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| #Post#: 12584-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: vonofterdingen Date: September 21, 2020, 3:32 pm | |
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| [img width=1024 | |
| height=529] | |
| https://i.postimg.cc/RFkF1prJ/Screen-Hunter-421.png[/img] | |
| I felt that it was time that we celebrate a Fleet Air Arm | |
| aircraft for our plane of the week, so I chose a relatively | |
| recent addition to the game, the Blackburn Skua. The Skua was | |
| widely used by the FAA in carrier operations, but does not seem | |
| to get as much press as its torpedo-carrying cousin, the Fairy | |
| Sowrdfish. To some extent I think it suffered from a design that | |
| tried to fulfill too many roles, and subsequently performed none | |
| of them very well. | |
| From Wikipedia | |
| The Blackburn B-24 Skua was a carrier-based low-wing, | |
| two-seater, single-radial engine aircraft operated by the | |
| British Fleet Air Arm which combined the functions of a dive | |
| bomber and fighter. It was designed in the mid-1930s and saw | |
| service in the early part of the Second World War. It took its | |
| name from the sea bird. | |
| Built to Air Ministry specification O.27/34, it was a | |
| low-wing monoplane of all-metal (duralumin) construction, with a | |
| retractable undercarriage and enclosed cockpit. It was the Fleet | |
| Air Arm's first service monoplane and was a radical departure | |
| for a force that was primarily equipped with open-cockpit | |
| biplanes such as the Fairey Swordfish. | |
| Performance for the fighter role was compromised by the | |
| aircraft's naval requirements for folding wings, large fuel | |
| capacity, heavy armament with large ammunition supply, rear | |
| gunner and lack of power of contemporary aircooled engines, | |
| resulting in a relatively low speed; in common with contemporary | |
| marks of Japanese and United States Navy Aircraft Carrier borne | |
| fighters along with the Royal Navy's Gloster Sea Gladiator. | |
| These naval fighters compared unfavourably with land based | |
| fighters such as the Messerschmitt Bf 109 which reached 290 mph | |
| (470 km/h) at sea level over the Skua's 225 mph (362 km/h) and | |
| the Gloster Sea Gladiator's 209 mph (336 km/h The armament of | |
| four fixed, forward-firing 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine | |
| guns in the wings and a single flexible, rearward-firing .303 in | |
| (7.7 mm) Vickers K machine gun was effective for the time. For | |
| the dive-bombing role, a 250 lb (110 kg) or 500 lb (230 kg) bomb | |
| was carried on a special swinging "trapeze" crutch under the | |
| fuselage (somewhat like that of the Junkers Ju 87), which | |
| enabled the bomb to clear the propeller arc on release. Four 40 | |
| lb (18 kg) bombs or eight 20 lb (9.1 kg) Cooper bombs could also | |
| be carried in racks under each wing. It had large Zap-type air | |
| brakes/flaps, which helped in dive bombing and landing on | |
| aircraft carriers at sea. | |
| Two prototypes were ordered from Blackburn in 1935 and the | |
| first, serial number K5178, first flew on 9 February 1937. Both | |
| prototypes were powered by the Bristol Mercury XII radial engine | |
| but following trials when a production order for 190 aircraft | |
| was placed, they were to have Bristol Perseus XII engines. | |
| The first unit to receive the Skua was 800 Naval Air Squadron | |
| in late 1938 at Worth Down. By November the squadron had | |
| embarked on HMS Ark Royal and was followed in 1939 by 801 and | |
| 803 squadrons. With the start of the Second World War, Skuas | |
| were soon in action and on 14 September three took off from Ark | |
| Royal to go to the aid of the SS Fanad Head which had been | |
| attacked by a U-boat. When they arrived, the Fanad Head was | |
| being shelled by U-30 and all three dived to attack the | |
| submarine, which quickly dived to safety. Two of the Skuas were | |
| damaged by the blasts and had to ditch. U-30 returned to Germany | |
| with the crews of the two ditched Skuas, who became the first | |
| naval airmen to be prisoners of war in the conflict. | |
| https://i.postimg.cc/pLCmNBj3/Screen-Hunter-420.png | |
| Skuas were originally credited with the first confirmed kill | |
| by British aircraft during the Second World War: a Dornier Do 18 | |
| flying boat was shot down over the North Sea on 26 September | |
| 1939 by three Skuas of 803 Naval Air Squadron, flying from Ark | |
| Royal. (An earlier victory by a Fairey Battle on 20 September | |
| 1939 over Aachen, was later confirmed by French sources). On 10 | |
| April 1940, 16 Skuas of 800 and 803 NAS led by Lieutenant | |
| Commander William Lucy, flying from RNAS Hatston in the Orkney | |
| Islands, sank the German cruiser K�nigsberg in Bergen harbour | |
| during Operation Weser�bung, the German invasion of Norway. | |
| K�nigsberg was the first major warship ever sunk in war by | |
| air attack and the first major warship ever to be sunk by dive | |
| bombing. Lucy later also became a fighter ace flying the Skua. | |
| These two mostly-Skua squadrons suffered heavy losses during an | |
| attempt to bomb the German battleship Scharnhorst at Trondheim | |
| on 13 June 1940; of 15 aircraft in the raid, eight were shot | |
| down and the crews killed or taken prisoner. Among the latter | |
| were both squadron commanders, Captain R. T. Partridge (RM) and | |
| Lieutenant Commander John Casson (RN). | |
| Although it fared reasonably well against Axis bombers over | |
| Norway and in the Mediterranean, the Skua suffered heavy losses | |
| when confronted with modern fighters, particularly the Bf 109, | |
| and they were withdrawn from front line service in 1941. Most | |
| Skuas were replaced by another two-seater, the Fairey Fulmar, | |
| which doubled the Skua's forward armament and had a speed | |
| advantage of 50 mph (80 km/h). A number of aircraft were | |
| converted to target tugs, following withdrawal from front line | |
| service. Others were completed as target tugs from the factory | |
| and used by the RAF and Fleet Air Arm in this role (Fleet | |
| Requirements). They were also used as advanced trainers for the | |
| Fleet Air Arm. The last Skua in service was struck off charge in | |
| March 1945. | |
| [img width=1024 | |
| height=474] | |
| https://i.postimg.cc/90yfLPV8/Screen-Hunter-423.png[/img] | |
| In game� | |
| Like most of you, I imagine, I prefer to fly fighter aircraft | |
| most of the time in IL-2. When not in a fighter though, I like a | |
| ground attack plane, and most of all I like to attack my targets | |
| with a plane capable of dive bombing. I have never had much | |
| success with level bombing but I can be deadly accurate with a | |
| dive bomber, especially when I have a fairly large target such | |
| as a ship. The Skua is a nice addition to early war naval | |
| missions over the channel, Norway, and as remote a location as | |
| Dakar. | |
| #Post#: 12587-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: Beowolff Date: September 21, 2020, 5:10 pm | |
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| Oh my... GREAT idea for a POTW article! And yeah, the old Skua | |
| is a much beloved plane to me. Very good reading. Thank you as | |
| usual! | |
| S! | |
| Beo | |
| #Post#: 12589-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: JG51_Ruski Date: September 21, 2020, 6:14 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Great article Von Thank You | |
| #Post#: 12594-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: cafs Date: September 22, 2020, 6:00 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Great PoW choice, the first FAA's all metal monoplane, a good | |
| design but, like many early to mid 30s aircraft, she got a weak | |
| engine for her weight and for the fighter part of her job. | |
| #Post#: 12598-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: larsresult Date: September 22, 2020, 11:19 am | |
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| I created a dogfight with Bf110Cs a while ago and the Skua | |
| fought well, if a bit slowly. The rear gunner is yet to be | |
| modelled though, and I do like to jump in the gunner cockpit | |
| every now and then. Usually the enemy sits directly behind your | |
| tail and you can't tell the Autopilot to bank to give you a | |
| clear shot, darn it. | |
| There is a good book on the Skua written by Peter C Smith, a | |
| naval aviation historian, and also a personal history of the | |
| Skua by an ex-pilot whose name I think is Partridge. Both worth | |
| a read. Also recommended is the Skua/Roc book by Matthew Willis, | |
| which I have not read yet. | |
| #Post#: 12601-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: DHumphrey Date: September 22, 2020, 12:57 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Another hit Von !!! A great article. I didn't know very much | |
| about this aircraft, I enjoyed the read very much. I learned | |
| something. :) | |
| #Post#: 12606-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: vonofterdingen Date: September 22, 2020, 3:39 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I had not heard of this plane myself until I played a campaign | |
| by Cracken called "Vultures of Dakar." That was long ago and we | |
| had no Skua in game so he used a Russian R-10 as a stand-in. It | |
| was a great campaign about an interesting event in history. | |
| #Post#: 12615-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Plane of the Week: Blackburn Skua | |
| By: ben_wh Date: September 22, 2020, 6:17 pm | |
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| von, | |
| Another great choice. As you stated already, despite | |
| performance limitation the Skua scored a number of 'firsts' for | |
| the Fleet Air Arm, and gave a preview of the threat of aircraft | |
| - even with modest performance - could pose to major warships. | |
| Captain Eric Brown piloted a Skua early in his career and danced | |
| with some Bf-109s in Norway, which was covered briefly here | |
| https://navalairhistory.com/2016/02/25/captain-eric-brown-a-personal-reflection… | |
| https://www.studio88.co.uk/acatalog/small_gic_m412_eric_brown_skua.jpg | |
| In game: even with the large number of mod planes available, the | |
| Skua was a relatively recent addition to the sim. Only in the | |
| last year or so could we recreate the attack of the | |
| [font=sans-serif]K�nigsberg in IL-2 1946 with proper Skua and | |
| K�nigberg models.[/font] | |
| Cheers, | |
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