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Airco DH.4

The Airco DH.4 is a British two-seat biplane day bomber of the First World War. It was designed by Geoffrey de Havilland (hence "DH") for Airco, and was the first British two-seat light day-bomber capable of defending itself.

DH.4
DH.4 above the clouds in France
Role Light bomber / General purpose
Manufacturer Airco
Built by Boeing Airplane Corporation
Dayton-Wright Company
Fisher Body
Standard Aircraft Corporation
First flight August 1916
Introduction March 1917
Retired 1932 (United States Army Air Service)
Status Retired
Primary users Royal Flying Corps
Royal Air Force
Royal Naval Air Service
United States Army Air Service
Number built 6,295, of which 4,846 were built in the United States.[1][2]
Variants Airco DH.9
Airco DH.9A
Dayton-Wright Cabin Cruiser

It was designed and developed specifically as a bomber, as well as aerial reconnaissance missions. The DH.4 was to have been powered by the new 160 hp (120 kW) Beardmore Halford Pullinger (BHP) engine, but problems with that resulted in numerous other engines being used, perhaps the best of which was the 375 hp (280 kW) Rolls-Royce Eagle engine. The DH.4 first flew in August 1916 and it entered operational service in France on 6 March 1917 less than a year later. The majority were manufactured as general purpose two-seaters in the United States for the American expeditionary forces in France, becoming the only American made plane to see combat in WW1.

Following the Armistice of 11 November 1918, many DH.4s were sold to civil operators where it was found to be particularly useful as a mailplane. Early commercial passenger airplane service in Europe was initiated with modified variants of the DH-4. War-surplus DH-4s became key aircraft in newly emerging air forces throughout the world. The U.S. Army later had several companies re-manufacture its remaining DH.4s to DH.4B standard and they operated the type into the early 1930s.

Development edit

Origins edit

The DH.4 was designed by Geoffrey de Havilland as a light two-seat combat aircraft, intended to perform both day bomber and aerial reconnaissance missions.[3] The intention was for it to be powered by the newly-developed 160 hp (120 kW) Beardmore Halford Pullinger (BHP) engine. The DH.4 was developed in parallel to the rival Bristol Fighter.[3] During August 1916, the prototype DH.4 made its first flight, powered by a prototype 230 hp (170 kW) BHP engine.[4]

Initial flight tests revealed it to have favourable handling and performance.[5] The Central Flying School (CFS) conducted early evaluation flights using the prototype, leading to it producing a favourable report on the aircraft, observing good stability in flight, light flying controls and its relatively comfortable crew positions. During its flights with the CFS, it was able to attain previously unheard-of time-to-altitude figures, unmatched by any of its predecessors.[5] While flying trials with the prototype had been producing promising results, it soon became clear that the BHP engine would require a major redesign prior to entering production.[5]

Even by the time of flying trials with the first prototype, there had been no finalised plans for quantity production of the BHP engine.[5] Coincidentally, another suitable and promising aeroengine, the water-cooled Rolls-Royce Eagle in-line engine, was approaching the end of its development process.[3] According to Bruce, the Eagle shared the same basic configuration as the BHP engine, which greatly aiding in its adoption by de Havilland, as did the engine's endorsement by William Beardmore. During the summer of 1916, a second prototype, equipped with the Rolls-Royce engine, conducted its first flight.[5]

In response to its favourable performance, the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) decided to place an initial order for the type during late 1916.[6] Separately to the RFC's interactions with the DH.4, it had received substantial interest from the Royal Navy as well.[7] The Admiralty decided to order a further pair of prototypes, configured to suit the service's own requirements, for evaluation purposes; however, according to Bruce, it is unlikely that the second of these was ever constructed. Following trials with the first of these prototypes, orders were placed for the production of DH.4s to equip the Royal Naval Air Service.[7]

Production edit

 
An early production DH.4

During late 1916, the first order for 50 DH.4s, powered by 250 hp (190 kW) Eagle III engines, was received from the RFC.[8] According to Bruce, it was not a surprise to most observers that the Eagle had been selected to power the first batch of production DH.4s.[6] The initial production aircraft were largely identical to the second prototype, the main difference being the adoption of armament, which included a single synchronised 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers machine gun for the pilot, while the observer was provided with a 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis gun mounted upon a Scarff ring.[9]

Production of the DH.4 was performed by a variety of companies beyond Airco themselves; these included F.W. Berwick and Co, Glendower Aircraft Company, Palladium Autocars, Vulcan Motor and Engineering, and the Westland Aircraft Works.[10] By the end of production, a total of 1,449 aircraft (from orders for 1,700 aircraft) were constructed in Britain for the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) and the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS).[11] Overseas, SABCA of Belgium produced a further 15 DH.4s during 1926.[12][10]

As production progressed, various changes and improvements to the design were introduced upon the DH.4.[7] As time went on, production DH.4s were fitted with Eagle engines of increasing power, ending with the 375 hp (280 kW) Eagle VIII, which powered the majority of frontline DH.4s by the end of 1917. However, this transition was greatly hindered as by January 1917, it had become clear that there was a chronic shortage of Rolls-Royce aero engines, and of the Eagle in particular; it has been claimed by Bruce that this shortfall was partially the result of protracted decision-making on the part of the Air Board.[7]

In response to the limited availability of the Eagle, extensive investigations into the use of alternative engines for the DH.4 were conducted. This resulted in aircraft being outfitted with a diverse range of engines; these included the BHP (230 hp (170 kW), the Royal Aircraft Factory RAF3A (200 hp (150 kW)), the Siddeley Puma (230 hp (170 kW)) and the 260 hp (190 kW) Fiat, all of which were used to power, which encountered varying degrees of success, to production aircraft.[8] None of these engines proved to be capable of matching the performance of the Eagle engine, which remained the preferred options despite the persistent supply constraints.[13]

American versions edit

 
Friends of Jenny DH.4, 2018

At the time of entry of the United States into the First World War on 6 April 1917, the aviation section of the U.S. Signal Corps was unprepared, not being equipped with any aircraft suitable for combat.[14] However, considerable optimism and energy was put into addressing this identified need, leading to the mobilization of American industry to set about the production of contemporary combat aircraft. As there were no suitable aircraft domestically, a technical commission, known as the Bolling Commission, was dispatched to Europe to seek out the best available combat aircraft and to make arrangements to enable their production to be established in the United States.[14] As a result of the efforts of the Bolling Commission, the DH.4, along with the Bristol F.2 Fighter, the Royal Aircraft Factory S.E.5, and French SPAD S.XIII were selected.[14] On 27 July 1917, a single DH.4 was sent to the United States as a pattern aircraft. It was not until 1918 that the first American-built DH.4s came off the production line.[15] Several different manufacturers, including the Boeing Airplane Corporation, Dayton-Wright Company, the Fisher Body Corporation, and the Standard Aircraft Corporation produced this Americanized variant of the DH.4, featuring over 1,000 modifications from the original British design, to equip the American air services.[16] A total of 9,500 DH.4s were ordered from American manufacturers, of which 1,885 actually reached France during the war. In American production, the new Liberty engine, which had proved suitable as a DH.4 power plant, was adopted. The Liberty was also eventually adopted by the British to power the DH.9A variant of the type.[1][17]

After the war, a number of firms, most significant of these being Boeing, were contracted by the U.S. Army to remanufacture surplus DH.4s to the improved DH.4B standard. Internally referred to by Boeing as the Model 16, deliveries of 111 aircraft from this manufacturer took place between March and July 1920; reportedly, roughly 50 of these were returned for further refurbishments three years later.[18][19]

During 1923, the Army placed an order for a new DH.4 variant from Boeing, distinguished by a fuselage of fabric-covered steel tube in place of the original plywood structure.[20] These three prototypes were designated DH.4M-1 (M for modernized) and were ordered into production alongside the generally similar DH.4M-2 developed by Atlantic Aircraft. A total of 22 of the 163 DH.4M-1s were converted by the Army into dual-control trainers (DH.4M-1T) and a few more into target tugs (DH.4M-1K). Thirty of the aircraft ordered by the Army were diverted to the Navy for Marine Corps use, these designated O2B-1 for the base model, and O2B-2 for aircraft equipped for night and cross-country flying.[21]

Design edit

 
Strength tests on various DH-4 wing ribs during World War I

The Airco DH.4 was a conventional tractor two bay biplane of all-wooden construction.[3] It was entirely built of traditional materials. The forward fuselage section and the underside of the tail area was covered by a 3mm plywood skin; this construction led to the fuselage being both strong and lightweight, heavily contributing to cross-bracing only being used for the four bays directly behind the rear cockpit.[3] The nose of the aircraft was considerably longer than necessary, the cowling having been originally designed to accommodate the Beardmore Halford Pullinger (BHP) engine, rather than the Rolls-Royce Eagle that was adopted for production instead.[3]

The DH.4 was powered by a variety of engines, including the Eagle, the BHP, the American Liberty, Royal Aircraft Factory RAF3A, the Siddeley Puma and the Fiat.[3] Regardless of the engine used, it drove a four-bladed propeller mounted upon the nose. Cooling for the engine was provided via an oval-shaped radiator, while a port-mounted exhaust manifold discarded waste emissions above the upper wing.[3] An unusual modification featuring on a small proportion of production DH.4s was the inversion of the engine, a design change that had been implemented in order to better accommodate the relatively-tall Ricardo-Halford-Armstrong (RHA) supercharged engine, which would otherwise unduly obstruct the pilot's forward field of view.[13]

The DH.4 was operated by a crew of two, who were accommodated in widely spaced cockpits, between which the fuel tank was positioned.[8] While the crew arrangement provided good fields of view for both the pilot and observer; however, it had the noticeable downside of causing communication problems between the two crew members, particularly during combat situation, where the speaking tube that linked the two cockpits was of only limited use.[22][6] On the majority of American-built aircraft, the pilot's seating and fuel tank arrangement were switched around; aviation author Peter M Bowers credits this change with improving the pilot's safety in the event of a crash, as well as allowing for better communication with the observer.[23]

The DH.4 was armed with a single forward-firing synchronised Vickers machine gun along with either one or two .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis guns fitted on a Scarff ring fired by the observer. In terms of bomb load, it accommodate a maximum payload of 460 lb (210 kg), which could be mounted upon external racks.[22] Throughout the type's production life, a number of alterations to the armaments, such as the ergonomics of the observer's Lewis gun and the installation of an additional Vickers gun, were implemented.[13] A pair of DH.4s were outfitted with COW 37 mm guns for experimental purposes, but the war came to a close prior to firing trials being conducted.[10] All armaments would typically be removed from those DH.4s that were used by civil operators, including ex-military aircraft that were sold on in great numbers following the end of the Great War.

One of the more elaborate modifications of the DH.4 was the adaption of the type as a seaplane.[10] It was furnished with large floats, which were allegedly based upon the design of those used upon the German Hansa-Brandenburg W.29 seaplane. According to Bruce, while no such aircraft entered into operational service as a result of competition from other aircraft to perform the role, a number of DH.4 seaplanes were produced for trial purposes at Felixstowe and were successfully flown.[10]

Operational history edit

British military service edit

The DH.4 entered service with the RFC in January 1917, first being used by No. 55 Squadron.[8] More squadrons were equipped with the type to increase the bombing capacity of the RFC, with two squadrons re-equipping in May, and a total of six squadrons by the end of the year.[8][24] During late 1917, the uptake of the type by the RFC was accelerated due to a desire to launch retaliatory bombing raids upon Germany following such attacks having been conducted against the British mainland. While Russia had been an early customer for the DH.4, having ordered 50 of the type in September 1917, the Russian and British governments subsequently agreed to delay the former's deliveries, instead diverting those aircraft to RFC squadrons in France.[25]

As well as the RFC, the RNAS also used the DH.4. During the spring of 1917, No. 2 Squadron became the first unit of the service to receive examples of the type.[24] The RNAS flew their DH.4s over both France and over Italy, specifically the Aegean front in the latter case.[8] The DH.4 was typically used to conduct coastal patrols by the RNAS. One such flight, crewed by the pilot Major Egbert Cadbury and Captain Robert Leckie (later Air Vice-Marshal) as gunner, shot down Zeppelin L70 on 5 August 1918.[26] In another incident, a group of four RNAS DH.4s were jointly credited with the sinking of the German U-boat UB 12 on 19 August 1918.[26][27]

The DH.4 proved a huge success and was often considered the best single-engined bomber of World War I.[Note 1] Even when fully loaded with bombs, with its reliability and impressive performance, the type proved highly popular with its crews. The Airco DH.4 was easy to fly, and especially when fitted with the Rolls-Royce Eagle engine, its speed and altitude performance gave it a good deal of invulnerability to German fighter interception,[28] so that the DH.4 often did not require a fighter escort on missions, a concept furthered by de Havilland in the later Mosquito of the Second World War.

A drawback of the design was the distance between pilot and observer, as they were separated by the large main fuel tank. This made communication between the crew members difficult, especially in combat with enemy fighters.[29] There was also some controversy (especially in American service) that this placement of the fuel tank was inherently unsafe.[30][31] In fact, most contemporary aircraft were prone to catching fire in the air.[Note 2] The fire hazard was reduced, however, when the pressurised fuel system was replaced by one using wind-driven fuel pumps late in 1917,[29] although this was not initially adopted by American-built aircraft.[33] The otherwise inferior DH.9 brought the pilot and observer closer together by placing the fuel tank in the usual place, between the pilot and the engine.

Despite its success, numbers in service with the RFC actually started to decline from spring 1918, mainly due to a shortage of engines, and production switched to the DH.9, which turned out to be disappointing, being inferior to the DH.4 in most respects. It was left to the further developed DH.9A, with the American Liberty engine, to satisfactorily replace the DH.4.

When the Independent Air Force was set up in June 1918 to carry out strategic bombing of targets in Germany, the DH.4s of 55 Squadron formed part of it, being used for daylight attacks.[22] 55 Squadron developed tactics of flying in wedge formations, bombing on the leader's command and with the massed defensive fire of the formation deterring attacks by enemy fighters.[34] Despite heavy losses, 55 Squadron continued in operation, the only one of the day bombing squadrons in the Independent Force which did not have to temporarily stand down owing to aircrew losses.[35]

After the Armistice, the RAF formed No. 2 Communication Squadron, equipped with DH.4s to carry important passengers to and from the Paris Peace Conference. Several of the DH.4s used for this purpose were modified with an enclosed cabin for two passengers at the request of Bonar Law.[36] One of these planes was extensively used by Prime Minister David Lloyd George and was sometimes called Lloyd George's airplane - probably the first aeroplane widely used by a political leader.[37][38] Modified aircraft were designated DH.4A, with at least seven being converted for the RAF, and a further nine for civil use.[39]

United States military service edit

At the time of its entry into the war, the United States Army Air Service lacked any aircraft suitable for front line combat. It therefore procured various aircraft from the British and French, one being the DH.4. As the DH-4, it was manufactured mostly by Dayton-Wright and Fisher Body for service with the United States from 1918, the first American built DH-4 being delivered to France in May 1918, with combat operations commencing in August 1918.[40][41] The powerplant was a 400 hp (300 kW) Liberty L-12 and it was fitted with two forward-firing .30 in (7.62 mm) synchronized Marlin-Rockwell M1917 (a development of the Colt-Browning) machine guns in the nose and two .30 in (7.62 mm) Lewis guns in the rear and could carry 322 lb (146 kg) of bombs. it could also be equipped with various radios like the SCR-68 for artillery spotting missions. The heavier engine reduced performance compared with the Rolls-Royce powered version, but as the "Liberty Plane" it became the US Army Air Service standard general purpose two-seater, and on the whole was fairly popular with its crews.

 
A formation of DH-4s in flight

Aircrew operating the DH-4 were awarded four of the six Medals of Honor awarded to American aviators. First Lieutenant Harold Ernest Goettler and Second Lieutenant Erwin R. Bleckley received posthumous awards after being killed on 12 October 1918 attempting to drop supplies to the Lost Battalion of the 77th Division, cut off by German troops during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive;[40] while Second Lieutenant Ralph Talbot and Gunnery Sergeant Robert G. Robinson of the United States Marine Corps (USMC) were awarded the Medal of Honor for beating off attacks from 12 German fighters during a bombing raid over Belgium on 8 October 1918.[42][43][better source needed] The type flew with 13 U.S. squadrons by the end of 1918.[44]

Following the end of the First World War, America had a large surplus of DH-4s, with the improved DH-4B becoming available, although none had been shipped to France. It was therefore decided that there was no point in returning aircraft across the Atlantic, so those remaining in France, together with other obsolete observation and trainer aircraft, were burned in what became known as the "Billion Dollar Bonfire".[45][41] With limited funds available to develop and purchase replacements, the remaining DH-4s formed a major part of American air strength for several years, used for many roles, with as many as 60 variants produced.[46] DH-4s were also widely used for experimental flying, being used as engine testbeds and fitted with new wings. They were used for the first trials of air-to-air refueling on 27 June 1923, and one carried out an endurance flight of 37 hours, 15 minutes on 27–28 August, being refueled 16 times and setting 16 new world records for distance, speed and duration.[47] The DH-4 remained in service with the United States Army Air Corps, successor to the United States Army Air Service, until 1932.[48]

A large number of DH-4s were also used by the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps, both during the First World War and postwar. The Navy and Marine Corps received a total of 51 DH-4s during wartime, followed by 172 DH-4B and DH-4B-1 aircraft postwar and 30 DH-4M-1s with welded steel-tube fuselages (redesignated O2B) in 1925.[49] They remained in service with the Marine Corps until 1929, being used against rebel factions in Nicaragua in 1927, carrying out the first dive-bombing attacks made by U.S. military forces.[49] The U.S. Navy converted some DH-4M-1s into primitive air ambulances that could carry one stretcher casualty in an enclosed area behind the pilot.[50]

Civil use edit

 
Robertson Aircraft Corp. operated DH-4 mailplane (CAM 2) 1926 at the Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum

Following the end of the First World War, large numbers of DH.4s and DH.4As were used to operate scheduled passenger services in Europe by such airlines as Aircraft Transport and Travel, Handley Page Transport and the Belgium airline SNETA. G-EAJC of Aircraft Transport and Travel flew the first British commercial passenger service from Hounslow Heath Aerodrome to Paris Le Bourget on 25 August 1919, carrying a reporter from the Evening Standard newspaper and a load of newspapers and other freight.[51][52] They were used by Aircraft Transport and Travel until it shut down in 1920, while Handley Page Transport and SNETA continued operating the DH.4 until 1921. One aircraft was used by Instone Air Lines until its merger into Imperial Airways in 1924.[53]

 
In 1923 the U.S. Post Office released a stamp featuring the DeHavilland Biplane being used for airmail service[54]

On September 4, 1922, Jimmy Doolittle made the first cross-country flight, flying a de Havilland DH-4 – which was equipped with early navigational instruments – from Pablo Beach (now Jacksonville Beach), Florida, to Rockwell Field, San Diego, California, in 21 hours and 19 minutes, making only one refueling stop at Kelly Field.

The DH.4 were also used by the Australian airline QANTAS, flying its first airmail service in 1922.[55] Twelve DH.4s forming part of the Imperial Gift to Canada were used for forestry patrol and survey work, spotting hundreds of forest fires and helping to save millions of dollars worth of timber, with the last example finally being withdrawn in 1927.[56][10]

The U.S. Post Office also adopted the DH-4 to carry air mail.[57][58] The Service acquired 100 of them from the army in 1918, and retrofitted them to make them safer, denominating them as the DH.4B.[57] In 1919, the DH-4B was standardised by the US Post Office, being modified to be flown from the rear cockpit with a 400 lb (180 kg) watertight mail compartment replacing the forward cockpit. The airmail DH-4B were later modified with revised landing gear and an enlarged rudder.[59] DH-4s were used to establish a coast-to-coast, transcontinental airmail service, between San Francisco and New York, a distance of 2,680 mi (4,310 km), involving night flight, the first services starting on 21 August 1924. The DH-4 continued in Post Office service until 1927, when the last airmail routes were passed to private contractors.[60]

War-surplus DH-4s were available cheaply in sufficient quantities to stimulate the development of "utility aviation": surveying, commercial photography, law enforcement, agricultural applications and other practical applications.[61]

Variants edit

 
Canadian DH-4 G-CYDK in the 1920s
 
Wright Radial Engine (R-1) fitted to a De Havilland DH-4B airframe

UK variants edit

  • DH.4 : Two-seat day bomber biplane.
  • DH.4A : Transport version. Built in the United Kingdom. Two passengers in glazed cabin behind pilot.
  • DH.4R : Single seat racer – 450 hp (340 kW) Napier Lion engine.

Soviet variants edit

United States variants edit

[62]

  • DH-4 : Two-seat day bomber biplane, built in the United States.
  • DH-4A : Civil version, built in the United States.
  • DH-4B : Rebuilt version of Liberty powered DH-4 for U.S. Air Service. Pilot's cockpit relocated to behind fuel tank, adjacent to observer's cockpit.
      • DH-4B-1 : Increased fuel capacity (110 US gal (420 L; 92 imp gal)).
      • DH-4B-2 : Trainer version.
      • DH-4B-3 : Fitted with 135 US gal (510 L; 112 imp gal) fuel tank
      • DH-4B-4 : Civil version
      • DH-4B-5 : Experimental civil conversion with enclosed cabin.
    • DH-4BD :Cropdusting version of DH-4B
    • DH-4BG : Fitted with smokescreen generators
    • DH-4BK : Night flying version
    • DH-4BM: Single seat version for communications
      • DH-4BM-1 : Dual control version of BM
      • DH-4BM-2 : Dual control version of BM
    • DH-4-BP : Experimental photo reconnaissance version
      • DH-4-BP-1 : BP converted for survey work
    • DH-4BS : Testbed for supercharged Liberty
    • DH-4BT : Dual control trainer
    • DH-4BW : Testbed for Wright H engine
  • DH-4C : 300 hp (220 kW) Packard engine
  • DH-4L : Civil version
  • DH-4M : Rebuilt version of DH-4 with steel tube fuselage.
  • DH-4Amb : Ambulance.
  • DH-4M-1 – postwar version by Boeing (Model 16) with new fuselage, designated O2B-1 by Navy
    • DH-4M-1T – Dual control trainer conversion of DH-4M
    • DH-4M-1K – target tug conversion
    • O2B-2 – cross-country and night flying conversion for Navy
  • DH-4M-2 – postwar version by Atlantic
  • L.W.F. J-2 – Twin-engine long range development of DH-4 (also known as Twin DH), powered by two 200 hp (150 kW) Hall-Scott-Liberty L-6 engines and with wingspan of 52 ft 6 in (16.00 m); 20 built for U.S. Post Office, 10 for U.S. Army.[63][64]
XCO-7
(Boeing Model 42) Two-seat observation version with Boeing designed wings, enlarged tailplane and divided landing gear.
XCO-8
Was a designation of one Atlantic DH.4M-2 fitted with Loening COA-1 wings and powered by a Liberty 12A engine.

Operators edit

Civil operators edit

  Argentina
  • The River Plate Aviation Co. Ltd.
  Australia
  Belgium
  United Kingdom
  United States

Military operators edit

  Belgium
  Canada
  Chile
  Cuba
  Greece
  Iran
  Mexico
  Nicaragua
  New Zealand
  • The New Zealand Permanent Air Force operated two aircraft from 1919 to 1929. It was used by the NZPAF as an advanced training aircraft. The DH.4 has the distinction of being the first aircraft to fly over Mount Cook on 8 September 1920. It also set a New Zealand altitude record of 21,000 ft (6,400 m) on 27 November 1919.
  South Africa
  Soviet Union
  Kingdom of Spain
  Turkey
  United Kingdom
  United States

Surviving aircraft edit

 
The DH-4B on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force

Specifications (DH.4 – Eagle VIII engine) edit

Data from The British Bomber since 1914,[8] The de Havilland DH.4[88]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Length: 30 ft 8 in (9.35 m)
  • Wingspan: 43 ft 4 in (13.21 m)
  • Height: 11 ft 0 in (3.35 m)
  • Wing area: 434 sq ft (40.3 m2)
  • Empty weight: 2,387 lb (1,083 kg)
  • Gross weight: 3,472 lb (1,575 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Rolls-Royce Eagle VIII water-cooled V12 engine, 375 hp (280 kW) [Note 3]

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 143 mph (230 km/h, 124 kn) at sea level [Note 4]
  • Endurance: 3 hr 45 min
  • Service ceiling: 22,000 ft (6,700 m)
  • Time to altitude: 9 min to 10,000 ft (3,000 m)

Armament

See also edit

Related development

Related lists

External links edit

  • "Pilot Report, The deHavilland DH4: A Trip Back In Time," by Addison Pemberton
  • "Chapter 3: The Airco/deHavilland DH-4," in Eight Great Aircraft, by Richard Harris.

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Quote: "Certainly the DH.4 was without peer among the day-bombing aeroplanes used by the aerial forces of any of the combatant nations."[22]
  2. ^ Sometimes derided as the "Flaming Coffin," Gorrell's History of the Air Service of the AEF refuted the misconception. Quote: "Of 33 DH-4s lost to enemy action by the US Air Service, eight fell in flames- no worse than the average at the time."[32]
  3. ^ 230 hp (170 kW) for BHP Puma
  4. ^ 106 mph (171 km/h) for Puma engine variants

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Jackson, 1987, p.58
  2. ^ Bruce, 1966, p.12
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Bruce, 1966, p.3
  4. ^ Jackson, 1987, p.53
  5. ^ a b c d e Bruce, 1966, p.4
  6. ^ a b c Bruce, 1966, pp.3–4
  7. ^ a b c d Bruce, 1966, p.5
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Mason, 1994, pp.66–69
  9. ^ Bruce, 1966, pp.4–5
  10. ^ a b c d e f Bruce, 1966, p.10
  11. ^ Jackson, 1987, p.54
  12. ^ Jackson, 1987, p.60
  13. ^ a b c Bruce, 1966, pp.5–8
  14. ^ a b c Bowers, 1966, p.3
  15. ^ Bowers, 1966, pp.3, 10
  16. ^ Bowers, 1966, pp.3–4
  17. ^ Bowers, 1966, pp.6–7
  18. ^ Bowers, 1989, p.67
  19. ^ Bowers, 1966, pp.7–8
  20. ^ Bowers, 1966, p.9
  21. ^ Bowers, 1989, p.70
  22. ^ a b c d Bruce, 1952, p.507
  23. ^ Bowers, 1966, p.7
  24. ^ a b Bruce, 1966, p.9
  25. ^ Bruce, 1966, pp.7–8
  26. ^ a b Thetford 1978, p.86
  27. ^ Bruce, 1966, pp.9–10
  28. ^ Jackson, 1987, pp.54–56
  29. ^ a b Jackson, 1987, p.56
  30. ^ Maurer, 1979, pp.12, 87, 120, 132
  31. ^ Bowers, 1966, pp.5–6
  32. ^ Williams, 1999, p.83
  33. ^ Maurer, 1979, p.551
  34. ^ Williams, 1999, p.84
  35. ^ Williams, 1999, p.195
  36. ^ Jackson, 1987, p.77
  37. ^ "Foreign Passenger-Carrying Aeroplanes Introduce a New Era of Transportation". Popular Mechanics Magazine. 31: 510–511. April 1919.
  38. ^ "British Premier's Altered DH-4 Shows Unusual Speed". Popular Mechanics Magazine. 32: 65. July 1919.
  39. ^ Jackson, 1987, p.81
  40. ^ a b "Fact Sheets: De Havilland DH-4." 14 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the USAF. Retrieved: 19 April 2008.
  41. ^ a b Bowers, 1966, p.6
  42. ^ "The De Havilland DH-4, Workhorse of the Army Air Service." 28 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Air & Space Power Journal, Winter 2002. Retrieved: 9 May 2008.
  43. ^ "Robert Guy Robinson, First Lieutenant, United States Marine Corps." at ArlingtonCemetery.net (Unofficial website).
  44. ^ Angelucci, 1981, p.79
  45. ^ Swanborough and Bowers, 1963, p.198
  46. ^ Bruce, 1952, p.510
  47. ^ "Fact Sheets: Air-to-Air Refueling." 18 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the United States Air Force. Retrieved: 10 May 2008.
  48. ^ Swanborough and Bowers, 1963, p.199
  49. ^ a b Swanborough and Bowers, 1976, p.156
  50. ^ Hearst Magazines (November 1929). "Help From The Skies". Popular Mechanics. Hearst Magazines. p. 765.
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Bibliography edit

  • Angelucci, Enzo, ed. World Encyclopedia of Military Aircraft. London: Jane's, 1991. ISBN 0-7106-0148-4.
  • Bruce, J.M. Flight, 17 October 1952, pp. 506–510.
  • Bruce, J.M. The de Havilland D.H.4. (Aircraft in Profile number 26). London: Profile Publications, 1966. No ISBN.
  • Bowers, Peter M. Boeing Aircraft since 1916. London: Putnam, Second edition, 1989. ISBN 0-85177-804-6.
  • Bowers, Peter M. The American DH.4 (Aircraft in Profile number 97). London: Profile Publications, 1966. No ISBN.
  • Jackson, A.J. British Civil Aircraft since 1919: Volume 2. London: Putnam, Second edition, 1973. ISBN 0-370-10010-7.
  • Jackson, A.J. De Havilland Aircraft since 1909. London: Putnam, Third edition, 1987. ISBN 0-85177-802-X.
  • Klaauw, Bart van der (March–April 1999). "Unexpected Windfalls: Accidentally or Deliberately, More than 100 Aircraft 'arrived' in Dutch Territory During the Great War". Air Enthusiast (80): 54–59. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Mason, Francis K. The British Bomber since 1914. London: Putnam Aeronautical Books, 1994. ISBN 0-85177-861-5.
  • Maurer, Maurer, ed. The U.S. Air Service in World War I: Volume IV Postwar Review. Washington, D.C.: The Office of Air Force History Headquarters USAF, 1979.
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  • Sturtivant, Ray and Gordon Page. The D.H.4/D.H.9 File. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd., 2000. ISBN 0-85130-274-2.
  • Swanborough, F.G. and Peter M. Bowers. United States Military Aircraft since 1909. London: Putnam, 1963.
  • Swanborough Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States Naval Aircraft since 1911. London: Putnam, Second edition, 1976. ISBN 0-370-10054-9.
  • Thetford, Owen. British Naval Aircraft since 1912. London: Putnam, Fourth edition, 1978. ISBN 0-370-30021-1.
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  • Wauthy, Jean-Luc & de Neve, Florian (June 1995). "Les aéronefs de la Force Aérienne Belge, deuxième partie 1919–1935" [Aircraft of the Belgian Air Force]. Le Fana de l'Aviation (in French) (305): 28–33. ISSN 0757-4169.
  • Williams, George K. Biplanes and Bombsights: British Bombing in World War I. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Air University Press, 1999. ISBN 1-4102-0012-4.

airco, redirects, here, 1950s, flying, platform, lackner, aerocycle, british, seat, biplane, bomber, first, world, designed, geoffrey, havilland, hence, airco, first, british, seat, light, bomber, capable, defending, itself, above, clouds, france, role, light,. DH 4 redirects here For the 1950s flying platform see de Lackner HZ 1 Aerocycle The Airco DH 4 is a British two seat biplane day bomber of the First World War It was designed by Geoffrey de Havilland hence DH for Airco and was the first British two seat light day bomber capable of defending itself DH 4 DH 4 above the clouds in France Role Light bomber General purpose Manufacturer Airco Built by Boeing Airplane Corporation Dayton Wright Company Fisher Body Standard Aircraft Corporation First flight August 1916 Introduction March 1917 Retired 1932 United States Army Air Service Status Retired Primary users Royal Flying CorpsRoyal Air Force Royal Naval Air Service United States Army Air Service Number built 6 295 of which 4 846 were built in the United States 1 2 Variants Airco DH 9 Airco DH 9A Dayton Wright Cabin Cruiser It was designed and developed specifically as a bomber as well as aerial reconnaissance missions The DH 4 was to have been powered by the new 160 hp 120 kW Beardmore Halford Pullinger BHP engine but problems with that resulted in numerous other engines being used perhaps the best of which was the 375 hp 280 kW Rolls Royce Eagle engine The DH 4 first flew in August 1916 and it entered operational service in France on 6 March 1917 less than a year later The majority were manufactured as general purpose two seaters in the United States for the American expeditionary forces in France becoming the only American made plane to see combat in WW1 Following the Armistice of 11 November 1918 many DH 4s were sold to civil operators where it was found to be particularly useful as a mailplane Early commercial passenger airplane service in Europe was initiated with modified variants of the DH 4 War surplus DH 4s became key aircraft in newly emerging air forces throughout the world The U S Army later had several companies re manufacture its remaining DH 4s to DH 4B standard and they operated the type into the early 1930s Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 Production 1 3 American versions 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 British military service 3 2 United States military service 3 3 Civil use 4 Variants 4 1 UK variants 4 2 Soviet variants 4 3 United States variants 5 Operators 5 1 Civil operators 5 2 Military operators 6 Surviving aircraft 7 Specifications DH 4 Eagle VIII engine 8 See also 9 External links 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 10 3 BibliographyDevelopment editOrigins edit The DH 4 was designed by Geoffrey de Havilland as a light two seat combat aircraft intended to perform both day bomber and aerial reconnaissance missions 3 The intention was for it to be powered by the newly developed 160 hp 120 kW Beardmore Halford Pullinger BHP engine The DH 4 was developed in parallel to the rival Bristol Fighter 3 During August 1916 the prototype DH 4 made its first flight powered by a prototype 230 hp 170 kW BHP engine 4 Initial flight tests revealed it to have favourable handling and performance 5 The Central Flying School CFS conducted early evaluation flights using the prototype leading to it producing a favourable report on the aircraft observing good stability in flight light flying controls and its relatively comfortable crew positions During its flights with the CFS it was able to attain previously unheard of time to altitude figures unmatched by any of its predecessors 5 While flying trials with the prototype had been producing promising results it soon became clear that the BHP engine would require a major redesign prior to entering production 5 Even by the time of flying trials with the first prototype there had been no finalised plans for quantity production of the BHP engine 5 Coincidentally another suitable and promising aeroengine the water cooled Rolls Royce Eagle in line engine was approaching the end of its development process 3 According to Bruce the Eagle shared the same basic configuration as the BHP engine which greatly aiding in its adoption by de Havilland as did the engine s endorsement by William Beardmore During the summer of 1916 a second prototype equipped with the Rolls Royce engine conducted its first flight 5 In response to its favourable performance the Royal Flying Corps RFC decided to place an initial order for the type during late 1916 6 Separately to the RFC s interactions with the DH 4 it had received substantial interest from the Royal Navy as well 7 The Admiralty decided to order a further pair of prototypes configured to suit the service s own requirements for evaluation purposes however according to Bruce it is unlikely that the second of these was ever constructed Following trials with the first of these prototypes orders were placed for the production of DH 4s to equip the Royal Naval Air Service 7 Production edit nbsp An early production DH 4 During late 1916 the first order for 50 DH 4s powered by 250 hp 190 kW Eagle III engines was received from the RFC 8 According to Bruce it was not a surprise to most observers that the Eagle had been selected to power the first batch of production DH 4s 6 The initial production aircraft were largely identical to the second prototype the main difference being the adoption of armament which included a single synchronised 0 303 in 7 7 mm Vickers machine gun for the pilot while the observer was provided with a 0 303 in 7 7 mm Lewis gun mounted upon a Scarff ring 9 Production of the DH 4 was performed by a variety of companies beyond Airco themselves these included F W Berwick and Co Glendower Aircraft Company Palladium Autocars Vulcan Motor and Engineering and the Westland Aircraft Works 10 By the end of production a total of 1 449 aircraft from orders for 1 700 aircraft were constructed in Britain for the Royal Flying Corps RFC and the Royal Naval Air Service RNAS 11 Overseas SABCA of Belgium produced a further 15 DH 4s during 1926 12 10 As production progressed various changes and improvements to the design were introduced upon the DH 4 7 As time went on production DH 4s were fitted with Eagle engines of increasing power ending with the 375 hp 280 kW Eagle VIII which powered the majority of frontline DH 4s by the end of 1917 However this transition was greatly hindered as by January 1917 it had become clear that there was a chronic shortage of Rolls Royce aero engines and of the Eagle in particular it has been claimed by Bruce that this shortfall was partially the result of protracted decision making on the part of the Air Board 7 In response to the limited availability of the Eagle extensive investigations into the use of alternative engines for the DH 4 were conducted This resulted in aircraft being outfitted with a diverse range of engines these included the BHP 230 hp 170 kW the Royal Aircraft Factory RAF3A 200 hp 150 kW the Siddeley Puma 230 hp 170 kW and the 260 hp 190 kW Fiat all of which were used to power which encountered varying degrees of success to production aircraft 8 None of these engines proved to be capable of matching the performance of the Eagle engine which remained the preferred options despite the persistent supply constraints 13 American versions edit nbsp Friends of Jenny DH 4 2018 At the time of entry of the United States into the First World War on 6 April 1917 the aviation section of the U S Signal Corps was unprepared not being equipped with any aircraft suitable for combat 14 However considerable optimism and energy was put into addressing this identified need leading to the mobilization of American industry to set about the production of contemporary combat aircraft As there were no suitable aircraft domestically a technical commission known as the Bolling Commission was dispatched to Europe to seek out the best available combat aircraft and to make arrangements to enable their production to be established in the United States 14 As a result of the efforts of the Bolling Commission the DH 4 along with the Bristol F 2 Fighter the Royal Aircraft Factory S E 5 and French SPAD S XIII were selected 14 On 27 July 1917 a single DH 4 was sent to the United States as a pattern aircraft It was not until 1918 that the first American built DH 4s came off the production line 15 Several different manufacturers including the Boeing Airplane Corporation Dayton Wright Company the Fisher Body Corporation and the Standard Aircraft Corporation produced this Americanized variant of the DH 4 featuring over 1 000 modifications from the original British design to equip the American air services 16 A total of 9 500 DH 4s were ordered from American manufacturers of which 1 885 actually reached France during the war In American production the new Liberty engine which had proved suitable as a DH 4 power plant was adopted The Liberty was also eventually adopted by the British to power the DH 9A variant of the type 1 17 After the war a number of firms most significant of these being Boeing were contracted by the U S Army to remanufacture surplus DH 4s to the improved DH 4B standard Internally referred to by Boeing as the Model 16 deliveries of 111 aircraft from this manufacturer took place between March and July 1920 reportedly roughly 50 of these were returned for further refurbishments three years later 18 19 During 1923 the Army placed an order for a new DH 4 variant from Boeing distinguished by a fuselage of fabric covered steel tube in place of the original plywood structure 20 These three prototypes were designated DH 4M 1 M for modernized and were ordered into production alongside the generally similar DH 4M 2 developed by Atlantic Aircraft A total of 22 of the 163 DH 4M 1s were converted by the Army into dual control trainers DH 4M 1T and a few more into target tugs DH 4M 1K Thirty of the aircraft ordered by the Army were diverted to the Navy for Marine Corps use these designated O2B 1 for the base model and O2B 2 for aircraft equipped for night and cross country flying 21 Design edit nbsp Strength tests on various DH 4 wing ribs during World War I The Airco DH 4 was a conventional tractor two bay biplane of all wooden construction 3 It was entirely built of traditional materials The forward fuselage section and the underside of the tail area was covered by a 3mm plywood skin this construction led to the fuselage being both strong and lightweight heavily contributing to cross bracing only being used for the four bays directly behind the rear cockpit 3 The nose of the aircraft was considerably longer than necessary the cowling having been originally designed to accommodate the Beardmore Halford Pullinger BHP engine rather than the Rolls Royce Eagle that was adopted for production instead 3 The DH 4 was powered by a variety of engines including the Eagle the BHP the American Liberty Royal Aircraft Factory RAF3A the Siddeley Puma and the Fiat 3 Regardless of the engine used it drove a four bladed propeller mounted upon the nose Cooling for the engine was provided via an oval shaped radiator while a port mounted exhaust manifold discarded waste emissions above the upper wing 3 An unusual modification featuring on a small proportion of production DH 4s was the inversion of the engine a design change that had been implemented in order to better accommodate the relatively tall Ricardo Halford Armstrong RHA supercharged engine which would otherwise unduly obstruct the pilot s forward field of view 13 The DH 4 was operated by a crew of two who were accommodated in widely spaced cockpits between which the fuel tank was positioned 8 While the crew arrangement provided good fields of view for both the pilot and observer however it had the noticeable downside of causing communication problems between the two crew members particularly during combat situation where the speaking tube that linked the two cockpits was of only limited use 22 6 On the majority of American built aircraft the pilot s seating and fuel tank arrangement were switched around aviation author Peter M Bowers credits this change with improving the pilot s safety in the event of a crash as well as allowing for better communication with the observer 23 The DH 4 was armed with a single forward firing synchronised Vickers machine gun along with either one or two 303 in 7 7 mm Lewis guns fitted on a Scarff ring fired by the observer In terms of bomb load it accommodate a maximum payload of 460 lb 210 kg which could be mounted upon external racks 22 Throughout the type s production life a number of alterations to the armaments such as the ergonomics of the observer s Lewis gun and the installation of an additional Vickers gun were implemented 13 A pair of DH 4s were outfitted with COW 37 mm guns for experimental purposes but the war came to a close prior to firing trials being conducted 10 All armaments would typically be removed from those DH 4s that were used by civil operators including ex military aircraft that were sold on in great numbers following the end of the Great War One of the more elaborate modifications of the DH 4 was the adaption of the type as a seaplane 10 It was furnished with large floats which were allegedly based upon the design of those used upon the German Hansa Brandenburg W 29 seaplane According to Bruce while no such aircraft entered into operational service as a result of competition from other aircraft to perform the role a number of DH 4 seaplanes were produced for trial purposes at Felixstowe and were successfully flown 10 Operational history editBritish military service edit The DH 4 entered service with the RFC in January 1917 first being used by No 55 Squadron 8 More squadrons were equipped with the type to increase the bombing capacity of the RFC with two squadrons re equipping in May and a total of six squadrons by the end of the year 8 24 During late 1917 the uptake of the type by the RFC was accelerated due to a desire to launch retaliatory bombing raids upon Germany following such attacks having been conducted against the British mainland While Russia had been an early customer for the DH 4 having ordered 50 of the type in September 1917 the Russian and British governments subsequently agreed to delay the former s deliveries instead diverting those aircraft to RFC squadrons in France 25 As well as the RFC the RNAS also used the DH 4 During the spring of 1917 No 2 Squadron became the first unit of the service to receive examples of the type 24 The RNAS flew their DH 4s over both France and over Italy specifically the Aegean front in the latter case 8 The DH 4 was typically used to conduct coastal patrols by the RNAS One such flight crewed by the pilot Major Egbert Cadbury and Captain Robert Leckie later Air Vice Marshal as gunner shot down Zeppelin L70 on 5 August 1918 26 In another incident a group of four RNAS DH 4s were jointly credited with the sinking of the German U boat UB 12 on 19 August 1918 26 27 The DH 4 proved a huge success and was often considered the best single engined bomber of World War I Note 1 Even when fully loaded with bombs with its reliability and impressive performance the type proved highly popular with its crews The Airco DH 4 was easy to fly and especially when fitted with the Rolls Royce Eagle engine its speed and altitude performance gave it a good deal of invulnerability to German fighter interception 28 so that the DH 4 often did not require a fighter escort on missions a concept furthered by de Havilland in the later Mosquito of the Second World War A drawback of the design was the distance between pilot and observer as they were separated by the large main fuel tank This made communication between the crew members difficult especially in combat with enemy fighters 29 There was also some controversy especially in American service that this placement of the fuel tank was inherently unsafe 30 31 In fact most contemporary aircraft were prone to catching fire in the air Note 2 The fire hazard was reduced however when the pressurised fuel system was replaced by one using wind driven fuel pumps late in 1917 29 although this was not initially adopted by American built aircraft 33 The otherwise inferior DH 9 brought the pilot and observer closer together by placing the fuel tank in the usual place between the pilot and the engine Despite its success numbers in service with the RFC actually started to decline from spring 1918 mainly due to a shortage of engines and production switched to the DH 9 which turned out to be disappointing being inferior to the DH 4 in most respects It was left to the further developed DH 9A with the American Liberty engine to satisfactorily replace the DH 4 When the Independent Air Force was set up in June 1918 to carry out strategic bombing of targets in Germany the DH 4s of 55 Squadron formed part of it being used for daylight attacks 22 55 Squadron developed tactics of flying in wedge formations bombing on the leader s command and with the massed defensive fire of the formation deterring attacks by enemy fighters 34 Despite heavy losses 55 Squadron continued in operation the only one of the day bombing squadrons in the Independent Force which did not have to temporarily stand down owing to aircrew losses 35 After the Armistice the RAF formed No 2 Communication Squadron equipped with DH 4s to carry important passengers to and from the Paris Peace Conference Several of the DH 4s used for this purpose were modified with an enclosed cabin for two passengers at the request of Bonar Law 36 One of these planes was extensively used by Prime Minister David Lloyd George and was sometimes called Lloyd George s airplane probably the first aeroplane widely used by a political leader 37 38 Modified aircraft were designated DH 4A with at least seven being converted for the RAF and a further nine for civil use 39 United States military service edit At the time of its entry into the war the United States Army Air Service lacked any aircraft suitable for front line combat It therefore procured various aircraft from the British and French one being the DH 4 As the DH 4 it was manufactured mostly by Dayton Wright and Fisher Body for service with the United States from 1918 the first American built DH 4 being delivered to France in May 1918 with combat operations commencing in August 1918 40 41 The powerplant was a 400 hp 300 kW Liberty L 12 and it was fitted with two forward firing 30 in 7 62 mm synchronized Marlin Rockwell M1917 a development of the Colt Browning machine guns in the nose and two 30 in 7 62 mm Lewis guns in the rear and could carry 322 lb 146 kg of bombs it could also be equipped with various radios like the SCR 68 for artillery spotting missions The heavier engine reduced performance compared with the Rolls Royce powered version but as the Liberty Plane it became the US Army Air Service standard general purpose two seater and on the whole was fairly popular with its crews nbsp A formation of DH 4s in flight Aircrew operating the DH 4 were awarded four of the six Medals of Honor awarded to American aviators First Lieutenant Harold Ernest Goettler and Second Lieutenant Erwin R Bleckley received posthumous awards after being killed on 12 October 1918 attempting to drop supplies to the Lost Battalion of the 77th Division cut off by German troops during the Meuse Argonne Offensive 40 while Second Lieutenant Ralph Talbot and Gunnery Sergeant Robert G Robinson of the United States Marine Corps USMC were awarded the Medal of Honor for beating off attacks from 12 German fighters during a bombing raid over Belgium on 8 October 1918 42 43 better source needed The type flew with 13 U S squadrons by the end of 1918 44 Following the end of the First World War America had a large surplus of DH 4s with the improved DH 4B becoming available although none had been shipped to France It was therefore decided that there was no point in returning aircraft across the Atlantic so those remaining in France together with other obsolete observation and trainer aircraft were burned in what became known as the Billion Dollar Bonfire 45 41 With limited funds available to develop and purchase replacements the remaining DH 4s formed a major part of American air strength for several years used for many roles with as many as 60 variants produced 46 DH 4s were also widely used for experimental flying being used as engine testbeds and fitted with new wings They were used for the first trials of air to air refueling on 27 June 1923 and one carried out an endurance flight of 37 hours 15 minutes on 27 28 August being refueled 16 times and setting 16 new world records for distance speed and duration 47 The DH 4 remained in service with the United States Army Air Corps successor to the United States Army Air Service until 1932 48 A large number of DH 4s were also used by the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps both during the First World War and postwar The Navy and Marine Corps received a total of 51 DH 4s during wartime followed by 172 DH 4B and DH 4B 1 aircraft postwar and 30 DH 4M 1s with welded steel tube fuselages redesignated O2B in 1925 49 They remained in service with the Marine Corps until 1929 being used against rebel factions in Nicaragua in 1927 carrying out the first dive bombing attacks made by U S military forces 49 The U S Navy converted some DH 4M 1s into primitive air ambulances that could carry one stretcher casualty in an enclosed area behind the pilot 50 Civil use edit nbsp Robertson Aircraft Corp operated DH 4 mailplane CAM 2 1926 at the Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum Following the end of the First World War large numbers of DH 4s and DH 4As were used to operate scheduled passenger services in Europe by such airlines as Aircraft Transport and Travel Handley Page Transport and the Belgium airline SNETA G EAJC of Aircraft Transport and Travel flew the first British commercial passenger service from Hounslow Heath Aerodrome to Paris Le Bourget on 25 August 1919 carrying a reporter from the Evening Standard newspaper and a load of newspapers and other freight 51 52 They were used by Aircraft Transport and Travel until it shut down in 1920 while Handley Page Transport and SNETA continued operating the DH 4 until 1921 One aircraft was used by Instone Air Lines until its merger into Imperial Airways in 1924 53 nbsp In 1923 the U S Post Office released a stamp featuring the DeHavilland Biplane being used for airmail service 54 On September 4 1922 Jimmy Doolittle made the first cross country flight flying a de Havilland DH 4 which was equipped with early navigational instruments from Pablo Beach now Jacksonville Beach Florida to Rockwell Field San Diego California in 21 hours and 19 minutes making only one refueling stop at Kelly Field The DH 4 were also used by the Australian airline QANTAS flying its first airmail service in 1922 55 Twelve DH 4s forming part of the Imperial Gift to Canada were used for forestry patrol and survey work spotting hundreds of forest fires and helping to save millions of dollars worth of timber with the last example finally being withdrawn in 1927 56 10 The U S Post Office also adopted the DH 4 to carry air mail 57 58 The Service acquired 100 of them from the army in 1918 and retrofitted them to make them safer denominating them as the DH 4B 57 In 1919 the DH 4B was standardised by the US Post Office being modified to be flown from the rear cockpit with a 400 lb 180 kg watertight mail compartment replacing the forward cockpit The airmail DH 4B were later modified with revised landing gear and an enlarged rudder 59 DH 4s were used to establish a coast to coast transcontinental airmail service between San Francisco and New York a distance of 2 680 mi 4 310 km involving night flight the first services starting on 21 August 1924 The DH 4 continued in Post Office service until 1927 when the last airmail routes were passed to private contractors 60 War surplus DH 4s were available cheaply in sufficient quantities to stimulate the development of utility aviation surveying commercial photography law enforcement agricultural applications and other practical applications 61 Variants edit nbsp Canadian DH 4 G CYDK in the 1920s nbsp Wright Radial Engine R 1 fitted to a De Havilland DH 4B airframe UK variants edit DH 4 Two seat day bomber biplane DH 4A Transport version Built in the United Kingdom Two passengers in glazed cabin behind pilot DH 4R Single seat racer 450 hp 340 kW Napier Lion engine Soviet variants edit copy of DH 4 manufactured by Polikarpov in the former Dux Factory in the 1920s United States variants edit 62 DH 4 Two seat day bomber biplane built in the United States DH 4A Civil version built in the United States DH 4B Rebuilt version of Liberty powered DH 4 for U S Air Service Pilot s cockpit relocated to behind fuel tank adjacent to observer s cockpit DH 4B 1 Increased fuel capacity 110 US gal 420 L 92 imp gal DH 4B 2 Trainer version DH 4B 3 Fitted with 135 US gal 510 L 112 imp gal fuel tank DH 4B 4 Civil version DH 4B 5 Experimental civil conversion with enclosed cabin DH 4BD Cropdusting version of DH 4B DH 4BG Fitted with smokescreen generators DH 4BK Night flying version DH 4BM Single seat version for communications DH 4BM 1 Dual control version of BM DH 4BM 2 Dual control version of BM DH 4 BP Experimental photo reconnaissance version DH 4 BP 1 BP converted for survey work DH 4BS Testbed for supercharged Liberty DH 4BT Dual control trainer DH 4BW Testbed for Wright H engine DH 4C 300 hp 220 kW Packard engine DH 4L Civil version DH 4M Rebuilt version of DH 4 with steel tube fuselage DH 4Amb Ambulance DH 4M 1 postwar version by Boeing Model 16 with new fuselage designated O2B 1 by Navy DH 4M 1T Dual control trainer conversion of DH 4M DH 4M 1K target tug conversion O2B 2 cross country and night flying conversion for Navy DH 4M 2 postwar version by Atlantic L W F J 2 Twin engine long range development of DH 4 also known as Twin DH powered by two 200 hp 150 kW Hall Scott Liberty L 6 engines and with wingspan of 52 ft 6 in 16 00 m 20 built for U S Post Office 10 for U S Army 63 64 XCO 7 Boeing Model 42 Two seat observation version with Boeing designed wings enlarged tailplane and divided landing gear XCO 8 Was a designation of one Atlantic DH 4M 2 fitted with Loening COA 1 wings and powered by a Liberty 12A engine Operators editCivil operators edit nbsp Argentina The River Plate Aviation Co Ltd nbsp Australia QANTAS nbsp Belgium SNETA nbsp United Kingdom Aircraft Transport and Travel Limited Handley Page Transport Imperial Airways Instone Air Line nbsp United States U S Post Office Military operators edit nbsp Belgium Aviation Militaire Belge nbsp Canada Canadian Air Force 1918 1920 Royal Canadian Air Force nbsp Chile Chilean Air Force nbsp Cuba Cuban Air Force American built DH 4s nbsp Greece Hellenic Air Force Hellenic Navy nbsp Iran Imperial Iranian Air Force nbsp Mexico Fuerza Aerea Mexicana nbsp Nicaragua Nicaraguan Air Force The Nicaragua Air Force received seven DH 4Bs 65 nbsp New Zealand The New Zealand Permanent Air Force operated two aircraft from 1919 to 1929 It was used by the NZPAF as an advanced training aircraft The DH 4 has the distinction of being the first aircraft to fly over Mount Cook on 8 September 1920 It also set a New Zealand altitude record of 21 000 ft 6 400 m on 27 November 1919 nbsp South Africa South African Air Force nbsp Soviet Union Soviet Air Force nbsp Kingdom of Spain Spanish Air Force nbsp Turkey Turkish Air Force nbsp United Kingdom Royal Flying Corps Royal Air Force Royal Naval Air Service nbsp United States United States Army Air Service 8th Aero Squadron 11th Aero Squadron 20th Aero Squadron 50th Aero Squadron 85th Aero Squadron 91st Aero Squadron 104th Aero Squadron 135th Aero Squadron 163rd Aero Squadron 166th Aero Squadron 168th Aero Squadron 278th Aero Squadron 354th Aero Squadron United States Navy United States Marine CorpsSurviving aircraft edit nbsp The DH 4B on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force 21959 citation needed The prototype American built DH 4 is on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington D C 66 Unknown ID A DH 4B is on display in the main atrium of the National Postal Museum in Washington D C 67 Unknown ID A DH 4 is on display at the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Triangle Virginia 68 It was restored by Century Aviation 69 Unknown ID A DH 4B at the Pearson Air Museum in Vancouver Washington It was restored by Century Aviation 70 71 72 Unknown ID A DH 4B is on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton Ohio 73 It was restored by Century Aviation 74 Unknown ID A DH 4B is on display at Fantasy of Flight in Polk City Florida It was restored by Century Aviation 75 Unknown ID A DH 4B is under restoration by Century Aviation for Fantasy of Flight in Polk City Florida It will be powered by a rebuilt Liberty V 12 76 Unknown ID A DH 4M 1 is on display at the Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum in McMinnville Oregon 77 This aircraft was previously owned by Paul Mantz 78 Unknown ID A DH 4M 2A is airworthy at the Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum in Maryland Heights Missouri 79 80 81 82 Unknown ID A DH 4 is on display at the Omaka Aviation Heritage Centre in Blenheim New Zealand 83 This aircraft was previously on display at the Crawford Auto Aviation Museum in Cleveland Ohio and was at one point loaned to the United States Air Force Museum 84 Replica A DH 4 is on display at the Museo del Aire in Madrid Spain 85 86 Replica A DH 4 is airworthy with The Vintage Aviator Limited in Masterton New Zealand It was built by Century Aviation and is powered by a rebuilt Liberty V 12 87 Specifications DH 4 Eagle VIII engine editData from The British Bomber since 1914 8 The de Havilland DH 4 88 General characteristicsCrew 2 Length 30 ft 8 in 9 35 m Wingspan 43 ft 4 in 13 21 m Height 11 ft 0 in 3 35 m Wing area 434 sq ft 40 3 m2 Empty weight 2 387 lb 1 083 kg Gross weight 3 472 lb 1 575 kg Powerplant 1 Rolls Royce Eagle VIII water cooled V12 engine 375 hp 280 kW Note 3 Performance Maximum speed 143 mph 230 km h 124 kn at sea level Note 4 Endurance 3 hr 45 min Service ceiling 22 000 ft 6 700 m Time to altitude 9 min to 10 000 ft 3 000 m Armament Guns One fixed forward firing 303 in 7 7 mm Vickers machine gun 1 or 2 303 in 7 7 mm Lewis guns on a Scarff ring Bombs 460 lb 210 kg of bombsSee also edit1916 in aviation Related development Airco DH 9 Airco DH 9A Related lists List of bomber aircraftExternal links edit Pilot Report The deHavilland DH4 A Trip Back In Time by Addison Pemberton Chapter 3 The Airco deHavilland DH 4 in Eight Great Aircraft by Richard Harris References editNotes edit Quote Certainly the DH 4 was without peer among the day bombing aeroplanes used by the aerial forces of any of the combatant nations 22 Sometimes derided as the Flaming Coffin Gorrell s History of the Air Service of the AEF refuted the misconception Quote Of 33 DH 4s lost to enemy action by the US Air Service eight fell in flames no worse than the average at the time 32 230 hp 170 kW for BHP Puma 106 mph 171 km h for Puma engine variants Citations edit a b Jackson 1987 p 58 Bruce 1966 p 12 a b c d e f g h Bruce 1966 p 3 Jackson 1987 p 53 a b c d e Bruce 1966 p 4 a b c Bruce 1966 pp 3 4 a b c d Bruce 1966 p 5 a b c d e f g Mason 1994 pp 66 69 Bruce 1966 pp 4 5 a b c d e f Bruce 1966 p 10 Jackson 1987 p 54 Jackson 1987 p 60 a b c Bruce 1966 pp 5 8 a b c Bowers 1966 p 3 Bowers 1966 pp 3 10 Bowers 1966 pp 3 4 Bowers 1966 pp 6 7 Bowers 1989 p 67 Bowers 1966 pp 7 8 Bowers 1966 p 9 Bowers 1989 p 70 a b c d Bruce 1952 p 507 Bowers 1966 p 7 a b Bruce 1966 p 9 Bruce 1966 pp 7 8 a b Thetford 1978 p 86 Bruce 1966 pp 9 10 Jackson 1987 pp 54 56 a b Jackson 1987 p 56 Maurer 1979 pp 12 87 120 132 Bowers 1966 pp 5 6 Williams 1999 p 83 Maurer 1979 p 551 Williams 1999 p 84 Williams 1999 p 195 Jackson 1987 p 77 Foreign Passenger Carrying Aeroplanes Introduce a New Era of Transportation Popular Mechanics Magazine 31 510 511 April 1919 British Premier s Altered DH 4 Shows Unusual Speed Popular Mechanics Magazine 32 65 July 1919 Jackson 1987 p 81 a b Fact Sheets De Havilland DH 4 Archived 14 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the USAF Retrieved 19 April 2008 a b Bowers 1966 p 6 The De Havilland DH 4 Workhorse of the Army Air Service Archived 28 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Air amp Space Power Journal Winter 2002 Retrieved 9 May 2008 Robert Guy Robinson First Lieutenant United States Marine Corps at ArlingtonCemetery net Unofficial website Angelucci 1981 p 79 Swanborough and Bowers 1963 p 198 Bruce 1952 p 510 Fact Sheets Air to Air Refueling Archived 18 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the United States Air Force Retrieved 10 May 2008 Swanborough and Bowers 1963 p 199 a b Swanborough and Bowers 1976 p 156 Hearst Magazines November 1929 Help From The Skies Popular Mechanics Hearst Magazines p 765 Jackson 1973 p 41 Jackson 1987 p 79 Jackson 1973 p 43 24 cent DeHavilland Biplane Smithsonian National Postal Museum Jackson 1973 p 40 Jackson 1973 pp 70 71 a b Pope Nancy A deHavilland DH 4 National Postal Museum Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on 6 July 2015 Retrieved 21 July 2015 Bowers 1966 pp 9 10 Swanborough and Bowers 1963 p 201 Bowers 1966 p 10 General Aviation in History of Flight Britannica retrieved May 29 2021 Jackson 1987 p 67 American airplanes Lo Lu Archived 21 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Aerofiles Retrieved 10 May 2008 Swanborough and Bowers 1963 pp 202 203 Klaus Erich Nicaragua Air Force Aircraft Types de Havilland Airco DH 4B Archived 27 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Aeroflight 1 June 2003 Retrieved 10 May 2008 De Havilland DH 4 Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Archived from the original on 12 April 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 deHavilland DH 4 Smithsonian National Postal Museum Archived from the original on 17 April 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 De Haviland DH 4 National Museum of the Marine Corps Virtual Experience Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 1918 DeHavilland DH 4 Century Aviation Archived from the original on 23 April 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 Cromwell Bob 15 October 2014 National Park Service Announces the Purchase of a DeHavilland DH 4 Biplane for Exhibit at Pearson Air Museum National Park Service Archived from the original on 19 September 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 1919 DeHavilland DH 4B Century Aviation Archived from the original on 23 April 2016 Retrieved 13 August 2016 The DH 4 Liberty Plane at War and in Peace National Park Service Retrieved 13 December 2023 De Havilland DH 4 National Museum of the US Air Force 7 April 2015 Archived from the original on 5 June 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 DeHavilland DH 4B Century Aviation Archived from the original on 23 April 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 1918 DeHavilland DH 4 Mail Plane Century Aviation Archived from the original on 28 April 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 1918 De Havilland DH 4 U S Army Air Corps Century Aviation Archived from the original on 23 April 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 Airframe Dossier Airco DH 4 c r N3258 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 Skaarup Harold 1 February 2002 Washington Warbird Survivors 2002 A Handbook on Where to Find Them iUniverse ISBN 9780595216932 Museum Hangar 4 Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 11 May 2016 Airframe Dossier Airco DH 4M 2A c r N3249H Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 FAA Registry N3249H Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 3 November 2021 DH 4M2 Peck Aeroplane Restoration Archived from the original on 20 September 2016 Retrieved 3 June 2016 The Exhibits Omaka Aviation Heritage Centre New Zealand Aviation Museum Trust Archived from the original on 13 April 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 Mazzolini Joan 7 March 2010 Western Reserve Historical Society has sold or put up for sale many items from its collection Cleveland com Advance Ohio Archived from the original on 18 August 2016 Retrieved 11 May 2016 Fotografia De Havilland DH 4 Ejercito del Aire Archived from the original on 18 March 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 Airframe Dossier Airco DH 4 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 1917 Airco DH 4 British Military Century Aviation Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2016 Bruce 1966 pp 8 10 Bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Airco DH 4 Angelucci Enzo ed World Encyclopedia of Military Aircraft London Jane s 1991 ISBN 0 7106 0148 4 Bruce J M The De Havilland D H 4 Flight 17 October 1952 pp 506 510 Bruce J M The de Havilland D H 4 Aircraft in Profile number 26 London Profile Publications 1966 No ISBN Bowers Peter M Boeing Aircraft since 1916 London Putnam Second edition 1989 ISBN 0 85177 804 6 Bowers Peter M The American DH 4 Aircraft in Profile number 97 London Profile Publications 1966 No ISBN Jackson A J British Civil Aircraft since 1919 Volume 2 London Putnam Second edition 1973 ISBN 0 370 10010 7 Jackson A J De Havilland Aircraft since 1909 London Putnam Third edition 1987 ISBN 0 85177 802 X Klaauw Bart van der March April 1999 Unexpected Windfalls Accidentally or Deliberately More than 100 Aircraft arrived in Dutch Territory During the Great War Air Enthusiast 80 54 59 ISSN 0143 5450 Mason Francis K The British Bomber since 1914 London Putnam Aeronautical Books 1994 ISBN 0 85177 861 5 Maurer Maurer ed The U S Air Service in World War I Volume IV Postwar Review Washington D C The Office of Air Force History Headquarters USAF 1979 Prins Francois Spring 1994 Pioneering Spirit The QANTAS Story Air Enthusiast No 53 pp 24 32 ISSN 0143 5450 Sturtivant Ray and Gordon Page The D H 4 D H 9 File Tonbridge Kent UK Air Britain Historians Ltd 2000 ISBN 0 85130 274 2 Swanborough F G and Peter M Bowers United States Military Aircraft since 1909 London Putnam 1963 Swanborough Gordon and Peter M Bowers United States Naval Aircraft since 1911 London Putnam Second edition 1976 ISBN 0 370 10054 9 Thetford Owen British Naval Aircraft since 1912 London Putnam Fourth edition 1978 ISBN 0 370 30021 1 Thomas Andrew In the Footsteps of Daedulus Early Greek Naval Aviation Air Enthusiast No 94 July August 2001 pp 8 9 ISSN 0143 5450 United States Air Force Museum Guidebook Wright Patterson AFB Ohio Air Force Museum Foundation 1975 Wauthy Jean Luc amp de Neve Florian June 1995 Les aeronefs de la Force Aerienne Belge deuxieme partie 1919 1935 Aircraft of the Belgian Air Force Le Fana de l Aviation in French 305 28 33 ISSN 0757 4169 Williams George K Biplanes and Bombsights British Bombing in World War I Maxwell Air Force Base Alabama Air University Press 1999 ISBN 1 4102 0012 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airco DH 4 amp oldid 1191920330, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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