Dette er blant de 481 flytypene Eric "Winkle" Brown fløy under- og etter krigen. Det har vært en stor ære å ha hatt ham på besøk på Flyoperatit Forum og ikke minst hilse på ham.(Red.)
Fairey Fulmar – the Flying Battleship Killer
The Fairey Fulmar aircraft looked right and felt right. Comfortable and
pleasant to fly, Captain Eric ‘Winkle’ Brown remembered about the type: (QUOTE)
“there was little with which the most fastidious of pilot’s could find fault in
its handling.”
The unsung hero rose to the turbulent skies of the early 1940s,
protecting Britain’s naval fleets; amid the volatile Mediterranean, the Fairey
Fulmar would down several Italian bombers in the North African Campaign, as
well as take active participation in chasing the infamous German battleship
Bismarck.
Born from the tug of war between the Royal Navy and the Royal Air
Force, the type emerged as a beloved and trusted aircraft. As Brown said:
(QUOTE) “In short, everybody liked it.”
Sjekk video her: http://tinyurl.com/mrh39b23
The Fairey Fulmar is a British carrier-borne reconnaissance
aircraft/fighter aircraft which was developed and manufactured by aircraft
company Fairey Aviation. It was named after the northern fulmar, a seabird
native to the British Isles. The Fulmar served with the Royal Navy’s Fleet Air
Arm (FAA) during the Second World War.
The design of the Fulmar was based on that of the earlier Fairey
P.4/34, a land-based light bomber developed during 1936 as a replacement for
the Fairey Battle light bomber. Fairey had redesigned the aircraft as a
navalised observation/fighter aircraft to satisfy the requirements of
Specification O.8/38, for which it was selected. Although its performance (like
that of its Battle antecedent) was unspectacular, the Fulmar was a reliable,
sturdy aircraft with long range and an effective armament of eight machine
guns; the type could also be put into production relatively quickly. On 4
January 1940, the first production aircraft made its first flight and delivery
commenced shortly thereafter, while production of an improved model, the Fulmar
Mk II, started during January 1941. Fairey produced a total of 600 Fulmars at
its Stockport factory between January 1940 and December 1942.
N1854, the first production Fulmar
at Farnborough at the SBAC show on 8 September 1962
During July 1940, No. 806 Squadron became the first FAA squadron to
receive the Fulmar. It participated in the pursuit of the German battleship
Bismarck, having acted as a spotter for the chasing fleet. The Fulmar was
heavily used in the North African Campaign, flying convoy protection patrols to
and from the island of Malta, and providing air cover for Fairey Swordfish
torpedo bombers during attacks such as the Battle of Cape Matapan. By autumn
1940, it had been recorded as having shot down ten Italian bombers and six
enemy fighters. The Fulmar was also deployed to the Far East, where it proved
largely incapable of matching the Japanese-built Mitsubishi A6M Zero. During
the later stages of the conflict, it was relegated from the fighter role by
single-seat aircraft such as the British-built Supermarine Seafire and the
American-built Grumman Martlet fighters. While continuing service as a trainer
and reconnaissance aircraft for a time, the Fulmar was withdrawn from front
line service in February 1945.
Top Photo: Fairey Fulmar Mk.
II carrier-borne fighter and recce with serial number N4062 in 1941(?) (Mk
I airframe completed as Mk II)
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