Hawker Hurricane | Rolls-Royce Merlin Powered Fighter | Things You Might Not Know, Full Video

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  • Опубликовано: 22 июн 2024
  • The Hawker Hurricane was a British single-seat fighter aircraft manufactured by Hawker Aircraft, Ltd., in the 1930s and ’40s. The Hurricane was numerically the most important British fighter during the critical early stages of World War II, sharing victory laurels with the Supermarine Spitfire in the Battle of Britain (1940-41) and the defense of Malta (1941-42). Hurricanes served in all theatres of war where British forces were engaged.
    The Hurricane emerged from efforts by Sydney Camm, Hawker’s chief designer, to develop a high-performance monoplane fighter and a March 1935 Air Ministry requirement calling for an unprecedented heavy armament of eight wing-mounted 0.303-inch (7.7-mm) machine guns. Designed around a 1,200-horsepower, 12-cylinder, in-line Rolls-Royce engine soon to be dubbed the Merlin, the Hurricane was an evolutionary development of earlier Camm designs, notably the Fury biplane fighter. A low-wing monoplane with retractable landing gear, the Hurricane, aside from its clean lines and heavy armament, was a conventional design. Its wings, rear fuselage, and tail surfaces were covered by fabric, though the fabric wing-covering soon gave way to aluminum.
    The first Royal Air Force (RAF) fighter capable of exceeding 300 miles (480 km) per hour in level flight, the plane had excellent flight characteristics.
    Hurricanes began entering squadron service in late 1937, and some 500 were on hand when Germany invaded Poland in September 1939. Hurricanes bore the brunt of air-to-air fighting in the Battle of France (May-June 1940), and Hurricanes equipped 30 squadrons (to 19 Spitfire squadrons) at the start of the Battle of Britain. The Hurricane I, the version that fought the battle, had a maximum speed of 330 miles (530 km) per hour (though in practice, this could be as low as 305 miles [490 km] per hour) and a ceiling of 36,000 feet (10,980 meters). Slower than the Spitfire, the Hurricane fought at a disadvantage to the German Bf 109 in climb and dive but proved to be a potent bomber destroyer, the concentrated fire of its eight machine guns literally sawing Luftwaffe bombers in half on occasion. In addition, the Hurricane was a forgiving aircraft to fly; this and its wide-set landing gear minimized landing accidents. Finally, the Hurricane’s conventional construction lent itself to speedy repair of battle damage, and shot-up Hurricanes returning quickly to service made an appreciable contribution to victory.
    Later Hurricane models exploited the Merlin engine's steadily increasing power to carry heavier armament so that, though it was superseded as a front-line interceptor by 1941, it remained a capable fighter bomber. The Hurricane II was built in two main variants, one mounting no fewer than 12 0.303-inch machine guns in the wings and the other mounting four 0.8-inch (20-mm) automatic cannons. Hurricanes were equipped with sand filters for service in the North African desert, tail hooks, and strengthened empennages for duty as sea hurricane carrier fighters. Fitted with underwing bomb shackles, Hurricane fighter-bombers served in North Africa and remained in front-line service in Burma (Myanmar) and India through the war’s end. Later versions were modified to carry launching rails for air-to-ground rockets; some had a pair of underwing 1.6-inch (40-mm) cannons. Perhaps the most bizarre use of Hurricanes was as “Hurricats,” launched by rocket-powered catapults from merchant ships on one-way missions to defend North Atlantic convoys from German patrol bombers.
    Hawker Hurricane General characteristics
    Crew: One
    Length: 32 ft 3 in (9.83 m)
    Wingspan: 40 ft 0 in (12.19 m)
    Height: 13 ft 1.5 in (4.001 m)
    Wing area: 257.5 sq ft (23.92 m2)
    Airfoil: root: Clark YH (19%); tip: Clark YH (12.2%)[177]
    Empty weight: 5,745 lb (2,606 kg)
    Gross weight: 7,670 lb (3,479 kg)
    Max takeoff weight: 8,710 lb (3,951 kg)
    Powerplant: 1 × Rolls-Royce Merlin XX V-12 liquid-cooled piston engine, 1,185 hp (884 kW) at 21,000 ft (6,400 m)
    Propellers: 3-bladed
    Performance
    Maximum speed: 340 mph (550 km/h, 300 kn) at 21,000 ft (6,400 m)
    Range: 600 mi (970 km, 520 nmi)
    Service ceiling: 36,000 ft (11,000 m)
    Rate of climb: 2,780 ft/min (14.1 m/s)
    Wing loading: 29.8 lb/sq ft (145 kg/m2)
    Power/mass: 0.15 hp/lb (0.25 kW/kg)
    Armament
    Guns: 4 × 20 mm (0.79 in) Hispano Mk II cannon
    Bombs: 2 × 250 or 500 lb (110 or 230 kg) bombs
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    #hurricane #aicraft #ww2

Комментарии • 40

  • @Dronescapes
    @Dronescapes  14 дней назад +4

    Watch more aircraft, heroes, and their stories and missions ➤

  • @edwardpate6128
    @edwardpate6128 День назад +5

    I always put the Hurricane in the same category as its American counterpart the P-40. Underrated and never appreciated for it's contributions to the war effort.

  • @brealistic3542
    @brealistic3542 14 дней назад +9

    The Hurricane did far more then the Spitfire when one actually looks into it. Without it things would have been a lot different.

  • @donf3877
    @donf3877 14 дней назад +3

    I'm an American and I say Capt Brown was the BEST pilot of his generation PERIOD, regardless of citizenship.

  • @davidelliott5843
    @davidelliott5843 7 часов назад

    If Sydney Camm had used a thinner wing, it’s highly likely the Spitfire would not have looked so much better.

  • @bohemian-girl
    @bohemian-girl День назад +2

    My great grandfather flew these aircraft in world war two, with the Royal Air Force 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron ^^

  • @7thpilot
    @7thpilot 21 час назад

    Back ground music made to eradiating to watch!!!!!

  • @mochabear88
    @mochabear88 14 дней назад +3

    enjoyed the hawker and jim brown information

  • @daveblack5109
    @daveblack5109 День назад +1

    Fabulous, enjoyed every minute,

  • @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935
    @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 14 дней назад

    Can we have a ten hour compilation next please.

  • @berthonsimbolon6198
    @berthonsimbolon6198 14 часов назад +1

    Waowwww😮😮😮😮

  • @bobsakamanos4469
    @bobsakamanos4469 14 дней назад +1

    Glory goes to the aircraft and its designers that was most effective; ie the Spitfire. The Hurricane was available in more numbers during the BoB ONLY because Lord Nuffield delayed production of Castle Bromwich. One wonders if he had shares in Hawker.

  • @jjock3239
    @jjock3239 14 дней назад

    I am incredibly impressed, by the illustrious career of Captain Brown. The expression isn't new, but after practising all the emergency procedures, and having had some of my own harrowing experiences, a pilot still wants to have a little luck.

  • @ysvsny7
    @ysvsny7 14 дней назад +1

    Modern russia looks exactly like fascist Germany of 1940

  • @jamesmckay9966
    @jamesmckay9966 14 дней назад

    It is P not B

  • @desmonddwyer
    @desmonddwyer 14 дней назад +1

    , the spitfire has a German wing🤔