Wikiposts
Search
Aviation History and Nostalgia Whether working in aviation, retired, wannabee or just plain fascinated this forum welcomes all with a love of flight.

V Bombers

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 14th Aug 2011, 12:06
  #1 (permalink)  
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: Nov 1999
Location: London UK
Posts: 533
Received 2 Likes on 2 Posts
V Bombers

Suppose the RAF had decided to rationalise and only buy 1 V bomber.

Which would it have been? (Victor my guess)

And how would whatever it was have coped when tactics were switched to low level?
Dr Jekyll is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 14:12
  #2 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Lincolnshire
Age: 64
Posts: 2,278
Received 37 Likes on 15 Posts
Originally Posted by Dr Jekyll
Suppose the RAF had decided to rationalise and only buy 1 V bomber.

Which would it have been? (Victor my guess)

And how would whatever it was have coped when tactics were switched to low level?
My guess Vulcan, so no change when tactics were switched to low level.

The Vulcan looked good, the Victor looked better, but the Valiant was a cracking aircraft.
ZH875 is online now  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 15:03
  #3 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: east ESSEX
Posts: 4,677
Received 71 Likes on 45 Posts
` the Valiant was a cracking aircraft`.....literally..!
sycamore is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 16:01
  #4 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: UK
Posts: 3,325
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
The Victor looked good? Each to their own, I suppose, but to me looked like summat Jules Verne had cooked up.

The Vulcan, though.... just magnificent. No co-incidence it's one of those that still flies (albeit rather gently compared to RAF displays), and not one of the other two V bombers.
Shaggy Sheep Driver is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 19:16
  #5 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Glasgow
Posts: 336
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
The Valiant was a pretty aeroplane but Vickers test pilots are on record as saying that above 400k IAS they preferred the handling of the prop-driven, straight-winged, manual-controlled Vanguard!
scotbill is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 19:21
  #6 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: UK
Posts: 5,222
Likes: 0
Received 4 Likes on 3 Posts
It would have been the Victor or Vulcan. The Valiant and Sperrin were stop gap in case those two failed. My guess would have been the Victor. Two pilots, jettisionable cockpit, larger bomb load etc.
Fareastdriver is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 19:27
  #7 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Lincolnshire
Age: 64
Posts: 2,278
Received 37 Likes on 15 Posts
Originally Posted by Fareastdriver
My guess would have been the Victor. Two pilots, jettisionable cockpit, larger bomb load etc.
And just how many times was the jettisonable cockpit used on the Victor. Granted it had a bigger bomb bay, but 1 dose of instant sunshine was enough.
ZH875 is online now  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 20:19
  #8 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: london
Posts: 379
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
DJ: Dates: Valiant: first flight 18/5/51, No. 1 prototype crashed 12/1/52; first production order (25), 9/2/51 (50% funded by US MDAP);
Vulcan: f/f: 30/8/52, No.1 prot. crashed 14/9/58. Its wing proof-of concept 707 had flown on 4/9/49 and crashed 30/9/49; 1st. production order (25), 22/7/52;
Victor: f/f: 24/12/52, No.1 prot. crashed 14/7/54. Its wing proof-of-concept H.P.88 had flown 21/6/51, crashed 26/8/51; 1st. production order (25), also 22/7/52.
Their store, to be Blue Danube, was seen to work on 3/10/52. Super Priority status for materials/resources was applied to both Vulcan and Victor, 12/52 after MoS failed to extract a $ contribution to either. "Insurance" had long been standard practice in UK Aero R&D funding, normally ceasing during the prototypes Evaluation process.

So: to address your Q: Valiant was an Interim, to get a bomb truck asap and to permit Bomber Command to lead-in to the definitive type(s). The logical point to concentrate effort on one would have been if MoS/A&AEE had seen any distinction during the test programmes of 1953/54/55. Instead, Churchill's Govt. ordered more of both, and initiated Mark 2 variants to carry (to be) Yellow Sun Mk.1 H-Bomb. The mood of Ministers and Marshals at that time was not to put all Deterrent eggs in one basket. Some remembered that in 1938 we had nearly abandoned Spitfire for Whirlwind-at-Castle Bromwich, Manchester for Halifax-at-Avro.

Macmillan became PM, 10/1/57 and set about axing much Defence (the Sandys Storm). If he had chosen one Deterrent basket, there was then no operational/technical blue water between them. He would logically have chosen the Hawker Siddeley/Bristol team on Vulcans/Olympii, which was industrially/financially heftier than HP.
tornadoken is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 21:28
  #9 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Cloud 9
Posts: 2,948
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Once upon a time I worked with the offspring of a V Bomber test pilot ... for the life of me I cannot recall the two manufacturers nor aircraft type(s) involved but one V Bomber was barrel rolled over the factory of another V Bomber.

But, during my basic training at Swinderby, I witnessed a Vulcan stall diving (coming straight down whilst corkscrewing), the Victors, whilst somewhat unique in their appearance, could never impress more than a stall diving Vulcan.
Phileas Fogg is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 21:59
  #10 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: UK
Posts: 314
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
The Vulcan handles like a big fighter, which encouraged enthusiastic early demonstration flying. A heavy price was paid for this eventually.

Victor pilots looked at that high T-tail and wisely thought better of it, although with all that thrust at light weight it probably would have performed equally well. It just was never quite tested to destruction in the way the Vulcan was.

Avro seemed better able to engage with Government than Handley Page post WW2 so I agree, the Vulcan probably always had the inside track.
Albert Driver is offline  
Old 14th Aug 2011, 23:12
  #11 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: UK
Posts: 3,325
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
The Vulcan handled like a fighter, despite its tennnis-court dimensions. The others handled like airliners. And in a display the 4 Olympus engines would crush your chest as the air pulsated and turn your feet to jelly as the earth vibrated.

Speys? Pah!

That's why a Vulcan display (a real one, in pre XH558 days) was something you'd never ever forget.
Shaggy Sheep Driver is offline  
Old 15th Aug 2011, 08:20
  #12 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: May 1999
Location: Quite near 'An aerodrome somewhere in England'
Posts: 26,832
Received 277 Likes on 112 Posts
The current displays flown by XH558 are far more graceful than the brutal efforts of the ASG in the latter days of the VDF!

Far smoother and plenty of noise!

I've still got an old VHS tape of the TV programme 'Holiday Air' of many years ago which included a VDF display. Every time I see that stupid wing-rocking in the climb I wince at the pointless airframe fatigue it must have caused.....
BEagle is offline  
Old 15th Aug 2011, 08:48
  #13 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: UK
Posts: 5,222
Likes: 0
Received 4 Likes on 3 Posts
The Victor' jettisionable cockpit was in the design stage but dropped as inpractable during the development stage. The clue was that all the services and controls went though plugs and connectors on the cockpit rear bullkhead.

IIRC one was lost at Wittering when one came adrift and all the electrics for something important stopped.
Fareastdriver is offline  
Old 15th Aug 2011, 09:24
  #14 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Lincolnshire
Age: 64
Posts: 2,278
Received 37 Likes on 15 Posts
I think the only loss of a jettisonable nose was when it was tested, a 'clever' electrician noted a long loop of cable and decided to shorten it, this cable was the connection between the nose and its parachute. End result when the nose was banged off was a big THUD as the nose hit the ground having severed the cable before chute actuation.

I would have been severly worried if any of the 4 BIG bolts that held the nose on the Victor ever came adrift. To lose electrical connections, all 4 must be undone, so rather than lose a few 'vital' connections, the whole nose would have fallen off.

So I think the Wittereing episode is just another Victor illusion.
ZH875 is online now  
Old 15th Aug 2011, 11:43
  #15 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: australia
Posts: 216
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Originally Posted by Albert Driver
The Vulcan handles like a big fighter, which encouraged enthusiastic early demonstration flying. A heavy price was paid for this eventually.
Many years ago flying an RAAF Sabre out of Butterworth I intercepted a B2 Vulcan, he at about 42,000ft, me at 38,000. I snapped up to get a simulated sidewinder shot, but at the instant he was illuminated by my gunsight radar he launched into a max rate climbing turn. Anyway, after 5 or 6 360 degree turns, I was at 48,000ft (unusual - a climbing engagement) he seemed about 10,000 ft higher, but more embarrassing was that he had done one more 360 than me and was perfectly placed to roll in and make a pass at me!
zzuf is offline  
Old 15th Aug 2011, 13:17
  #16 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Toulouse area, France
Age: 93
Posts: 435
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
@ fareastdriver & ZH875

Victor cockpit

Jettisoning the complete cockpit was investigated during the Victor design phase, but it was discovered that the relative movement of the cockpit-less airframe and the (hopefully) parachute-suspended cockpit was dangerously unpredictable, so the idea was abandoned.

Of the three aircraft, I preferred the Victor because it was the only one from which you could see out properly. Someone once described flying the two others was "like driving my mother-on-law's house from the back bedroom window". Another comment was "like driving a house through the letter-box". High up or low down, drivers need to be able to see what's happening outside.

PS. Apart from the "instant sunshine" load, the ability to carry large numbers of conventional bombs certainly came in useful (as a very credible threat) during, for example, the Indonesian Confrontation, when their deterrent effect, plus what was happening on the ground in Borneo, eventually persuaded enough people in Indonesian high places that they really were on a hiding to nothing.

Last edited by Jig Peter; 15th Aug 2011 at 13:41. Reason: Add PS
Jig Peter is offline  
Old 16th Aug 2011, 07:22
  #17 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: New South Wales
Age: 63
Posts: 9,764
Received 3 Likes on 3 Posts
RAAF Sabre
We had better luck with the Mirage...

Noyade is offline  
Old 17th Aug 2011, 12:11
  #18 (permalink)  
Cunning Artificer
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: The spiritual home of DeHavilland
Age: 76
Posts: 3,127
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Hum! Didn't know they had Photoshop in the sixties.
Blacksheep is offline  
Old 17th Aug 2011, 12:43
  #19 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: UK
Posts: 3,325
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Was that the Mirage that started life as the Fairey Delta Two?
Shaggy Sheep Driver is offline  
Old 17th Aug 2011, 17:20
  #20 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Toulouse area, France
Age: 93
Posts: 435
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Fairey Mirage

Well, Mr. Driver of Sheep, Monsieur Dassault did remark that he just couldn't understand why the Powers That Be preferred the P1B/Lightning to the FD2, but I'm sure that his own teams didn't need outside help (apart from, perhpas, phots ... ???) when designing a versatile delta-winged fighter?
I think he regarded the Lightning as a "one-trick pony", but hjave no reson to say that he was right ...
(FWIW)
Jig Peter is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.