| Felixstowe F.5 | |
|---|---|
Felixstowe F.5s in formation, 1928.[1] | |
| General information | |
| Type | Military flying boat |
| National origin | United Kingdom |
| Manufacturer | Seaplane Experimental Station (1) Short Brothers (23) Dick, Kerr & Co. (2) Phoenix Dynamo Manufacturing Company (17) Gosport Aircraft Company (10) S.E. Saunders Ltd Boulton Paul Ltd (hulls only) Aircraft Manufacturing Co. Ltd Yokosuka Naval Air Technical Arsenal (10) Hiro Naval Arsenal (60) Aichi (40) |
| Designer | |
| Primary users | Royal Air Force |
| Number built | 163 (F.5); 227 (F5L) |
| History | |
| Introduction date | 1918 |
| First flight | November 1917 |
| Retired | 1930 |
| Developed from | Felixstowe F.2 |
| Variants | Felixstowe F5L Hiro H1H |
The Felixstowe F.5 was a British First World War flying boat designed by Lieutenant Commander John Cyril Porte, RN of the Seaplane Experimental Station in Felixstowe.
Design and development
[edit]Porte designed a better hull for the larger Curtiss H-12 flying boat, resulting in the Felixstowe F.2A, which was greatly superior to the original Curtiss boat. This entered production and service as a patrol aircraft. In February 1917, the first prototype of the Felixstowe F.3 was flown. This was larger and heavier than the F.2, giving it greater range and a heavier bomb load but inferior manoeuvrability. The Felixstowe F.5 was intended to combine the good qualities of the F.2 and F.3, with the prototype (N90) first flying in November 1917. The prototype showed superior qualities to its predecessors, but the production version was modified to make extensive use of components from the F.3 in order to ease production, giving a lower performance than either the F.2A or F.3.[citation needed]
Operational history
[edit]The F.5 did not enter service until after the end of the First World War but replaced the earlier Felixstowe boats (together with the Curtiss machines) to serve as the Royal Air Force's (RAF) standard flying boat until being replaced by the Supermarine Southampton in 1925.[citation needed]
Variants
[edit]Operators
[edit]- Royal Air Force – generally formed from RNAS flights.
- Gosport Aircraft and Engineering Company – one civil registered F.5.
Japan – (Post-war)
- Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service – licence built by the Hiro Naval Arsenal and Aichi
Specifications (F.5)
[edit]Data from Aircraft of the Royal Air Force[17]
General characteristics
- Crew: four
- Length: 49 ft 3 in (15 m)
- Wingspan: 103 ft 8 in (31.6 m)
- Height: 18 ft 9 in (5.7 m)
- Wing area: 1,409 sq ft (131 m2)
- Empty weight: 9,100 lb (4,128 kg)
- Gross weight: 12,682 lb (5,753 kg)
- Powerplant: 2 × Rolls-Royce Eagle VIII, V-12 , 345 hp (257 kW) each
Performance
- Maximum speed: 76 kn (88 mph, 142 km/h) at 2,000 ft (610 m)
- Endurance: Seven hours
- Service ceiling: 6,800 ft (2,073 m)
- Time to altitude: 30 min to 6,500 ft (1,980 m)
Armament
- Guns: 4 × Lewis guns (one in the nose, three amidships)
- Bombs: Up to 920 lb (417 kg) of bombs beneath wings
See also
[edit]Related development
- Felixstowe F.2
- Felixstowe F.3
- Felixstowe F.4 Fury[6]
- Felixstowe F5L
- Short N.3 Cromarty
- Hiro H1H
- Naval Aircraft Factory PN
- Short Singapore
- Hall PH
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
- Phoenix P.5 Cork
- Vickers Valentia
- English Electric Kingston
- Supermarine Swan
- Supermarine Southampton
- Saunders A.14
References
[edit]Notes
- ^ "Felixstowe F.5, N4568, in formation with another aircraft, 1928". Royal Air Force Museum. Hendon. 1928. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
- ^ Cowin, Hugh W. (1999). Aviation Pioneers. Osprey. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
- ^ Jackson 1974, p. 342
- ^ "The Gosport Flying-Boats". Flight. 31 July 1919. p. 1006.
- ^ a b c Bruce, 23 December 1955, p.931
- ^ a b c "Some Gosport Flying Boats for 1920". Flight. 25 December 1919. pp. 1657–1658. Archived from the original on 1 August 2015.
- ^ Spooner, Stanley, ed. (5 August 1920). "An Aeromarine Limousine Flying Boat". Flight. XII (606).
- ^ Johnston, E. R. (2009). "Part 1: The Early Era, 1912–1928". American Flying Boats and Amphibious Aircraft: An Illustrated History (illustrated ed.). McFarland. p. 11. ISBN 978-0786439744.
- ^ Kusrow; Larson, Daniel; Björn (2017). "A Website About Aeromarine Airways A Pioneer Airline in U.S. Aviation". The Aeromarine Website. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Hiro (Hirosho) Navy Type F.5 Flying-boat". Japanese Aircraft of WWII. Archived from the original on 31 December 2014. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
- ^ Barnes 1967, p. 197.
- ^ Mikesh, Robert C.; Abe, Shorzoe (1990). Japanese Aircraft 1910–1941. Maryland 21402: Naval Institute Press Annapolis. ISBN 1-55750-563-2.
}: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Januszewski, Tadeusz; Zalewski, Kryzysztof (2000). Japońskie samoloty marynarski 1912-1945. tiel2, Lampart. ISBN 83-86776-00-5.
}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Larsson; Zekria, Björn; David (9 April 2004). "Atlantic Coast Airways". airline timetable images. Airline Timetable Images. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Fortier, Rénald (3 April 2018). "The costliest sandwich shop on planet Earth, Part 1". Ingenium channel. Ingenium. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
- ^ Fortier, Rénald (9 April 2018). "The costliest sandwich shop on planet Earth, Part 2". Ingenium channel. Ingenium. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
- ^ Thetford 1979
- ^ Evans; Peattie, David C.; Mark R. (2012). Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy 1887–1941 (illustrated ed.). Seaforth Publishing. pp. 179–181. ISBN 978-1-84832-159-5.
}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Bibliography
- Barnes, C.H. Shorts Aircraft Since 1900. London: Putnam, 1967.
- J.M., Bruce (2 December 1955), "The Felixstowe Flying-Boats (Historic Military Aircraft No. 11 Part 1)", Flight, pp. 842–846, archived from the original on 7 November 2018
- J.M., Bruce (16 December 1955), "The Felixstowe Flying-Boats (Historic Military Aircraft No. 11 Part 2)", Flight, pp. 895–898, archived from the original on 3 August 2016
- J.M., Bruce (23 December 1955), "The Felixstowe Flying-Boats (Historic Military Aircraft No. 11 Part 3)", Flight, vol. 68, no. 2448, pp. 929–932, archived from the original on 5 March 2016
- Donald, David and Jon Lake, eds. Encyclopedia of World Military Aircraft. London: AIRtime Publishing, 1996. ISBN 1-880588-24-2.
- A.J.Jackson, British Civil Aircraft since 1919 Volume 2, Putnam & Company, London, 1974, ISBN 0-370-10010-7
- Taylor, Michael J.H., ed. Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation. London: Studio Editions, Ltd., 1989. ISBN 0-517-10316-8.
- Thetford, Owen. Aircraft of the Royal Air Force since 1918. London: Putnam & Co., 1979. ISBN 0-370-30186-2.
External links
[edit]- First visit of an English flying boat to Kristiana: Film of the arrival and overflight by an RAF Felixstowe F.5 flying boat (N4044) at Kristiania (later Oslo), Norway, July 1919.
- Royal Air Force: Film of Fleet Air Arm aircraft and aircraft operating from shore bases, including the F.5, 1925.
- Felixstowe Flying-Boats Archived 30 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine