(Fairey) Albacore @·AIRCRAFTUBE

  • Albacore of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
Albacore of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
    Albacore of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
  • Fairey Albacore second prototype
Fairey Albacore second prototype
    Fairey Albacore second prototype
  • Albacore of Sqn 820 of the Fleet Air Arm on HMS Victorious
Albacore of Sqn 820 of the Fleet Air Arm on HMS Victorious
    Albacore of Sqn 820 of the Fleet Air Arm on HMS Victorious
  • Fairey Albacore
Fairey Albacore
    Fairey Albacore
  • After the<br>Tirpitz<br>strike<br>(1944)
After the<br>Tirpitz<br>strike<br>(1944)
    After the
    Tirpitz
    strike
    (1944)
  • 820 Sqn<br>HMS<br>Formidable
820 Sqn<br>HMS<br>Formidable
    820 Sqn
    HMS
    Formidable
  • Albacores of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
Albacores of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
    Albacores of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
  • Fairey Albacore
Fairey Albacore
    Fairey Albacore
  • Two Albacores of 820 Squadron
Two Albacores of 820 Squadron
    Two Albacores of 820 Squadron
  • Fairey Albacores<br>approaching<br>HMS Victorious
Fairey Albacores<br>approaching<br>HMS Victorious
    Fairey Albacores
    approaching
    HMS Victorious
  • Albacore Mk.I of No 119 Sqn RAF at Maldeghem, in Belgium
Albacore Mk.I of No 119 Sqn RAF at Maldeghem, in Belgium
    Albacore Mk.I of No 119 Sqn RAF at Maldeghem, in Belgium
  • Albacores of 820 Squadron
Albacores of 820 Squadron
    Albacores of 820 Squadron
  • Fairey Albacore
Fairey Albacore
    Fairey Albacore
  • Albacores of 820 Sqn
Albacores of 820 Sqn
    Albacores of 820 Sqn
  • HMS<br>Victorious<br>hangar
HMS<br>Victorious<br>hangar
    HMS
    Victorious
    hangar
  • Albacores of 820 Squadron
Albacores of 820 Squadron
    Albacores of 820 Squadron
  • Albacores of 820 Sqn (HMS Formidable)
Albacores of 820 Sqn (HMS Formidable)
    Albacores of 820 Sqn (HMS Formidable)
  • Fleet Air Arm Museum at RNAS Yeovilton, Somerset
Fleet Air Arm Museum at RNAS Yeovilton, Somerset
    Fleet Air Arm Museum at RNAS Yeovilton, Somerset
  • Landing on HMS Victorious
Landing on HMS Victorious
    Landing on HMS Victorious
  • British Airmen<br>training at<br>Carlstrom Field,<br>Florida, in 1941
British Airmen<br>training at<br>Carlstrom Field,<br>Florida, in 1941
    British Airmen
    training at
    Carlstrom Field,
    Florida, in 1941
  • Fairey Albacore
Fairey Albacore
    Fairey Albacore
  • Albacores of 820 Squadron
Albacores of 820 Squadron
    Albacores of 820 Squadron
  • Albacores on HMS Victorious with torpedoes to attack the Tirpitz, in 1944
Albacores on HMS Victorious with torpedoes to attack the Tirpitz, in 1944
    Albacores on HMS Victorious with torpedoes to attack the Tirpitz, in 1944
  • Fleet Air Arm Museum
Fleet Air Arm Museum
    Fleet Air Arm Museum
  • Albacore of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
Albacore of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
    Albacore of 820 Sqn on HMS Formidable
  • Albacore Mk.I of 820 Naval Air Sqn<br>during the North African landings, in November 1942
Albacore Mk.I of 820 Naval Air Sqn<br>during the North African landings, in November 1942
    Albacore Mk.I of 820 Naval Air Sqn
    during the North African landings, in November 1942
  • Fairey Albacore (1940) Fairey Albacore (1940)
    Fairey Albacore (1940)

Fairey Albacore

The Fairey Albacore was a British single-engine carrier-borne biplane torpedo bomber built by Fairey Aviation between 1939 and 1943 for the Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm and used during the Second World War. It had a three-man crew and was designed for spotting and reconnaissance as well as level bombing, dive bombing and as a torpedo bomber. The Albacore, popularly known as the "Applecore", was conceived as a replacement for the aging Fairey Swordfish, which had entered service in 1936. However, the Albacore served with the Swordfish and was retired before it, being replaced by the Fairey Barracuda and Grumman TBF Avenger monoplane torpedo bombers.

Design and development

The Albacore prototypes were built to meet Specification S.41/36 for a three-seat TSR (torpedo/spotter/reconnaissance) for the FAA to replace the Swordfish. The Albacore was designated TBR (torpedo/bomber/reconnaissance) and like the Swordfish, was fully capable of dive bombing: "The Albacore was designed for diving at speeds up to 215 knots (400 km/h) lAS with flaps either up or down, and it was certainly steady in a dive, recovery being easy and smooth..." and the maximum under wing bomb load was 4 x 500 lb bombs. The Albacore had a more powerful engine than the Swordfish and was more aerodynamically refined. It offered the crew an enclosed and heated cockpit. The Albacore also had features such as an automatic liferaft ejection system which triggered in the event of the aircraft ditching.

The first of two prototypes flew on 12 December 1938 and production of the first batch of 98 aircraft began in 1939. Early Albacores were fitted with the Bristol Taurus II engine and those built later received the more powerful Taurus XII. Boscombe Down testing of the Albacore and Taurus II engine, in February 1940, showed a maximum speed of 160 mph (258 km/h), at an altitude of 4,800 ft (1,463 m), at 11,570 lb (5,259 kg), which was achieved with four under-wing depth charges, while maximum speed without the depth charges was 172 mph (277 km/h). An Albacore fitted with the Taurus II engine and carrying a torpedo weighed 11,100 lb (5,045 kg).

A total of 800 Albacores were built, including two prototypes which were all built at Fairey's Hayes Factory and test flown at what is now London Heathrow Airport.

Operational history

No. 826 Naval Air Squadron was specially formed to operate the first Albacores in March 1940, being used for attacks against harbours and shipping in the English Channel, operating from shore bases, and for convoy escort for the rest of 1940. HMS Formidable‍ '​s 826 and 829 Squadrons were the first to operate the Albacore from a carrier, with operations starting in November 1940. Initially, the Albacore suffered from reliability problems with the Taurus engine, although these were later solved, so that the failure rate was no worse than the Pegasus that equipped the Swordfish. However, it remained less popular than the Swordfish, as it was less agile, with the controls being too heavy for a pilot to take effective evasive action after dropping a torpedo.

Eventually, there were 15 first-line FAA squadrons equipped with the Albacore which operated widely in the Mediterranean. Albacores played a prominent role in the ill-fated raid on Kirkenes and Petsamo in July 1941. More successfully they participated in the Battle of Cape Matapan and the fighting at El Alamein as well as supporting the landings at Sicily and Salerno. During the period September 1941 to end of June 1943, No. 828 Squadron, based at RAF Hal Far, Malta, operated a squadron of Albacores under some of the most severe blitz conditions imaginable during the siege of Malta, mainly against Italian shipping and shore targets in Sicily.

On 9 March 1942, 12 Albacores from HMS Victorious were launched to attack the German Bismarck-class battleship Tirpitz at sea near Narvik. Based on information from one of six radar equipped aircraft already launched, Albacores from 817 and 832 Squadrons launched torpedoes and some also attacked with their machine guns. A courageous attack came within 30 ft of success at the bow, but ultimately the FAA's only torpedo attack on the Tirpitz at sea failed, with the loss of two aircraft and damage to many others.

In 1943, the Albacore was progressively replaced in Fleet Air Arm service by the Barracuda. The last FAA Albacore squadron, No. 841 Squadron, (which had been used for shore based attacks against shipping in the Channel for the whole of its career with the Albacore), disbanded in late 1943.

The Royal Air Force deployed some Albacores; No. 36 Squadron based at Singapore acquired five to supplement its Vickers Vildebeests at RAF Seletar in December 1941. The remnants of the squadron was captured by the Japanese in March 1942. In 1943, No. 415 Squadron RCAF was equipped with Albacores (presumably ex-FAA) before the Flight operating them was transferred and reformed as 119 Squadron at RAF Manston in July 1944. The squadron deployed later to Belgian airfields. Their Albacores were disposed of in early 1945 in favour of ASV-radar equipped Swordfish Mk.IIIs that the squadron kept until the end of the war in May. The Aden Communication Flight used 17 Albacores between the middle of 1944 and August 1946. Some of these were delivered by sea on the SS Empire Arun in December 1945 (all from Royal Navy stock).

The Royal Canadian Air Force took over the Albacores and used them during the Normandy invasion, for a similar role until July 1944. The Albacore was the last biplane to be used in combat by the RCAF.

Operators

  • Canada
    • Royal Canadian Air Force
  • United Kingdom
    • Royal Air Force
    • Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm

Surviving aircraft

Only one Albacore is known to survive, on display at the Fleet Air Arm Museum. It was built using parts of Albacores N4389 and N4172 recovered from crash sites.

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This text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Source : Article Fairey Albacore of Wikipedia ( authors )

Specifications (Albacore)

  • Crew : Three.
  • Length : 39 ft 10 in (12.14 m).
  • Height : 14 ft 2 in (4.62 m).
  • Wingspan : 50 ft (15.24 m).
  • Wing area : 623 ft² (57.9 m²).
  • Empty weight : 7,250 lb (3,295 kg).
  • Loaded weight : 10,460 lb (4,755 kg).
  • Max. takeoff weight : 12,600 lb (5,727 kg).
  • Maximum speed : 140 kts (161 mph, 259 km/h).
  • Cruise speed : 122 kts (140 mph, 225 km/h) (maximum cruise).
  • Stall speed : 47 kts (54 mph, 87 km/h) (flaps down).
  • Range : 817 nmi (930 mi, 1,497 kts) (with torpedo).
  • Service ceiling : 20,700 ft (6,310 m).
  • Climb to 6000 ft : 8 min.
  • Powerplant : One Bristol Taurus II (Taurus XII) 14-cylinder radial engine.
  • Power : 1,065 hp (1,130 hp) (794 kW (840 kw)).
  • Armament :
  • One fixed, forward-firing .303 in (7.7 mm) machine gun in starboard wing.
  • One or two .303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers K machine guns in rear cockpit.
  • Bombs : One 1,670 lb (760 kg) torpedo or 2,000 lb (907 kg) bombs.

— — — = = — — —

This text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Source : Article Fairey Albacore of Wikipedia ( authors )
Fairey Albacore : Your comments on this subject
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