The Pakistani/Chinese JF-17 fighter aircraft might not have Russian origins… but it may have Romanian ones!

So how good is Pakistan's JF-17 fighter aircraft? Analysis from RUSI  think-tank's Justin Bronk | Hush-Kit

– Andreas Rupprecht

It is an old and often repeated story that the Soviet MiG Project 33 fighter design influenced the Chinese/Pakistani JF-17, and in my opinion, there is NOTHING in it. The FC-1 aka JF-17 had already well advanced through the original CAC conception, then through the Sino-US cooperation with Grumman under the Super-7 name – and finally by CAC with Pakistani participation. When the “Russians” stepped in, that at least in my opinion it was much too late to gain any substantial redesigns by adding Project 33 (often known incorrectly by its never allocated designation of MiG-33)-genes. Additionally, I’m also convinced that Project 33 ever progressed far to have anything to meaningfully contribute. All I have seen from the Project 33 are a few quite crude desk models and drawings, but I have seen no true detailed blue-print. As such, I’m quite sure, the Russian participation was to modify the airframe – eventually most of all the intake’s airflow – to fit a different engine. As such their contribution was mostly one of engine integration, similar to the integration of the AL-31FN to the J-10.

MiG-37 | Hush-Kit
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My main argument for this is that the external shape of the JF-17 fixed, and here I must add a rather weirder idea than Russian influence. It is barely known fcat, that China had originally its foot in the door in the Romanian IAR-95 fighter project, which was to use a WS-9 – aka a RR Spey Mk. 202 (?) – as its powerplant.

Fictional IAR-95
IAR-95 digital image from DCS

And if you compare this very early IAR-95 wind-tunnel model with an early JF-17/FC-1 wind tunnel model in Pakistan, it has at least, I’m my, opinion, more similarities (besides a different tail, saw-tooth in the wing’s leading edge and a slightly different aka lower-placed wing) than to any Project 33 model I know.



In consequence, I would rate Jane’s report as on a major Russian involvement on the design as false – and I know there is a similar claim for the J-10-Lavi connection, all based on an interview with an unknown (he wanted to remain anonymous) Russian technician, who was allegedly involved in that project.

I would say there was for sure a certain Russian involvement, but that certain engineer simply hyped up this involvement – may be to diminish the Chinese part, or to over-emphasize the Russian, or perhaps his own personal contribution – and now after decades it is a de facto accepted fact on social media and no-one is willing or even able to check the facts.

The gargantuan Calidus B-350: A 21st century Skyraider or yet another COIN aircraft that won’t happen?

Drawing considerable attention at the Dubai Air Show has been a mock-up of a new Counter-Insurgency (COIN) and Close Air Support (CAS) aircraft, the Calidus B-350 from Abu Dhabi. The aircraft is a scaled-up version of the B-250 from the same Company, which had the general form and capabilities as the Embraer Super Tucano.

In contrast, the B-350 is very significantly larger, with a wingspan of about 50 feet (15.5 m), and an all up weight of about 20,000 lb (9 tonnes). This puts the aircraft into the same weight and size category as the Vietnam-era Douglas A-1 Skyraider, and the aircraft does, in many ways resemble that aircraft, particularly in the wall-to-wall array of underwing pylons and stores presented on the aircraft at the show. Where it differs, of course, will be in the technology employed in the mission systems, the weapons and sensors, and in the use of a turboprop engine, the 2600 hp Pratt & Whitney Canada PW 127.

The smaller 250

Missions and Capabilities

So, what can we say about the mission applications of such an aircraft? Hush-Kit has previously published an article on COIN aircraft, containing this memorable quote:

“The thing about counterinsurgency is it doesn’t work. If you are doing counterinsurgency there’s a strong chance you’re in the wrong, either ethically, tactically or strategically and probably all three. Still, putting big guns on, often tiny, aeroplanes is pretty exciting stuff.” – from a Top 10 of cancelled COIN aircraft

And this comparison of the British and US experience with Counter Insurgency (the ‘Air Policing’ of the 1930s), is from my piece on the BAe SABA project:

“… after the First World War, Britain made a great thing of policing its Empire by air, having worked out that this solution was cheaper, and quicker, than sending ground forces out to deal with trouble spots. In doing so, it was exploiting superior mobility, enabled by the fact that the, generally poorly-equipped, opposition had no effective anti-air weapons other than the possibility of a lucky shot with a rifle. The aircraft used at the time, and indeed up to the Second War, were basically general-purpose biplanes, capable of carrying limited numbers of bombs, and the odd machinegun.

Photos kindly provided by Michael Jerdev

After the Second war, the Empire became the Commonwealth, as Britain set about divesting itself of its colonies. There were, of course, still hot spots to deal with, including troubles in Africa, Malaya and the Middle East, but a wide range of capable aircraft was also available to help manage these, making the development of new types unnecessary. An eventual decision to cease involvement ‘East of Suez’, pretty much took the UK out of the COIN game for a while, although an eye to the export market did result in modest successes with aircraft like the Strikemaster.

In the US, however, a combination of a post-war vision of that Nation somehow being empowered as a World Policeman, National testosterone, and a fear of Communism, led to the US being involved in many conflicts, of scale ranging from the Korean and Vietnam Wars, to the Invasion of Grenada. The Vietnam experience revealed the surprising utility of aircraft like the AD-1 Skyraider in suppressing ground forces, and ever since Vietnam, there has been a healthy succession of US efforts to field similar capabilities, delivered with some quite impressive aircraft, including the Cessna A-37, B-26K Counter-Invader, OV-10 Bronco and, at the extreme tank-busting end, the A-10 Thunderbolt II.

Today, the field remains active, with high-end operators like the USAF and US Marines operating the A-10, AV-8B Harrier and even AC-130 variants, alongside armed UAVs such as the MQ-9 Reaper. The Su-25 Frogfoot provides a good example of a Russian solution to the COIN/CAS requirement, and the L-15B has been suggested as filling this role in future for China. Inevitably, of course, some Armies have preferred to regard Attack Helicopters as the best source of CAS, particularly since these generally fall within the Army command chain.

Client states and smaller Nations are operating a range of other aircraft, notably the A-29 Super Tucano, AT-6 Wolverine and the Ag-plane-derived IOMAX Archangel. The B-350 really represents this latter group of turbo-prop COIN aircraft on steroids, basically following the same general approach, but exploiting the benefits that a larger aircraft offers. These include greater payload-range; a more numerous and more diverse weapon, sensor and defensive aids capability; and greater loiter capability, if used to provide a ‘cab-rank’ style CAS-on-demand service.

So, the Calidus B-350 might well satisfy the needs of Nations requiring a capable air-to-surface strike aircraft to attack a variety of forces and targets, reflecting either internal dissent or external land threats, but lacking the resources required to operate high-end jet-powered solutions, or really capable armed UAVs.

While the latter might seem attractive, there are substantial infrastructure requirements if strike operations are to be successfully conducted with unmanned systems, particularly if this were to be required in a CAS situation, in relatively close proximity to friendly forces. In practice, the two-man crew of the B-350, aided by appropriate target location, tracking and designation equipment, might well provide a more robust solution, at lower cost, than use of a capable armed UAV.

Reality Check

One has, however, to ask – does the capability make sense? And if so, is there a sufficient market to justify the investment required?

Looking at the market side of the question first, it is clear that the UAE has the resources to develop the aircraft to meet its own needs, if it wishes to do so. It has the experience of operating the IOMAX Archangel alongside the AH-64 Apache, and has also had the opportunity to consider the smaller B-250 design from Calidus. It may also be seeking to develop an Industrial position as a regional arms provider.

Would export opportunities exist? Well, it is not hard to envisage a number of countries with Governments that are concerned about insurgency, insurrection, or external threats from non-state actors, or even neighbouring states. However, a moment’s consideration suggests that the attraction of this type of solution may be somewhat limited.

One problem is that, to be viable, air superiority has to be assured, as aircraft in this category would be vulnerable to almost any higher-performance armed airborne threat. Were such a threat to be present, the survivability of a B-350 would be very dependent on the quality of its defensive aids, and on whether it has the ability to carry AAM.

That said, there have been many recent circumstances where conflicts have taken place when air superiority has been assured. But there remains a substantial vulnerability to Man-Portable Air Defence (MANPAD) systems, and these are widely available to almost everyone, not just those with tanks, tilt-rotors and attack helicopters at their disposal.

Despite these concerns, there is no denying the success of the AT-29 Super Tucano, which has achieved widespread sales in South America, the Middle East, Africa and Asia. The B-350 undeniably offers greater potential capability, not just through additional weapons, but also through the ability to carry targeting and other sensors while still retaining numerous pylons available for air-to-surface and anti-air weapons.

It also has the attraction of being a relatively simple airframe, powered by a well-proven turbo-prop engine, with a configuration that should deliver good field performance from unprepared surfaces. Assuming the policy of keeping the technologies in the aircraft free of US-imposed International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) constraints carries over from the B-250 to its larger development, the B-350 may be an attractive proposition to users seeking greater capability than offered by the AT-29 or AT-6.

– Jim ‘Sonic’ Smith

Why Mr Mainwaring was a Brewster Buffalo, and other Dad’s Army characters matched to WW2 aeroplanes

10 things you didn't know about Dad’s Army

One was the biggest catastrophe in human history and the other was a lovable British situational comedy from the 1960s, we are of course speaking of World War II and Dad’s Army. In this extremely culturally specific article, we will pair combat aircraft of the Second World War with characters from Dad’s Army.

Capt. Mainwaring Brewster Buffalo

Outdated, overconfident, not much use – and with a hot little dad bod, we are talking about the Brewster Buffalo. Like Mainwaring its bad reputation overshadowed the fact its pugnacious bravery when the chips were really down.

Good things about the Buffalo?

The Buffalo was the first modern fighter designed for carrier use, complete with a retractable undercarriage and all-metal construction. It had a very good range and excellent handling characteristics. It was unfairly dismissed despite proving incredibly effective in Finnish service. The early models, unencumbered by heavy armour, proved formidable over Finland, they were also pleasant to fly and proved popular with Finnish aircrew.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2b/Brewster_239_formation.png

Bad things about the Buffalo?

It couldn’t handle a Mitsubishi Zero due to its inferior agility and speed. It also had inadequate armament, an absence of armour (in earlier variants) for the pilot and lacklustre high-altitude performance. That not enough? How about a tendency for engine overheating and poor cockpit controls.

Weird things

Statistically the finest fighter of all time for the ratio of kills to airframes made – 509 made – 800+ kill/loss. In Finland, it had a kill loss ratio of 26/1 (in World War II this is second only to Finland’s G.50s) it is claimed that it destroyed 477 Soviet aircraft in combat for the loss of 19 buffalos. We’re not sure of Mr Mainwaring’s kill – loss ratio. The Buffalo also had some cool nicknames in Finnish, translating as ‘bustling Walter’ and the flying beer bottle.

Sergeant WilsonWestland Lysander

Quiet, understated, old and still effective in a new role, Sgt Wilson is of course the Westland Lysander. Both character and machine shared an air of mystery. The Lysander was originally intended as an army co-operation aircraft, but today is famous for its covert work landing at night in remote locations in occupied Europe, supporting resistance fighters, dropping and retrieving agents. Wilosn

Quiet sophistication, though both Wilson and the Lysander appear old fashioned in the mannered conventional appearance they are both quietly sophisticated. The Lysander featured fully automatic wing slats and slotted flaps and a variable incidence tailplane, rather advanced stuff in 1936.

Scapegoated by Arthurs The Westland design, internally designated P. 8, was the work of Arthur Davenport under the direction of “Teddy” Petter. Petter would later blame Davenport for problems with the development of Wyvern carrier-borne attack aircraft. Wilon was often scapegoated by Mainwaring (played by an Arthur).

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Good things about the Lysander

Amazingly short take-off and landing, and a very low stall speed. Unlike its German counterpart, the skinny Storch, the Lysander can carry more – and you can drop a bomb.

Bad things

If it meets any enemy fighters, it’s dead. Shockingly vulnerable, slow and badly armed. It suffered many losses in France – It cannot survive by day (unlike Wilson who could survive by day though like the Lysander saw a great deal of nocturnal action).

Weird things

Egyptian Lysanders were the last to see active service, against Israel in the 1947–1949 Palestine war.

In September 1939, four squadrons were dispatched to France with the British Expeditionary Force to operate as artillery spotters and light bombers. By June 1940, more than two-thirds of the fleet had been lost.

Lance Corporal Jones – Gloster Gladiator

Looks older than it actually is, very manoeuvrable (Clive Dunn did his own stunts), used in the colonies: the Gloster Gladiator is a perfect match for Cpl Jones. Both served in South Africa. Whereas Dunn was a POW, the Gladiator was imprisoned in the Luftwaffe as a small number of ex Latvian and Lithuanian machines were pressed into service. Phoney war stories! The Gladiator took part in the phoney war – Jones had some phoney war stories.

As an aside, the South African pilot Marmaduke “Pat” Pattle was the top Gladiator ace with 15 victories with the type (he was also the top Hurricane pilot).

Both Jones and the Gladiator were in the wrong age, a biplane soldiering on into the monoplane age.

Good things about the Gladiator…

Good turn rate, good roll rate, good climb rate – lovely to fly.

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Bad things?

Slow, not well-armed (four 303s) – couldn’t catch bombers. If a clever man said, ‘I am going to build a big thing that will burn better and quicker than anything else in the world,’ and if he applied himself diligently to his task, he would probably finish up by building something very like a Gladiator.— Roald Dahl, “A Piece of Cake”, from the short story collection The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar

Weird thing?

Long careers – Portugal retired their aircraft in 1953. The Luftwaffe used captured Latvian Gladiators as glider tugs.

The Finnish Air Force was the last to use the Gloster biplane in combat. It was under Finnish insignia that the Gladiator achieved its last air victory. During the Continuation War, against the Soviets, Glosters supported the advance of the Karelian Army around Lake Ladoga. On 15 February 1943, 1st Lt HÃ¥kan Strömberg of LLv 16, during a reconnaissance mission along the Murmansk railway, between the White Sea and the Lake Onega, spotted, on Karkijarvi, a Soviet Polikarpov R-5 taking off. Stromberg dived on it and shot it down into the forest near its airfield with two bursts.[102] This was the last confirmed victory in the Gladiator.

Private PikeWestland Whirlwind

QUENTIN LETTS on Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson (aka 'Private Pike') |  Daily Mail Online

A slim overlooked immature fighter with a medical/engine condition. The young Pike is a match for the Westland Whirlwind. Pike is the son of Wilson, and the Whirlwind is from the same manufacturer as the Lysander, so is sorta the son of the Lysander.

Good things about the Whirlwind

Very fast at low level, extremely well-armed, great gun placement, great pilot view. Good armour. Easy to maintaine. On its debut, it was the heaviest armed fighter in the world with four 20-mm automatic cannon.

Bad things about the Whirlwind

Too late – if it had been available in the Battle of Britain it would have been spectacular. Short endurance. bad performance at altitude. Used an engine that was sidelined by its manufacturer Rolls-Royce show were busy with the Merlin. Limited to 3g in steep turns due to elevator issues. Too radical.

Weird or notable thing?

First British fighter designed from the start with autocannon.

Private Joe WalkerFisher P-75 Eagle

DAYTON, Ohio — Fisher P-75A at the National Museum of the United States Air Force. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Looks good, sleek American style, but is a huge scam. We must be talking about the Fisher P-75 Eagle. Both Walker and the Eagle love pinching (or recycling) things they’d found. The Eagle used the outer wing panels from the North American P-51 Mustang (and P-40), the tail assembly from the Douglas A-24 (SBD), and the undercarriage from the Vought F4U Corsair. Walker ‘found’ things and sold them on the black market.

What was good about the Eagle?

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/34/Fisher_XP-75-GM_In_flight_%28SN_43-46950%2C_1st_aircraft_built%29_061024-F-1234P-043.jpg

Very long-ranged and very fast escort fighter. Using commercial off the shelf parts of other aircraft was a smart move.

..and what was bad about the Eagle?

It was shit in almost every day: poor handling, dreadful tendency to spin and underwhelming performance later in its very short life. The Eagle was probably a case of fraud, it was made deliberately shit to avoid dragging General Motors into building B-29s; they did not want further government work as they were already overstretched.

P75A_Eagle.jpg

Walker was played by actor James Beck. Sadly, like the Eagle, Beck died young. He died due to a combination of heart failure, renal failure and pancreatitis, aged 44.

Private Charles Godfrey MM

Let’s go with the Westland Wapiti (everyone’s a bloody Westland!). It was very old in World War II the Wapiti entered service in 1927 and the wings were actually lifted from the World War I DH.9 but was still operational during War World II. The actor who played Godfrey, Arnold Ridley, was wounded at the Somme (AND fought with the BEF in France in 1940) so both have WWI and WWII connections. The Wapiti is most famous for its civilian achievement of flying over Everest and Ridley was actually a very successful playwright in the ’30s, so both enjoyed civilian fame in the interwar period.

On the subject of old fighters, the oldest type to score an air-to-air kill was the Bristol Bulldog. Finnish Bulldog shot down two Tupolev SB bombers in 1939 and 1940. The Bulldog first flew in 1927.

Good things about the Wapiti? Unlike Godfrey it was very reliable and rugged.

Bad things about the Wapiti?

Really absurdly old, really absurdly slow and and very vulnerable.

Private Frazer – Yokosuka MXY-7 ‘Ohka’

An undertaker and a rocket-propelled flying coffin are a perfect match. Pilots of the air-launched Yokosuka MXY-7 ‘Ohka’ kamikaze rocket bomb were indeed “doomed”.

What was good about the ‘Ohka’?

It was very fast in the dive (575 mph terminal, and we mean terminal, velocity). It was also well armed with a
1,200 kg (2,600 lb) Ammonal warhead.

Bad things about the Okha?

Not effective as a weapon and the worst survival rate of any warplane for its luckless pilots. Four were successfully deployed. 56 were either destroyed with their ‘Betty’ parent aircraft or in making attacks.

Mainwaring’s wife: The Heinkel 113 fighter was never seen but often reported, likewise the mysteriously reclusive Elizabeth Mainwaring.

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AP1480B.pdf

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(Oldest type to capture another aircraft: A Finnish Gloster Gamecock surprised an Ilyushin DB-3 being refuelled on the ground by a second DB-3. The attacking Gamecock caused the two crews to make good their escape in one of the aircraft leaving the secind to be picked up by Finnish forces. The Gamecock first flew in 1925.)

Top Racing Landplanes

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By Stephen Caulfield

Fire-breathing monsters, deadly fireballs and earth-shattering noise, there has never been a sport as exciting as air racing. We take an adrenaline-scorched run through the Top 11 racing aeroplanes.



11. Bleriot Type XI / Curtiss No. 2


When was the first air race held?  The day the second aeroplane was built. From modest beginnings, it rapidly grew in prestige and scale. No mistake, air racing has been a serious business since the pioneering era of flying. This mad new sport drew huge attention, at stake was a brace of trophies and substantial prize purses often posted by circulation-hungry daily newspapers. Racing proliferated and quickly entered the popular culture almost as soon as the first powered, heavier-than-air machines were available. Races would draw crowds by the tens of thousands.  Many got their first, unforgettable, sight of aviation at races featuring craft like these two. Aviation pioneer and founding father of the American US aircraft business Glenn Curtiss locked horns with his French equivalent Louis Bleriot at early air races in France and California. They flew in aeroplanes of their own invention, the Bleriot Type XI and Curtiss No. 2.


Maximum speed: depends
Spiritual equivalent: Alexander Graham Bell’s Silver Dart

10. Travel Air 4000

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2e/Curtiss_Wright_Travel_Air_E4000_OTT2013_D7N8754_BEA_003.jpg

What do you call a woman flying a plane? The pilot.. or ‘aviatrix’ if you’re in the 1920s. The superlative Travel Air 4000 is remembered as the winning machine in the Women’s Air Derby of 1929, with Louise Thaden at the controls. Thaden departed Santa Monica, California for Cleveland, Ohio, with twenty other entrants. It would become an arduous nine-day test of women and machines. One flyer would even lose her life. Along the way, there would be all the hazards of early cross-country flying: navigation errors, bad weather, mechanical failures, engine fire – as well as a possible incident of sabotage.

As we might expect given the year, these trials were accompanied by much sexist commentary. In spite of how many perceived the pilots, they achieved a remarkable feat completing (and surviving) this epic race.

The aeroplanes themselves were also stars. Travel Airs worked hard during Hollywood’s golden age, finding their way into many a popular flying-themed feature. Appearing at the close of the great barnstorming era, the Travel Air 4000 had a brief moment to shine and it did so with incandescent glamour. They remain examples of what lovely things biplanes can be.

https://airandspace.si.edu/webimages/previews/82-2132p.jpg



Maximum speed: 120 mph
Spiritual equivalent: Great Lakes Sport Trainer

9. Hughes H-1 Racer

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5f/HughesH1PropLower.JPG


A streamlined all-metal low-wing monoplane, with an enclosed cockpit, powerful radial engine and a retractable undercarriage was absolutely cutting edge configuration when the H-1 appeared in 1935. Only the Polikarpov I-16, then the best fighter in the world, could boast such a sleek combination of technologies, but Howard Hughes was never a man to do things by halves. This racing plane was also, in many ways, the most advanced aeroplane of its time. Huge efforts were made to make it as aerodynamically efficient as possible, Hughes even pioneered the use of individually machined flush rivets to keep the aluminium skin as smooth as possible. Everything was done in the name of speed, and it paid off. Hughes smashed the world landplane speed record in the H-1 in1935, clocking an impressive 352.39 mph (567.12 km/h). This was the last time an air speed record would be held by a private citizen and the last time it ended with a crash in a beetroot field. Had this been developed into a fighter, USAAC would have had a worldbeater, but for some reason (Hughes believed a reactionary fear on new technology) they declined Hughes’ overtures. Instead, the United States would enter the War with mediocre indigenous combat aircraft, and not have a world-class fighter until the P-51 of 1942.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b0/HughesH1RacerTailTip.JPG



Maximum speed: 352 mph
Spiritual equivalent: everything from the IAR 80 to the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt.

8. Granville Gee Bee Models R & Z

Gee Bee R1 Racer | Aircraft |


Air racing is a bit of a blood sport. Testimony to that is the Gee Bee family of racers. Freakishly superlative, they were simply too hot to handle. The following footage from 1931 may cause distress to some viewers.



Maximum speed: 294 mph
Spiritual equivalent: everything from the Boeing P-26 Peashooter to the Focke-Wulf Fw 190A

7. Caudron-Renault C.450/561


The two decades between 1919 and 1939 were mad rollercoasters of high hopes, heartbreak and nihilism for the entire continent of Europe. Perhaps that explains some of the attraction to air racing during those years? Or perhaps air racing was just very exciting. It certainly was exciting when it involve the Caudron, this long-nosed French classic looked very fast even when sitting still on the tarmac waiting to race.  Not a rivet on these aircraft is wasted on anything other than turning tightly and going as fast as possible for as long as possible. The Caudron’s claim to fame is the Coupe Deutsche de la Meurthe races.  By 1936, entrants in this event were reaching speeds of 300 mph across a thousand-kilometre run,  a considerable increase from the first race in 1912 covering one hundred kilometres with a best speed of 75 mph. The Caudron also gave rise to a lightweight fighter family– the C.710 series.


Maximum speed: 310 mph
Spiritual equivalent: Messerschmitt Me 209

6. De Havilland DH-88 Comet

https://www.baesystems.com/en-media/webImage/20210402153546/1434592519539.jpg


Some extroverted racers roar around the pylons thrilling the crowds, others are lonely soloists performing feats of navigation and endurance out over the dangerous seas, mountains and deserts. The Comet was an utterly elegant example of the soloist. Every time this pretty thing left the ground it seemed to set new records. In fact, the word ‘pretty’ hardly does justice to the most beautiful manmade object ever made. Its supreme achievement was the 1934 England-to-Australia MacRobertson Trophy Air Race.  Barely half a dozen were built, including modern replicas, yet the impression this aircraft left on aviation is remarkable. The Comet is an achingly gorgeous marvel that perfectly encapsulates the look and dynamism of the Art Deco era in living breathing flying form.         

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Roger

@Roger_Nock


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Ron Smith


Maximum speed: 237 mph
Spiritual equivalent: DH-98 Mosquito 


5. Hawker Sea Fury

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c9/HawkerSeaFury_%284544662619%29.jpg

The finest British prop fighter ever built and probably the most potent from any nation, the Sea Fury demands your respect. Built at the zenith of the prop fighter age it was (and still is) one of the fastest piston-engined and blessed with extremely fine handling characteristics. It was an obvious choice for air racing. A dozen or so Sea Furies have been active at the National Championship Air Races held near Reno, Nevada for decades. 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e4/The_Sea_Fury_%22Ruff_Stuff%22_%282826931814%29.jpg

These racing Sea Furies have unique colour schemes and are significantly modified. At various times they have sported clipped wing tips and rudders and lowered cockpit canopies to reduce drag.  Also, their original sleeve-valved Bristol Centaurus powerplants were swapped out years ago for more reliable Pratt & Whitney R-4360 Wasp Majors.  Remember, this engine produces 4,300 horsepower compared to the Centaurus’s output of 2,520.  It was hardly weedy before this soup-up, even with the Centaurus, a Sea Fury was already one of the fastest piston-engined aircraft ever built!

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https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bb/CPonte_September_Fury_Reno1.jpg


  
Maximum speed: 403.274 mph (2019 Reno Unlimited Gold category winning speed)
Spiritual equivalent: Grumman Bearcat


4. Scaled Composites Model 158 Pond Racer

Scaled Composites Pond Racer (A race aircraft designed to match WW2  warbirds' speed and replace them in races so that the historical warbirds  weren't lost in race-related races -- 1991): WeirdWings


Warbird enthusiast Bob Pond was horrified at the use of increasingly rare warbirds like the Bearcat, Corsair and Sea Fury in the dangerous world of racing. The enormous stresses placed on modified airframes and engines by racing (to say nothing of crashing) struck Pond as reckless and wasteful. Pond, looking for a solution, turned to aviation freethinker Burt Rutan to build him a prop-driven hot rod that would match the excitement of the old warbirds. Commissioned in the late 1980s the resultant machine was a single-aircraft project powered by two supercharged Nissan automotive racing engines. Sadly, a fatal crash after an oil leak terminated the programme early on, though there was a ton of potential in this exciting design. 


Maximum speed: 400 mph  
Spiritual equivalent: Lockheed P-38 Lightning

3. North American P-51 Mustang

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/88/Voodoo_P_51_2014_Gold_Champion_photo_D_Ramey_Logan.jpg

Individual Mustangs have been absolute legends of air racing since 1945.  Tweaked here and there, the Mustang remains a natural racer. Clean aerodynamics, near laminar-flow wings and a Packard-built version of the Rolls Royce Merlin contribute to its beastly good performance. Fifteen thousand were built during the war and afterwards, a handy supply of them and their bits and pieces was available.  There was also a community of technicians and enthusiasts able and more than willing to support air racing.  Among competition warbirds only the North American T-6 Texan/Harvard has outnumbered the Mustang. 

A Mustang named ‘Voodoo’ is currently the world’s fastest piston engine plane. It hit a 531.64mph average over two runs in 2017. Hurrah for Merlins! Though due to a clerical quirk the Bearcat still holds the record despite it being slower. Did it have a normal Merlin? Not a very normal Merlin no. It was apparently producing 3100hp (and it broke). I think the key to the Mustang is how slippery it is. And they did a load of fluid dynamic work on the record plane to improve the streamlining further, it has an altered wing profile for instance that apparently raises the critical Mach number allowing for an extra 28mph. The clerical quirk was that Rare Bear flew 528mph in 1989 and garnered the ‘unlimited’ piston engine record. That class of record no longer officially exists, having been replaced by 23 weight categories each with its own record holder. The Mustang gained a record in its own category of 531 but for the ‘unlimited’ record to be declared null and void it had to exceed the previous speed by over 1%. Thus it is the fastest aircraft ever flown but didn’t break Rare Bear’s record. Incidentally, the 531 was an average over two runs – the first run was clocked at 554.69mph (!) over 3kms. That’s pretty quick. The record was flown at about 100 feet!


Maximum speed: 554 mph
Spiritual equivalent: Supermarine Spitfire F. Mk. 24

2. Zivko Aeronautics Edge 540

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/28/Zivko_Edge_540_at_Red_Bull_Air_Race_on_Langley_Park_Monty-1.jpg


An Edge 540 can climb at ferocious 3,200 feet per minute, which is 400 feet per minute more than a Messerschmitt Bf-109G-6 fighter of World War II. It can turn through a rather alarming 420 degrees in one second. For 15 years the Red Bull Air Races jazzed up the world of air racing and instigated a revival of the sport among the wider public, before its sad ending in 2019. Red Bull’s pylon races combined aerobatics and timed runs over water in exotic locations (and London’s Docklands) with a crowd slightly on edge from the ingestion of free energy drinks. Yes, there was a lot of hype, but the most common aircraft during Red Bull’s heyday was very much the real thing and the pilots were some of the best in the world.

Maximum speed: 260 mph
Spiritual equivalent: Yakovlev Yak-3

1. Condor Aviation White Lightning

Condor Aviation White Lightning - program supplier guide | Airframer


The White Lightning is the first electric aircraft to appear in a Hush-Kit Top 10, and there are many other amazing things about this machine, too. Not only does each set of props contra rotate, but each of the motors driving them also does too! The White Lightning is a heavily modified version of a Cassutt Special, a hot little racing number in its own right. The White Lightning debuted at the Dubai Airshow in 2020 ahead of a much-anticipated all-electric air racing series. 

White Lightning: the worlds first electric racing airplane - ElectricWhip

Industry giant Airbus had thrown its weight behind the Air Race E World Cup before the plague ruined everyone’s fun. Expect to see more of the White Lightning, and its potential rivals, as the world returns to some kind of normalcy.

Maximum speed: 300 mph
Spiritual equivalent: K5054

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Chris

@Yellow_Ferret








Analysis of FC-31 stealthy naval fighter

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There has been a recent upsurge in social media attention to the Shenyang FC-31, prompted by the release of a photograph of a new carrier-capable variant, with what appears to be folding wings, and a nose undercarriage compatible with a carrier catapult system.

The FC-31 has been variously described in the past, as the J-31 and J-35, designations generally reserved for aircraft in production for the PLAAF or PLANAF. F-60 has also been used, in presentations suggesting that the aircraft would be available for export to Nations unwilling or unable to acquire the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II.

The FC-31 designation is that used by Shenyang, and may change, should the aircraft be ordered into Chinese service. It is used in this article to describe both the prototype aircraft, and the recent carrier-capable variant.

On its first appearance, the FC-31 was greeted by a chorus of suggestions that it was simply a copy of the F-35. I’m not going to weigh into that debate – there are a number of twin-engine concepts and projects, as well as the FC-31, which share common features with either, or both of, the US F-22 and F-35. How much of this is convergence in design given similar requirements, and how much is replication seems, to me to be a moot point.

In the end, the external lines of these aircraft will have a relatively minor impact on their performance as air combat systems. The propulsion system, radar and other sensors, air-to-air and air-to-surface weapons, and their integration, along with external data feeds, into the man-machine interface will be the key to combat effectiveness. Similarly, the integration of defensive aspects, including signature, electronic combat and protection systems, and missile warning and countermeasures systems will be critical in determining survivability. While the aircraft shape will influence its signatures, the electromagnetic tailoring of the aircraft, including treatment of its surface, its intake and exhaust system, and the integration of its sensors and apertures, will all be critical if low signatures are to be achieved.

How does the FC-31 stack up on all these aspects? Well at this stage, I’d suggest much attention is likely to be required. How much, depends on how closely the PLAAF and PLANAF have been engaged, in what has been presented as an independent design by Shenyang. That said, it should also be noted that the development program for the J-20 aircraft appears to have been relatively rapid, although perhaps its operational capabilities have still to be fully revealed.

Since the appearance of quality photographs of the prototype FC-31 appeared, there has been some evidence of ongoing design refinement, which, in this case, may have been spurred by the PLAAF decision to adopt the J-20. This decision may have prompted Shenyang consideration of the development of a carrier-compatible aircraft for the PLANAF, or a version that might be exported.

Carrier-compatible FC-31

The recent photograph shows a new variant of the FC-31, with modifications including a catapult launch bar and folding wings. An Electro-optical Targeting System (EOTS) has also been fitted below the aircraft nose. The modifications are clearly directed at achieving aircraft carrier compatibility, presumably with the new Type 003 carrier, and its systems including the Electro-Magnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) which is fitted, aircraft lifts and hangar spaces. 

The changes to strengthen the undercarriage for carrier launches and landings, and the introduction of folding wings, have increased the weight of the aircraft, and other increases in weight are likely as additional operational capability is introduced in development. As a result, the maximum take-off weight (MTOW) of the aircraft is reported to have increased from 25 tonnes to 28 tonnes. This 12% increase in MTOW is perhaps less than might have been expected, suggesting that provision for some navalisation has been included in the initial design. The twin nosewheels of the prototype may be an example of this, as this design is compatible with a catapult launch bar.

The aircraft, in its development,  is also reported to have had a change in engine from the 86 kN Guizhou WS-13 to the 110 kN WS-19 engine, a significant increase in thrust. Looking at the impact of this, we can compare the Thrust to Weight ratio (T/W) of the earlier and latest aircraft. Given the reported weapons load capability of 8000 kg, 2000 kg of which is internal, and making the assumption that a realistic strike configuration would have maximum fuel and carry only internal stores, we can compare the prototype with WS-13 engines to the carrier-compatible aircraft with WS-19 engines. With these assumptions, the T/W of the prototype is 0.92, and for the heavier and more powerful carrier aircraft, T/W is 1.02. With a lighter air-to-air loadout, the WS-19 powered aircraft would have a T/W in the region of 1.07.

These figures suggest reasonably competitive performance should be achieved, bearing in mind that the figures assume full internal fuel, and internal weapons carriage. Considering the systems aspects, with an Active Electronically Scanned Array radar, the EOTS, and a weapons loadout which is likely to include the long-range, Meteor-like, PL-21 Beyond Visual Range AAM, or a variety of air-to-surface or anti-shipping weapons, an FC-31 carrier-compatible aircraft could well be a very attractive option to equip the new Type 003 carrier.

The work still to be done to develop the full operational capability of the aircraft and its systems, and then to integrate that capability into the broader maritime battlespace would be considerable. That said, such a system would be a very useful asset if required to provide tactical Air Defence and Control over an area such as the South China Sea, or to project power elsewhere, if required.

The time taken to fully realise this potential will depend on how closely Shenyang has been working with the PLANAF in the development of the aircraft. Given the need to complete, fit out, integrate and trial the Type 003 carrier, the FC-31 would appear well placed to equip that vessel, should the PLAN decide to select the FC-31.

In the absence of such an order, the future of the FC-31 does look questionable. A land-based export version would appear to be a better option, given the small number of aircraft-carrier-equipped Navies that would be likely to select a Chinese combat aircraft as their primary Naval Air capability.

Or, to put it another way, the extensive work, and the cost, required to develop the carrier-compatible version of the FC-31, suggests that the PLAN is anticipating ordering the type, and might already be contributing to its development.

– Jim Smith


Top Ten Italian Aircraft of World War Two

Derided by their foes and patronised by their major ally, the armed forces of Italy during World War II have not been given the subsequent level of historical attention they deserve. The Regia Aeronautica entered the war (a little late) fresh from a spectacularly successful campaign in the Spanish Civil War where Italian aircraft had proved to be amongst the world’s best. Second World War Italian aircraft design was often brilliant but was unfortunately dependant on Italian industrial output, which was not. Here is a totally subjective top ten of these relative rarities. Che figo!

10. Fiat G.50 Freccia (‘Arrow’)

Colourization by Michael Jucan

How many Italian fighters achieved a 33/1 kill loss ratio during the Second World War? If your answer to the second question is ‘none’: well, you’re half right – as we shall see. Designed by Guiseppe Gabrielli, who would later rustle up the pretty G.91 jet for NATO use, the Fiat G.50 was the first Italian monoplane fighter and fitted with such amazing novelties as retractable undercarriage and an enclosed cockpit. The latter feature was discarded fairly rapidly, though not, as has often been suggested, due to the highly conservative nature of Italian fighter pilots but rather because it was virtually impossible to open in flight. Even the most forward-thinking and radical fighter pilot is generally in favour of the idea of escaping the aircraft in the event of, say, a massive terrifying fire. Dangerous canopy notwithstanding, 12 examples of the G.50 were sent to Spain to be evaluated under combat conditions although none actually took part in any fighting so this evaluation could be considered inconclusive at best. Gifted to Spain at the end of the conflict these G.50s would later see combat in Morocco but by that time the Freccia had been in action against both the French and British. A few G.50s were committed to the Battle of Britain but despite flying 479 sorties failed to intercept a single British aircraft. The little Fiat did better with Italian forces in North Africa but its career could hardly be described as spectacular.

Sadly for Italy, the amazing kill to loss ratio mentioned above was actually achieved by the Freccia in service with the Finns who operated 33 G.50s from the end of the Winter War, through the Continuation War and on until 1944 when these now quite aged aircraft were withdrawn from the front line. Finnish Fiat pilots shot down 99 Soviet aircraft for the loss of only three of their own, representing the best ratio of victories to losses achieved by any single fighter type in the service of a specific air arm during the war. Despite this amazing achievement Finnish pilots apparently still preferred the MS.406, Hurricane and Brewster Buffalo, not least as the open cockpit of the G.50, whilst pleasant on a Spring day over the Mediterranean was not a particularly attractive place to be in the depths of a Finnish winter – at least they didn’t have to worry about opening the canopy to bale out though. After the G.50s were phased out of service they remained operational as trainers until the end of 1946 when the spare parts supply ran out. The G.50 was, in fairness, a fairly lacklustre aeroplane but who could reasonably ignore that insane 33 to 1 success rate?

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9. Savoia-Marchetti SM.79 Sparviero (‘Sparrowhawk’)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3b/Savoia-Marchetti_SM.79_in_formation.jpg

A bit an oldie (in 1940s terms) having first flown way back in 1934, the Gobbo maledetto (‘damned hunchback’, the nickname deriving from the SM.79’s pronounced hump just behind the cockpit) was one of aviation’s great survivors. After setting a swathe of records in the mid 30s the SM.79 became likely the best bomber committed to the Spanish Civil War, outlived the aircraft specifically designed to replace it (the now obscure SM.84) and ended its war as the Axis’ most potent torpedo bomber before relaxing into a surprisingly long postwar dotage. All this whilst enjoying a cosmopolitan existence in some quite unexpected air forces (Brazil anyone?) and like the best old stagers, the Sparviero defied expectation – although it has become aviation history’s archetypal trimotor bomber, the wonderfully ugly Romanian built SM.79JR was a twin (and the fastest of the lot). Although very fast by world standards during the conflict in Spain, the SM.79’s primary attributes during the Second World War were its sturdy construction and excellent reliability, neither of which represented a quality associated with Italian engineering in general.

Savoia Marchetti SM 79 Sparviero in volo.jpg

In action during the Spanish Civil War the Sparviero proved highly effective and more or less immune to interception, which was lucky as the Italians did not possess a fighter fast enough to escort it. Of the 100 or so aircraft committed to Spain only four were lost on operations. Early operations during WWII were quite successful but the SM.79’s great speed advantage had evaporated by 1940, operating against the latest British fighters over North Africa and Malta, the SM.79’s reputation for apparent invulnerability was lost. Nevertheless, it remained a reliable if unspectacular medium bomber for the duration of Italy’s involvement in the war. However, as a torpedo bomber the SM.79 suddenly found itself in intense and effective action, gaining considerable fame at home in the process. The torpedo version of the Sparviero dispensed with the draggy ventral gondola containing the bomb aimer and resulted in a faster aircraft and although able to carry two air-launched torpedoes, only one was ever carried on combat missions. The SM.79s sank a considerable amount of Allied shipping and damaged much more, notably the battleship Nelson, and the best year for the Aerosiluranti torpedo units was 1941 when during the course of 87 attacks, nine ships totalling 42,373 tonnes were sunk and another 12 were damaged. The top Sparviero torpedo pilot was Carlo Emanuele Buscaglia, credited with over 90,718 tonnes of enemy shipping sunk and much decorated. Buscaglia was shot down and presumed dead on 12 November 1942. As a result, after the Italian armistice, an anti-shipping unit, the 1° Gruppo Aerosiluranti, was named in his honour by the Fascist Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana (ANR). Ironically however Buscaglia had actually survived, and was serving in the Co-Belligerent Air force, fighting alongside the Allies. The SM.79 continued to operate as a torpedo aircraft until late 1944 when the last two surviving ANR Sparvieros flew the final mission on 26 December, bowing out with a flourish by sinking a 5000-ton vessel off the Dalmation coast.

In addition to Italy the SM.79 flew with Yugoslavia against the Germans, in twin-engine form with Iraq against the British and with Brazil. Romania went the whole hog and licence-built their own twin-engine version which they used against the Soviets. Probably the most surprising operator was the RAF, four SM.79s flew in British colours with 117 squadron from May to November 1941. After the war the tiny nation of Lebanon (an SM.79 could traverse the entire country from west to east in 14 minutes) bought four Sparvieros and flew them until 1965, representing the last Italian WWII aircraft in service anywhere in the world. Both surviving SM.79s are ex-Lebanese aircraft.

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As an interesting but totally irrelevant aside, one of the Sparviero‘s wartime pilots was Capitano Emilio Pucci who would later gain considerable fame as one of Italy’s most successful fashion designers. As well as producing the first one-piece skiing outfit, Pucci bridged the fashion/aviation divide when he designed six complete collections for Braniff Airways’ hostesses, pilots and ground crew between 1965 and 1974. Marilyn Monroe was also a fan, ultimately she was interred in a Pucci gown. Pucci died in 1992 at the age of 78 but the design house that bears the name is still going strong.

8. Fiat CR.42 Falco (‘Falcon’)

CR.42 Falco

A ludicrous, conceptually outdated dinosaur or a fighter ideally suited to the specific operating conditions in which it found itself? The CR.42 was, like its great adversary the Gloster Gladiator, arguably both. Fiat had been happily building a succession of effective and successful biplane fighters bearing the initials of designer Celestino Rosatelli since the CR.1 of 1923. All featured distinctive w-shaped warren-truss struts which eliminated the need for virtually all bracing wires and the CR.42 was the logical culmination of this line, a line that would likely have continued had not the Second World War cruelly stamped out any future for the biplane as a viable combat machine. Featuring a radial engine in place of the V-12 unit of its immediate predecessor, the CR.32, the Falco appeared too late to see combat use in the Spanish Civil War, a conflict which had already made plain the shift from biplane to monoplane fighters was effectively inevitable. Despite this, and proving Fiat’s canny awareness of the world fighter market, the CR.42 enjoyed considerable export success with significant orders being placed by Hungary, Sweden and Belgium, the latter two nations operating the Fiat alongside the Gloster Gladiator and it was in Belgian service that the CR.42 first fired its guns in anger. In the brief Belgian campaign Falcos scored five confirmed kills, including two Bf 109s, before the country fell to the Germans but this would not be the last time the Fiat flew against Axis forces. In the meantime there followed an extremely busy couple of years for the Fiats with their nation of origin.

In June 1940, Mussolini’s tardy (and ultimately fatal) decision to join Germany in the invasion of France saw the CR.42 committed as an escort fighter to a brief series of spectacularly successful bombing raids on French airfields. In air-to-air combat with French monoplanes the Falco fared adequately: five CR.42s were lost in exchange for eight (though possibly as high as 10) French fighters. Later the same year the East African campaign saw the pinnacle of the Falco‘s career as the three squadrons committed to the theatre tangled for the first time with the RAF and came out decisively on top, for example on one occasion in November CR.42s tangled with RAF Gloster Gladiators and destroyed seven for no loss. The top-scoring biplane ace of the Second World War, Mario Visintini, scored all but two of his 16* officially credited victories during this campaign. Over North Africa and Malta the Falco proved adequate, capable of dealing with the Hurricane if well handled (RAF units were forced to come up with tactics specifically to deal with such a manoeuvrable foe), and during the invasion of Greece the CR.42s demolished the defenders: officially destroying 162 aircraft destroyed for the loss of 29 of their own. Slightly later the Royal Hungarian Air Force took its CR.42s into action on the Eastern Front and during six months of action the Hungarian Fiats shot down 24 Soviet aircraft for the loss of only two CR.42s. Over the course of 1941 however, it was becoming increasingly clear that the Falco simply did not have the performance necessary to deal with modern monoplane fighters and it increasingly switched, very successfully, to the ground attack role. The fine handling and outstanding manoeuvrability of the CR.42 allowed it to evade both fighter attack and ground fire at low level and the Falco proved a highly accurate close support asset. So effective was the aircraft that after the Italian capitulation of 1943 German authorities had the CR.42 returned to production for Luftwaffe use as light night attack bombers: an order for 200 CR.42LWs, purpose-built for nocturnal use was placed with Fiat in Turin of which around 112 were completed. Meanwhile some CR.42s flew operationally with the Italian Co-Belligerent Air Force alongside Allied forces in the Balkans. Most Co-Belligerent use was as a training aircraft but the Falco became one of very few combat aircraft to have fought alongside the Luftwaffe, fought as a part of the Luftwaffe, and fought against the Luftwaffe

Swedish Air Force Fiat CR.42/J 11 Falco (Fv 2543) at the Swedish Air Force Museum (Flygvapenmuseum) near Linköping

In contrast to the Gloster Gladiator which was built in comparatively small numbers, the seemingly outdated Fiat was manufactured in greater numbers than any other Italian aircraft of the war with just over 1800 known to have been built. One of only three serious contenders for the title of best biplane fighter of WWII, the CR.42 was more useful and effective than its manifest conceptual obsolescence would have one believe.

*Subsequent research by aviation historian Christopher Shores, suggests that Visinitini’s total was higher than that officially recognised at the time and that he actually destroyed 20 enemy aircraft.

7. Macchi MC.200 Saetta (‘Lightning’)

Ground crew adding ammunition to the C.200 Saetta.

In the late 1980s, I was a very young aviation enthusiast and still believed all the jingoistic popular myths bandied around about most of the aircraft of WWII, such as ‘all Italian aircraft were shit’. It came as a great shock to me therefore to read in Bill Gunston’s ‘Combat Aircraft of World War II’ (Salamander Books 1978) the words “in combat with the lumbering Hurricane it proved effective, with outstanding dogfight performance and no vices”. Lumbering Hurricane?! Outstanding dogfight performance?! I was aghast and amazed and although I didn’t realise it at the time, the concept of history being subject to nuance, interpretation and outright falsehoods had been subtly introduced into my brain. The aircraft inadvertently responsible for this Road to Damascus style aviation-history awakening was the Macchi MC.200 and it remains, (probably coincidentally, though who knows?), one of my all-time favourite aircraft. Possessed of a charmingly bumblebee-like aesthetic the Saetta was, like the Spitfire, the fighter follow-on to a swathe of fast, radical and highly successful seaplane racing aircraft built to compete in the Schneider Trophy air races. Unlike Reginald Mitchell’s Spitfire, which resembles its floatplane ancestors quite closely with Rolls-Royce V-12 engine and slender airframe, the Saetta was radial powered and looked nothing like its Macchi MC.72 forebear despite both being the work of the great designer Mario Castoldi. Powered by the Fiat A74 radial, like the slightly earlier G.50 Freccia, the MC.200 made much better use of this reliable but only modestly powerful engine. A relatively small aircraft, the MC.200 followed the precedent set by the G.50 by initially appearing with a cutting edge enclosed cockpit but having this feature discarded in short order. The armament was typical of contemporary Italian fighters in that it was pathetic, two 12.7 mm (.50-in) machine guns, but this was actually double the armament specified in the original specification. At least the pilot had an indicator in the cockpit showing how much ammunition was left. An unusual feature was that one wing was slightly longer than the other to cancel out the rotation of the propeller. Rather than simply counteracting the torque, the enlarged left wing put the asymmetric force created by the airscrew to useful work by generating lift. Initially the Saetta was something of a handful, prone to entering an unrecoverable spin, but adoption of a different wing profile solved the problem before Italy entered the war and the aircraft’s handling was effectively viceless.

Entering service in the summer of 1939, the MC.200 was either the third or fourth best operational fighter in service anywhere in the World at the outbreak of war (after the Bf 109, Spitfire and depending on your opinion, the lumbering Hurricane) but by the time Mussolini stopped dithering and jumped in on the side of Germany a whole bunch of new fighters had appeared that were at least as good, such as the Curtiss P-36 and Dewoitine D.520. Italian industry had suffered in the past from a lack of standardisation and as a reaction to this the MC.200 remained in production virtually unchanged from the first examples in 1939 all the way through to Italy’s capitulation in 1943 (the final examples produced as a back-up to more advanced fighters that were held up by shortages of the Alfa Romeo R.A.1000 Monsone engine) and as such the Saetta was overtaken and then gradually left behind by the pace of fighter development. The worldbeater of 1940 was a distinctly pedestrian performer by 1943. Nonetheless during the three years the Regia Aeronautica were in action in WWII the Saetta flew more combat sorties than any other Italian type and, initially at least, was highly successful. Over North Africa the Macchi could outmanoeuvre both the P-40 and Hurricane, the most numerous Allied fighters in the theatre, the airframe was rugged and performance was roughly equivalent, especially in the case of the Hurricane which had its speed impaired by the adoption of a large dust filter necessary for operations in the desert. Like many early war fighters the Saetta saw its role shift to the ground attack role and it first saw action as a fighter bomber in North Africa. Bomb armed MC.200s managed to sink the British destroyer Sikh off Tobruk in 1942. Over the Eastern Front the MC.200 made up a significant part of the Italian Expeditionary force which downed 88 Soviet aircraft in exchange for 15 of their own. 

After 1943 Saettas saw service briefly with the Co-belligerent Air Force in the close support role but both Italian factions employed the MC.200 as a trainer, a function the Macchi would fulfill until 1947. 

6. CANT Z.506B Airone (‘Heron’)

What could be better than a slender Italian trimotor bomber? Why, a slender Italian trimotor bomber on floats of course. Although in the Z.506’s case, it was one of the vanishingly few seaplanes to be developed into a successful landplane rather than the other way round, in 1939 a developed version of the design entered service (on land) as the Z.1007 Alcione. Designed by Filippo Zappata, the Z.506 was one of the last frontline aircraft to utilise classic wood construction for the majority of the airframe. Starting life as a 12-seat commercial aircraft, the Z.506 which immediately set a bunch of speed, range and payload records. Fifteen examples of the original airliner saw service with Ala Littoria. The Z.506B was the military version with more powerful engines, a raised and enlarged cockpit, and featuring a long ventral gondola which contained the bomb aimer, the bombload itself and a defensive gun position at the rear. The Z.506B then followed up the record breaking feats of the civil version by setting a few records of its own including an impressive nonstop 7020km flight from Cadiz to Carravelas. A few saw service in the Spanish Civil War thus starting a twenty four year frontline career, almost unheard of for an aircraft of this vintage. 

Despite its wooden construction, the Airone was noted for its ability to operate in unusually rough seas and was kept busy throughout the Second World War, raiding coastal installations, attacking shipping with torpedoes, engaging in long range maritime patrol and reconnaissance and occasionally acting as a transport and communications aircraft,a role for which its commercial origins made it well suited. A dedicated air-sea rescue version was developed, designated the Z.506S (S for Soccorso ‘rescue’) and these were responsible for saving 231 people during 1940-42. Despite being marked with large red cross markings, the rescue Airones were regularly attacked and shot down by British fighters. After the Italian capitulation, Z.506s were operated by both sides in Italy with the Luftwaffe using them for patrol duties over the Baltic, based at Peenemunde, and air sea rescue out of Toulon. After 1945, the Z.506 soldiered on well into the Cold War, despite its wooden structure and outdated performance, it remained highly effective in the air sea rescue role due to its excellent endurance and seaworthiness, the last examples were retired as late as 1959. The longevity of the Airone was reflected in the life of its designer, Fillipo Zappata was 100 years old when he died in 1994.

Despite its many years of yeoman service, the Z.506B is probably best known these days, in the anglophone world at least, as the only aircraft in the west to be successfully hijacked by prisoners of war. On 29 July 1942 a Z.506B rescued the crew of a ditched Bristol Beaufort. During the subsequent flight to Taranto the British airmen overpowered their Italian rescuers and flew the aircraft to Malta instead, it subsequently entered RAF service, joining two other captured Airones on RAF strength. 

5. Macchi MC.205V Veltro (‘Greyhound’)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f8/Macchi_MC-205V_Veltro%2C_Italy_-_Air_Force_JP6942435.jpg

The culmination of a distinguished line of Macchi fighters that began with the MC.200, the Veltro combined the excellent Daimler-Benz DB.605 engine (in licence built form as the Fiat RA.1050 R.C.58 Tifone) with the beautiful handling of the Macchi MC.202 Folgore (itself essentially a Saetta re-engined with a DB.601 V-12) to produce an airframe well up to world standard. It was also the first Italian fighter of the war to feature an armament that wasn’t pitiful, boasting instead a standard fit of two 20-mm cannon and two 12.7mm (.50 in) machine-guns. Although inferior to both of its contemporaries, the Re.2005 and G.55, the Veltro was still a magnificent performer, well up to international standards and, – importantly, as a developed version of an aircraft already in mass production (or what passed for mass production in wartime Italy), was able to be produced in decent numbers immediately: 146 examples of the MC.205V made it into Regia Aeronautica units before the Italian capitulation compared with 35 Fiat G.55s and less than 50 Re.2005s. Ultimately more examples of the G.55 would be built but the MC.205V saw much more service while Italy was still a single nation and wholly part of the Axis.

In action Veltro pilots were very successful. As a developed version of an extant type, the aircraft’s handling was a known quantity to many of its pilots who were already flying the MC.202 – and the Macchi handled exceptionally well. Noted British test pilot Eric Brown stated “One of the finest aircraft I ever flew was the Macchi MC. 205 … It was really a delight to fly, and up to anything on the Allied programme.” In its ‘Serie V’ form sported one of the world’s best aero-engines and it was well armed. The top-scoring MC.205 pilot was Sergente Maggiore pilota Luigi Gorrini who officially destroyed 14 aircraft in the Veltro and Italy’s most successful WWII fighter pilot Major Adriano Visconti shot down 11 of his 26 confirmed victories in the MC.205. At the time of the Italian armistice only 66 MC.205s remained airworthy, six of these flew to join the Allies, the remainder being taken into the service of the Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana, the air arm of the Italian Social Republic. Macchi built a further 72 Veltros for ANR service. The Luftwaffe also flew a few MC.205s for a couple of months in late 1943 but were not hugely enthusiastic about the aircraft. Despite praising the speed and handling of the Veltro, they were scathing of its unreliable radio and the slow refuelling and rearming times. Only one confirmed ‘kill’ was made by a German operated MC.205V when a P-38 Lightning was downed on 1 December 1943. 

The Veltro served on in postwar Italian service until 1955, the last being built as late as 1951, and a few new build aircraft were constructed for supply to Egypt. An act that provoked the bombing of a hangar in Italy by Israeli secret services, destroying three MB.308s and one MC.205. Revenge of a sort came during the 1948 Arab Israeli war, when an Egyptian Veltro downed an Israeli P-51D on 7 January 1949. 

4. Piaggio P.108

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Curiously, none of the Axis nations showed any great interest in strategic bombing. Germany and Japan both viewed military aviation as primarily a tactical adjunct for armies in the field (or navies in the case of Japan) and the only heavy bomber to be built in numbers was the Luftwaffe‘s problematic Heinkel He 177 Greif. However, another large strategic bomber was built by the Axis: the Piaggio P.108B (B for Bombardiere), and it was lucky indeed for the Allies that it was manufactured in trivial numbers, for it ranked amongst the world’s best. First flown in 1939, one of the P.108’s test pilots was Bruno Mussolini, son of Benito, who lost his life in 1941 when he crashed one of the brand new bombers into a house. Despite this unfortunate accident it was clear that Piaggio’s heavy bomber was an outstanding aircraft, comparing very well with the latest Allied ‘heavies’. With a top speed just under 300 mph it was slightly faster than a Lancaster or a B-17, carried a bombload about halfway between the two and boasted a similar range capability. Unlike most Italian aircraft it sported a powerful and technically advanced defensive armament, including remotely controlled turrets on the outer wings. The aircraft was also immensely strong, having been built to a 6G load factor, a level more appropriate to contemporary fighters (the Spitfire I’s wing was partly built to this very specification) than a 32 metre span four engined bomber. This level of over-engineering led to an aircraft with an arguably overweight structure but the sheer strength of the airframe undoubtedly contributed to crew confidence in their unusually robust machine.

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The P.108’s single greatest fault was its scarcity. Only 24 examples of the bomber variant were ever constructed and missions were undertaken in a rather desultory fashion. Flying against well-defended Allied targets such as Gibraltar and bases in Algeria occupied in the wake of Operation Torch, several P.108s were on the receiving end of Beaufighter night-fighter attacks. In total, five (or possibly six) of the Piaggios were lost to enemy action, the last two in attacks on Allied forces during the invasion of Sicily. However, the bomber was only a part of the P.108 story, as the aircraft was also produced as a transport aircraft and, somewhat surprisingly, as a pressurised transatlantic airliner. The latter aircraft was the P.108C, ordered in 1940 and intended to carry 32 passengers. It first flew in 1942 and despite both Piaggio’s inability to deliver the bomber variant and the fact that Italy was now at war with the USA, the very nation it was intended to fly to, five production examples were ordered. More sensibly the P.108 was produced as a straightforward military transport, the P.108T, which could carry up to 60 troops and boasted the impressive ability to carry two partially dismantled MC.200 fighters (or 12 tonnes of less exciting cargo). Production of the transport variants under German control and most of the 12 P.108C and Ts constructed saw extensive use with Transportfliegerstaffel 5 of the Luftwaffe, proving particularly invaluable during the withdrawal from Crimea, and surviving examples saw service until the end of hostilities.

Most spectacular of all was the P.108A (A for Artigliere) which mounted a 102-mm gun in the nose for the anti-shipping role. Though the gun and its anti-recoil equipment functioned well in testing, the wisdom of attacking ships at low level in a 30-tonne, 32-metre span heavy bomber seems questionable at best. The armistice of 1943 ultimately put paid to the programme and the sole P.108A was likely destroyed by Allied bombing at the German test centre at Rechlin.

3. Reggiane Re.2005 Sagittario (‘Archer’)

https://www.asisbiz.com/il2/Re2005/Reggiane-Re2005-Sagittario/images/Reggiane-Re2005-Sagittario-MM092352-Northern-Italy-1944-01.jpg

Had Mussolini not thrown in his lot with Hitler and invaded France in May 1940, Reggiane would have built 300 Re.2000 Falco fighters for the RAF, which seems somewhat crazy given that a mere three years later the much more potent Re.2005 Sagittario was besting the Spitfire over the skies of Sicily. In stereotypical fashion, underwhelming Italian industrial performance saw the exceptionally promising Sagittario produced in pathetic numbers (of 750 ordered, 54 were built) and flown in combat by only one unit. The most exciting looking of the Serie V fighters powered by the Fiat built Daimler Benz DB 605 engine, the Re.2005 was a logical development of the slightly humdrum Re.2001 Falco II which was slower than it looked and outperformed by contemporaries on both sides. The Re.2005 also maintained an unfortunate feature of the earlier aircraft in that it was a complicated airframe, both time consuming and expensive to build which is small potatoes if you had the massive industrial capacity and wealth of, for example, the US but Italy in the 1940s was industrially puny and seriously strapped for cash. What Italy had no shortage of though, then as now, was design flair and the Re.2005, whilst being absolutely the wrong fighter for its nation of origin in a pragmatic sense, possessed the effortless thoroughbred chutzpah of a mid-60s Maserati. And the looks seem to have been borne out in action for although the Sagittario‘s combat career was unsurprisingly brief, it made quite an impression on friend and foe alike. Officially rated the best flying of the trio of similar looking Italian contemporary fighters fitted with the DB.605, the Fiat G.55 was preferred as it offered only minimally inferior performance whilst being considerably easier to mass produce (hence too the G.55’s higher rating on this list), both being considered superior to the MC.205V. 

The Re.2005 saw combat for the first time on 2 April 1943 when the prototype was used to intercept B-24 Liberators attacking Naples. The first confirmed kill scored by a Sagittario occurred on 28 April and Italy capitulated on 8 September so the handful of Re.2005s saw essentially four months of operational use. During that period they proved superior to contemporary MC.205 fighters in attacking high flying American bombers. Both aircraft had the same engine but the Reggiane had a considerably greater wing area allowing it to manoeuvre more effectively at altitude. The only fault the aircraft possessed was a propensity to experience flutter in the tail at speeds above 680km/h. Work undertaken to solve the problem was apparently successful as test pilot Tullio de Prato allegedly dived an Re.2005 to the incredible speed of 980 km/h with no loss of control and experienced no flutter in July 1943. Italian pilots loved it and German test pilots were (grudgingly) impressed. Meanwhile on the Allied side RAF Wing Commander Wilfrid Duncan Smith said “The Re.2005 ‘Sagittario‘ was a potent aircraft. Having had a dog-fight with one of them, I am convinced we would have been hard-pressed to cope in our Spitfires operationally, if the Italians or Germans had had a few Squadrons equipped with these aircraft at the beginning of the Sicily campaign or in operations from Malta.” Praise indeed. Ultimately of course it didn’t matter how amazingly good the aircraft was, like many other Italian types the fact that production didn’t even make it into triple figures rendered the Re.2005 essentially irrelevant. 

2. FIAT G.55 Centauro (‘Centaur’)

https://hushkit.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/fiat_g55_centauro.jpg

The best Italian fighter of the war, the Fiat G.55 was so good that a team of German experts came to the conclusion that it was the best fighter in the Axis, possibly the world. Kurt Tank, designer of the Fw 190 had nothing but praise for the G.55 and went to Turin to look at its potential for mass-production. Sadly for the Axis it was pointed out that the Fiat took three times as long to build as a Bf 109, and whilst the Centauro was a better fighter, it wasn’t three times better and production plans were abandoned. Compared to its Reggiane and Macchi contemporaries, the Fiat suffered fewer teething issues, was easier to build than the complicated Re.2005 and demonstrated better altitude performance than the MC.205. A mere 35 were delivered before the armistice of 8 September 1943 and the few pilots lucky enough to fly these aircraft in combat were delighted with the new Fiat fighter. The 353a Squadriglia commanded by Capitano Egeo Pittoni and charged with the defence of Rome was the only Regia Aeronautica unit to operate the G.55 for longer than a few days and over the summer of 1943 this unit utilised the Centauro‘s excellent altitude performance to good effect against American bombers. The Fiat featured three 20-mm cannon supplemented by two 12.7 mm (more familiar to the metrically challenged as .50-cal) machine guns which represented a terrific punch for a mid war single engine fighter and totally overturned the stereotype of the underarmed Italian fighter. More relevantly it was more than adequate to bring down an American heavy bomber.

After its brief but eventful Regia Aeronautica service many examples were confiscated by the Luftwaffe and the G.55 continued to be used by the Fascist Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana (except for a single example that flew south to join the Allies) and remained in production at Fiat’s Turin factory. Ultimately 274 examples were built during the war and the Centauro formed the equipment of four ANR frontline fighter squadrons, details of Luftwaffe usage remains obscure but the type was apparently flown operationally by German pilots. After a year or so it was replaced in Italian units by the Bf 109G, much to the chagrin of pilots.

The end of hostilities did not see the end of the G.55 for, like its great rival the MC.205, but in contrast to nearly all other Axis combat aircraft, the G.55 returned to production in 1946, a further 74 examples of the original wartime design being built. These served with the postwar Italian air force as well as with Syria, Egypt and Argentina. Syrian and Egyptian G.55s seeing combat against Israeli aircraft. Stocks of the Fiat RA.1050 engine (a licence-built Daimler Benz DB 605) were running low so the decision was made to develop a Rolls-Royce Merlin powered version of the aircraft which entered production as the G.59. The new version proved successful enough that all remaining G.55s were converted to G.59 standard and the Merlin-powered aircraft served as an advanced trainer in Italy from 1950 to 1965. This represents an astonishing longevity of production and service for an Axis fighter, rivalled only by Spain’s Bf 109-derived lash-up, the Hispano Buchon (similarly Merlin powered) but the G.59 was a better engineered design and a much nicer aircraft to fly than the Buchon. At least two examples of the G.59 remain in airworthy condition in 2021. At the time of writing one of them was up for sale, so if you happen to have a spare million or so Euros, an example of the ultimate development of an Italian WWII fighter could be yours

1. Savoia-Marchetti SM.82 Kanguru (‘Kangaroo’)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/70/Savoia-Marchetti_SM.82_02.jpg

This corpulent machine was the best transport aircraft of the Axis to see production in any numbers. So useful was it that after 1943 large numbers served both the Allies and Germany and the Kanguru remained in service with the Italian air force until the early 1960s. Neither glamorous nor particularly attractive, the SM.82 was however likely the most useful aircraft produced by Italian industry during the conflict. First flown in 1939, the SM.82 was a development of the earlier SM.75 Marsupiale airliner, itself a highly capable trimotor transport which saw considerable wartime service, including several extremely long-range flights such as a 6000km non-stop flight from German occupied Ukraine to Japanese occupied Mongolia. The Kanguru maintained the inexplicable antipodean naming convention but lost the svelte lines of its elegant predecessor. A double-deck fuselage was adopted with seats for 32 passengers on the upper deck and room for freight on the lower. The Kanguru was also the last example of a very 1930s design trend: the bomber-transport. Other examples of this dual-role type included the Handley-Page Harrow, Bristol Bombay and the other major transport design of the Axis, the Junkers Ju 52/3m. Combining two roles in one made sound fiscal sense during the economically dark years of the 1930s and was particularly attractive for a not-particularly wealthy nation like Italy. As such the Kanguru sported large bomb bay doors which doubled as a handy access feature for loading heavy freight into the capacious lower deck, nine sections of its wooden floor were detachable to facilitate this ability. If called upon to function as a bomber it could carry an impressive bombload of up to 4000kg. Its modern external appearance belied a quite old-fashioned construction, no fancy monocoques or stressed skin here, the SM.82’s fuselage consisted of a steel tube framework covered in sheet metal over the forward fuselage but plywood and fabric elsewhere, much like a massively enlarged Hawker Hurricane. The wing however, was almost entirely constructed of wood. 

In the same year as its first flight the prototype SM.82 caused something of a stir by flying for 10,000km non-stop in 56 hours 30 minutes. Production aircraft began to be received by the Regia Aeronautica during 1940 and the type was in great demand for the duration of the war, not least as there were never enough of them thanks to typically dismal rates of industrial output. The Kangurus were kept busy throughout 1940 and 41 supplying Italian forces in East and North Africa, one of the most notable transport actions taking place during the latter half of 1940 as SM.82s supplied 51 complete CR.42 fighters with a further 51 spare engines to East Africa. The early war years also saw the Kanguru perform several audacious bombing missions such as attacks on Gibraltar but the most spectacular of all was a raid on British-controlled oil refineries at Manama in the Persian Gulf. This required a 15 hour 4200km round trip, the longest bombing raid yet undertaken by any nation. Although the raid consisted of only four aircraft carrying 1500kg of bombs each and comparatively little material damage was caused, they achieved total surprise and the attack was a huge shock to the British who had considered the refinery out of range. This resulted in a costly upgrade of defences in the area that Britain could ill afford at the time. Further long range missions were planned but the limited number of SM.82s available restricted what could be achieved, nonetheless some raids were carried out, notably against Alexandria in the autumn of 1940. Its incredible range capability also led to the SM.82’s use as a civil airliner (despite the war being in full swing). Services to Brazil were flown via Spain and West Africa for nearly a year between 11 September 1940 until Brazil declared war on the Axis in August 1942.

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As a transport aircraft with considerably more capacity than the Ju 52/3m the SM.82 also caught the eye of the Germans and the Kanguru would become the most numerous foreign aircraft to serve in the wartime Luftwaffe. From 1942 onwards FliegerTransportGruppe “Savoia” operated 100 of the big trimotors and after the Italian capitulation Savoia Marchetti continued building SM.82s under German contract, eventually building 299 aircraft for the Luftwaffe. Sadly, little is known of the aircraft’s extensive usage in German hands as records were either lost, deliberately destroyed or non-existent. Meanwhile the Kanguru continued to be flown by Italian units on both sides of the conflict, about 60 in the air force of the Italian Social Republic in the North, 40 of which were operating on the Eastern Front. Although fewer in number, much use was made of the 30 or so SM.82s operated by Co-Belligerent forces under Allied control in Southern Italy. After hostilities ceased, the Italian Air Force continued to fly the SM.82 until at least 1960, postwar aircraft receiving Pratt & Whitney Twin Wasp engines which were simultaneously more reliable and more powerful than the Alfa Romeo 128s originally fitted.

The Kanguru was slow, underpowered and vulnerable to fighter attack but this was hardly unusual for a transport of its era. It was also capacious, capable and versatile. Its range capability was unmatched for most of its career and its practicality is borne out by its widespread adoption by Nazi Germany, a regime notoriously chauvinist in its opinion of other nations’ technical abilities. It is ironic that the most effective wartime aircraft produced by a country best known in WWII for producing beautiful, precocious fighter aircraft should be a lumbering transport workhorse of prodigious size and less-than-inspiring aesthetics. Yet the 726 SM.82s built were probably the best aircraft produced in Italy during the war and contributed meaningfully to the conflict (on both sides) to an extent that cannot be matched by any other Italian aeroplane. 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b8/Savoia_Marchetti_SM_82_Vigna_di_Valle.jpg

Flying the C-17: Interview with RAF Globemaster III pilot

A C-17 of 99 Squadron at RAF Brize Norton is enroute to a flypast over Buckingham Palace for the Queen’s Birthday. It’s not known if she’s more of an A400M gal or not.

Weighing nine times more than a fully loaded Lancaster bomber, the C-17 is an absolute behemoth of an aircraft. Andy Netherwood flew the Globemaster III for Britain’s Royal Air Force, he spoke to us about what it is like to fly the mighty ‘Moose’

Describe the C-17 in three words

Rugged. Powerful. Workhorse.

What is the main role of the RAF’s C-17s and are they effective?

Air transport. They are highly effective, able to carry large loads long distances and operate from small, austere airfields. They are also an excellent aircraft for aeromedical evacuation, offering medics a spacious and stable platform to care for patients while flying them direct to the UK from thousands of miles away. The RAF simply could not support global operations without it.

What is the best thing about the C-17?

“On final approach its huge blown lift flaps mean it flies ‘backside’ i.e. pitch controls speed and power glidepath.”

Its capacity, range and ability to operate from short runways on austere airfields.

…and the worst?

The avionics were excellent for the 1990s, and the extra situational awareness was a revelation after the C130K, but they’re a bit clunky by modern standards. It’s also quite thirsty

Complete this sentence: “The C-17 is better than the C-130J because…

Complete this sentence, “The C-17 is better than the A400M because…

The C-17 can carry more, further & faster than either the A400M or C-130J, but the fact is that each aircraft brings a different set of capabilities required for a varied set of tasks

What was the weirdest or most notable thing you carried?

Marine One.

Trump: Globemaster Marine One at Palm Beach International Airport

Do transport aircraft have similar relationships with their aircraft as fighter pilots do?

It’s different I think. Crews never get their ‘own’ aircraft and the nature of air transport flying is that is optimised to keep the aircraft flying is so you are often picking an aircraft up from one crew and then handing it on to another. The other difference is that we are always operating as part of a crew, it’s never just you and the aircraft as it is with say a Typhoon or F-35. One of the best things about a transport aircraft though is that wherever you are in the world, it is a little piece of ‘home’. That familiarity, and the fact that it is often getting you and your passengers out of some pretty unpleasant places mean the crews feel an affection towards them.

What was your most notable mission or exercise and why?

This is a tough one as there are many that were notable, memorable or poignant for different reasons. The ‘Op Pabbay’ repatriation flights were extremely moving and each has stayed with me, as have the aeromedical evacuation flights bringing broken young men back from war. Some missions were notable because of enemy action, being attacked by rockets on the ground or, one occasion, having my aircraft hit by enemy fire. Some were notable because of the high-profile nature of the cargo, such as flying Marine One to Rome when the Pope died, or a passenger such as flying Prince Harry home from Afghanistan. I was fortunate enough to fly on the C-17s ‘million-hour mission’ as part of a mixed crew representing all the C-17 users at that time: the USAF, Air National Guard with me representing the RAF; that was pretty notable, operating with a fantastic bunch of people.

What are your feelings about refuelling?

Not something the RAF does with its C-17s, but widely employed by the USAF. I have to confess that despite being an instructor I never really enjoyed boom air refuelling. Probe & drogue is jousting – the sport of kings – but boom always felt like trying to balance on a basketball.

Tell me something I don’t know about the C-17

On final approach its huge blown lift flaps mean it flies ‘backside’ i.e. pitch controls speed and power glidepath

How does it handle when it is heavy?

Very well. The automatic flight control system means there aren’t any trim issues and the aircraft is pretty agile for its size.

What should I have asked you?

What comes after the C17. I don’t know the answer but it’s something we need to start thinking about.

The first indigenous jet aircraft of each jet nation

Was your country late to the jet-set? Find out in this pleasingly swift guide to the pioneering aircraft of every nation we can think of that has created its own jet. If we’ve missed out your nation, let us know the details in the comments section below.

Romania Coandă-1910

A controversial one here, some label this the first jet to fly – others believe it was neither strictly a jet aircraft nor did it fly. The inventor Henri Marie Coandă unsuccessfully tried to make nazi jetskis in World War II using the same method of propulsion as the 1910 aircraft. The Coandă effect describes the attachment issues a body of moving air of leaving a surface, the Canadians later tried to harness this effect to build flying saucers.

Coanda 1910.png

Germany Heinkel He 178 – 27 August 1939

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1e/Ohain_USAF_He_178_page61.jpg

The Germans flew the first jet aircraft and then celebrated four days after by invading Poland.

Italy – Caproni Campini N.1 (featuring first afterburner) 27 August 1940

Caproni Campini N.1: World's Second Jet Aircraft - Comando Supremo

The N.1 was powered by a motorjet (also known as thermojet), is a rudimentary type of jet engine with the compressor driven by a piston-engine. The motorjet was originally a French idea, refined and patented by the British and first flown by the Italians. Their first pure jet was the Fiat G-80 of 1951. Damn if we allow this in we’ll have to include all the weird Soviets.

Great Britain – Gloster E.28/39 May 15, 1941

Gloster E.28/39 - Wikipedia

The British invented the jet engine but were second to put one in a flying aeroplane.

USABell P-59 Airacomet 1942

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c1/Bell_P-59_Airacomet_060913-F-1234P-013.jpg

The USA made 66 of the disappointing P-59. One was given to the RAF. It used a General Electric J31, a souped-up variant of a British engine.

USSR – Mikoyan-Gurevich I-250 – 3 March 1945

IL2 1946 Mikoyan-Gurevich I-250 - YouTube

Not quite a jet, think Caproni N1 but with a propeller.

Japan – Nakajima Kikka 7 August 1945

The story of the Nakajima Kikka, the Japanese Messerschmitt Me 262 Schwalbe  that never was - The Aviation Geek Club

Despite a superficial resemblance to the 262, the Kikka was a Japanese product though the designers had access to Me-262 imagery and a cutaway of its BMW engine.

After this none of the aircraft are strictly indigenous and each involve a degree of foreign technology

USSR Mikoyan-Gurevich I-300 24 April 1946 Yak-15 24 April 1946

File:WofRussia03 MiG I-300.jpg - The Internet Movie Plane Database
MiG: Learning By Trial and Error

The Yak was ready earlier but lost a coin toss to the MiG. The MiG was the first true Soviet jet to fly, using a reverse-engineered BMW engine. The Yak was a converted Yak-3 fitted with a reverse-engineered German Junkers Jumo 004.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/38/Yakolev_Yak-15_37_yellow_%288454539446%29.jpg

France Sud-Ouest SO.6000 Triton – 11 November 1946

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/11/Triton_Musee_du_BOurget_P1020096.JPG

Sweden – SAAB 21R 10 March 1947

Sticking a jet in a piston-engined aircraft worked for the Soviets so why not? Not as elegant as a Vampire but pretty lovely.

We do dope merch of the piston version here

Argentina – FMA I.Ae. 27 Pulqui I 9 August 1947

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ec/FMA_IAe27.jpg

With a design team led by a Frenchman, Émile Dewoitine and a British engine the Pulqui was still the first Latin American jet aircraft.

Canada – Avro Canada C102 Jetliner 10 August 1949

Does anyone remember Canada's Avro C102 Jetliner? - TravelUpdate

Only the Canadians would think to enter the jet age with an airliner.

Austrailia – GAF Pika 1950

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/40/GAF_Pika_C-2_A93-2_Pt_Cook_22.03.88_edited-3.jpg

A crewed prototype for an uncrewed target drone, the delightfully cute Pika.

Our top cute aeroplances are here

Netherlands – Fokker S.14 Machtrainer 19 May 1951

FOKKER S-14 MACHTRAINER - BROCHURE AND PILOT'S NOTES | eBay

Insert joke about Fokker sounding like ‘fucker’ here.

Switzerland – EFW N-20.02 Arbalète 16 November 1951

https://i0.wp.com/www.aviationmuseum.eu/Blogvorm/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/FW-N-20-Arbalete-2.jpg?ssl=1

Wait… Switzerland flew a jet aircraft before China? Bonkers.

Yugoslavia

Ikarus 451M –  25 October 1952

Followed by

Ikarus 452 – 24 July 1953

Ikarus 452-M - Yugoslav prototype fighter from 1950s: WeirdWings

Wait…Yugoslavia flew a jet before China?

Spain – Hispano HA-200 12 August 1955

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4b/HA-200_Saeta_%28recortada%29.jpg

With a bit of help from Willy Messerchmitt, Spain made this little beauty.

China Shenyang JJ-1 26 July 1958

Shenyang JJ.1.jpg

China is a tricky one to nail down. This was preceded by the J-2 and J-5, but they were both versions of MiGs.

Czechoslovakia Aero L-29 Delfín 5 April 1959

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8c/Aero_Vodochody_L-29_Delfin_Beetle_3rd_Pass_04_TICO_13March2010_%2814597429704%29.jpg

A real cutie this one.

PZL TS-11 Iskra 5 February 1960

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/df/PZL_TS-11_Iskra_aircraft.JPG

India HAL HF-24 Marut 17 June 1961

Flying & fighting in the HAL HF-24 Marut: Interview with IAF pilot  Vijainder K Thakur | Hush-Kit

Designed by Kurt Tank, creator of the superb Fw 190, the gorgeous Marut proved a disappointment and put India off creating its own jets for 50 years. We interviewed a Marut pilot here.

Egypt – Helwan HA-300 7 March 1964

The Helwan HA-300; Egypt's Messerschmitt - - Military Matters

The first African and Middle Eastern jet aircraft, the project had at earlier times been Spanish and Indian. The design was led by Willy Messerschmitt.

Taiwan – AIDC AT-3 Tzu Chung 16 September 1980

AIDC AT-3 Tzu Chung (ROCAF) - Passed for Consideration - War Thunder -  Official Forum

It’s the 80s now, so everything non-Soviet will have some US involvement. Northrop helped with this.

IsraelIAI Lavi 31 December 1986

Lavi

Isreal had already created licence produced and pirated jet aircraft but it’s probably fair to call the Lavi the first indigenous type though there was much US assistance.

Brazil – Embraer ERJ145 August 11, 1995

Embraer ERJ-145 - Aerospace Technology

Insert joke about mowing the side of the runway ‘Brazilian-style’

Russian Federation – Yakovlev Yak-130 25 April 1996

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f0/Yakovlev_Yak-_130_%28modify%29.jpg

A bit Italian, and studies may have predated the end of the USSR, but the ‘Mitten’ is probably the first new Russian (we’re more certain the French/Russian MiG AT design was older so more Soviet in origin).

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South Korea KAI T-50 20 August 2002

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/80/RoKAF_T-50_Golden_Eagle.jpg

Lots of help from Lockheed Martin but let’s say this is South Korean.

Ukraine – Antonov An-148 (2004)

Russian Authorities Ground Antonov An-148 Passenger Airliners - Aviation  News

Or if you prefer, the An-72 of 1977 (as other Soviet Antonovs were built in Russia too)

Why support The Hush-Kit Book of Warplanes Volume 2 before I have book 1? An explanation here

Supermarine Spitfire (Griffon-powered variants) - Wikipedia

I’m getting asked this a lot at the moment and it is a very fair question. Why should anyone support the second volume before receiving the first? I’ll give a quick answer. I should add that I’m not in charge of the schedule, that is with Unbound, the publisher. I’m very busy with both the site and the books so please don’t send your queries to me, send them directly to the publisher. Huge thanks for all your patience and support, this will be a very special book. Ok, so here’s the short answer:

Quickish answers

  1. Most important answer here: you of course don’t have to. You will however see some tweets and things promoting it. If you don’t wish to support volume 2 , but have supported Volume 1 then a big thanks. Sorry about the promo but I need to do this. I will always endeavour to make the promo entertaining and informative in its own right. We’re starting book 2 to get it out as fast as possible and to ensure the minimum time between volume 1 and 2.
  2. If it doesn’t hit funding targets it won’t happen. If it hits targets late it will be created very late. I’ve asked for assurances from Unbound of a far speedier turnaround for volume 2 which they’ve agreed to, but this is dependent on hitting 100% funding in a reasonable time.
  3. This model of book creation (crowd funded) means development of the book doesn’t start until funding reaches 100%, this is part of the reason it seems to take so long: the supporter is hearing about the book for up to four months before work has begun (often the opposite to the conventional model). The good news is the crowdfunding gives me full editorial control, nothing is diluted.

Again, enormous thanks. I’m as hungry as you to see this on the shelf. I’ll be sharing the latest spreads from the book soon so you can see how beautifully it is shaping up.

HUGE THANKS TO ALL OF YOU

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