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General Aircraft Fleet Shadower - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

General Aircraft Fleet Shadower

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

G.A.L.38 Fleet Shadower
Type Carrier-based fleet shadower
Manufacturer General Aircraft Ltd
Maiden flight 13 May 1940
Retired 1941
Number built 1

The General Aircraft G.A.L.38 Fleet Shadower was a British long-range patrol aircraft design of the immediate pre-Second World War period. Although the Fleet Shadower was a highly specialized aircraft that would have fit a tactical need, its concept produced an ungainly and ultimately unsuccessful type.

Contents

[edit] Design and development

The G.A.L.38 Fleet Shadower and the Airspeed A.S.39 Fleet Shadower were produced to meet Specification S.23/37, which came from the Royal Navy's "Operational Requirement OR.52" for an aircraft that could shadow enemy fleets at night. Three other companies were also involved initially: Percival, Short Brothers and Fairey Aviation. Following evaluation of the designs General Aircraft and Airspeed were contracted to built two prototypes each, General Aircraft contract dated 15 November 1938.

The specified performance of a successful design was a speed of 38 knots at 1,500 feet for not less than six hours. The design would also have to be able to operate from an aircraft carrier flight deck and use a folding wing configuration for easier deck storage.

The G.A.L.38 and the A.S.39 designs were similar – both high-wing aircraft with fixed landing gear using four small Pobjoy Niagara V engines spread across the wings to generate lift at low speed. There was an observer's position in a glazed compartment in the nose and a radio operator's station in the fuselage behind the pilot's cockpit.

Due to development problems at Pobjoy with the Niagara V, it was decided to use the lower-powered civil version the Niagara III. The first G.A.L.38 Fleet Shadower (also known as the "Night Shadower") flew on 13 May 1940 with the Niagara III engines. An innovative use of the "propwash" generated by propellers directed over the full-span flaps led to an impressive minimum speed of 39 mph (63 km/h) which would have allowed the Fleet Shadower to cruise effortlessly above an enemy fleet.[1] During test the aircraft suffered from aerodynamic stability problems, but not as bad as the Airspeed design which was cancelled in February 1941. The aircraft had major modification before flying again in June 1941 with the Niagara V engines. The three tail fins having been replaced by a single fin. The incomplete second G.A.L.38 being used as a spares source test flying continued until September 1941. In October 1941 the company was instructed to scrap the second aircraft, and in March 1942 instructions were issued to scrap the prototype as well.

The concept of a fleet patrol aircraft was superseded by the wartime development of effective Air to Surface (ASV) radar that could be fitted in long-range patrol aircraft such as the Liberator I. In February 1941, the Royal Navy cancelled the project.

[edit] Specifications

Data from [2]

General characteristics

  • Crew: Three (pilot, observer, radio operator)
  • Length: 36 ft 1 in (11 m)
  • Wingspan: 55 ft 10 in (17.02 m)
  • Height: 12 ft 8 in (3.86 m)
  • Wing area: 472 ft² (43.85 m²)
  • Empty weight: 6,153 lb (2,791 kg)
  • Loaded weight: 8,591 lb (3,897 kg)
  • Useful load: 3,305 lb (1,500 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 9,458 lb (4,290 kg)
  • Powerplant:Pobjoy Niagara III air-cooled radial engine, 130 hp (99 kW) each

Performance

Armament

None

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Winchester 2005, p. 119.
  2. ^ GAL 38

[edit] Bibliography

  • Bridgman, Leonard, ed. Jane’s All The World’s Aircraft 1945-1946. London: Samson Low, Marston & Company, Ltd 1946.
  • Butler, Phil. "The Night Shawdowers." Air-Britain Aeromilitaria Vol. 32, Issue 125, Spring 2006, p. 19-22. ISSB 0262-8791.
  • Swanborough, Gordon. British Aircraft at War, 1939-1945. East Sussex, UK: HPC Publishing, 1997. ISBN 0-9531421-0-8.
  • Winchester, Jim, ed. "General Aircraft Fleet Shadower (1940)". The World's Worst Aircraft: From Pioneering Failures to Multimillion Dollar Disasters. London: Amber Books Ltd., 2005. ISBN 1-904687-34-2.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

Comparable aircraft

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