Type 133 | |
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Role | Single seat fighter |
National origin | United Kingdom |
Manufacturer | Bristol Aeroplane Company |
Designer | Frank Barnwell |
First flight | 8 June 1934 |
Number built | 1 |
The Bristol Type 133 was a prototype single-seat, single-engine monoplane fighter, armed with four guns, metal-skinned and with a retractable undercarriage, built by The Bristol Aeroplane Co. to an Air Ministry specification in the mid-1930s. The single example crashed before the trials commenced.
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Air Ministry Specification F.7/30 called for a four-gun fighter with better high-altitude performance and endurance than current fighters, outstanding climb rate, manoeuvrability and all-round vision combined with a low landing speed. Bristol's first contender, the private-venture biplane Type 123, had been a failure but when the Air Ministry let it be known that they would consider an engine other than the Rolls-Royce Goshawk, Bristol decided to try again with a very different design. Once more, this was a private venture.
Powered by a Bristol Mercury radial engine, the Type 133[1] was a low-wing cantilever monoplane and was the first RAF aircraft with retractable wheels. It was also the first Bristol aircraft to use stressed-skin construction for the wings, using recently invented Alclad sheets. The wings were of constant chord out to rounded tips and of cranked or inverted gull wing form, that is negative dihedral in the centre section and positive dihedral beyond. The fabric-covered ailerons extended over the whole of the outer wing and could be lowered symmetrically (drooped) in lieu of traditional flaps. The horizontal tail was of quite high aspect ratio and aluminium-covered, carrying horn-balanced, fabric-covered elevators. The rudder was similarly horn-balanced and fabric-covered.[1]
The rear fuselage was an aluminium monocoque and the forward fuselage was aluminium-skinned over a tubular steel structure. The pilot's open cockpit was situated over the wing at mid-chord. The Mercury engine was enclosed in a long-chord cowling[2]. One advantage of the cranked wing was that it reduced the length of the undercarriage, making retraction easier. The main wheels of the Type 133 retracted fully into bath-type fairings under the wings; this was done hydraulically, using a handpump. Two of the four machine guns were fitted in the wing just outboard of the undercarriage fairing, the other two being either side of the nose.[1]
The Type 133 first flew carrying the experimental marking R-10 on 8 June 1934 piloted by Cyril Uwins, who was impressed. Testing over the next eight months produced some modifications including the addition of a sliding canopy and a crash pylon, better brakes, an enlarged rudder and the replacement of the tailskid with a castoring tail wheel. Engine exhaust and cooling were also improved. The long-span ailerons were shortened and combined with centre section split flaps. The aircraft was almost ready to go the competitive tests at RAF Martlesham Heath when W.T. Campbell entered a spin with the undercarriage unintentionally down. An irrecoverable flat spin developed and Campbell had to abandon the aircraft. That was the end of Bristol's interest in the specification F.7/30 competition, which was won by the Gloster Gladiator.[1]
Data from Barnes 1970, p. 248
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
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