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de Havilland DH.60 Moth

The de Havilland DH.60 Moth is a 1920s British two-seat touring and training aircraft that was developed into a series of aircraft by the de Havilland Aircraft Company.

DH.60 Moth, Cirrus Moth, Genet Moth, Gipsy Moth, and Moth Major
BAe Systems' DH.60 Cirrus III Moth, based at The Shuttleworth Collection, Old Warden. It was the eighth DH.60 produced, delivered 29 August 1925 and retains the early single axle.
Role Trainer
Manufacturer de Havilland Aircraft Company
Designer Geoffrey de Havilland
First flight 22 February 1925 (DH.60 Cirrus Moth)
Developed from de Havilland DH.51
Variants de Havilland Tiger Moth

Development

The DH.60 was developed from the larger DH.51 biplane.[1] The first flight of the ADC Cirrus powered prototype DH.60 Moth (registration G-EBKT) was carried out by Geoffrey de Havilland at the works airfield at Stag Lane on 22 February 1925. The Moth was a two-seat biplane of wooden construction, it had a plywood covered fuselage and fabric covered surfaces, a standard tailplane with a single tailplane and fin. A useful feature of the design was its folding wings which allowed owners to hangar the aircraft in much smaller spaces. The then Secretary of State for Air Sir Samuel Hoare became interested in the aircraft and the Air Ministry subsidised five flying clubs and equipped them with Moths.

The prototype was modified with a horn-balanced rudder, as used on the production aircraft, and was entered into the 1925 King's Cup Race flown by Alan Cobham. Deliveries commenced to flying schools in England. One of the early aircraft was fitted with an all-metal twin-float landing gear to become the first Moth seaplane. The original production Moths were later known as Cirrus I Moths.

Three aircraft were modified for the 1927 King's Cup Race with internal modifications and a Cirrus II engine on a lowered engine mounting. The original designation of DH.60X (for experimental) was soon changed to Cirrus II Moth; the DH.60X designation was re-used in 1928 for the Cirrus III powered version with a split axle. The production run for the DH.60X Moth was short as it was replaced by later variants, but it was still available to special order.

Gipsy engine

Although the Cirrus engine was reliable, its manufacture was not. It depended on components salvaged from World War I–era 8-cylinder Renault engines and therefore its numbers were limited by the stockpiles of surplus Renaults. de Havilland therefore decided to replace the Cirrus with a new engine designed by Frank Halford built by his own factory. In 1928 when the new de Havilland Gipsy I engine was available a company DH.60 Moth G-EBQH was re-engined as the prototype of the DH.60G Gipsy Moth.

Next to the increase in power, the main advantage of this update was that the Gipsy was a completely new engine available in as great a number as the manufacture of Moths necessitated. The new Gipsy engines could simply be built in-house on a production-line side by side with the Moth airframes. This also enabled de Havilland to control the complete process of building a Moth airframe, engine and all, streamline productivity and in the end lower manufacturing costs. While the original DH.60 was offered for a relatively modest £650, by 1930 the price of a new Gipsy-powered Moth was still £650, this in spite of its state-of-the-art engine.

 
DH.60G-III Moth Major G-ADHE at Coventry in June 1954

A metal-fuselage version of the Gipsy Moth was designated the DH.60M Moth and was originally developed for overseas customers, particularly Canada. The DH.60M was also licence-built in Australia, Canada, the United States and Norway. Also in 1931 a variant of the DH.60M was marketed for military training as the DH.60T Moth Trainer.

In 1931 with the upgrade of the Gipsy engine as the Gipsy II, de Havilland inverted the engine and re-designated it the Gipsy III. The engine was fitted into a Moth aircraft, which was re-designated the DH.60G-III Moth Major. This sub-type was intended for the military trainer market and some of the first aircraft were supplied to the Swedish Air Force.

The DH.60T Moth was re-engined with the Gipsy III and was initially re-designated the DH.60T Tiger Moth. The DH.60T Tiger Moth was further modified with swept back mainplanes and the cabane struts were moved forward to improve egress from the front cockpit in case of emergency. The changes were great enough that the aircraft was again re-designated, becoming the DH.82 Tiger Moth.

Design

 
Lower port wing internal structure

Apart from the engine, the new Gipsy Moth was still a standard DH.60. Except for changes to accommodate the engine the fuselage remained the same as before, the exhaust still ran alongside the left side of the cockpits and the logo on the right side still read 'De Havilland Moth'. The fuel tank was still housed in the bulging airfoil that formed the centre section of the upper wing. The wings could still be folded alongside the fuselage and still had de Havilland's patented differential ailerons on the bottom mainplanes and no ailerons on the top ones. Colour options still remained as simple as before: wings and tail in "Moth silver", fuselage in the colour the buyer chose.

Operational history

As there was no real comparison between the original DH.60 and the new DH.60G, the Gipsy Moth quickly became the mainstay of British flying clubs as the only real recreational aircraft in the UK. By 1929 it was estimated that of every 100 aeroplanes in Britain, 85 were Moths of one type or another, most of them Gipsy Moths. This was in spite of the fact that with de Havilland having switched from the Cirrus engine to its own Gipsy engine, surplus Cirruses were now pouring into the market and a trove of Cirrus-powered aircraft like the Avro Avian, the Klemm Swallow, and the Miles Hawk started fighting for the flying club and private market.

Although replaced in production by the DH.82 Tiger Moth, the Gipsy Moth remained the mainstay of the British flying scene up to the start of WWII. The war however marked the end of the Gipsy Moth and post-war it was quickly replaced by ex-RAF Tiger Moths pouring into the civilian market.

DH.60 Moth in flying clubs

The DH.60 arrived at the right spot at the right time. Next to the Moth's maiden flight, 1925 also marked the birth of the first five Royal Aero Club flying schools and clubs and with its simplicity and performance, the Moth was the aircraft of choice to equip the clubs. De Havilland then used this income to concentrate on developing the Moth further into a mass-produced, mass-market aircraft. The Moth made the aero clubs at least just as much as the aero clubs made the Moth. The Moth remained the mainstay of the clubs even long after more modern aircraft became available.

With de Havilland's habit of painting the wings and tailplane of the Moth in silver also came the clubs' habit of distinguishing their aircraft by painting their fuselage in one distinctive club colour. Aircraft of the London Aero Club had a yellow fuselage (plus yellow struts and wheel caps); those of Newcastle a red one. Green stood for the Midlands and blue for Lancashire. Registration letters were black on the wings and, depending on the club colour, either black or white on the fuselage.

 
DH.60 Moth built in 1931 in France under licence by Morane-Saulnier

As the Royal Aero Club marketed the idea of flying clubs to other members of the Commonwealth, the de Havilland Aircraft Company followed suit and soon established subsidiaries in Australia and Canada to stock the local flying clubs there with Gipsy Moths. Canadian Moths were offered with a detachable canopy for winter flying. Other factories to licence-build the Gipsy Moth were the Larkin Aircraft Supply Company in Australia (which built 32 for the RAAF). Although built for flying clubs rather than for individual air cruising, the Australian Moths were the DH.60 L "Luxury" version and were delivered with their fuselages sporting the L's characteristic two-tone colour scheme rather than the fuselage entirely painted in the club colour as was customary in British flying clubs. Other manufacturers were Morane-Saulnier in France (40 built) and a company called Moth Aircraft Co. in the U.S. (18 built).

DH.60 Moth in private use

 
Amy Johnson and Jason, a DH.60G Gipsy Moth, in Jhansi, India in 1930

Most Gipsy Moths belonged to flying clubs, but after the Prince of Wales purchased a Gipsy Moth (G-AALG) for his own private flying, the aircraft became popular with high society. In addition the Moth was used for many record flights. The 'Lonely Flyer' Sir Francis Chichester flew his Gipsy Moth from England to Australia, on to New Zealand and then across the Pacific to Japan. Although he originally planned to fly around the world, a crash in Japan convinced him to switch to sailing. (Chichester subsequently named his yachts 'Gipsy Moth II', 'Gipsy Moth III', and most famously, 'Gipsy Moth IV'.)

Of the aviatrixes, London secretary Amy Johnson flew her Gipsy Moth (G-AAAH "Jason") 11,000 mi (17,703 km) to Australia in 1930, and Jean Batten used a Gipsy Moth for her flights from England to India and England to Australia (the aircraft used to fly to India was G-AALG borrowed from Victor Dorée, who then owned the plane. In March 1928 Mary Bailey flew her Cirrus Moth solo from Croydon to Cape Town, a trip of three weeks, and returned the following year.

 
Amy Johnson's Gipsy Moth (G-AAAH "Jason")

DH.60 Moth in military service

Although the DH.60T was aggressively marketed as a military trainer, response was rather lukewarm. In particular the RAF initially purchased only a handful of aircraft for testing and found that many aspects of the Moth did not suit their method of military flight training. However, by 1931 the RAF had acquired 124 DH.60M Moths and these were used by the Central Flying School and other training units until 1939.

Moth trainers were however ordered by a number of foreign air forces including those of Argentina, Australia (as noted above), Austria, Norway, Portugal, Sweden and the flying arm of the Danish Navy. Finnish Valtion lentokonetehdas licence-built 21 Moth trainers of which 18 were purchased by Finnish Air Force. First examples were equipped with Cirrus engine while 11 later ones had Hermes engine, X-type landing gear struts and a locally built engine cover which earned these the name "Härkä-Moth" ("Bull Moth").[2]

Two Gipsy Moths were purchased by the Paraguayan government during the Chaco War. They were used as liaison aircraft. One was lost in a fatal accident at Ñu-Guazú Air Force Base and the other survived the war. It was transferred to the Paraguayan Aeroclub in 1936.

The bulk of military Moths however were civilian sport aircraft impressed by their countries air forces and used as trainers and liaison aircraft. Like this, civilian Moths ended up flying for both the Nationalist and Republican air forces during the Spanish Civil War. This was repeated on a larger scale during the Second World War where Moths ended up flying, amongst others, for the air forces of Egypt, China (with several captured ex-Chinese aircraft flying for the Japanese), Ireland, Italy, Iraq, Belgian Congo, Dutch East Indies (later taken over by the Indonesian AF), South Africa, New Zealand and the U.S. Navy.

Variants

(Variants are listed in chronological order)

 
Royal Canadian Air Force DH.60 Cirrus Moth fitted with floats
  • DH.60 Cirrus Moth
Prototype and early production aircraft powered by a 60 hp (45 kW) ADC Cirrus engine. 8 pre-production and 31 production aircraft built.
  • DH.60 Cirrus II Moth (also known as the Hermes Moth)
Introduced in 1927 this variant had a slightly larger wingspan and decreased distance between the upper and lower wings. Powered by an uprated (105 hp/78 kW) Cirrus Hermes engine, 32 built.
  • DH.60 Genet Moth
A small number of DH.60 Moths were fitted with the Armstrong Siddeley Genet radial engine. The type was used by the Royal Air Force Central Flying School for display purposes, six built.
  • DH.60G Gipsy Moth
 
DH.60G Gipsy Moths in service with LAN-Chile, 1933
First major overhaul of the design: Cirrus engine replaced by a 100 hp (75 kW) de Havilland Gipsy I engine.
  • DH.60GII (GipsyII Moth)
Powered by a 120 hp (89 kW) Gipsy II. Commonly referred to as a "Gipsy Moth" just like the 100 hp (75 kW) version.
  • DH.60X
Optional 'X' braced undercarriage version of the early Gipsy Moth. (X-style undercarriage became standard for the DH.60M and all subsequent models)
  • DH.60L (Luxury)
Offered with wider let-down cockpit doors and an enlarged luggage locker behind the rear cockpit. The luxury version also featured a state-of-the-art 1930s-style two-colour paint scheme for the fuselage.
  • DH.60M Moth (Metal Moth)
The original plywood box fuselage replaced with a construction of metal stringers covered with doped fabric. Although overall weight increased, maintenance became easier and metal fuselages became standard for all later versions. Four pre-production aircraft, 536 built by de Havilland at Stag Lane, 40 built by de Havilland Canada, 161 built by the Moth Corporation in the United States, 10 built by the Norwegian Army Aircraft Factory in Norway.
  • DH.60T (Moth Trainer)
Trainer variant of the Metal-Gipsy Moth. Rearranging of the inner wing bracing wires allowed for easier access to the front cockpit, a necessity for military pilots wearing parachutes. Two prototypes and 47 production aircraft were built.

(Production for all Gipsy I and II variants: 595 built by de Havilland at Stag Lane Aerodrome, 40 built by Morane-Saulnier in France, 18 built by the Moth Corporation in the United States, and 32 built by Larkin Aircraft Supply in Australia.)

 
Swiss registered DH.60G III Moth Major
  • DH.60G III Moth
In 1931 the company took a de Havilland Gipsy II engine and turned it upside down and re-designated it the Gipsy III, this engine was then fitted to the Moth to create the DG.60G III Moth, 57 built including 10 as fuselages for the Royal Air Force as 'Queen Bee' target drones.
  • DH.60G III Moth Major
In 1934 from the 58th DH.60G III onwards, the engine name was changed to Gipsy Major and the resulting variant was renamed the DH.60G III Moth Major. 96 were built including 10 as fuselages for the Royal Air Force as 'Queen Bee' target drones, production ending in May 1935. A final Moth Major was built by the de Havilland Technical School, giving total production of the DH.60G III of 154.[3]
  • DH.60T (Tiger Moth Prototypes)
Eight prototypes with swept wings for a proposed RAF trainer. Because of the substantial changes, the aircraft entered production as the DH.82 Tiger Moth.

Note: Variant information taken from Bransom.[4]

 
Prototype DH.60T

Operators

Military operators

Surviving aircraft

 
G-EBLV & G-EBWD displaying at Evening Airshow, Old Warden, Bedfordshire.
  • There are currently 31 de Havilland DH.60 Moths on the UK aircraft register (as of August 2017).[9]
  • There are currently six DH.60 Moths on the Australian aircraft register (as of 15 November 2015).[10]
  • There is one DH.60M at Kjeller Aerodrome outside Oslo, Norway. Built by de Havilland in March 1929, it was shipped to Australia, registered as VH-UKC and won the air race between Sydney and Perth that same year. Crashed in May 1930 and subsequently stored. Remains bought by Kjeller Flyhistoriske Forening in Norway in 2007, and rebuilt to as new standard over a ten-year period. Airworthy, with new registration LN-KFM.
  • The oldest surviving DH.60 Moth (G-EBLV built in 1925), remains airworthy as of August 2017, and is owned and operated by the BAe Systems Heritage Flight in the UK. It is kept at the Shuttleworth Collection, Old Warden Aerodrome and is often displayed at airshows.[11]
  • A 1928 DH.60X Moth (G-EBWD) has been based at a single aerodrome (Old Warden) for longer than any other aeroplane in aviation history. This Moth was originally Richard Shuttleworth's own private aircraft in which he learnt to fly[12] and during its career was extensively modified with an original Cirrus Hermes engine but an X-legged undercarriage and different windshields on the front and rear cockpit. It remains airworthy as of August 2017 and is displayed at British airshows during the summer months.
  • VH-UAE is the world's second oldest DH.60 still airworthy (serial number 192, constructed in 1925) and was first registered in Australia as VH-UAE on 5 November 1925 making it the longest registered, airworthy aircraft in Australia.[13] It was impressed into RAAF for training service during WW2 (A7-88), and disposed of in 1945. The original 'VH' registration was re-issued. Other than a brief restoration time during 2000, the aircraft has been airworthy and registered since 1925.

Aircraft on display

The following DH.60 Moth aircraft are on public display in museums:

Specifications (DH.60G Gipsy Moth)

 
DH.60 Cirrus Moth 3-view drawing from NACA Aircraft Circular No.18

Data from De Havilland Aircraft since 1909[14]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Length: 23 ft 11 in (7.29 m)
  • Wingspan: 30 ft 0 in (9.14 m)
  • Height: 8 ft 9+12 in (2.680 m)
  • Wing area: 243 sq ft (22.6 m2)
  • Empty weight: 920 lb (417 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 1,650 lb (748 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × de Havilland Gipsy I 4-cylinder air-cooled in-line piston engine, 100 hp (75 kW)
  • Propellers: 2-bladed fixed-pitch propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 102 mph (164 km/h, 89 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 85 mph (137 km/h, 74 kn)
  • Range: 320 mi (510 km, 280 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 14,500 ft (4,400 m)
  • Rate of climb: 500 ft/min (2.5 m/s)

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

Notes

  1. ^ Bransom 1991, p. 11.
  2. ^ a b Heinonen, Timo; Valtonen, Hannu (2010). "De Havilland D.H.60 ja 60X Moth". Albatrossista Pilatukseen - Suomen sotilaslentokoneet 1918-2010 [From Albatros to Pilatus - Finnish military aircraft 1918-2010] (in Finnish). Keski-Suomen Ilmailumuseo. p. 80. ISBN 978-952-99989-2-0.
  3. ^ Jackson 1973, p. 92.
  4. ^ Bransom 1991, pp. 12–34.
  5. ^ Borja, Elizabeth (27 February 2021). "The Dream of Abyssinia: Two Black Aviators and Ethiopia". National Air and Space Museum. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  6. ^ Ketley and Rolfe 1996, p. 11.
  7. ^ Sipos, Milos; Cooper, Tom (2020). Wings of Iraq, Volume 1: The Iraqi Air Force, 1931-1970. Warwick, UK: Helion & Company Publishing. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-913118-74-7.
  8. ^ Jackson 1987, p. 222.
  9. ^ "G-INFO – DH.60." Civil Aviation Authority. Retrieved: 29 August 2017
  10. ^ "Registered DH-60Gs in Australia" Civil Aviation Safety Authority, Retrieved: 15 November 2015
  11. ^ BAe Systems Heritage - DH.60 Moth Retrieved: 29 August 2017
  12. ^ "The Shuttleworth Collection - DH60X Moth". The Shuttleworth Collection Retrieved: 29 August 2017.
  13. ^ "VH-UAE Information" Airways Museum & Civil Aviation Historical Society, Retrieved: 15 November 2015
  14. ^ Jackson 1987, p. 239.

Bibliography

  • Bransom, Alan. The Tiger Moth Story, Fourth Edition. Shrewsbury, UK: Airlife Publishing Ltd., 1991. ISBN 0-906393-19-1.
  • Comas, Matthieu (September–October 2020). "So British!: 1939–1940, les avions britanniques dans l'Armée de l'Air" [So British!: British Aircraft in the French Air Force 1939–1940]. Avions (in French) (236): 38–61. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • Cortet, Pierre (December 1999). "Rétros du Mois" [Retros of the Month]. Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire (in French) (81): 43. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • De Havilland, D. H. (Summer 1980). "60 Moth". Dirty Plastics. No. 98/100. Arizona Historical Modellers Society.
  • Gilbert, James (1970). The Great Planes. New York: Ridge Press.
  • Grant, James Ritchie (July–August 1999). "Anti-Clockwise: Australia the Wrong Way". Air Enthusiast. No. 82. pp. 60–63. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Jackson, A. J. (1973). British Civil Aircraft since 1919: Volume 2 (2nd ed.). London: Putnam. ISBN 0-370-10010-7.
  • Jackson, A. J. (1987). De Havilland Aircraft since 1909 (3rd ed.). London: Putnam. ISBN 0-85177-802-X.
  • Ketley, Barry; Rolfe, Mark (1996). Luftwaffe Fledglings 1935–1945: Luftwaffe Training Units and their Aircraft. Aldershot, UK: Hikoki Publications. ISBN 978-5-9955-0028-5.
  • Lopes, Mario Canoniga (Spring 1994). "Talkback". Air Enthusiast. No. 53. pp. 79–80. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Prins, François (Spring 1994). "Pioneering Spirit: The QANTAS Story". Air Enthusiast. No. 53. pp. 24–32. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Weal, Elke; Weal, John; Barker, Richard (1977). Combat Aircraft of World War Two. London: Arms and Armour Press / RAF Museum Hendon.

External links

  • at Science Museum (archived)
  • displayed at the Royal Air Force Museum (archived)
  • DH.60X Cirrus Moth, G-EBWD at the Shuttleworth Collection
  • The de Havilland Moth Club
  • at Chile's Aviation Museum (archived)
  • DH.60G aircraft 6 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine on the UK aircraft register

havilland, moth, other, havilland, moth, aircraft, havilland, moth, yacht, gipsy, moth, other, meanings, gypsy, moth, gypsy, moth, disambiguation, 1920s, british, seat, touring, training, aircraft, that, developed, into, series, aircraft, havilland, aircraft, . For other de Havilland Moth aircraft see de Havilland Moth For the yacht Gipsy Moth or other meanings of Gypsy Moth see Gypsy moth disambiguation The de Havilland DH 60 Moth is a 1920s British two seat touring and training aircraft that was developed into a series of aircraft by the de Havilland Aircraft Company DH 60 Moth Cirrus Moth Genet Moth Gipsy Moth and Moth MajorBAe Systems DH 60 Cirrus III Moth based at The Shuttleworth Collection Old Warden It was the eighth DH 60 produced delivered 29 August 1925 and retains the early single axle Role TrainerManufacturer de Havilland Aircraft CompanyDesigner Geoffrey de HavillandFirst flight 22 February 1925 DH 60 Cirrus Moth Developed from de Havilland DH 51Variants de Havilland Tiger Moth Contents 1 Development 1 1 Gipsy engine 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 DH 60 Moth in flying clubs 3 2 DH 60 Moth in private use 3 3 DH 60 Moth in military service 4 Variants 5 Operators 5 1 Military operators 6 Surviving aircraft 7 Aircraft on display 8 Specifications DH 60G Gipsy Moth 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment EditThe DH 60 was developed from the larger DH 51 biplane 1 The first flight of the ADC Cirrus powered prototype DH 60 Moth registration G EBKT was carried out by Geoffrey de Havilland at the works airfield at Stag Lane on 22 February 1925 The Moth was a two seat biplane of wooden construction it had a plywood covered fuselage and fabric covered surfaces a standard tailplane with a single tailplane and fin A useful feature of the design was its folding wings which allowed owners to hangar the aircraft in much smaller spaces The then Secretary of State for Air Sir Samuel Hoare became interested in the aircraft and the Air Ministry subsidised five flying clubs and equipped them with Moths The prototype was modified with a horn balanced rudder as used on the production aircraft and was entered into the 1925 King s Cup Race flown by Alan Cobham Deliveries commenced to flying schools in England One of the early aircraft was fitted with an all metal twin float landing gear to become the first Moth seaplane The original production Moths were later known as Cirrus I Moths Three aircraft were modified for the 1927 King s Cup Race with internal modifications and a Cirrus II engine on a lowered engine mounting The original designation of DH 60X for experimental was soon changed to Cirrus II Moth the DH 60X designation was re used in 1928 for the Cirrus III powered version with a split axle The production run for the DH 60X Moth was short as it was replaced by later variants but it was still available to special order Gipsy engine Edit Although the Cirrus engine was reliable its manufacture was not It depended on components salvaged from World War I era 8 cylinder Renault engines and therefore its numbers were limited by the stockpiles of surplus Renaults de Havilland therefore decided to replace the Cirrus with a new engine designed by Frank Halford built by his own factory In 1928 when the new de Havilland Gipsy I engine was available a company DH 60 Moth G EBQH was re engined as the prototype of the DH 60G Gipsy Moth Next to the increase in power the main advantage of this update was that the Gipsy was a completely new engine available in as great a number as the manufacture of Moths necessitated The new Gipsy engines could simply be built in house on a production line side by side with the Moth airframes This also enabled de Havilland to control the complete process of building a Moth airframe engine and all streamline productivity and in the end lower manufacturing costs While the original DH 60 was offered for a relatively modest 650 by 1930 the price of a new Gipsy powered Moth was still 650 this in spite of its state of the art engine DH 60G III Moth Major G ADHE at Coventry in June 1954 A metal fuselage version of the Gipsy Moth was designated the DH 60M Moth and was originally developed for overseas customers particularly Canada The DH 60M was also licence built in Australia Canada the United States and Norway Also in 1931 a variant of the DH 60M was marketed for military training as the DH 60T Moth Trainer In 1931 with the upgrade of the Gipsy engine as the Gipsy II de Havilland inverted the engine and re designated it the Gipsy III The engine was fitted into a Moth aircraft which was re designated the DH 60G III Moth Major This sub type was intended for the military trainer market and some of the first aircraft were supplied to the Swedish Air Force The DH 60T Moth was re engined with the Gipsy III and was initially re designated the DH 60T Tiger Moth The DH 60T Tiger Moth was further modified with swept back mainplanes and the cabane struts were moved forward to improve egress from the front cockpit in case of emergency The changes were great enough that the aircraft was again re designated becoming the DH 82 Tiger Moth Design Edit Lower port wing internal structure Apart from the engine the new Gipsy Moth was still a standard DH 60 Except for changes to accommodate the engine the fuselage remained the same as before the exhaust still ran alongside the left side of the cockpits and the logo on the right side still read De Havilland Moth The fuel tank was still housed in the bulging airfoil that formed the centre section of the upper wing The wings could still be folded alongside the fuselage and still had de Havilland s patented differential ailerons on the bottom mainplanes and no ailerons on the top ones Colour options still remained as simple as before wings and tail in Moth silver fuselage in the colour the buyer chose Operational history EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message As there was no real comparison between the original DH 60 and the new DH 60G the Gipsy Moth quickly became the mainstay of British flying clubs as the only real recreational aircraft in the UK By 1929 it was estimated that of every 100 aeroplanes in Britain 85 were Moths of one type or another most of them Gipsy Moths This was in spite of the fact that with de Havilland having switched from the Cirrus engine to its own Gipsy engine surplus Cirruses were now pouring into the market and a trove of Cirrus powered aircraft like the Avro Avian the Klemm Swallow and the Miles Hawk started fighting for the flying club and private market Although replaced in production by the DH 82 Tiger Moth the Gipsy Moth remained the mainstay of the British flying scene up to the start of WWII The war however marked the end of the Gipsy Moth and post war it was quickly replaced by ex RAF Tiger Moths pouring into the civilian market DH 60 Moth in flying clubs Edit The DH 60 arrived at the right spot at the right time Next to the Moth s maiden flight 1925 also marked the birth of the first five Royal Aero Club flying schools and clubs and with its simplicity and performance the Moth was the aircraft of choice to equip the clubs De Havilland then used this income to concentrate on developing the Moth further into a mass produced mass market aircraft The Moth made the aero clubs at least just as much as the aero clubs made the Moth The Moth remained the mainstay of the clubs even long after more modern aircraft became available With de Havilland s habit of painting the wings and tailplane of the Moth in silver also came the clubs habit of distinguishing their aircraft by painting their fuselage in one distinctive club colour Aircraft of the London Aero Club had a yellow fuselage plus yellow struts and wheel caps those of Newcastle a red one Green stood for the Midlands and blue for Lancashire Registration letters were black on the wings and depending on the club colour either black or white on the fuselage DH 60 Moth built in 1931 in France under licence by Morane Saulnier As the Royal Aero Club marketed the idea of flying clubs to other members of the Commonwealth the de Havilland Aircraft Company followed suit and soon established subsidiaries in Australia and Canada to stock the local flying clubs there with Gipsy Moths Canadian Moths were offered with a detachable canopy for winter flying Other factories to licence build the Gipsy Moth were the Larkin Aircraft Supply Company in Australia which built 32 for the RAAF Although built for flying clubs rather than for individual air cruising the Australian Moths were the DH 60 L Luxury version and were delivered with their fuselages sporting the L s characteristic two tone colour scheme rather than the fuselage entirely painted in the club colour as was customary in British flying clubs Other manufacturers were Morane Saulnier in France 40 built and a company called Moth Aircraft Co in the U S 18 built DH 60 Moth in private use Edit Amy Johnson and Jason a DH 60G Gipsy Moth in Jhansi India in 1930 Most Gipsy Moths belonged to flying clubs but after the Prince of Wales purchased a Gipsy Moth G AALG for his own private flying the aircraft became popular with high society In addition the Moth was used for many record flights The Lonely Flyer Sir Francis Chichester flew his Gipsy Moth from England to Australia on to New Zealand and then across the Pacific to Japan Although he originally planned to fly around the world a crash in Japan convinced him to switch to sailing Chichester subsequently named his yachts Gipsy Moth II Gipsy Moth III and most famously Gipsy Moth IV Of the aviatrixes London secretary Amy Johnson flew her Gipsy Moth G AAAH Jason 11 000 mi 17 703 km to Australia in 1930 and Jean Batten used a Gipsy Moth for her flights from England to India and England to Australia the aircraft used to fly to India was G AALG borrowed from Victor Doree who then owned the plane In March 1928 Mary Bailey flew her Cirrus Moth solo from Croydon to Cape Town a trip of three weeks and returned the following year Amy Johnson s Gipsy Moth G AAAH Jason DH 60 Moth in military service Edit Although the DH 60T was aggressively marketed as a military trainer response was rather lukewarm In particular the RAF initially purchased only a handful of aircraft for testing and found that many aspects of the Moth did not suit their method of military flight training However by 1931 the RAF had acquired 124 DH 60M Moths and these were used by the Central Flying School and other training units until 1939 Moth trainers were however ordered by a number of foreign air forces including those of Argentina Australia as noted above Austria Norway Portugal Sweden and the flying arm of the Danish Navy Finnish Valtion lentokonetehdas licence built 21 Moth trainers of which 18 were purchased by Finnish Air Force First examples were equipped with Cirrus engine while 11 later ones had Hermes engine X type landing gear struts and a locally built engine cover which earned these the name Harka Moth Bull Moth 2 Two Gipsy Moths were purchased by the Paraguayan government during the Chaco War They were used as liaison aircraft One was lost in a fatal accident at Nu Guazu Air Force Base and the other survived the war It was transferred to the Paraguayan Aeroclub in 1936 The bulk of military Moths however were civilian sport aircraft impressed by their countries air forces and used as trainers and liaison aircraft Like this civilian Moths ended up flying for both the Nationalist and Republican air forces during the Spanish Civil War This was repeated on a larger scale during the Second World War where Moths ended up flying amongst others for the air forces of Egypt China with several captured ex Chinese aircraft flying for the Japanese Ireland Italy Iraq Belgian Congo Dutch East Indies later taken over by the Indonesian AF South Africa New Zealand and the U S Navy Variants Edit Variants are listed in chronological order Royal Canadian Air Force DH 60 Cirrus Moth fitted with floats DH 60 Cirrus MothPrototype and early production aircraft powered by a 60 hp 45 kW ADC Cirrus engine 8 pre production and 31 production aircraft built DH 60 Cirrus II Moth also known as the Hermes Moth Introduced in 1927 this variant had a slightly larger wingspan and decreased distance between the upper and lower wings Powered by an uprated 105 hp 78 kW Cirrus Hermes engine 32 built DH 60 Genet MothA small number of DH 60 Moths were fitted with the Armstrong Siddeley Genet radial engine The type was used by the Royal Air Force Central Flying School for display purposes six built DH 60G Gipsy Moth DH 60G Gipsy Moths in service with LAN Chile 1933 First major overhaul of the design Cirrus engine replaced by a 100 hp 75 kW de Havilland Gipsy I engine DH 60GII GipsyII Moth Powered by a 120 hp 89 kW Gipsy II Commonly referred to as a Gipsy Moth just like the 100 hp 75 kW version DH 60XOptional X braced undercarriage version of the early Gipsy Moth X style undercarriage became standard for the DH 60M and all subsequent models DH 60L Luxury Offered with wider let down cockpit doors and an enlarged luggage locker behind the rear cockpit The luxury version also featured a state of the art 1930s style two colour paint scheme for the fuselage DH 60M Moth Metal Moth The original plywood box fuselage replaced with a construction of metal stringers covered with doped fabric Although overall weight increased maintenance became easier and metal fuselages became standard for all later versions Four pre production aircraft 536 built by de Havilland at Stag Lane 40 built by de Havilland Canada 161 built by the Moth Corporation in the United States 10 built by the Norwegian Army Aircraft Factory in Norway DH 60T Moth Trainer Trainer variant of the Metal Gipsy Moth Rearranging of the inner wing bracing wires allowed for easier access to the front cockpit a necessity for military pilots wearing parachutes Two prototypes and 47 production aircraft were built Production for all Gipsy I and II variants 595 built by de Havilland at Stag Lane Aerodrome 40 built by Morane Saulnier in France 18 built by the Moth Corporation in the United States and 32 built by Larkin Aircraft Supply in Australia Swiss registered DH 60G III Moth Major DH 60G III MothIn 1931 the company took a de Havilland Gipsy II engine and turned it upside down and re designated it the Gipsy III this engine was then fitted to the Moth to create the DG 60G III Moth 57 built including 10 as fuselages for the Royal Air Force as Queen Bee target drones DH 60G III Moth MajorIn 1934 from the 58th DH 60G III onwards the engine name was changed to Gipsy Major and the resulting variant was renamed the DH 60G III Moth Major 96 were built including 10 as fuselages for the Royal Air Force as Queen Bee target drones production ending in May 1935 A final Moth Major was built by the de Havilland Technical School giving total production of the DH 60G III of 154 3 DH 60T Tiger Moth Prototypes Eight prototypes with swept wings for a proposed RAF trainer Because of the substantial changes the aircraft entered production as the DH 82 Tiger Moth Note Variant information taken from Bransom 4 Prototype DH 60TOperators EditMilitary operators Edit AustraliaRoyal Australian Air Force AustriaAustrian Air Force 1927 1938 BelgiumBelgium Air Force Postwar one aircraft Belgian CongoForce PubliqueBurmaBurma Volunteer Air Force One aircraft only BrazilBrazilian Air Force Brazilian Army Brazilian Naval Aviation CanadaRoyal Canadian Air Force Republic of ChinaChinese Nationalist Air Force ChileChilean Air Force CubaCuban Navy DenmarkDanish Army Flying Corps Danish Naval Air Service EgyptRoyal Egyptian Air Force EthiopiaImperial Ethiopian Air Force 5 FinlandFinnish Air Force 23 total including 18 Finnish license built versions and 5 former civilian aircraft In use between 1929 and 1944 registrations MO 93 MO 94 MO 96 104 MO 106 116 2 GermanyLuftwaffe small numbers 6 GreeceHellenic Air Force HungaryHungarian Air Force IrelandIrish Air Corps IraqIraqi Air Force 7 Empire of Japan captured from China NorwayNorwegian Army Air Service New ZealandNew Zealand Permanent Air Force Royal New Zealand Air Force No 4 Squadron RNZAF ParaguayParaguayan Air Arm Transport Squadron during the Chaco War PolandPolish Air Force PortugalPortuguese Navy RomaniaRoyal Romanian Air Force South AfricaSouth African Air Force Spanish RepublicSpanish Republican Air Force Spanish StateSpanish Air Force SwedenSwedish Air Force United KingdomRoyal Air Force Central Flying School Royal Air Force College No 5 Flying Training School No 24 Squadron RAF No 173 Squadron RAF No 510 Squadron RAF Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm United StatesUnited States Navy One DH 60 purchased for use by the US Naval attache in London 8 Kingdom of YugoslaviaRoyal Yugoslav Air Force Yugoslav Royal NavySurviving aircraft Edit G EBLV amp G EBWD displaying at Evening Airshow Old Warden Bedfordshire There are currently 31 de Havilland DH 60 Moths on the UK aircraft register as of August 2017 9 There are currently six DH 60 Moths on the Australian aircraft register as of 15 November 2015 10 There is one DH 60M at Kjeller Aerodrome outside Oslo Norway Built by de Havilland in March 1929 it was shipped to Australia registered as VH UKC and won the air race between Sydney and Perth that same year Crashed in May 1930 and subsequently stored Remains bought by Kjeller Flyhistoriske Forening in Norway in 2007 and rebuilt to as new standard over a ten year period Airworthy with new registration LN KFM The oldest surviving DH 60 Moth G EBLV built in 1925 remains airworthy as of August 2017 and is owned and operated by the BAe Systems Heritage Flight in the UK It is kept at the Shuttleworth Collection Old Warden Aerodrome and is often displayed at airshows 11 A 1928 DH 60X Moth G EBWD has been based at a single aerodrome Old Warden for longer than any other aeroplane in aviation history This Moth was originally Richard Shuttleworth s own private aircraft in which he learnt to fly 12 and during its career was extensively modified with an original Cirrus Hermes engine but an X legged undercarriage and different windshields on the front and rear cockpit It remains airworthy as of August 2017 and is displayed at British airshows during the summer months VH UAE is the world s second oldest DH 60 still airworthy serial number 192 constructed in 1925 and was first registered in Australia as VH UAE on 5 November 1925 making it the longest registered airworthy aircraft in Australia 13 It was impressed into RAAF for training service during WW2 A7 88 and disposed of in 1945 The original VH registration was re issued Other than a brief restoration time during 2000 the aircraft has been airworthy and registered since 1925 Aircraft on display EditThe following DH 60 Moth aircraft are on public display in museums DH 60G Gipsy Moth G AAAH Jason used by Amy Johnson is on static display at the London Science Museum DH 60G Gipsy Moth formerly CC FNG now marked as LAN 32 at Museo Nacional Aeronautico y del Espacio de Chile Chile DH 60G Gipsy Moth formerly VH ULJ on static display at The South Australian Aviation Museum Port Adelaide South Australia DH60G Gipsy Moth OH VKM on static display at Malmo Museums Sweden DH60X Cirrus Moth OH EJA Jurre on static display at Finnish Air Force Museum FinlandSpecifications DH 60G Gipsy Moth Edit DH 60 Cirrus Moth 3 view drawing from NACA Aircraft Circular No 18 Data from De Havilland Aircraft since 1909 14 General characteristicsCrew 2 Length 23 ft 11 in 7 29 m Wingspan 30 ft 0 in 9 14 m Height 8 ft 9 1 2 in 2 680 m Wing area 243 sq ft 22 6 m2 Empty weight 920 lb 417 kg Max takeoff weight 1 650 lb 748 kg Powerplant 1 de Havilland Gipsy I 4 cylinder air cooled in line piston engine 100 hp 75 kW Propellers 2 bladed fixed pitch propellerPerformance Maximum speed 102 mph 164 km h 89 kn Cruise speed 85 mph 137 km h 74 kn Range 320 mi 510 km 280 nmi Service ceiling 14 500 ft 4 400 m Rate of climb 500 ft min 2 5 m s See also Edit Aviation portal Canada portalde Havilland MothRelated development Caproni Ca 100 de Havilland Tiger MothAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Aero A 34 Albatros L 82 Avro Avian Boeing Stearman Model 75 PZL 5References EditNotes Edit Bransom 1991 p 11 a b Heinonen Timo Valtonen Hannu 2010 De Havilland D H 60 ja 60X Moth Albatrossista Pilatukseen Suomen sotilaslentokoneet 1918 2010 From Albatros to Pilatus Finnish military aircraft 1918 2010 in Finnish Keski Suomen Ilmailumuseo p 80 ISBN 978 952 99989 2 0 Jackson 1973 p 92 Bransom 1991 pp 12 34 Borja Elizabeth 27 February 2021 The Dream of Abyssinia Two Black Aviators and Ethiopia National Air and Space Museum Retrieved 3 March 2021 Ketley and Rolfe 1996 p 11 Sipos Milos Cooper Tom 2020 Wings of Iraq Volume 1 The Iraqi Air Force 1931 1970 Warwick UK Helion amp Company Publishing p 13 ISBN 978 1 913118 74 7 Jackson 1987 p 222 G INFO DH 60 Civil Aviation Authority Retrieved 29 August 2017 Registered DH 60Gs in Australia Civil Aviation Safety Authority Retrieved 15 November 2015 BAe Systems Heritage DH 60 Moth Retrieved 29 August 2017 The Shuttleworth Collection DH60X Moth The Shuttleworth Collection Retrieved 29 August 2017 VH UAE Information Airways Museum amp Civil Aviation Historical Society Retrieved 15 November 2015 Jackson 1987 p 239 Bibliography Edit Bransom Alan The Tiger Moth Story Fourth Edition Shrewsbury UK Airlife Publishing Ltd 1991 ISBN 0 906393 19 1 Comas Matthieu September October 2020 So British 1939 1940 les avions britanniques dans l Armee de l Air So British British Aircraft in the French Air Force 1939 1940 Avions in French 236 38 61 ISSN 1243 8650 Cortet Pierre December 1999 Retros du Mois Retros of the Month Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 81 43 ISSN 1243 8650 De Havilland D H Summer 1980 60 Moth Dirty Plastics No 98 100 Arizona Historical Modellers Society Gilbert James 1970 The Great Planes New York Ridge Press Grant James Ritchie July August 1999 Anti Clockwise Australia the Wrong Way Air Enthusiast No 82 pp 60 63 ISSN 0143 5450 Jackson A J 1973 British Civil Aircraft since 1919 Volume 2 2nd ed London Putnam ISBN 0 370 10010 7 Jackson A J 1987 De Havilland Aircraft since 1909 3rd ed London Putnam ISBN 0 85177 802 X Ketley Barry Rolfe Mark 1996 Luftwaffe Fledglings 1935 1945 Luftwaffe Training Units and their Aircraft Aldershot UK Hikoki Publications ISBN 978 5 9955 0028 5 Lopes Mario Canoniga Spring 1994 Talkback Air Enthusiast No 53 pp 79 80 ISSN 0143 5450 Prins Francois Spring 1994 Pioneering Spirit The QANTAS Story Air Enthusiast No 53 pp 24 32 ISSN 0143 5450 Weal Elke Weal John Barker Richard 1977 Combat Aircraft of World War Two London Arms and Armour Press RAF Museum Hendon External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to De Havilland DH 60 Moth Amy Johnson exhibit at Science Museum archived DH 60 Gipsy Moth displayed at the Royal Air Force Museum archived DH 60X Cirrus Moth G EBWD at the Shuttleworth Collection The de Havilland Moth Club Details of Chilean preserved DH 60G at Chile s Aviation Museum archived DH 60G aircraft Archived 6 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine on the UK aircraft register Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title De Havilland DH 60 Moth amp oldid 1146853980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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