Fairey Battle  WS-83

Fairey Battle

Product code WS-83

Fairey

€ 15.55

:
Add to cart

Series Warpaint Series No 83

Publisher/Brand Hall Park

Author William Harrison

Format a4

No. Pages 60

Version Soft cover

Language English

Category Aviationbooks

Subcategory WW2 UK » WW2 UK Aircraft

Availability only 1 remaining

Add this product to my wishlist

This product was added to our database on Friday 5 August 2011.

Your reliable Aviation Book Source since 1989


Also in this series:
ProductPublisher/BrandSeries/scalePrice €
Aero L29 Delfin ws-134Aero L29 DelfinHall ParkWarpaint Series No 134€ 22.89
Avro Shackleton WS-6Avro ShackletonHall ParkWarpaint Series No 6€ 12.80
Cessna T37A/B/C 'Tweet' and the A37A/B 'Dragonfly' ws-127Cessna T37A/B/C 'Tweet' and the A37A/B 'Dragonfly'Hall ParkWarpaint Series No 127€ 22.89
De Havilland DH103 Hornet De Havilland DH103 HornetHall ParkWarpaint Series No 19€ 13.72
De Havilland DH112 Sea Vixen SEA VIXENDe Havilland DH112 Sea VixenHall ParkWarpaint Series No 11€ 14.63
English Electric Lightning LIGHTNINGEnglish Electric LightningHall ParkWarpaint Series No 14€ 20.14
McDonnell Douglas F4K and F4M Phantom ws-31McDonnell Douglas F4K and F4M PhantomHall ParkWarpaint Series No 31€ 17.39
Mirage F1 WS-142Mirage F1Hall ParkWarpaint Series No 142€ 20.14
Short Sunderland WS-25Short SunderlandHall ParkWarpaint Series No 25€ 16.47
Westland Lysander WS-48Westland LysanderHall ParkWarpaint Series No 48€ 15.55

Product description

The Fairey Battle was not a failure!

British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, said in the House of Commons on 20 August, 1940 - ....'on no part of the RAF does the weight of war fall more heavily than on the daylight bomber'.... . A reflection of what happened in the Low Countries during May/June 1940. The Battle was not mis-used during this debacle. The Air Staff, before the war, had planned against such an attack by Germany through the Low Countries, the Blitzkrieg was just outside their experience and the light bombers were thrust in at low level against a rapidly moving and heavily armed enemy.

It is also unfair for aviation journalists to compare the performance of a Battle against the new emerging single-engined fighters. It was a large but graceful design, and by contemporary standards was advanced for its day. Originally conceived within the limits of the Geneva Disarmament Conference the Battle would, by the time the second world war opened, have over 1000 aircraft in RAF service providing vital aircrew experience of a modern monoplane with a retractable undercarriage, variable-pitch propellers and hydraulic systems.

After withdrawal from front line squadrons the Battle airframe was adapted to provide experimental test bed work and give trainee aircrews extensive flying training in the UK, Australia, Canada, South Africa and Southern Rhodesia. More than half of all Battles built were later used in the training role - many continuing in use until 1945 or after!