Blackburn Dart

T.2 Dart
Blackburn Dart T.2, N9541, 461 Flight, HMS Furious, c. 1930
Role Torpedo bomber
Manufacturer Blackburn Aircraft
First flight October 1921
Introduction 1922
Retired 1933
Primary user Royal Air Force (Fleet Air Arm)
Produced 1922–1928
Number built 118 (plus eight Swift export models)
Variants Blackburn Velos

The Blackburn Dart was a British carrier-based torpedo bomber biplane, manufactured by Blackburn Aircraft, which first flew in 1921. The Dart was the standard single-seat torpedo bomber used by the Fleet Air Arm from 1923 until 1933. A modified variant was also sold to Greece, where they served with the Greek Navy.

Design and development

In 1919, Blackburn commenced the design of a private venture, carrier-based torpedo-bomber to replace the Sopwith Cuckoos which were the existing torpedo bombers flying from the Royal Navy's carriers. The Blackburn aircraft, the product of their chief designer, Major Frank Arnold Bumpus, was named T.1 Swift.[1] Although mainly conventional, the large biplane featured two-bay, equal-span wings that were staggered and could fold for storage aboard ship. The wing centre section structure was steel with wooden outer section, all fabric covered.[2] Ailerons were mounted on all four wings. The fuselage was mounted on the lower wing, and also consisted of a metal structure with fabric covering. The tail unit had a braced tailplane and fin with balanced rudder. The divided landing gear had main wheels on oleo legs that allowed the fitting of a standard torpedo below the fuselage.[3][4]

The prototype Swift first flew in September 1920, almost crashing owing to a miscalculated centre of gravity.[5] This was resolved by sweeping back the wings, while a revised rudder was fitted to improve directional control. Following this, the Swift proved satisfactory, and an order was placed against Specification 3/20 for a further three aircraft for service trials. These were renamed the Blackburn Dart.[6]

The Dart was powered by either a Napier Lion IIB or V engine that was mounted with a thrustline angled upward; the fuselage also dropped sharply downwards from the cockpit.

The prototype Dart was first flown in October 1921, and despite its size handled well, exhibiting a remarkable 43 mph (69 km/h) stalling speed.

Blackburn company advertisement announcing the Blackburn Dart (note the erroneous 1920 date)

An export model of the Dart retained the name Swift and used the 450 hp (340 kW) Napier Lion engine. Seven were built as the Swift Mk II, two for the Japanese Navy, three for the Spanish Navy, and two for the United States Navy. The U.S. Navy aircraft were designated Swift F by Blackburn and Blackburn BST-1 by the U.S. Navy but following competitive trials in 1921, the U.S. Navy decided not to proceed with an order and purchased the Douglas DT-2 instead.

Operational history

The Dart T.2 entered service with the Fleet Air Arm in 1923 with No 460 Flight aboard HMS Eagle stationed in the Mediterranean and with 461 and 462 Flights on HMS Furious based in home waters. Shore training was conducted by "D3" Flight at Gosport. In 1928, the Blackburn Dart flew with Nos. 463 and 464 Flights embarked on HMS Courageous in the Mediterranean fleet. The following year, a single Dart was delivered to No. 36 Squadron RAF (Coastal Defence Torpedo Flight), initially for smoke-screen trials and later to form part of the complement of torpedo bombers in the first fully operational Royal Air Force torpedo bomber squadron.

Three Darts were converted into two-seat seaplanes to provide advanced training from 1925 to 1929, at Blackburn's RAF Reserve School on the River Humber. The conversions led to a new variant, the T.3 Velos, which was ordered as a torpedo bomber by the Greek Navy in 1925.

Blackburn Dart trainer

The Dart continued in service with the Blackburn Reserve School, alongside a number of T.3s converted to landplanes until their eventual replacement by Ripons and Baffins in 1933.

One notable event marked the career of the Dart; Air Commodore G.H. Boyce became the first pilot to carry out a night deck landing, when he landed his Dart aboard Furious on 6 May 1926. The flight deck was illuminated by flood lights for the attempt but the docile Dart easily handled the task.

Variants

T.1 Swift
Prototype torpedo bomber, one built.
Dart
Prototype; one built.
T.2 Dart
Initial production variant - 117 built (three converted to two-seat trainers).
Swift Mk II
Export version - seven built.
Swift F
US Navy designation of the Swift Mk II for evaluation (would have been designated the BST-1 if ordered).
T.3 Velos
Two-seat variant for the Greek Navy - 16 built (12 under licence in Greece).
T.3A Velos
Company demonstrator and trial aircraft - six built.

Operators

 Japan
 Spain
 United Kingdom
 United States

Specifications (Dart T.2)

Data from Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation.[7]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

See also

Related development


References

Notes

  1. Woodman 1996, pp. 2—3.
  2. Jackson 1968, pp. 139–140.
  3. Flight 7 May 1925, pp. 269–272.
  4. Woodman 1996, pp. 3–4.
  5. Mason 1994, p.130.
  6. Woodman 1996, p. 5.
  7. Taylor 1980, p. 306.

Bibliography

  • "The Blackburn Twin-Float Seaplane." Flight, 7 May 1925, pp. 269–272.
  • Jackson, A.J. Blackburn Aircraft since 1909. London: Putnam, 1968. ISBN 0-370-00053-6.
  • Mason, Francis K. The British Bomber since 1914. London: Putnam, 1994. ISBN 0-85177-861-5.
  • Sturtivant, Ray. "Fleet Air Arm Colours 1923-33." Scale Aircraft Modelling, Vol. 4, No. 6, March 1982.
  • Taylor, Michael, J.H., ed. Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation. Danbury, Connecticut: Grolier Educational Corporation, 1980. ISBN 0-7106-0710-5.
  • Woodman, Harry. "Blackburn Dart:The Fleet Air Arm's Seminal Torpedo Bomber". Air Enthusiast, No. 63, May–June 1996. pp. 2–11.

External links

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