Handley Page Hampden and Hereford

Купить бумажную книгу и читать

Купить бумажную книгу

По кнопке выше можно купить бумажные варианты этой книги и похожих книг на сайте интернет-магазина "Лабиринт".

Using the button above you can buy paper versions of this book and similar books on the website of the "Labyrinth" online store.

Реклама. ООО "ЛАБИРИНТ.РУ", ИНН: 7728644571, erid: LatgCADz8.

Handley Page Hampden and Hereford (Warpaint Series 57)

By Alan W. Hall

Publisher: Warpaint Books 2000 36 Pages

Язык: English

ISBN: B002G31XZK

PDF 17 MB

The Air Ministry in its wisdom has since before World War 2 invested in a bomber force which consisted of three different types of aircraft according to the advancement of aerodynamic technical­ities and subject to time and operational requirements.

The first of these were the trio of Hampden, Whitley and Wellington. As the war and tactics changed the next three were the Stirling, Halifax and Lancaster. Finally post-war saw the Valiant, Victor and Vulcan emerging as front line aircraft. But in each case one aircraft in each batch became the mainstay so that the Wellington, Lancaster and Vulcan were predominant each in its own way.

The start of this succession came well before World War 2 as preliminary studies which eventually became the Hampden were started in 1932. At that time bomber squadrons were equipped with open cockpit Harts, Heyfords and Sidestrands and in issu-

ing Specification B.9/32 the Air Ministry hoped for radical design developments which although still confined to a twin-engined bomber had both enclosed cockpits, a comparitively large bomb load, long range and retractable undercarriages. They got all of these in the shape of Handley Page's HP.52. Interestingly the Wellington, that outlived the Hampden operationally, also stemmed from the same B.9/32 specifica­tion.

But the Hampden's gestation period was beset by restrictions. In 1932 the League of Nations Disarmament Conference, meeting in Geneva, laid down various restrictions on the construction of bomber aircraft in regard to tare weight. The aim of the conference was to eliminate armaments altogether but this was doomed to failure and in a similar manner the Air Ministry decided to disre­gard the tare weight restrictions and in Specification B.9/32 asked for a heavy bomber with twin engines, crew of four and, initially, a range of 1,250 miles.

Дата создания страницы: