Nigel G Wilcox
Powered by Sispro1-S
Paragon Of Space Publication
© Copyright Reserved - United Kingdom
Ideal Screen Composition 1024 x 768
Small Aircraft of  - WWII
Maximum speed: 223.70 km/h (139 mph), Maiden flight: 17 Apr 1934, Length: 35.66 ft, Wingspan: 45.51 ft, Passengers: 3, Introduced: 1936,
Fairey Swordfish
The Fairey Swordfish was a biplane torpedo bomber designed by the Fairey Aviation Company. Originating in the early 1930s, the Swordfish, nicknamed "Stringbag", was operated by the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy, in addition to having been equipped by the Royal Air Force alongside multiple overseas operators, including the Royal Canadian Air Force and the Royal Netherlands Navy. It was initially operated primarily as a fleet attack aircraft; during its later years, the Swordfish became increasingly used as an anti-submarine and training platform. The type was in frontline service throughout the Second World War, but it was already considered obsolescent at the outbreak of the conflict in 1939.
Role: Torpedo-bomber
Manufacturer: Fairey Aviation
First flight: 17 April 1934
Introduction: 1936
Retired: 21 May 1945
Primary users: Royal Navy
Royal Air Force: Royal Canadian Air Force
                         Royal Netherlands Navy
Produced: 1936-1944
Number built: 2,391 (692 by Fairey and 1,699 by Blackburn)
Operators
Australia - Royal Australian Air Force - Six aircraft were used by No. 25 Squadron RAAF in 1942.
Canada - Royal Canadian Air Force, Royal Canadian Navy
Italy - Regia Aeronautica - Swordfish 4A was first to fall into Italian hands in the aftermath of the Battle of Taranto, in poor condition.
Swordfish K8422 of HMS Eagle was shot down and captured during a raid on Maritza airfield, Rhodes on 4 September 1940. Evaluated at Guidonia Test Centre and kept serviceable until mid-1941 with spare parts coming from captured Swordfish K8422.
Swordfish P4127 (coded 4F) of 820 squadron on HMS Ark Royal, involved in bombing raid on Cagliari, Sardinia. Hit by ground fire, it force-landed on the enemy airfield at Elmas on 2 August 1940. The crew were taken prisoner and the aircraft captured intact. Caproni repaired it locally and fitted it with an Alfa Romeo 125 engine. It was taken to the Stabilimento Costruzioni Aeronautiche in Guidonia on 27 February 1941. It was still listed as being there on 6 April 1942.
Netherlands - Royal Netherlands Navy, Dutch Naval Aviation Service in exile in the United Kingdom, No. 860 (Dutch) Squadron, Fleet Air Arm
Spain - Swordfish W5843 of 813 squadron at North Front, Gibraltar lost its bearings during an anti-submarine sweep and force landed between Ras el Farea and Pota Pescadores, in Spanish Morocco, on 30 April 1942. The crew were all interned. The final fate of the aircraft is not known.
Swordfish P4073 of 700 squadron of HMS Malaya ran out of fuel whilst shadowing the German battleship Scharnhorst on 8 March 1941. Aircraft and crew were interned in Spain. The Swordfish was put on the strength of the Spanish air force as HR6-1 on 6 December 1943 with 54 Escuadrilla, Puerto de le Cruz, Tenerife, Canary Islands. Retired March 1945 at Las Palmas, Gran Canaria.
United Kingdom - Royal Air Force - No. 8 Squadron RAF, No. 119 Squadron RAF, No. 202 Squadron RAF, No. 209 Squadron RAF, No. 273 Squadron RAF, No. 613 Squadron RAF, No. 3 Anti-Aircraft Co-operation Unit (No. 3 AACU), Malta and Gibraltar, No. 4 Anti-Aircraft Co-operation Unit (No. 4 AACU), Singapore9 (Pilot) Advanced Flying Unit.
Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm (prior to May 1939 part of RAF)
700 Squadron, 705 Squadron (float-equipped aircraft from the battlecruisers Repulse and Renown), 771 Squadron, 810 Squadron, 811 Squadron, 812 Squadron, 814 Squadron, 815 Squadron, 816 Squadron, 817 Squadron, transferred to South Africa in 1945, 818 Squadron
819 Squadron, 820 Squadron, 821 Squadron, 822 Squadron, 823 Squadron, 824 Squadron, 825 Squadron, 835 Squadron, 836 Squadron, 838 Squadron
General characteristics
Crew: Three (pilot, observer, and radio operator/rear gunner; observers position frequently replaced with auxiliary fuel tank)
Length: 35 ft 8 in (10.87 m)
Wingspan: 45 ft 6 in (13.87 m)
Height: 12 ft 4 in (3.76 m)
Wing area: 607 ft² (56.4 m²)
Empty weight: 4,195 lb (1,900 kg)
Loaded weight: 7,580 lb  (3,450 kg)
Powerplant: 1 × Bristol Pegasus IIIM.3 radial engine, 690 hp (510 kW)

Performance

Maximum speed: 143 mph with torpedo at 7,580 lb (230 km/h, 124 knots) at 5,000 ft (1,450 m)
Range: 522 mi (840 km, 455 nmi) normal fuel, carrying torpedo
Endurance: 5.5 hr
Service ceiling: 16,500 ft at 7,580 lb (5,030 m)
Rate of climb: 870 ft/min (4.42 m/s) at sea level at 7,580 lb. (690 ft/min (3.5 m/s) at 5000 ft (1,524 m) at 7,580 lb)

Armament

Guns:
1 × fixed, forward-firing .303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers machine gun in upper right fuselage, breech in cockpit, firing over engine cowling
1 × .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis or Vickers K machine gun in rear cockpit
Rockets: 8 × "60 lb" RP-3 rocket projectiles (Mk.II and later)
Bombs: 1 × 1,670 lb (760 kg) torpedo or 1,500 lb (700 kg) mine under fuselage or 1,500 lb total of bombs under fuselage and wings.
The Swordfish was one of the most successful aircraft in the history of naval air warfare. It sits at the heart of the nation’s naval aviation heritage and its importance to the Royal Navy and the nation is profound. Between 1939 and 1945, Swordfish saw active service worldwide, pursuing the enemy afloat and ashore in every theatre of the war, between the Atlantic and Indian Ocean, the Equator and the Arctic Circle. The success of the Swordfish came from its versatility, though it is best known for the major role it played in defeating the U-boat threat in the Battle of the Atlantic. Swordfish aircraft operated from escort carriers, patrolling in the mid-Atlantic gap, helping keep U-boats submerged and providing vital air cover for the convoys.

The Fairey Swordfish evolved from the prototype Fairey TSR.II (Torpedo Spotter Reconnaissance), designed by Marcel Lobelle and HE Chaplin of the Fairey Aviation Company Ltd. It first flew in 1934, entering service with No.825 Squadron in 1936. A total of 2391 aircraft were built, the first 692 by Fairey Aviation and the remainder under licence by Blackburn Aircraft Company at their works at Sherburn-in-Elmet and Brough, Yorkshire. In service the Blackburn-built aircraft became known as “Blackfish”. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of this very distinguished aircraft was its longevity. Although by all normal standards it was already obsolete at the outbreak of World War II, it confounded everyone by remaining in operational service throughout the whole of the war, gaining the distinction of being the last British bi-plane to see active service. Indeed, it outlasted its intended replacement, the Albacore, which disappeared from front-line service in 1943.

The secret of the Swordfish lay in its superb handling qualities which made it uniquely suitable for deck flying operations and the problems of torpedo or dive bombing attacks. Pilots marvelled that they could pull a Swordfish off the deck and put it in a climbing turn at 55 knots. The aircraft manoeuvred in a vertical plane as easily as it would at straight and level, and even when diving from 1,000ft, the ASI would not rise much beyond 200 knots. The controls were not frozen rigid by the force of the slipstream, and it was possible to hold the dive within 200ft of the water. Even its lack of speed could be turned to advantage. A steep turn as sea level towards an attacker just before he came within range and the difference in speed and tight turning circle made it impossible for a fighter to bring its guns to bear for more than a few seconds. The approach to a carrier deck could be made at extremely slow speed, yet control response remained firm. It is not hard to imagine what that means to a pilot attempting to land on a dark night when the carrier’s deck was pitching the height of a house. Swordfish (or “Stringbags” as they were often nicknamed) in addition to sinking more than 300,000 tons of German/Italian Axis shipping, were responsible for the destruction of over 20 U-Boats. Operating from adapted merchant vessels, the Merchant Aircraft Carriers (MAC Ships), Swordfish aircraft could be carried with the convoys, providing both a deterrent to submarines and a boost to the merchant sailors’ morale.

Amongst their many battle honours, those which stand out above the rest are the Battle of the Atlantic, the attack on the Italian Fleet at Taranto in November 1940; the operation to seek, pursue and destroy the German Battleship Bismarck in May 1941; and the ill-fated operation against the German Battlecruisers Scharnhorst, Gneisenau and Heavy Cruiser Prince Eugen as they made their famous ‘Channel Dash’ in February 1942. But above all, the Swordfish carved its name in the history books through its critical role of protecting convoys.

From August 1942 Swordfish sailed on the Russian convoys. In one convoy, embarked in the escort carriers Vindex and Striker, Swordfish flew 1,000 hours on anti-submarine patrol in ten days, and in September 1944 Vindex’s Swordfish sank four U-Boats in a single voyage. Such feats were accomplished despite frequently experiencing the most appalling weather conditions, often at night and with all the additional Arctic hazards of snow and ice on the ships’ decks.

Of the Atlantic convoys Winston Churchill remarked “..the Battle of the Atlantic was the only one I feared about losing..”, and the sheer magnitude of this battle can be appreciated by recognising that the Allies lost more than 4,600 ships, and that the Germans lost 785 submarines. It was the introduction of air power at sea which turned the tide in the Allies’ favour, and the contribution made to this battle by Swordfish aircraft was very substantial indeed.  (
Courtesy: Navy Wings)
SITEMAP
SCIENCE RESEARCH
ABOUT
Desk
MAIN INDEX
World War II
Planes
S'sonic
Stealth
Menu
Space
Transport
Menu
Topic
Menu
Study
Menu