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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Design and development  





2 Operational history  





3 Variants  





4 Operators  





5 Specifications (F.B.19)  





6 Citations and references  














Vickers F.B.19






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Vickers F.B.19
Role Single-seat scout
Manufacturer Vickers
Designer G. H. Challenger
First flight August 1916
Introduction 1916
Primary users Royal Flying Corps
Russia/USSR
Number built 62

The Vickers F.B.19 was a British single-seat fighting scoutofthe First World War, developed from the Barnwell Bullet prototype, and sometimes known as the Vickers Bullet. It served with the Royal Flying Corps and the Imperial Russian Air Service, which subsequently led to the Red Air Force adopting it during the Russian Civil War.

Design and development[edit]

G. H. Challenger designed the F.B.19,[1] which first flew in August 1916. It was a single-engine, single-bay, equal-span biplane, slightly smaller than either the Sopwith CamelorNieuport 17, with a proportionally large engine fairing and tall fuselage, which gave it a relatively stubby appearance. It was armed with one synchronised 7.7mm Vickers machine gun, mounted unusually on the left-hand side of the fuselage, to facilitate the installation of the Vickers-Challenger synchroniser gear.[2]

The 100-hp Gnome Monosoupape engine gave a relatively slow speed, and the relatively low cockpit position, placed behind a wide rotary engine and between unstaggered wings, severely limited visibility for the pilot. The clearest view was sometimes said to be upwards, through a transparent section in the upper wing. Modifications were introduced, including a more powerful 110-hp (82-kW) Le Rhône or Clerget engine and staggered mainplanes, culminating in the Mk II design.[3]

The plane's relative success on the Eastern Front appears to have been due in part to it receiving a more powerful engine in Russia.

Operational history[edit]

Around sixty-five F.B.19s were built. Six early production examples were sent to France in late 1916 for operational evaluation, where the RAF found them unsuitable for the fighting conditions then evolving. Twelve Mk IIs went to the Middle East, five to Palestine and seven to Macedonia; no squadron was fully equipped with the type. They were not popular - pilots found visibility poor.[2] A few Mk IIs served as trainers and for air defense over London, but the type had effectively been retired before the end of 1917.

The F.B.19 found more favour in Russia, where it was known as the Vikkers Bullit. A single example was initially sent for evaluation in 1916. Leading pilots, including the ace Yevgraph Kruten, regarded it favourably. Russian sources indicate that it was fitted with a more powerful 130-hp Clerget engine that provided a maximum speed of around 200 km/h, making the Bullit faster than both the SPAD S.VII and the Sikorsky S-20. The Russians procured around twenty or thirty planes, and deployed at least four to front-line units, including one in which the ace Grigoriy Suk claimed two of his victories. A number of unarmed planes served as trainers.

After the October Revolution, a number of Bullits found their way into Bolshevik hands. A force of six F.B.19s are said to have been employed in 1918 against the anti-Bolshevik People's Army, and the type remained in service until 1924.

All examples of the F.B.19s active in Russian service appear to have been Mk. I planes with unstaggered wings. A number of additional examples are said to have remained in crates on the dockside at Archangelsk until the British Royal Navy destroyed them during the evacuation of the allied expeditionary force in 1919.

Variants[edit]

Operators[edit]

 Russian Empire

 Soviet Russia

 Ukrainian People's Republic

 United Kingdom

Specifications (F.B.19)[edit]

Data from British Aeroplanes 1914–18[4]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

Citations and references[edit]

Citations

  1. ^ Bruce 1969, p. 112.
  • ^ a b Hare, Paul (2014). Britain's Forgotten Fighters of the First World War. Stroud UK: Fonthill. p. 198. ISBN 978-1781551974.
  • ^ Andrews, C.F and Morgan, E.B., 1988. Vickers Aircraft since 1908. London: Putnam. ISBN 0-85177-815-1.
  • ^ Bruce 1957, p. 688.
  • References


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