Battaglia di Fairey

Fairey Battle

PaeseRegno unito
RuoloBombardiere leggero
Prima mosca10 marzo 1936
Costruito2201

Le Battaglia di Fairey era un bombardiere leggero monomotore britannico progettato e prodotto dalla Fairey Aviation Company. Fu sviluppato durante la metà degli anni 1930 per la Royal Air Force (RAF) come monoplano successore dei precedenti biplani Hawker Hart e Hind. La Battle era alimentata dallo stesso motore a pistoni Rolls-Royce Merlin ad alte prestazioni che alimentava vari caccia britannici contemporanei. Tuttavia la battaglia fu significativamente più pesante, con il suo equipaggio di tre uomini e il carico di bombe. Sebbene fosse un grande miglioramento rispetto all'aereo che lo precedette, il Battle fu relativamente lento e limitato nel raggio d'azione. Con solo due .303 in mitragliatrici come armamento difensivo, si scoprì che era altamente vulnerabile ai combattenti nemici e al fuoco antiaereo.

fonte: Battaglia di Fairey su Wikipedia

Fairey Battle
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Fairey Battle Walk Around
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Fairey Battle Walk Around
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Vedi anche:

Seconda guerra mondiale: la storia visiva definitiva dalla guerra lampo alla bomba atomica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Seconda guerra mondiale Mappa per Mappa (DK Storia Mappa per Mappa) - Amazon

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Le Battaglia di Fairey was a British single-engine light bomber designed and manufactured by the Fairey Aviation Company in the mid-1930s. Intended to replace the RAF’s biplane bombers (like the Hawker Hart), it was a low-wing monoplane and the first operational aircraft to be powered by the renowned Rolls-Royce Merlin engine.

Design and Crew

  • Appearance: The Battle had a clean, streamlined design, often mistaken for an oversized fighter. It was built using a light-alloy stressed-skin construction, which was modern for its time.
  • Powerplant: It was powered by a single liquid-cooled Rolls-Royce Merlin I/II/III V12 piston engine (the same engine used in the Spitfire and Hurricane). However, being much heavier with a three-man crew and bomb load, it was significantly slower than its fighter counterparts.
  • Crew: A crew of three: Pilot, Observer/Navigator/Bomb Aimer, and Radio Operator/Air Gunner, all seated in tandem under a continuous glass canopy.
  • Armamento:
    • One fixed forward-firing 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine gun in the starboard wing.
    • One flexible 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers K machine gun for the rear gunner.
  • Bomb Load: Standard internal load of four 250 lb (110 kg) general-purpose bombs carried in cells within the wings, totaling 1,000 lb. Additional small bombs could be carried on under-wing racks.

Combat History and Obsolescence

Although highly advanced when first flown in 1936 and entering service in 1937, the rapid advancement of military aviation meant the Battle was operationally obsolete by the outbreak of World War II in 1939.

  • Early Service: It scored the RAF’s first aerial victory of the war in September 1939.
  • High Losses: During the Battle of France (May 1940), Battle squadrons of the Advanced Air Striking Force (AASF) suffered catastrophic losses, frequently exceeding 50% per mission, due to being slow, having poor defensive armament, and lacking armor and self-sealing fuel tanks. This vulnerability earned it the grim nickname “Flying Coffin.”
  • Relegation: By late 1940, the Battle was withdrawn from front-line bomber duties. The majority of the aircraft were subsequently relegated to secondary roles, primarily as trainers e target tugs (Battle TT), especially under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan in Canada, Australia, and South Africa, where it served usefully for the remainder of the war.

Key Specifications (Battle Mk I)

Characteristic Valore
Motore Rolls-Royce Merlin I, II, or III
Max Speed Approx. 257 mph (414 km/h) at altitude
Gamma Approx. 1,000 miles (1,600 km)
Apertura alare 54 ft 0 in (16.46 m)
Lunghezza 42 ft 4 in (12.90 m)
Historical Impact: Despite its disastrous combat career, the Battle pioneered the use of the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine in RAF service and played a vital, if less dramatic, role in training thousands of Commonwealth aircrews.

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