series. 0 The two blisters under Ihe nose of this Boeing B-51G Stratofortress enclose a Westinghouse A VQ-22 low-light television ( LLTV) camera in the nearest port, and a Hughes AAQ-6 forward-looking infra-red ( FUR ) sensor in thefurllter protrusion. When not in use the equipment is protecled by shullers. ( Below) Royal A ir Force Harriers ( illustrated) alld Jaguars hare laser ranger and marked target seeker ( LRMTS) sensors in the nose. During close air-support operations. a control/er on the grount/ aims a laser at the largel he wants to be destroyed. The gimbal/ed optics in the LRMTS loek-on to the marked target and laser pulses are emifled and times to provide ranging data. PAG E 35 technical engi neers who served as aerodynamicists and consultants on the conversion. they came up with a design that, according to computer projections. should ullimately be good for a top speed of at least 480 mph (172 km /h). With the help of a large group of co-workers and volunteers. Hinton and Maloney spent the next 4~ months in a furious whirl of 12/18-hour days working to modify the Corsair to their specifications. The first job called for the fuselage to be completely gUllcd, inspected and rebuilt to "as new" condi tion. In the process of stripping off the layers of pai nt that the Corsair had acquired during years of service with the US Navy and Marine Corps, the work crew discovered seven small Japanese flags. representing '"kills" scored in the South Pacific during World War II. on the bottom layer of paint. Although efforts are now under way to trace the precise history of this Corsair, the only thing that is known for sure at present is that the aircraft did take part in combat during the war. In order to accommodate the massive R4360 engine and still keep the centre of gravity within acceptable limits. it was necessary to remove the oil tank from the front of the fuselage and manufacture a new tank to fi t in behind the cockpit. A new engine mount was fashioned to securc the cngine to thc fuselage and. when finally in place, the fuselage actually turned out to be about one inch (2,5 cm) shorter than that ofa sta ndard F4U-I, despite the fact that the R-4360 engine is almost twice as big as the engine in the original Corsair. Other modifications to the Corsair included cutting43 in (I,09m) from the tipofeach wing: improving thc profile of the oil cooler ducts: adding water tanks and spray bars to keep the radiators cooler during high speed, low-Ievcl fligh t: incorporating wing fillets to improve the airnow at the wing-fuselage juncture: metalskinning the previously fabric-covered portions of the F4U-1 wings and moulding a new low-profile cockpi t canopy. In all, parts from at least seven different aircraft were used in the project. As stated earlier, the fuselage and tail came from a Vough t F4U-1 Corsair: however, each wing came from a different model Corsair (one wing had cannon ports and the other had machine gun pons). The engine was taken from a Douglas C-124 Glohemaster, the engi ne cowling was adapted from a Douglas B-26 Invader, the propeller spinner was taken from a P·5 1K Mustangand the propeller came from an A-I Skyraider. The major part of the work was completed by 28 August and the first flight, with Jim Maloney at the controls, took place late that afternoon. During the next week, Hinton and Maloney alternated nights in the aircraft. making systems checks and working out minor "bugs". Although there were still many deta ils requiring attention on the Corsair. both pilots were impressed with the smooth operation of the engine and the aircraft's acceleration. After a week of test flights, the aircraft, now registered as a Vought-Goodyear F2G, went into the paint shop. Five days later, it cmcrged in the silver, blue and red colours of Budweiser Light Beer, lhe Corsair's sponsor for lhe 1982 Reno Air Races. There was time for only one additional day of test flying before the Corsair had to be ferried from Chino, California, to Reno, Nevada, for the technical inspections required before the air races. The inspections took place on 13 September and the races lasted fro m 17·1 9 September. During the time between inspection and the races, every opportunity was taken to work out minor but nagging problems with aileron response, the water injection system and engine cooling. However, poor weather limited the amount o f nyi ng t.hat could be completed and the Budweiser Light Corsair had to qualify and race with some problems still uncorrected. In spite of those problems, Hinton and Maloney did manage to qualify for the main event, the Gold Race on the 17th, and the modified Corsa ir finished in fourth place with Hinton at the controls. While it didn't win at Reno, the Budweiser Light F2G Corsair was the hit of the event and, after the "bugs" are worked out of the aircraft, Hinton and Malo ney are positive that it will be a definite contender for the championship in futu re air races and should eventually be able to take the time·to·climb record as well. In a ny event, the restoration a nd modification of this very dilTerent Corsair represents an impressive effort by a determined group of individuals working on a limited budget. Between races and record attempts, the Budweiser Light F2G Corsai r will be displayed in The Air Museum's '" Planes of Fame" collection at the Chino FRANK B MORMILLO Airport. 0 The F2G Corsair is shown here being M'orked on in Ihe "Planes of Fame" maintenance hangar al Chino. When nOI being used for racing or record attempts, Ihe Corsair is displayed allhe '"Planes of Fame" museum. bUI remains tl!ejoint property of Hinton and Maloney. The massil'e 28·cylinder R-4360engine is c/ear/y shown in Ihis \'iew. ~~~ ,. PAGE 38 AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 Eighty-two: a melancholy saga in the first issue of each I12 months New Year to look back over the preceding and assess them from the modelling T IS OUR PRACTICE viewpoint. Perusal of this col umn in the January issues of the past two or three years is scarcely to be recommended as salutary at a time when o ne is perhaps contending with the less desi rable after effects of the festive season. Indeed, it is an exercise conducive to acute melancholia in any self-respecting modeller, but the depressing saga ofa model kit industry reeling from and in part succumbing to world recession and the economic pressures in which it is resulting has undeniably continued apace. The depressingly reduced num ber of kit releases during the course of this year past we had none to record in October - that have formed the net output of what is now lillie more than a skeletal manufacturing industry sca rcely augurs recovery in this year of nineteen hundred and eighty-three! We can perhaps be thankful that the names Heller and Airjix have survived the companies that originally established them as important vertebrae of the modelling backbone, but the conglomerates that have acquired these illus· trious epithets have made no pretence of releasing kits on a regular monthly basis over the past 12 months and have manifested no intention ofso doing in the foreseeabl e future. The largest num ber of kits from anyone source during the course of t.he year bore the "Matchbox" appellation, and perhaps the only light in the otherwise unleavened gloom is the intention of the new owners - at the time of closing for press, at least - to continue production of plastic kits at the Rochford fac tory, near Southend, despite the demise of the die-casting side of the o rganisation. During the year, we received for review just 29 newly-released injection-mo ulded kits, some of which were near-duplicatesand others re-issues of earlier kits in revised form, while three were produced by small companies on a limited production basis. At least the international element was still in evidence in the near score-and-a-half kits that reached our work bench as they represented seven dilTerent countries: the UK, the USA, France, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Japan and the Germa n Democratic Republic. Apart from the UK and the USA, only one manufacturer represented each country. The largest number of kits received from any one source was from "Matchbox", despite the traumatic events of the year that brought that terminal disease of liquidation to its parent, Lesney Products. The eight kits from this source rendered Esci, with seven kits, a close runner-up as the year's most prolific manufacturer of aircraft model kits, although a mere seven or eight kits might hardly be considered to equate with prolificity on the basis of what we had come to expect before the ind ustry supporti ng o ur pastime entered the doldrums. Of course, for most kit manufacturers, aircraft subjects represent only a fraction of their overall production programme. Monogram, for example, released only two aircraft kits, but this company's output of non-aircraft related subjects was very substantial. Aircraft kits issued under the Airfix tradename, too, were restricted to j ust four, but many others bearing that label and far outside the scope o f this column reached the market. Disappointing though the year's new kits have been quantitatively, they have not been so qualitatively, the standard of those kits that hal'e reached us maintaining a consistently high level, and the injection-moulded offerings have been supported by vacuum-formed kits, which, in many cases, have attained exceptionally high standards of quality while displaying the fla ir for the unusual that we have come to expect from their manufacturers. Over the past 12 months, we have reviewed 21 vac-forms in lhe column, Ca nada having been the most consistent source for such with 10 new kits reaching us from that country and from three different sources. Others came from the UK, the USA and Federal Germany, those from the UK being the products of two companies, Controlil and Formaplane, and the laller line was discontinued during the course of the year with the closure of the well-known BMW Models' shop in Wimbledon. One range that never ceases to amaze us is the '"Microscale" series of aircraft decals of which we have reviewed more than three score sets over the year. How does this company keep it up? It certainly makes no concessions on the score of quality in maintaining a prodigious output roreach sheet is invariably a first rate production. Understandably, the "Microscale" decals are heavily biased towards American subjects, although there wasa noteworthy tendency towards increased diver· si ty as the year progressed. This month's colour subject What modeller other than those confining themselves to, say, airliners or modern jet combat aircraft, has not, at one time or another, assembled a kit o f a Spitfire. This superlative little fighter has always been and continues to be a popular subject among modellers, yet, surprisingly, it is loday a subject that is not all that easily found in acceptable form on stockists' shelves. The majority of the Spitfire kits offered over the years have represented the earlier Merlin· engi ned variants, the Mks I. 11 and V, but the later Merlin 61-series fighters, such as the Mks VIII and IX, have figured in the cata logues from time to time and in more than one scale, and this monlh we have selected these as our colour subject. Many years ago, Airfix produced a kit of the Spitfire Mk IX in 1/72nd scale, which, if somewhat crude by standards latcr obtained, ENTHUSIAST was acceptably accurate and mighl possibly still be obtainable. Monogram's 1/48th scale Mk IX is still included in that company's catalogue, but itleavesa lot to be desired and is now rather archaic by any standard, the undercarriage, in particular, calling for attention. This same kit, in rather inferior mouldings, has appeared at times under the Marusan label, incidentally. In this larger scale, the best kit of which we know is Otaki's Mk VIII which may also be completed as a Mk IX . Regrettably, however, this kit is now likely to prove difficult to locate in the UK as it was never very widely distributed even when first issued a few years back. But examples (lre slill around . A shapely Czech In the early 'sixties, the Czechoslovak aircraft industry produced what was to prove one of the most successful jet trainers of its generalion, the L 29 Delfin, and, in due course, the Kovozavody Prostejov produced, as its first offering, a 1/ 72nd scale kit. A decade or so later, the Czechoslovak aircrafl industry came up with ilS intended successor, the L 39 Albatros. which was to be adopted by many of the countries that had utilised its predecessor and has been built in I'er), large numbers in consequence. Indeed, production reached four figures some time ago and is continuing today. KP has now, as its latesl offering, produced a 1/72nd scale kit of the L 39, and it is intriguing to compare this with the L 29 kit o f so many years ago and note the technical advances achieved by KP in the intervening years. The L -:39 kit consists of 37 component parts moulded in light grey plastic apart from three tra nsparencies, and a two-piece stand is provided . Theq ualityofthemouldings, as well as that of the plastic, is very good and the components display fine ly formed surface detailing of which the raised panel lines are a feature. We were surprised to discover that the underca rriage doors are engraved on the undersurfaces of the wings and fuselage, no cut-outs being provided for the wells. However, the cover doors close flush with the surfaces after the gear is extended, covering the wheel wells themselves. Nevertheless, there are small doors attached to the mainwheel legs which do IWI dose with the gear down and, in consequence, a small area under each pa nel adjacent to the oleo strut should be cut away. The actual mainwheel legs are well moulded, each in one piece, including the knee joint, but with separate wheels, whereas the nosewheel is moulded integrally with its stru\. The cockpit interior fea tures a one-piece, two-level floor, with side consoles and rear bulkhead attached, and has separate ejection sea ts, instrument panels and control columns. The effect is adequate when viewed through the long, clear canopy which has well-defined framing. The air intake cowlings on each side of the fuselage are in two parts and the tailpipe is also an individual part, but the vertical fin and rudder are moulded inlegrally with the left-hand fuselage half. The lo .....er wing panel is in one piece, tip to tip. and the wingtip ta nks are moulded integrally, clear lenses being provided for the landing lights at the forward extremi ties of these tanks. External stores are PAGE 39 ( Bel ow) Sp itfire IXE , used as per sonal ai r c r aft by Eze r W eizm an w hen CO of No 101 Sqn , Isr aeli Defence ForCe/Air Fo r ce. ( l ower l eft) Crest of th e Heyl Ha'A vir. (B el ow) The Spitfire VIII fl own by It L P Molland , CO of 308th Squadron . 31 st FG , serving with th e US Fi ftee nth A ir Force in Ital y. 1944. ( lower l eft ) Per sonal embl em of It M o lland . (Below) Spitfire IX in the m arking s of No 133 Eagle Squadron . one of the three allAmerican squadro ns flying with the RAF i n 1942. (Above) An ex· RAF Spitfire IX ope ra ted by the Royal Egyptian Air Force during the Palestine War in 1948. (Above) A Spitfire IXE acquired from Czecho':-"". . . . . slovaki a for use by the Israeli Defence Force! A ir Force (Heyl Ha ' Avir) in the early ' fifties. JOHN PAGE 40 WE'~A~L...t::=S..~ AIR INTERNATIONAL/ J ANUAR Y 1983 (Above) A two -seat conversion of the Spitfire IX made in the Soviet Union by the No 1 Aircraft Depot, leningrad . i n 1945. (left) Pink - finished . pres surised Spitfire PR Mk X as operated by No 541 Squadron. RAF Benson. 1945. (Above) Spitfire VIII " Grey Nurse " of No 457 (Australian) Sqn. No 1 Fighter Wing . li vi ngstone, 1943. (left) Spitfire IXC o f No 73 Squ adron ope rating fr o m Hal Far. M alta, in 1945. Thi s unit carried its d istincti ve squadro n m arkin gs on its ai r c r aft f o r m ost o f the w ar. (Below) A Spitfire IXE as fl ow n by It- Gen Bo b Ro g ers, No 40 Sqn , SAAF, in Italy. 1944. Nam e " Eve lyn" r ef ers t o w ife of l arry Barn ett , w ho helped r est o r e th is Spitfire in th e 'si xti es . (Above) Spitfire HF Mk VII of No 131 Sqn in high -altitude day finish , 85 introduced in June 1943 but not w idel y used . (Left) Spitfire PR Mk XI of No 541 Squadron at RAF Benson , June 1944. in standard PR blue finish. (Above) Spitfire PR MkXI in natural metal finish , operated by 7th Photo Group of the USAAF, Mount Farm . Oxon. 1943-44. (Above) Spitfire PR Mk XI in standard RAF colours. operated by 7th Photo Group, USAAF. in the UK, 1943-44. PAG E 41 Our sample was not accompanied by the instructions that will normally be supplied, but we know from previous experience that these instructions will be comprehensive. giving the exact location of each part. The Waldron Model concern's products are handled in the UK by Croydon Impex (10 Stoneyfield Rd . Old Coulsdon, Surrey CR3 2HJ). which supplied our sample and should be contacted concerning delivery and price. We are adviscd. incidentally, that Croydon Impex is the UK distributor of the Australian Roodecals which have been reviewed in this column o n occasions and may be recommended to any modeller interested in Australian and New Zealand aircraft. confined to two drop tanks mounted on two of the four underwing pylons. We found it necessary to add some weight inside the nose in order to balance the tail. The multi-lingual instruction sheet, which includes English, is comprehensive, and provides marking diagrams and colour scheme information for the fou r dilTerent aircraft fea tured by the accompanying decal sheet. One machine. from the fi rst production scries, has Czechoslovak Air Fo rce markings on a white and light grey scheme. trimmed with red: a second is camouflaged with pale blue undersurfaces and is from the "Higher Military Avia tion School of the Slovak National Uprising", and a third example has a Cuchoslovllk civil registration and represents the aircraft exhibited at the 1977 Paris Salon. Fi nally, there is an L 39 of the Soviet Air Force in an overall light grey finish with red trim. This is a neat, well-produced kit of a subject unlikely to feature in the catalogues of any of the remaining western ma nufacturers. Nipponese canard Alone time. a canard was defined as an extravaga nt or absurd story circulated as a hoax. Today, in aeronautical parlance. il is taken 10 mean II ltJil-first aircraft - alleast, an aircraft with auxiliary horizontal surfaces al the fro nt (ie, fo replanes) - but why such a configuration should be labelled a canard (duck) and the surfaces themselves as canards completely escapes us. Never, in the aftennath of our wildest assaults on the office elderberry wine bar, have we seen a duck fly ing backwards! Of course, the so--called canard '<Onfiguratio n dates back to the earliest days of flying. bUI it is only recently that it has begun to catch on in a big way. Israel Aircraft Industries having been in the vanguard of the new wave wi th its Kfi r-C2, and the next generation of multi-role fighters, such as Ihe JAS 39, the Lavi and the ACA, evidently considering canards to be de rigueur! From time to time, during the annals o f military aircraft, designers, presumably bored with the conventional, have exercised whimsicality and placed the horizontal tail surfaces up fronl - examples that traditionalists have ascribed more to caprice than to the normal process of aeronautical research. Arguably, the designers o f these cana rd-configured aircraft were less bigoted in their approach to the radical than their less adventuro us fe llows. That is as may be. but in the late 'thirties a nd early 'forties, there was certainly a revival of interest in the potential of the canard arrangement for figh ters. The firs t of these to fly was Sergio Stefanutti's SA l Ambrosini S.S.4, which, evolved fro m experience gained with the 16 hp S.S.2 and 38 hp S.S.3 configurational test-beds. flew on 7 March 1939. Regrettably, this intriguing fighter prototype prom ptly crashed and its fu rther development was abandoned. Four years later, in July 1943, the first of three Curtiss XP-55 Ascender canard-configured figh ter prototypes entered flight test in the USA, but their inherently bad stalling characteristics and questio nable stability led to discontinuation of development. Two years later still, Japan got into the canard act with the flight testing of the very much more po .....erful J7WI Shinden (Magnificent lightning) fighter, and, somewhat surprisingly. in view of the fact that only one prototype of this radical warplane was ever flown. the Shinden PAGE 42 has been selected by Hasegawa as the subject ofa 1/48th scale kit. Representing the exotic and the esoteric in unique combination by injection-moulded kit sta ndards, Hasegawa's olTering, distributed in the UK by Hales Limited at £2'99, is certainly fascinating. If you have a penchant for the 01Tbeat then this is the kit for you! Attaining a very high standard of q uality, the Shinden kit possesses 55 component parts moulded in dark green plastic, plus three transparencies, and these olTer very fi ne surface deta iling, mainly raised panel lines and engraved control surface outlines, and precise fit. The elTective cockpit interior takes encapsulated form , no seated pilot figure being provided and none being called for as such would partly obscure the interior detail. The six-bladed propeller is moulded in one piece with separa te spinner and backplate, and there is some nice detail moulding in the air intake gills o n each side of the fuselage and also around the cowling. The long, stalky undercarriage units are neatly formed, but, inevitably, unless the manufacturer of the ki t departs dramatically from scale, somewhat vulnerable to damage if handled in the least boisterously. All doors and housings reveal internal engraved detail. The bottom panel of the low wing is in one piece. th us fixing the dihedral angle. Markings. such as they were, are provided by the accompanying decal sheet and the modeller scarcely has much choice in respect of colour finish, but what a fascinating model this kit produces. The clear assembly diagrams and general arrangement drawings are supplemented by two large-scale full--colour side elevations. Embellishing cockpits From time to time. we have reviewed examples of the wares of Waldron Model Products (1358 Stephen Way, San Jose, CA 95129) which specialises in cockpit interiors - mostly instruments engraved on aluminium sheet. These components upgrade the models to which they are applied to quite an extent and we are delighted to hear that this company is expanding its range. A preliminary sample has reached us for the F-14A Tomcat pilot's cockpit in 1/48th scale, and the number of instruments represented is quite remarkable, their incorporation calling for additional eITort on the part ofthemodeller. but this being more than justified by the final result. AI R INTERNATI ONAL/J A NUA RY 1983 Decal review Microscale: (Krasellndustries Inc, Santa Ana, CA 92705) Fast and fu rious come the Microscale decals and this month there is a veritable mass o f them to record for the 1/48th scale modeller. primarily for the predictable series of F·14s and A-7s for which this company would seem to have a marked predilection, but with a reasonable leavening of other types to sweeten the pot. Sheet No 48118 is shared between an F- 14A of VF-41, which now rejoices in the appellation of the "Sukhoi Killers", and an A-7E of VA-86, the latter d isplaying on its fin a large, coiled snake with the legend "Don't Tread on Me". Sheet 48-119 olTers three more A-7Es, respectively from VA- 15, VA-37 and VA-83, the first of the trio being the most striking with a black lion as a fin embellishment. The F-14A re-appears once more on Sheet 48-122. the units represented being VF-I02 and VF-II I. both being in low-visibility grey and the latter sporting a shark's mouth and a sunray pattern on t.he fin. but, in a darker shade of grey. these decorations tend to lack impact. Yet two more F-14s. from VF-IOI on loan to VF-33 and from VF-II , are subject matter for Sheet 48-123, these being much more colourful than those represented by the preceding sheet, particularly the VF-33 loan aircraft with blaek fin s with yellow lightning flashes and stars superimposed. Sheet 48-124 provides a final appearance of the F-14 - in this batch, at least - with aircraft belonging to VF-31 and VF-143, the fonner in overall light gull grey with large red areas bedecking its fins and the latter having a stylised winged puma in grey o n each side. Departing at last from the Corsair-Tomcat duo. we come to Sheet 48-125 which is devoted to three aircraft of the Israeli Heyl Ha 'AI'ir, the F-15, the F-4E and the A-4M. Although camouflaged, ei ther in ai r superiority or tactical style, these aircraft display plenty of colour. the Phantom in particular with its elaborate shark's mouth. National markings are included on the sheet. Sheet 48- 126 caters for F-I6s in service with four NATO air forces (ie, Belgium. Denmark, the Netherlands and Norway) and included are national insignia. codes. badges. instrument panels and many small markings. Two sheets follow under the generic heading " International Mirages" and comprise, on Sheet 48-127, Colombian, Egyptian and Pakistani aircraft. the variety of national markings making this an attractive set. Sheet 48- 128 covers a Mirage IIIC of EC 3/ 10 Vexin of the Aflneede I'Air, a Mirage 111 0 of No 75 Sqn, RAAF, and a Mirage III EA of the Fuer:a Airea Argentina. 0 f J UENDERSQN !~~~~i~~ACK---;::::===============::::::' PF.TI:"R Green's leiter (A IR INTERNATIONAL/ October 1982) referring [0 the first flight date of the Gloster F. 5/34 prototype. serial number K5604. demonstrates the way in which many reputable sources of information have been led astray. I think thaI the initial mistake may well have come from the first appearance of the aircraft in Jane's - this was in the volume for 1937. issued in December. Not having access to 1937 copies of Thl! Al!ropltllleand Fligh/. I cannot comment on the air-to·air photographs published in June of that year. However. if The Aeroplane photographs were those which appeared in )one's six months later. then another little mystery needs clearing up. I have copies of these photographs - and they carry The Aeroplane negative number 10, 121 with suffixes "N··. "0". "P··. etc: but I also have a photogrdph of the Latvian Gladiator (serial No 114), and this carries The Aeroplane negative number 10.12 1 wi th the suffix ··F" - which strongly suggests that all were taken on the same occasion. Yet. from the sources I have available. the Latvian Gladiators were apparently erected, tested and shipped out between August and November, 1937. I would hazard a guess thai these photographs were taken in May 1937. and that the published references to both the F.S/ 34 and Latvian Gladiator are wrong. Whilst employed with Bristol Aircraft. I had among my colleagues at Filton Ronnie Ellison and Jock Campbell and made some notes o f their experiences with various aeroplanes of pre-war days. Both remembered the Bristol prototype submitted to F.5/34. the Type 146. and described it as a forlorn hope for scveral reasons: fi rstly. the intended sleeve-valve Perseus had not been ready in time: secondly. the Gloster machine had already been flying "for more than a yea r": and thirdly. the Vickers PV (the Venom) not only had a sleeve· valve engine but had flown before the Gloster aircraft. The Bristol 146 was first 110wn - by C F Uwins - on II February 1938. So. ifmy friends' collective memories were righ t. the Gloster F.5/34 was flying very early in 1937. Of course. the connecting link bet .....een all three aeroplanes was Roy Fedden. who was at the forefront of the eITort to break the RollsRoyce monopoly and get an air-cooled radial engine into the new monoplane figh ter scene. Kurt Tank was eventually to achieve this for him! All else I can olTer Mr Green on the Gloster F.5/ 34 K5604 is the foll owing: I. Taken on charge by Ai r Ministry (not RAF) after completion of manufaclUrer's trials on 18 May 1937. (This was probably why the photographs were taken.) 2. Appeared in the New Types Park at the Hendon Air Pageant on 26 June 1937. (The photograph in AIR INTERNATIONAL/August 1980. page 104. was taken on that occasion the "set-piece" can be seen in the background .) 3. Positioned to the SBACShow and shown as a static exhibit on 28 June 1937. and gave a l1yingdisplay the following day. 4. On charge to Boscombe Down until struck oITin February 1940. when it became a non-l1ying instructional machine with the ( Aool'e) One of the series ofpholOgraphs 0/ the G/oster F.5/34 in ''The Aeroplalle" series nl/mbered /0.121 anfl ( bl'Ioll') olle 0/ a series of "rOlmd-the -c1ock ,. groll/u/I'iell"s of the same aircraft taken by the Air M illiSfryr."orogmpher ill accOr(lallCf! lI"itll the standard reql/iremem: almost certai"ly take" immediate y be/ore or tJI the timp offirst flight, these official prints are dated May 1937. maintenance serial 2232M. 5. In Gloster Accomplishmelll. a book let issued by GAC in November. 1947, the F. 5/34 is listed as appearing in 1936. It looks. on balance, as though everyone but Mr Green and the manufaclUrers got the year wrong. There is much more that could be written about Ihis Gloster design, in particular its link with what was going on at Filton at the time. One hardly has to do more than compare photographs of the two machines to see that the F.5/ 34 has a Blenheim I "power plant " bolted on the front - the first production Blenheim was in the shops at Filton in the second half of 1936 being filted. among o ther things, with NACA cowlings and cooling gills. wi th exhausts feeding into a nose collector ring and exiting through twin countersunk exhaust pipes. One wonders why the Bristol 146 wasn't so equipped. Then there was the Fedden-i nspired scheme to re-engine the Gloster F. 5/34 with a Taurus, making up for the increased weight forward by fitting a 40/50 Imp gllllon (182/227 1) tank aft of the cockpit. Oddly enough. although thought of as a much bigger engine. the Taurus was barely a litre bigger in swept volume than the Mercuryl Perseus - but it was more than I I percent less in diameter. The combi nation could have emerged as quite a polent fighter. providing the rear row of Taurus cylinders could be persuaded to hold together! One last point - it's rather odd to see that all three F. 5/34 prototypes (no - I haven't forgotten the fourth. Martin- Baker, aeroplane, which is a saga in itself) had three-blade controllable-pitch propellers - which wasn't possible with the engines fitted to the prototype Hurricane and Spitfire. I look_ forward to my co py of A IR INTERNATIONAL every month - it remains second to none. Keep it up. ) D OughlOn BriSlOI, A 1'011 AuSlralia's Hawkers YOUR notes o n the Hawker P. 108 1 ("Fighter A to Z··. AIR INTERNATIONAL/August 1982) give rather a distorted view on Australian participation in the project. On 14 October 1949 Sir Keith Park , the South Pacific representa tive of the Hawker Siddeley Group. met wi th Prime Minister Chifely to discuss the Group'solTer to build jet fighters in Australia. A change of government took place in December 1949 and on 4January 1950 Sir Frank Spriggs (Managing Director of the Group) publicly renewed the olTer. Cabi net approved the manufacture of the figh ter (with conditions) seven days later and on 8 February 1950 a total of 72 were ordered as the Commonwealth CA-24 with initial deliveries commencing in July 1951. By 10 August, the Group was able to announce negotiations for the manufacture of the P.l081 were completed, and Australian technicians were in England . Australian interest ended when it was realised that the P. 108 1 was an experimental design and not the promoted production machine. One can only speculate on the Hawker Siddeley Group's motives in the episode. Did they think they could sell the dated P. I081 design or was it a ploy to lock the Australians into the coming Hunter? Trevor W Boughton M osmans &y, Australia PAG E 43 1r1(;1IlrItII " lrII ~ p~'i:m:a,~iI~Y i~n~h:aV~in:g~t:h':~~'b~la~d~ f ·.·.#~~~~~~~--~d~i~=e.n:'n~g~fr:o:m~t:he~p:,o:t:ot~y~ metal propellers in place of the two-bladed wooden unit. Although the speed capability of the I. A.R. 15 was adjudged excellent, it was considered inferior to the P. II b on the sco re of manoeuvrability, and no furthe r examples were o rdered. Max s~, 233 mph (375 km/h) at 13, 125 fi (4000 m), 230 mph (370 km/h) at 16,405 fi (5000 m). Climb to 16,405 fi (5000 m), 8·0 min . Range, 373 mls (600 km). Empty weigh t, 2,6781b ( 1215 kg). Loaded weight, 3.6371b (1650 kg). Span, 36 fi I in ( 11 ,00 m). Length , 25 fi 5f in (7,76 m). Height, 8 ft 10. in (2,70 m). Winga Tea, 204·51 sq ft ( 19,00 ml). ~ I • • I. A. R. 16 Thc I.A.R.l4 (obm',. and be/ow) en/ered Romanian ser~ice in small nllmbers in 19J4, bU/ 11'(1$ destined to be re/egated to Ihe fig/lief training ,611'. -- /~I I. A. R.80 I. A. R. 14 ROMANIA Altho ugh the Aero"Qlllica Mililara had selected the PZ L P. ll for the re-equipment of its fighl er clement, a small series of L A. R. 14s was to be ordered in 1934 fo r evaluation pu rposes. Fl own in 1933, the I.A .R. 14 was essentially similar to the LA.R. 13 but reverted to the Lo rraine 12Eb engine, which, while inferio r to the HS 12Mc for fighter installation , had the advantage o f being licence-built by I. A.R. Apart from the engine change, the fu selage of the I.A.R. 14 was redesigned, the turnover pylo n was incorporated in a fairing aft of the cockpit, sho rter-span, broad-chord a ilerons were introduced, the vertical tail was redesigned a nd the span of the horizontal surfaces was increased, their inverted-vee type bracing struts giving place to parallel struts. Armament rema ined the standard pai r of 7,7-mm Vickers guns. The small series of I.A .R.14s deli vered to the Aerollaurica Mi/irara in 1934, were, after service evaluation, utilised in the fighter training role. Max speed, 183 mph (294 km/h) at sea level, 163 mph (263 km/h) at 16,405 fi (5000 m). Time to 16,405 ft (5 000 m), 10·45 min . Endurance, 2· 16 hrs. Empty weight , 2,767 Ib (1 255 kg). Loaded weight, 3,4 17 1b ( I 550 kg). Spa n, 38 ft 4j in (II ,70 m). Length , 25 ft 5f in (7,76 m). Hei ght, 8 n 6 in (2,60 m). Wing area, 213· 13 sq n ( 19,SO m 2 ). I.A.R. IS ROMAN IA Possessing little more than a configurational similarity to preceding single-seat fighters of Ca rafoli design, the I.A.R. 15, which flew for the first time la te in 1933, was powered by a 600 hp Gnome-Rhone 9 Krse nine-cylinder radia l and ca rried an armament of two 7,7-mm Vickers machine guns. The structure followed that of the I.A.R . 14 in having a welded steel-tube fuselage covered by duralumin sheet forward and fab ric aft, and a three-piece wing with two duralumin spars, pine and plywood ribs and dura lumin sheet skinning for the centre section with fabric covering for the outer panels. A series of five I.A.R. 15s was o rdered for the Aeronaulica Militara, these PAGE 44 AlA INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 ROMAN IA Alt hough evolved in pa rallel with the 1.A. R. 15, the 1.A.R .16, which flew for the first time in 1934, was the fi rst ofCarafoli's fi ghters to fea ture a n all-metal structure, this having plywood. fabric and duralumin skinning. Powered by a 560 hp Bristo l Mercury IVS.2 nine-cylinder radial enclosed by a Townend ring and carrying an a rmament of two 7,7-mm Vickers guns, the I.A. R. 16 established a national altitude record of 3S, 156 ft ( 11 63 1 m) in 1935. The LA.R. 16 was not developed further than a single prototype, bringing to an end Romanian fighter design for more than a dozen years. Max speed, 212 mph (342 km/h a t 16,405 fi (5000 m). Time to 16,405 fi (5000 m). 6·5 min . Em pt y weight, 2,698 1b ( 1224 kg). Loaded weight , 3,637 Ib (1650 kg). Span , 38 ft 4j in (1 1,70 m). Length, 24 ft 2* in (7,37 m). Height, 9 ft 2* in (2,80 m). Wing area , 2 18·5 sq ft (20.30 m' ). ROMAN IA In October 1937, the I.A.R. design team led by Prof Io n Grosu initia ted work on a potential successor fo r the licence-built P.24E fi ghter. The prototype of the new fi ghter, the I.A.R .80, uti lised, wherever possible, proven components of the P.24E, including the entire semi -mo nocoque rear fuse lage. Of allmetal st ressed-sk in construction, the I.A. R.80 was powered by The first Romanian fighler 10 be built in substantial numbers, Ihe I.A .R .80 (abol'e and below) ulilised some elements of Ihe PZL P.24E lhal had been licence-built by I.A .R. Three l'Oriants differing in armoment were built. o The I.A .R. 16 ( abol'e 011(1 below) broughl illdigenous Romanilm fighler tlesign 10 all endfor more Iholl a dozen years. The firsl Romonial/fighler with 01/ oil-metal structure. it failed /0 progress filrlher Iltan prolotype slUge. an I.A.R. K 14-111 C36 14-cylinder radial based o n the Gnome-Rhone 14K Mist ra l-Major ra ted at 900 hp for ta keoff. Production was initiated fo r the FARR ( Fone/or Aeriene Rega/ ale Romania), the first series I.A .R.SO being completed in the spring of 1940. This differed from the proto type primarily in having a 1,025 hp l.A.R . K 14- IOOOA engine, an enlarged wing, lengthened fu selage, an enclosed cockpit and the tail plane bracing struts deleted . Armament initially comprised four 7,92-mm FN-Browni ng guns, but after the completion of 50 aircraft, two additional 7,92-mm weapons were added (LA.R.SOA), a furth er 90 aircraft bei ng built before two of the 7,9-m01 guns gave place to guns of 13,2-mm calibre O.A.R .SOB). Productio n of the I.A.R .SO totalled 121 a ircraft before it was supplanted by its derivative, the I.A.R.8 1. Max s~d, 319 mph (5 14 km/h) a t 13,025 Ft (3970 m), 342 mph (550 km/h) at 22,965 Ft (7000 m). Timeto 14,765 ft (4 500 m), 5·67 min. Range, 584 mls (940 km) at 205 mph (330 km/h). Empty weight, 3,9241b (I 780 kg). Loaded weight, 5,622 1b (2550 kg). Span, 34 fi 5t in ( 10,50 m). Length, 29 fi 21 in (S,90 m). Height, I I ft 91 in (3,60 m). Wing area, 171·9 sq n (15,97 m'). I. A. R.B I ( Abol'eolldbelow) Consilleredinferior to the PZL P.l Ibon the score of mallMlll'rabilitJ', the I.A.R.15 - the prOtotype of which is iIIwtraled abol'e - was restricted to a series offiW! aircraft . cannon wi th MG lSI cannon of similar calibre, deliveries termina ting in January 1943. Performance data fo r the I.A.R.8 1 (in clean condition) was essentially similar to that for the l.A .R.80, and apart from the aforementioned increase in wing span, dimensions were simil ar. I.A. R.93 ROMAN IA The I.A.R .93 single-seat close ai r support fighter has been developed under a joint programme with the Yugoslav SOKO organisation by which it is known as the Orao . T he CN IAR is responsible for the Ro ma nian part of the programme, and the two 4,000 Ib st ( 1814 kgp) Roll s- Royce Viper Mk 632-41 turbojets are licence-manufactured in Bucharest. There are two final assembly lines for the I. A.R.93 a lias Orao, one at Mostar in Yugoslavia a nd the o ther at Craiova in Ro mania, and deliveries of production aircraft to bot h national air forces were initia ted in 1980. Design leadership in this aircraft, which is produced in both si ngle-seat and tandem two-seat versions, is held by SOKO under which details will be included. ROMANIA Expansion of the operational versatility of the basic LA .R.80 design to embrace the fight er-bomber and dive bombing missions resulted, in 1941, in appeara nce ofa modified version of the fighter, the l.A. R.S I which was subsequently built on a parallel assembly line with the I.A. R.80 a nd eventuall y replaced the earlier model in 1942. Powered by a similar I.A.R . K 14- IOOOA engine to that of the I.A.R.SO, the LA.R .8 1 embodied some struct ural strengthening, feat ured a 7·S7-in (20-cm) increase in wi ng span a nd had centreline a nd underwing racks for a 55 1-lb (250-kg) a nd two 11O-lb (50-kg) bombs. The l.A.R.S l (50 built) a nd 81A (29 built) differed only in wing armament, Ih is being similar to that of the I.A.R.80A a nd 80 B respectively. The I.A. R.S I A was dispersed on the lin<' with the LA . R.8 1B (50 built) lo ng-range fighter with wet points in the wings for two drop tanks and a n a rmament of two 20-mm MG FF ca nnon and fo ur 7,92-mm machine guns. The fina l production model, the I.A .R.S IC (3S built), differed from the SI B primarily in replacing the MG FF PAGE 45 MOSQUITO Jrompage30 Monchengladbach. The two Oboe squadrons. Nos 105 a nd 109, received the Mosquito XV I in March 1944 and in due course Ihis mark. which was the most important of the wartime Mosquito bombers, equipped another four squadrons in the Light Nigh t Striking Force, comprising the previously mentioned No 692 and Nos 128, 571 and 60S. The L SF squadrons also were the principal users of the Canadian -built Mosquito XX a nd 25 bomber versions described below, a nd another three units. Nos 142. 162 and 163. were principally equipped wit h the Mk 25 . Oflhesc units. No 162 was in course of converting 10 ope rations wi th H2Sequipped aircraft when t he war in Europe ended . Although the importance of the Mosqu ito in the pathfi nding a nd o ther special roles ca nnot be igno red. it was the squadrons of the Li ght Nigh t Striking Force th at achieved the most o bvio us results wit h the bomber versions. Througho ut 1944 and the months of 1945 until the end of the war, the eight Mosquito squadrons ranged freel y over Germany, freque ntl y led to their targets by the Oboe-equipped PF F units and then bom bi ng wi th a precision that could ofte n not be ach ieved by Main Force ··heavies". Berlin became the major target and during Ma rch 1945 was visited o n 27 successive nights; on the night of 2 1/22 March, all eight sq uadrons attacked in two waves, with just over I 00 in the first and 35 in the second. 20 aircraft actually participati ng in both waves. Between January and May 1945, the LNSF Mosquitoes dropped 1.459 "cookies" on Berlin alone, a nd 1,500 on other targets. The squadrons of No 8 Group (incl uding the three PFF units), flew a tota l of 26,255 sorties for the loss of 108 aircraft (plus 88 written off as a result of battle damage); overall Bomber Command statistics at the end of the war showed a total of 39.795 Mosquito sorties fo r the loss Qf 254, a loss rate of 0·63 per cent - the best. by a very substant ial margin . of any type operated by the Command . A total of 26.867 tons of bombs was dropped. The concept of the high speed unarmed bomber was clearly justified. By the time the wOl r ended. production was switching from the B Mk XV I to the B Mk 35, a version first flown on 12 March 1945. and differin g in havi ng 1.690 hp Merlin 113/ 114 engines. Production o f the B Mk XV I tota lled 400, of which 195 were built by Perciva l Aircraft and the remainder by de Havilla nd a t Hatfield. The B Mk 35 production total was 276. of which about 60 had been delivered by VE day but none had entered operations. possible need to transfer it s main activities to Canada in view of the thrcat of in vasion in the UK. but whereas Australian production (exclusively of fightcr·bomber, PR a nd training versions) was to meet local operational needs, the Ca nadian programme was undertaken primarily to allow Canada's industrial re~ources to make a contribution to Britain's need for war supplies. In co nsultation with de Havilland's Canadian company at Downsview. out side Toro nto, the Canadian and Brit ish government s agreed in June 1941 to a proposa l that Mosquitoes should be built at Downsview. where the c<lpacity was estimated to be 40 aircraft a month, a nd the Ministry of Ai rcraft Production pl aced a contract for International 400_ Canadian production was concerned princi pally wit h the bomber variants. a nd made use of Packard-built versio ns of the Merlin engine. The fir st 25 ai rcraft were based o n the proposed British B Mk V, ie, the B M k IV Srs 2 wit h the bnsic wing , and were designated B Mk VII ; usi ng mostly British supplied components. the first of these new a t Downsview on 24 September 1942 and all were retained in North America, including six transferred to USAAF as F-8 pho tographicrecon naissance aircraft . The B Mk VI I, which was powered by 1,460 hp Packa rd Merlin 31 engines, was followed by the B Mk XX , this being one of the principal Canadian production versions wit h North American equipment thro ugho ut and Packard Merlin 31s or 33s, respet:tively with 12lb/sq in a nd 14 Ib/sq in (5,4 and 6,4 kg/cml) boost ra tings. Some 60 MOSQui to B Mk XXs were off the line by the end of 1943 and the total of 245 was reached before mid· 1944. The B Mk 25 followed. differing o nly in having Merlin 225 engines with 181b/sq in (8.2 kg/cm! ) boost, and the first of 400 built was accepted at Downsview on 7 Jul y 1944. Delivery of the Ca nadian·built Mosquitoes to Britain began in August 1943 and the first B Mk XXsentered service with No 139 Squadron in November 1943. nying thei r first operation ' o n 2 December. In all, 135 of this ma rk reached Britain , to be fo llowed in 1944/45 by 343 B Mk 25s. As already noted. they served with v:lrious squadrons in No 8 G roup's LNSF. and the B M k 25 exclusively eq uipped Nos 142, 162 and 163 Squadrons. Pl ans to prod uce a version with Packard-built two·stage Canadi an Mosq ui toes Plans for the productio n of Mosq uitoes in Canada were first considered in 1940, at a time when de Havilland even foresaw a ( &10"'"' ) Post· .....ar, some late,production Mosquito bombers .....ere modified to serl'e '.....ith Ih~ RA F in other roles - l or exumple this TT M k 35 lurgel·lug. AJew others "'En v :por/t'(1 into pril'ute o .....nership. Silch us (abol'e r;ghl ) litis ~xumplf!jfo ... n in Spain as Ee· WKH b)' Capl Rudy Bo)', ...·ho lUlU found~d the Spuntax t"ompany. Esta blished as Europe's mos t a u thoritative, widely - read aviation monthly, AIR INTERNA TlONA L is a must fo r all who wish to be wel l informed on the international aviat io n scene . Detailed, dynam ic , accura te reporting of the following subjects is included in each 56 - page issue ... contemporary aviation technology ... international intelligence report ... in-de pth coverage of latest ai rcraft ... the current military airscene ... air force and airline operation s ... flight tes t reports ... revealing h isto ric featu res ... exclusive cutaway, colour and three -view drawings and photographs . BACK ISSUES New readers may wish to co llect AIR INTERNA TlONAL back n umbe rs. Most issues fro m J ul y 1 9 71 to date a re st ill ava il able but some are in s h ort su pply. . We regret the following issues are now out of print: Jun, Aug , Sept. 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The indices to th e bo und volu me series are p u b lished sepa rately fo r t h is purpose a nd t hose fo r all Vo lumes 1 to 22 a re c urrentl y avai la ble . Cost per binder: £3-50 (USA/ Canada $7-50); per index 30p (USA/ Canada $1-50) including postage / packing . SUBSCRIPTIONS Annual subscription rates for 1 2 consec utive iss ues: U K £8· 75; Overseas £9·25; USA $23'00; Ca nada $26·00. When ordering, readers p lease note. Payment may be made by cheque, UK Postal Order, International Postal! Money Order. Post Office National Giro A ccount No 57 1 4451. Overseas readers (excluding USA/Canada) personal cheques Bre accepted but please add 50p for bank clearance. Please ensure all enquiries other than orders are accompanied by return postage in the form 01 stamps ( UK) or International Reply Coupons (Overseas / USA / Canada) . FINESCROLL LIMITED, DE WORDE HOUSE, 283 LONSDALE ROAD, LONDON SW13 9QW USA and Canadian orders. and letter mail only, may be addressed to: AIR INTERNATIONAL, PO BOX 353, WHITESTONE, NY 11357-0354 for onward transmission to the UK from where a/l correspondence ;s answered and orders despatched. PAGE 46 AIR tNTERNATIONAl/ JANUA RY 1983 THE RISE AND fAll Of fREDDIE lAKER ROYAL OBSERVER CORPS . ... HOWARD BANKS .... the Service with a difference The true story behind one of rrs VITAL WORK ... the most extraordinary A network of posts and controls would perfonn a vital role in the defence of the nation in the event of war. .•• AND YOU'RE AMONG FRIENDS IN TODAY'S ROYAL OBSERVER CORPS rags-co-riches business careers of the ce ntury, wrinen 'in the beSt traditions of unsentimental business reporting. ' Tlte Economist If you are looking for a worthwhile way to spend one evening a week, we have vacancies for men and women between the ages of 16 and 55 as volunteer spare-time members. Allowances are paid for attendances o n duty. 'Refreshing . . . a sympathetic but objective account. ' TlttStondord For/un details write mE COMMANDANf HEADQUARlERS ROYAL OBSERVER CORPS £6.95; Faber Paperback £2.50 ONSALENOW fi RAF BENI1.EY PRIORY, STANMORE MIDDX HA7 3HH Or telephone 01·950 4000, ext 457 fober ondfober AEROSPACE-WHERE ITS BEEN ITS GOING. JANE'S AVIATION REVIEW Edited by Michael J. H. Taylor Aerospace is moving faster than ever, and this is the theme for this year's Jane's Aviation Review. a lively and informative insight into developments and trends in military and civil aviation. Military developments dominate once more and are covered by articles on killer satellites and the Bright Star Us. Egyptian joint exercise. Aircraft are also working harder than ever in the service of mankind, as John W. R. Taylor reveals in Wings For the Third World. Aerospace continues to force the pace of technological innovation, while good old Ideas like the biplane and airship are making a comeback. The untimely ends of Laker Airways and the replica Gee- I JANE S ---- Bee Racer are discussed. and there is a record of this year" s events and the anniversaries of the air. £7. 95 160 pages 175 black·and·white illustrations ALSO AVAILABLE ( Above) Thejirsl Canadian M osquito, KOlOO, which made its maidenflighl on 24 September /942. II wasrepresenlalil'e o/the B Mk XX production \'ersion, an example of which is shown ( below right) a/lerarril'al in the UK. Merlins similar to the Merlin 76, as the Mosquito B Mk 23, did not proceed; an alternative proposal was to install (wo·stage Packard-built Merlin 695 and the 4.000·lb ( I 816-kg) bombbay in aircraft a lready delivered to Brita in a nd in January 1945 onc such conversion, made by Marshalls of Cambridge, was flight-tested. This plan was dropped because it seemed unlikely that large numbers of conversions could be made quickly enough to see operational service before the war ended, but five B Mk 255 were given the enlarged bomb-bay for operations with No 627 Squadron. T he bomber post-war As already briefly recorded, the final production version of the Mosquito in the bomber role was the B Mk 35, used post-war by two squadrons in Bomber Command and three in Germany. The Bomber Command units were Nos 109 and 139, the two pathfinder units; these Hew the Mosquitoes from Hemswell, Lines, until replaced by Canberras in July 1952 and June 1953, respectively. In Germany, No 6 13 Squad ron was renumbered No 69 in August 1945 and Hew B Mk 35sat Wahn until disbanded in November 1947; No 14, also a t Wahn, remained on the type until 1950, as did No 98 at Celie. Starting in 1952, 105 surplus B Mk 35 bombers were converted to IT Mk 35 configuration as target tugs, and a few of these later btx:ame Met Mk 35s for weather reconnaissance. Ten other bombers were modified as PR Mk 35s to operate on photo-recce missions by night, some of these serving wit h No 58 Squadron. Thus, the Mosquito maintained its reputation for versati lity right to the end . Conceived as a high-speed unarmed bomber, it performed outstandingly in that role, but also spanned an enormous variety of other marks destined to serve in a lmost every offensive role in which the RAF itself engaged during World War 11. As the Sea Mosq uito, it carried torpedoes and Hew from carrier decks, extending still further the range of missions performed in what was, without question, Britain 's most versatile warplane of the 'forties. Many of the fighter and fighter-bomber variants also served with forei gn air forces after being retired from the RAF - but that is another story, to be told in the next issue of AIR I NTERNATIONAL. 0 The M osquito B M k 25 was the major Canadian production \'ersian , differing/rom the Mk XX in having up-boosted M erlins. Many came to the UK 10 equip squadrons 0/ the Light Night Striking Force. JANE'S MILITARY REVIEW Edited by Ian V. Hogg £7.95 160 pages 175 black·and·white illustrations JANE'S NAVAL REVIEW Edited by Captain John E. Moore RN £7.95 160 pages 175 black·and·white illustratIons JAN E'S In your bookshops OON or. in case of difficulty, write to the Sale. Department, Jene'. Publishing Company, 238 City Road, London ECtV 2PU. PAGE 47 II P8111_________1 "The Sporty Game: The High Risk ComfU! lilil'f' Businl'ssof Making and Selling Commercial Airliners" by John Newhouse Alfred A Knopf, New York , $U·9j 142 pp. 6 in by 9 in TIllS IS an excellent survey of the aircraft industry's experiences with the commercial ai rliner during the past 20 yea rs; it focuses upon the wide-body generatio n of aeroplanes. However, it is only superficia lly an "aeroplane" book; the heart ofits matter is business, finance and politics. It treats with Boeing's troubled rise to its current supremacy. the mutually destructive competition between Douglas and Lockheed, the ineptitude of McDonnell-Do ugla s, the unexpected but spectacular success of Airbus Indusl rie, and the imminent appea rance orlhe Japa nese. Written with sobriety but nevertheless highly readable, this book's enduring value is the information the aut hor obtained during extensive interviews with the industry, finan cial and political leaders in the USA, Engla nd and Europe by way o f determining why and how cen ain things happened the way they did, It is a pity that the air transport business cannot have a historical analysis of this quality every five years or so. To anyone even slightly interested in the subject, this book cannot be recommended too highly. - RKS. "Chosen Illstrument: Thr: Triumph and Tragedyo/ PanAm anti iu Founder, Juan Trippe " b)' Matylin Belltieranti Selig Aluchul Simon &: Schwter, New York ,5 / 9·95 655 pp, 6 in by 9 in, iIIus/rated nus VOLUMIi hus been awaited for a long time: a solid, analytical biography o f Juan Trippe (1899-1981) and a history of his ai rline, The two were synon ymous. The authors are wife and husba nd. she a forme r financial editor for the New Yo rk T imes, he a former economic anal ys t for the US Civil Aero nautics Board. They bring unusual expertise to the subject; and the result is an extraordinarily good book, The title sets the theme. Although " the chosen instrument" is an expression of British origin, devised to serve the creation of Imperial Airways (1924), Trippe co-opted it to create a popular image o f PanAm as the " instrument" of US overseas airline aviation. In truth. PanAm was a self-choscn instrument. The US Government was stuck with it, often to the Government's convenience but frequently to its embarrassment, for almost a quartercentury. Trippe was obsessed by making the "self-chosen instrument" official ; but his obtuse efforts to establish PanAm as the United States' sole overseas airline only served to alienate the Government goose which laid all the golden eggs which the American airlines were permitted to hatch. After 1950, the re were no more golden eggs for PanAm . The text focuses upon personalities, politics, management and finance. A strange man, Trippe was a well-tailored Ivy League variant of Howard Hughes; but instead of being a public recluse he hid within himself. There is nothing likeable abou t his person. Like man y an empire builder, he was a poor manager. In 1939, at what appea red to be the ai rline's PAGE 48 pinnacle of success, PanAm ac tually stood at the edge of financial disaster. Only the o utbreak of war in Europe saved its new transatlantic operations from in fl icting a probably fatal financial haemorrhage upon the company. Trippe's wartime ac tivities come close to demonstrating Samuel j ohnson's aphorism ( 1775) that patriotism is the last refuge o f a scoundrel. But for Trippe, this was a first and last refuge; practically an operating base. When he reti red in 1967, he left the company teetering on anothe r brink of disaster and by 1975 PanAm was actually prepari ng for bankruptcy. PanAm's financial health remains a subject of grim speculation as this no te is penned . Even 600 pages of tightly-written text must sweep past many aspects of a subject as big and complex as PanAm and its foun der and some readers will be disappointed that the authors did not fi nd space to parade their own special hobby horses. There will be o ther histories of PanAm, but all will have to stand on the fo undatio n created by this book . Anyone remotely interested in air Iransportation in general or Pa nAm in pa rticular will requi re this volume in their library. The text is accompanied by ' I6 pages with 30 photos and four maps, - RKS. " The Aerojilms Book 0/ Britain/rom the Air" by Bernard Stonehouse Weidenfeld &: Nicolsoll, London, l/4·95 160 pp, 10 ill by IJ~ in, illustrated THEREarejust three photographsof aero planes and one of a n air5hip in this volume, so to mention it in these pages may seem perverse. Without aero planes, ho we ver, the 152 colour AIR INTERNATIONAL/ JANUARY 1983 photographs of Britai n could not have been taken. Drawn from the archives of Aerofilms, they a re presented in lhe form ofa "ramble by air" from one end of Britain to the other and back again - splendid, interesting photo· graphs with informative captions, lackingonly a note of the date o n which each photograph was take n to add specific in terest for the reader. " utters/rom Amelia; An Imimme Portrait 0/ Amelia Earhart " by Jean L Backus Beacoll Press, Bostol/ . 5 /4 ·95 250 pp. 6 in by 9 ill, iIIuStratel1 nils IS a once-over-lightly biography of this 'famous woman of the 1930s; it is structured around a rather interesting collectio n of letters fro m Ea.rha.rt to her mother. Theauthorknows precious little about aviation and, clea rl y, did not try vcry hard to inform herself: but given the focus of these pages this is merely a nnoying, and not seriously so. The book does not a ttempt to traffic upon Earhart's scnsationaliscd d isappearance of 1937 and aficionados of the s ubject will find these pages more tha n sa tisfactory. The text is served by 26 pho tos. - RKS, ~'"",.~. ~~ - _. - ( Left and /wlow ) These hot air balloon.f are no/ among the most difficult aircraft shapes to identify, but preci.Je de/ails can Iw found in the Air-Britain " UK and Ireland Civjl Regis/ers ", G·PERR is rt'gistered as a Cameron 60 Boltle H AFB while G- HO US is a Colt JIA Air Chair HAFB . ..... To check the \'Dlue of /he two Airline Fiet'fs publication.f noted on this page. we picked these Ihree iIIuslrations off the ellitorial Ilesk . Qui/e rea.ronably, the Air-Britain publicatioll lists nOIlt' 0/ them, since none is in airline ser ~ice . The J P publicatioll spreads ils net wider, to inc/Ilde go~ernmellf-owl/ed airliners. and lists ( abo.'e) the Boeing 720.()2JB A6- flflR a/the UAE Royal Flighl and (below) lilt' 707-3 P IC A7·AAA of the Ruler of Qatar. It misidelllijies, however, the BA C Ol/e-Elew!fI HZ-G Pl .-_..:. ("" ;;;;l Iom le}t) as a Boeing 727 - unless the marking has been reallocaled. chosen illustrations. some in colour, including air force insignia and markings. " Fligh llnternational Directory 0/ European Aviation 1982" Editedby Ma/colm Gin.fberg IPC Transport Press Ltd, Sutton. Surrey, £1O.()() Registers, fleet lisls , , , IiAl.f-A-OOZEN volumes that have reached us for review in the past few weeks go to show just how well·served is the aviation enthusiast of the 'eigh ties. New editions o f some established "classics", and an important new title, as listed below, reach new standa rds of completeness and accuracy in their particular fields and reflect the dedication of the individuals and groups responsible for their preparation. Especially noteworth y is the ne w ( 16th) edi tion of " jP Airline Reets International" . Emanating from Switzerland, but published in English, this volume now covers 2,61 5 airline. air taxi and aerial work operators in 178 countries and lists, by regist ration, 24, 165 ". Annua ls and Directories WE NOTE the publication of new edit ions of several established reference works and one title that is new, this being the "Aight Directory of European Aviation", This is a useful partner for the well· known " Directory of British Aviation", providing a wealth of informa tion about avia tion companies (manufacturing a nd operating) throughout Europe, plus a very selective (ie, not very extensive) "Who's Who in European Aviation". The " lnteravia ABC" covers the same field more full y as just o ne section of its world-wide content, but is, of course, more expensive than the " Aight" ver5ion, and less hand y to use. GAMTA, thc General Aviation Manufacturers' and Traders' Association, has produced a new (third) edition ofa directory with much useful information in its particular field, and the second edition o f the British Airport Equipment Ca talogue is handsome and well produced, incorporating a special 50-page section ofairpon planning data for the British Aerospace BAe 146. The two last-mentioned are distribu ted free o f charge to interested parties: application should be made to the addresses noted below, aircraft in service with those companies. The one-line entries provide details of c/n, previous identity, yea r o f manufaclUre, power plan t, max certificated weight, configuration and other notes. There are many useful appendices, including tabulated aircraft data a nd 125 colour photographs showing airline liveries. The " Air Britain" competitor, " Airline ReelS '82",covers some 1, IOO opera to rs in 163 counlries, but has the advamage of being cheaper a nd much more portable for use during airpo rt visits. The other "Air Britain" pUblication, devoted to U K a nd Ireland registers up to ea rl y 1982. follows its familiar format but is 10 per cent longer. Also in the same pattern as before are both Lars Olausson's fourth edition o f a "Lockheed Hercules Production List" and the eighth edi tion of " Wrecks and Relics", a rat her misleadinglytitled guide to all preserved aircraft in the U K and Eire. The new title in this batch is " Militair 1982", which does for air forces roughl y the same as the " jP Airline Aeets" does for airlines. Intended to be published annually, this volume sets out to provide a directory of thc World's air forces, wilh summaries of organisation, and historics, maps showing location of bases and o ther releva nt information for each. Other books are on the market covering the sa me field, in some cases in more detail and with more information: what makes this vol ume unique is that the author has set out also to list the equipment of each arm by type and serial number. It is a mind-boggling task, and inevitabl y there arc gaps and inaccuracies, some of which will no doubt be put right in future editions as users discover them a nd inform the au thor. There are many well- "J P Airline- Ffeeu International 1982" by FE Bucher . U Klee and olhers Edition.f JP, PO Box 293, C H-8058 Zurich Airport, Switzerland, S FrJ 9·95 U K distributor: A viatioll Hobby Shop. 4 Horton Parade, Horton RII, West Drayton, Middlesex, UB 7 8EA, £I 1·]5 (inc postagt') 440 pp, II ill by 8 in , ilfuSlrated " Airline Fleels 82" by Chris Chatfield and Da~id Wilkin.son Air Britaill Sales, Stone Cottage, Gt Samp/ortl, Saffron Walden. wex C BIO 2 RS, [5-(JOPOSI free 320 pp. spiral bound, 7t in by4t in " UK and IrelandCMI Regi.tlers l 982 " by Malcolm P Fillmore A ir Brilain Sales ( addreu a.s abol·e) . [j ,()() post f ree 2 14 pp, 9* in by 61 in, ilfu.strated " Lockheed Hercules Production ListI9j4· 1983" byLArsOlaUS5on AI'aiiable/rom Iheauthor, Box 142, S ·53012, Sdlemh, Sweden (giro al c 541636-7) , l 1-80 inc/usil'eo/postage, Also in the UK/rom Mill/alld Counties Publications 72 pp , in by 5t in 8* " Wrecks and Relics" by Ken Ellis M erseyside A~iation Socie/y Ltd, 5 Bamtillie Road, Lil'r:rpool U 8 I EN, U95 ( plus 55p postage/packing) 192 pp, in by6 in. illustrated 8* " Mi/itair 1982 " by John Andrade A I'iation Preu Ltd, 25 Templt' S heen Rood. London S IY/4 7PY, [9·95 ( plw £1 ,55 pastage/ packing in UK, £2,55 ol'ersea.s) 368 pp, 8t in by 5i in , illu.strated 604 pp, 8i in by 5t in 'Interavia ABC 1982" S A , Genel'a, Switzerland 1,450 pp. lit in by8 ill IlItera~ia "General A ~iatjon in Britaill " GAMTA Ltd, 26 High Street. Brill, Aylesbury, Bucks 108 pp, 81 in by 5i in " British Airport Equipment Ca ta/ogue " Combined Sen'ice Publication.f Ltd, PO Box 4, Farnborough, HanuGU/4 lLR J60pp, lI i in by8t in Best of the rest SHORTAGE of space precludes publication of more complete re views of the followin g recentl y-published titles. "A World to Conquer" by Ernest A M cKay A rco Publishing Inc, New York, USA, S12·95 200 pp. 9 in by6i in, iIIwtrated THEstory of the first round-the-world flight , by Douglas D-WC biplanes. " M oving Tent " by Richard Prusmore ThomQ.f Harmsworlh Publishing , Lomlon , [ 7,95 248 pp,8~ in by5i in, illustrated STOItY of the au tho r's five-year imprisonment aftcr bailing-out ofa Blenheim over Germany in 1940: sequel to " Blenheim Boy". "A viation Entllusiasu' Guide 10 London &: the South East " by Pe /er G Cook.Jley Patrick Stephens Ltd, Cambridge, [8·95 184 pp, 9i in by6 in , iIIwtrated UNIfORM with this publisher's "Action Stations" series, traces man y little known aviation artifacts and allusions in England's bottom right-hand corner. PAGE 49 AUSTRALIA ..;,,,,,,,"1 '~";.~' I ;Il AUSTRALlAN BAS IC TRAINER fU LL SCALI! DEVELOPMENT of the Aus tralian Basic Trainer (which has sometimes been referred to as the A. IO) was launched o n 16 June las t, whe n the Aust ralian Department for Defence Support placed a SAus36m (£20'8m) conl ract (at January 1981 prices) with the Australian Aircraft Consortium Pty Ltd (AAC) for design, develo pment, cons truction and Hi~t testing o f two pro totypes, toge the r with ai rfra me and component specimcns for static and fati gue tes ting and damage tolerance testing. Details o f the ABT were first included in Air Data File in our August 198 1 issue and a n updated specificatio n is given below. The programme now under way provides for pro tot ype first Hight in February 1985, completio n o f RAAF Type Acceptance by Apnl 1987 and - subject to confinnation of production plans in due course - fi rs t Hight of a production aircraft and e ntry into service with the RAA F in 1988. The A BT is intended as a replacement for the Cf4 Airtrainers that ha ve been in service since 1976, and the RAAF requiremen t is for 69 aircraft. Including production of spares and support equipment, the total acquisition cost is estimated to be SAusl55m (£89·7m) at August 198 1 prices. The AAC believes tha t there is a potential international ma rket for abo ut 200 of the trainers. Following the contract awa rd, the AAC a nno unced the appointment of Alan J Smith as general manager and Robert C Den ~ate as chief designe r. Mr Smith was preVlously project designer, guided weapons, at the Government Aircraft factories and Mr Dengale was p'reviously chief designer o f Hawker de HaVilland. The Australian Aircraft Consortium, which was set up to handle ABT design and production, is jointly owned by GAF. Hawker de Havilland and Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation, a nd will place s ub-contracts with these companies for the design and manufactu ring activities. The ABT has been desiened to meet RAAF requirements expressed In the staff target AFST 5044 issued in 1979, and confo nns to Specification AC 180. The principal demands of this requi remcnt were set o ut in detail in the previously cited AirDoto File reference. The aircraft has been designed fo r ab initio pilot training, aerobatics, cross-country navigation eAercises and introductory weapons training; it is intended tha t the perfo nnance will be adeq ua te for the first 100 ho urs of pilot trai ning, fo r studen ts with no prior flying experience, whereas the Cf4 is s uitable fo r only abou t 60 hrs. Aircraft structure will be primarily o f allmetal stressed skin type, with selective use of advanced composi te ma terials to be introduced on production aircraft. The RAAF requi res a minimum service life o f 8,000 Hying hours spread over 20 yea rs. Other characteristics include the choice of a turbop rop engine, an electrically operated tricycle undercarriage designed for grass or semi-prepared surfaces, and side-by-side seating with sufficient space in the rear of the cockpit for two extra seats or additional equipment. Low maintenance costs and minimum ma intenance infrastructure are among the design objectives. with a ta rget of 2 MMH (at uni t level) per flight hour. Because of the density o f Hyi ng acti vities aro und the major Aust ralian training bases. the ABT is designed to have a high rate of climb and the ability to sustain a 2·Sg turn at missions is 4,410 Ib (2000 kg) in acco rdance with the specification, but weights o f up to 5,730 Ib (2600 kg) are to be available for ahe rnative roles. At the lower weight, the ai rcraft will have limit load factors o f + 7·0g a nd - 3·0g. The basic training pro fil e for the ABT is a 9O-minute sortie for ,eneral handling, lowflyi ng and circuits; tYPically, on such a sortie, the ABT would reach 10,000 ft (3 050 m) 15 minutes afte r starting to taxi, spend 25 min on spins, aerobatics and stalls, then desce nd for 35 min of cruising and circuits a t low level. Two such sorties will be possible without intennediate refuelling; total endurance is 3 hrs plus a 50-min reserve at best e ndura nce speed at 10,OOOft (3 050m). Alternative profiles a re a low-level na vigatio n exercise, with a duration o f 110 min fl ying at 200 ft (6 1 m) at 180 kt (333 kmfh), and a 120-min medIUm level navigation sorlie at the same speed at 15,000 ft (4 572 m). Operating altitudes a nd conditions for which the ABT has been designed include the following: Inverted (- I g) 20 sec minimum, 30 sec desirable 10 sec minimum Vertical flight , nose up 20 sec minimum Vertical flight , nose down Roll, ± 30 deg 60 sec minimum Pitch, + 20 des. no roll 5 min 90 sec Pitch, - 30 des. no roll 90 sec: Pitch, + 20 deg wi th 30 deg roll Pitch, - 30 deg wi th 30 deg roll 4 min Knife edge (wings vertical) 10 sec minimum Zero-g conditions 5 sec Spin 30 sec minimum After studying a number of alternatives, the AAC has chosen the well-prove n Pratt & Whitney PT6A to po....-er the ABT. A turboprop was preferred to a piston engine because of increasi ng diffic ul ties over the supply of Avgas, for the sake o f relia bility and mamtai nability, to obtain the benefit o f reduced vi bration levels and because vi rtually all Australian pilots will in future be transitioning to turbine-powered ai rcraft a fter completing thei r fl ight training. As equipped for the RAAF. the productionmodel ABT will have an environmental control system that will be able to produce comfortable cockpit conditions within five minutes of start-up, following a pre-flight soak of up to four hours wi th the canopy open in a temperature of 45 deg C. A low pressure diluter/demand type oxygen system will be provided, for use up to 25,000 ft (7 620 m) with 3 hrs capacity. The aircraft will be all-electric, Som~ minor with no hydraulic system, and avionics will include single VHF and UH F communications systems! TACAN, AOF. transponder. Q ro magneuc compass a nd a three,posilio n intercommunications system. Po",er Plant: One Pratt & Whitney PT6A-25C IUrboprop rated a t 750 shp (559 kW). driving a propeller of 7 rt 6 in (2,29 m) diameter. Full load, 869 1b (394 kg), Performance: Max speed, 228 kls (422 km/h) at 15,000 ft (4 752 m) and 20S klS (380 km/h) at sea level; max cruise, 217 kts (402 kmfh) at 15,000 n (4572 m) and 193 kts (357 kmfh) at sea level; approach speed , 73 kts (1 35 kIn/h) CAS; stalling speeds, 64 kts (118,5 km/h) fl a~ up and 57 kts (105,5 km/h) landing flaps; initial ft (725ftm); ta,~';;:i; ~;:~~;~~h' 3,710 (I1~ (295 kmlh); ft (7 620 m); take-ofT distance to 50 n (15,2 m), 1, 180 n (360 m); landing distance from 50 n (15,2 m), ) ,640 n (500 m), Desip speeds: Limit speed VL, 280 kts (5 19 kmfh) EAS up to 16,000 n (4877 m), M L, 0·575; max level fli ght speed VH, 240 kts (444 kmfh) EAS up to 16,000 n (4877 m), MH, 0·493; max gust speed Vo, 182 kts (337 kmfh) EAS up to 16,000 ft (4 877 m). Weights: Equipped empty weight, 3,064 Ib ( 1390 kg);aircrew, 420 Ib ( 19Okg): parachutes, 40 Ib ( 19 kg); survival pack, 20 Ib (9 kg); usable fuel, 13 1b (6 kg); full usable fuel . g551b (388 kg); max take-off, training configuration, 4,41 0 Ib (2000 kg); max take-off, future versions, 5.7321b (2600 k ~). DimeDSiQDS: Span, 36 ft I In}; '"";' .~' ~, ";~' 33 ft Ii in (10,10 m); height, wi ng reference a rea, 215·3 undercarriage track, II n: wheelbase, 8 ft 9 in (2,67 m). INDIA H A.L AJ EET T RAI NER first flight of the HAL Ajcct Trainer at Bangalore on 20 September 1982, in the hands ofWg Cdr M W THa k, provides a further lease of life for the aircraft that began its life as the Petter-designed Folland-built Gnat light fighter. As a fighter, the Gnat's primary success was achieved through the licence agreement negotiated by the Indian government in September 1956. leading to the asse mbl y by HAL of 2 13 Gnats as well as 15 assembled wholly or in part from U K-su pplied comTHE -,,-;,-".;,-; m); fcrry ra nge (900 km); ferry end ura nce, Weights: Empty, 5,686 lb (2579 kg); normal take-off. clean, 8,000 Ib (3629 kg); max takeo ff,9.683 Ib (4 392 kg). Oim('nsions: Span, 22 ft I in (6,73 m); length, 34 ft 3! in ( 10,45 m); height, 8 ft 5i in (2,58 m); underca rriage track, 5 ft I in ( 1.5 m); wheelbase, 10 ft I in (3,07 m); wing area, 157·7 sq ft ( 14,65 m l); anhed ral, 5 degconsta nt. Armament: Two 3O-mm Aden cannon in fo rward fuselage. Two inboard wing strongpoints - each carry o ne 550-Ib (250-kg) bomb, one 500-lb (227-kg) Mk 2 1 H E bomb with Type 11 2 tail unit, o ne Type 122 practice rocket pod, or one C BLS carrying four 25-lb (I I-kg) practice bombs, o ne 57-mm rocket pod o r a cluster bomb. rate of climb, 2,250 ft /min (11,43 m/sec); time 10 10,000 ft (3050 m), 5·5 min; service ceiling (for 200 ft/min, 1,02 m/sec climb ratc), 25,000 ponents. In the UK, meanwhile, Folland had evolved the Gnat Trainer fo r the RAF, with tandem seatin, and a slightly enlarged airfram e; productIon totalled 105. In 1975, HAL first flew a prototype o f an improved version of the Gnat which It named Ajeet (Invincible) a fter first referring to it as the Gnat 2. This introduced a num ber o f systems and annament improvements, a nd production totalled 89, wit h deliveries completed in March 1982. Although this appeared to bring down the c urtain on production of Petter's no table light fighter a ft cr 22 yea rs, work was already well adva nced in India on HAL's own version o f a two-seat training variant, to meet an Indian Air Force reljuirement for a replacement for its Hunte r tramers. Ajeet Trainer uses same basic ,,;;~';,~;:~ the single-seat but Ie fuselage, with:, ,,_.: ~: ,_, : _,and nosewheel ",;5«1 rockp;' ;~" ,od~':Cd-, d;'p"'ci,'~ rellisiot/$ hal'e bun made to the AU.flro/ian &sic Trainer. as shown her€'. sinu a threeI'i~wdrawing wasfirst published in our August 1981 issue. tho - -- - --, traini~~g~b;;;;:;;;;;;;~~~~~S~~g;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ manoeuvres can be perfonned at or above that 10,000 The ft (3 050 m). so thaweight t all manual level. maximum for training provision tanks. Performance (Oean, max internal sea level. uro wind): Max I I 'p'= , ."m{," (J 070 kmfh); max s~ at km), M = 0·95; initIal rate ftl min (16,5 m/sec:); time to -')''- .,,,- ,. (l2000 m), 7·5 .",.• ~ - ," r~~;~!~1~1~~:~1fl~j~~~~~~~.lr~[~~gearis generator serves DC system, wi th two static ; ~::f~:;i;! fo r AC, a nd two sta nd-by batteries. p comprise a UfVH F communica tion bCSli·;;<nd.-~bY UHF, IFF M k 10 and 11 the cockpits. The two 30are re tai ned, a nd there a re points fo r assorted ordancc :;;;;;;om ' ~£i~:'~~~;t!~two wet l pylons outboard, interna fue l capacity in .: The Ajeet Trainer is stressed for a maximum sustained load of 4·6g. The loading envelope as an intercepto r is + 7'2g and - 3·6g, and for ground a ttack it is +8g and - 4·2g. The maxi mum sustained tu rn rate a t sea level is 15 des/sec. The cockpit pressurisation system is aCliva ted a utomatically as the aircraft climbs through 15,000 ft (4 572 m) and auains its max differen tial of 3·6 lb/sq in (0.25 kg/cm !) at 43,000 ft (13 106 m). The Indian Air Force has ordered an initial batch of 12 Ajeet Trainers for the OCU, at presenteq ui ppcd with Hunter trainers, a nd the India n Navy is likely to procure a t least eigh t. Further o rders are expected to take total productio n to 40 or more, apa rt from any possible exports. At a unit cost o f abo ut Rs l Crone (around £600,(00), the Ajeet Trai ner appears to be one o f the most cost-effective trainers currently available in its class. Power P lant: One Ro lis- Royce(Bristol), HAL- POLAND PZL M-ZI MI Nl DROMADER WSK factory of the Polish state i induslry at Mielec has developed, C': ; ; :c : ' ~' test-flying d uring 1982, a less lighter version of the M- 18 prane. Kn-own as the M -2 1 Mini has been developed under the Ja roslaw Rumszewicz, a nd fl ight the hands ofTade usz Pakula. The origi nal M- 18 Dromade r. wi th a I hp ASh-62 I R engine, is among the largest most powerful o f ag-planes at present o n market. Development of the M-21 , with 70 I;lCr cent commonality, offers operators chOIce of a more economical aircraft when working areas not exceeding 50 hectares, particularl y if they al ready have M-1 8s also in use. In size, the M-2 1 is close to another Polish ag-plane, the PZL-I 06 Kruk (a product o f T HE The PZL Mini Dromader difl~rsfrom the 1.1-18 Dromoder primarily in respect ol;",h'''''''-'I''m wing and leu powerful engine . -------, Th~ prototype PZL Mini Dromader, shown in the Ihree-vie'tl'drol4'ing on the previous page, entered flight tesling during /982. Production de/il'eries aft! not expected to begin umiI1986. Okecie, Warsaw. factory), although the latter has rather less engine power and a smaller hopper capacity. The M·21 differs in two principal respects from its larger forebea r: the engine has been changed to a 600 hp (442 k W) PZ L·3SR sevencylinder radial - uncowled, as in the M-1 8 and the wing span has been red uced by changing the centre section. Altho ugh overall length remai ns virtually unchanged, the size of the ho pper in the fuselage ahead o f the cockpi t is reduced from 550 Imp gal (2500 I) to 374 Imp gal ( I 700 I) in order to restrict the gross weight to manageable limits. . Applications fo r the M·21 inelude field and forest spraying, using water or oil·based solutions o r oil or water·based aerosols: dusting and seed·sowing. Polish sources have spoken o f plans to produce the Mini Dra ma· de r in fi ve versio ns, ineludi ng one with a turboprop. Productio n is expected to begin at Mielec in 1986 and then to proceed at a rate of abo ut 50 a year. PO~'er Plant: One 600 hp (442 kW) PZ L-3S R air-cooled radial engine, dri ving a three-bladed Polish·built propeller. Fuel capacity. 88·9 Imp began test Hying for the Firefly 160M certification o n 15 July 1982. The first Firefly 160M airframe was shown al Farnborough International '82 in a near-<:omplclc Sla le. and sho uld have Slarted flight testing by the time Ihis issue a ppears. Slingsby will begin delivering FireHies next year, the first an nounced order being for 10, placed by Specialist Flying Training LId after evaluation of the T67A lasting several months. SFT will use the 'aircraft as primary trainers for overseas students, fl ying from the College Air Training at Hamble. The Firefly 160M has been designed to comply with BCAR Section K and the ae roba tic category of FAR 23. and is stressed for +6 and -38 at aeroba tic weight or +5 and - 2·5 g at max take·off weight. It has manually-opcrated flaps and push-rod aile· rons and elevator controls. $eating is side-byside beneath a large one-piece canopy that opens up and rearwards. Po~-er P lant: One Avco Lycoming AE IO-320DIB flat·four engine rated at 160 hp at 2.700 rpm for take-off. Hoffmann two· blade con· stant speed propeller of 5 ft II in ( 1,80 m) diameter. Fuel capacity, 24 1m p gal ( 1081). Perfonnance (at aerobatic weight): Neverexceed speed (VNB), 175 kts (324 km /h); max level speed, sea level, 132 kts (245 km/h): cruising speed at 8.000 ft (2438 m), 118 kts (2 19 km/h); initial rate ofelimb. 1,150 fi/min (5,8 m/sec); take-offto 50 ft ( 15,2 m), 1,066 ft (325 m); endurance, 2 hrs 45 mins (plus reserves) at 65 per cent power. Weights: Typical empty, 1.350 Ib(6 12 kg); max ae robatic weight, 1,800 Ib (817 kg); max takeo ff and landing. 1,900 Ib (862 kg). Dimensions: Span, 34 ft 9 in (10,60 m); length, 23 ft 0 in (7, 10 m); height. 8 n 3 in (2.5 1 m); wing area, 136 sq ft ( 12,63 ml); dihed ral, 3 deg 30 mins constant ; aspect ra tio, 8·88: 1; under· carriage track, 8 n 0 in (2.44 m); wheelbase, 4 ft II in(l,50m). A«ommodation: Two pilots side-by·side. • ~ ::: . PC-7 Turbo Trainer gal (404 1). Performance: Max speed, 143 mph (230 km/h); cruising speed. 141 mph (227 km/h); operating speed range, 96- 119 mph (155· 180 km/h): takeoffdistancc to 50 ft (15.2 m), 1.542 n (470 m); landin~ distance from 50 ft ( 15,2 m), 1.804 ft (550 m); range (no reserves), 435 mls(700 km); worki ng endurance, wit h 30-min transit reserve, 3·6 hrs. Weights: Max take-off. 7.275 Ib (3300 kg); payload, 1,984 Ib (900 kg). Dimensions: Span, 47 ft 71 in ( 14,5 I m); length. 3 1 ft 11 in (9.48 m); height. 12 n 61 in (3.82 m). Pilafus In Ihe same general calegoryas Ihe Aermacchi MB·339andpo....ered bya similar 4.(}()() Ib Sl ( 1814 kgp) Viper 632 turbojel. the SOKO Super Gafeb ( Super SeagufJ) appears to hm'e been heal'if), injluenced by Ihe British Aerospace Ha'lI'k in its design. Possessing no commonalif), with the G2A Goleb which i l is apparently intended 10 succeed in Yugoslav Air Force serl'ice, Ihe Super Gafeb has apparently been under flight test since / 981. sel'eraf prototypes/pre·series aircrtift participating in the flight del'elopment progromme by mid·J982, but the present prod/lclion status is uncertain. Conforming with now standard practice. the Super Galeb possessesfollr wing ordnollce stations for armament training and a secondary light strike r61e, and it may beassumed that. ifpre~ious Yugosla~ practice isfollo .....ed. a single-seal dedicated light tacticall'ersion will el'entually emerge. Those are the facts: • More than 300 Aircraft sold • To 10 Air Forces and Navies in 4 Continents • To Airlines and Private Operators F UNITED KINGDOM SLlNGSBY FIREFLY 160M LTD, the recently renamed aviation subsidiary o f the British Underwater Engineering Ltd group of companies, eXpe<;ts to have completed certification of the FIrefly 160M by the end of this year. Previously known as the T67M, the Firefl y is an allBritish. all-plastics derivative of the Fournier RF-6B, 10 examples o f which have been built by Slingsby under licence as T67As. The Firefly 160M differs from the T67A in having a structure built entirely of glassreinforced plastics (G RP), and an uprated Lycoming engine, offering 160 hp in place of the 120 hp of the RF-6B(f67A. One o f the T67As (G- BJ NG) was re-engined with the 160 hp unit, with a constant speed propeller, and SLiNOSBY AVIATION L .. ,=PILATUS=, Pilatus Aircraft Ltd., CH-6370 Stans/Switzertand Tel.: 041/631133. Telex: 78329. Cable: Pilatusair Member of the Oertikon-Bilhrte Group PlL-620 The G 222 is the only medium range military transport aircraft available on the market today. Wide operational capabilities and high reliability even in critical flight conditions are guaranteed by the advanced G.E. T64 P4D turboengines. The most sophisticated avionics systems and airborne instrumentation enable the aircraft to operate in all weather conditions independentiy of ground assistance. The G222 is certified for operation with a crew of two and can take-off and land on grass strips. Its large volumetric capacity allows to carry a wide range of loads (up to 20,000 Ibs.) or 53 fully equipped soldiers and to parachute 42 paratroopers or to air drop heavy loads up to 11,000 Ibs. The G 222 can be rapidly converted to fulfill rescue missions, aeromedical transport, aerophotogrammetry, fire fighting and radio calibration. And all the above at a very low operational cost.