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Handley Page Halifax

The Handley Page Halifax is a British Royal Air Force (RAF) four-engined heavy bomber of the Second World War. It was developed by Handley Page to the same specification as the contemporary twin-engine Avro Manchester.

Halifax
Handley Page Halifax B.III showing the later rectangular fins and Bristol Hercules radial engines
Role Heavy bomber
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Handley Page
First flight 25 October 1939
Introduction 13 November 1940
Retired 1961 (Pakistani Air Force)
Status Retired
Primary users Royal Air Force
Royal Canadian Air Force
Royal Australian Air Force
Free French Air Force
Produced 1940–1946
Number built 6,176[1]+ 2 HP.57 Prototypes

The Halifax has its origins in the twin-engine HP56 proposal of the late 1930s, produced in response to the British Air Ministry's Specification P.13/36 for a capable medium bomber for "world-wide use." The HP56 was ordered as a backup to the Avro 679, both aircraft being designed to use the underperforming Rolls-Royce Vulture engine. The Handley Page design was altered at the Ministry to a four-engine arrangement powered by the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine; the rival Avro 679 was produced as the twin-engine Avro Manchester which, while regarded as unsuccessful mainly due to the Vulture engine, was a direct predecessor of the famed Avro Lancaster. Both the Lancaster and the Halifax emerged as capable four-engined strategic bombers, thousands of which were built and operated by the RAF and several other services during the War.

On 25 October 1939, the Halifax performed its maiden flight, and it entered service with the RAF on 13 November 1940. It quickly became a major component of Bomber Command, performing routine strategic bombing missions against the Axis Powers, many of them at night. Arthur Harris, the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Bomber Command, described the Halifax as inferior to the rival Lancaster (in part due to its smaller payload) though this opinion was not shared by many of the crews that flew it, particularly for the MkIII variant.[2] Nevertheless, production of the Halifax continued until April 1945. During their service with Bomber Command, Halifaxes flew a total of 82,773 operations and dropped 224,207 tons of bombs, while 1,833 aircraft were lost. The Halifax was also flown in large numbers by other Allied and Commonwealth nations, such as the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Free French Air Force and Polish forces.

Various improved versions of the Halifax were introduced, incorporating more powerful engines, a revised defensive turret layout and increased payload. It remained in service with Bomber Command until the end of the war, performing a variety of duties in addition to bombing. Specialised versions of the Halifax were developed for troop transport and paradrop operations. After the Second World War, the RAF quickly retired the Halifax, the type being succeeded as a strategic bomber by the Avro Lincoln, an advanced derivative of the Lancaster. During the post-war years, the Halifax was operated by the Royal Egyptian Air Force, the French Air Force and the Royal Pakistan Air Force. The type also entered commercial service for a number of years, used mainly as a freighter. A dedicated civil transport variant, the Handley Page Halton, was also developed and entered airline service; 41 civil Halifax freighters were used during the Berlin Airlift. In 1961, the last remaining Halifax bombers were retired from operational use.

Development edit

Origins edit

 
Personnel in the Handley Page drawing office working on the Halifax bomber
 
A row of Halifax bombers under assembly at the Handley Page factory at Cricklewood, 1942

In the 1930s, the Royal Air Force (RAF) was primarily interested in twin-engine bombers.[3] These designs put significant demands on engine production and maintenance, both of which were already stretched with the introduction of many new types of aircraft into service. Power limitations were so serious that the British invested heavily in the development of huge engines in the 2,000 horsepower (1,500 kW) class in an effort to improve performance. However, during the late 1930s, none of these engines was ready for production. Meanwhile, both the United States and the Soviet Union were developing bombers powered by arrangements of four smaller engines with favorable results, including excellent range and fair lifting capacity. Accordingly, in 1936, the RAF decided to investigate the feasibility of a four-engined bomber.[3]

During the mid-1930s, the British Air Ministry released Specification P.13/36, seeking a twin-engine heavy-medium bomber suitable for "world-wide use".[4] Further requirements of the specification included the use of a mid-mounted cantilever monoplane wing and all-metal construction, and encouraged use of the Rolls-Royce Vulture engine then in development.[4] In response, Handley Page produced the twin-engine HP56 design to meet Specification P.13/36.[5] Handley Page aircraft designer George Volkert had responsibility for the design.[citation needed]

Other candidates were submitted for the same specification, including the Avro 679, and designs from Fairey, Boulton Paul and Shorts; all submissions were designed around two-engine configurations, using the Rolls-Royce Vulture, Napier Sabre, Fairey P.24 or Bristol Hercules engines. The majority of these engines were under development at this point; while four-engined bomber designs were considered for specification B.12/36 for a heavy bomber, wings mounting two pairs of engines were still in the experimental stage and required additional testing at the Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE). Adopting a stronger wing also required additional strengthening of the overall aircraft structure, resulting in an increase in overall weight.[6]

In February 1937, following consideration of the designs, the Air Ministry selected Avro's submission, with Handley Page's bid chosen as "second string". Accordingly, during April 1937, the Air Ministry ordered two prototypes of each design.[7][4] The introduction of the successful P.13/36 candidates was delayed by the necessity of ordering additional Armstrong-Whitworth Whitley and Vickers Wellington bombers first. In mid-1937, it was decided to order both the Avro 679 and HP56 designs "off the drawing board" in order to speed up delivery timetables.[citation needed]

During July 1937, Handley Page was instructed to redesign the HP56 to use a four-engine arrangement, instead of the original twin-engine configuration; by this point, the Vulture had already been suffering from reliability and performance problems.[4] The rival Avro 679 proceeded into service as the Avro Manchester powered by a pair of Vulture engines, but was only built in limited quantities after suffering substantially from engine-related difficulties.[citation needed] The four-engine redesign increased its wingspan from 88 ft (27 m) to 99 ft (30 m) and added 13,000 pounds (5,900 kg) of weight.[4] In September 1937, the Ministry specified the use of four Rolls-Royce Merlin engines; according to aviation author Phillip J. R. Moyes, this redesign to four Merlin engines had been done "much against the company's wishes".[4]

Towards the end of the year, a full mock-up of the design was assessed; production of a pair of HP57 prototypes commenced in March 1938.[8] Further design modifications resulted in the definitive aircraft, now considerably enlarged and powered by four 1,280 hp (950 kW) Rolls-Royce Merlin X engines. Such was the promise of the new model that, in January 1938, the RAF chose to place their first production order for the type, ordering 100 Mk.I Halifaxes "off the drawing board", at which point the serials which had already been assigned to HP56 were switched to HP57.[4]

Prototypes edit

 
Aerodynamic model of the Halifax undergoing wind tunnel testing, 1942

The first prototype was built at Handley Page's facility in Cricklewood, London, It was then dismantled and transported by road to RAF Bicester (the nearest non-operational RAF airfield with suitable facilities) for reassembly. On 25 October 1939, the maiden flight of the first prototype Halifax, serial number L7244, was performed by chief test pilot Jim Cordes with E A 'Ginger' Wright as flight test observer; during this flight, the undercarriage remained locked down as an extra safety precaution.[9][4]

On 17 August 1940, the first flight of the second prototype, L7245, now complete with full armament and operationally-representative equipment, was performed by Cordes from Radlett Aerodrome.[4] The HP57 was given the service name Halifax upon its acceptance. This name followed the practice of naming heavy bombers after major towns – in this case, Halifax in the West Riding of Yorkshire. In September 1941, a production Halifax Mk.I participated in an official naming ceremony of the type, officiated by Lord Halifax and Lady Halifax.[4]

Production edit

 
Spray painters at work in the paint shop of the Handley Page's Cricklewood factory, 1942

Series production of the Halifax began at Handley Page's factory at Cricklewood and at English Electric's site in Samlesbury, Lancashire. In order to speed up production, Handley Page implemented several new manufacturing techniques, including two pioneering approaches: photo-lofting and split construction. In the latter capacity, each Halifax was built from various sub-assemblies.[10] Surface panels were flush-riveted, although the application of the matt black night bomber camouflage probably negated its benefit.[11]

Handley Page built the assemblies and components at Cricklewood and the aircraft were assembled and flown from Radlett Aerodrome; the first production aircraft flew from Radlett on 11 October 1940.

The sizeable production run envisioned required the involvement of several external parties in addition to Handley Page.[10] The resulting Halifax Group was established to oversee the manufacturing programme, comprising English Electric (who had previously been a valued contributor in the production of the Handley Page Hampden), various firms within the London Aircraft Production Group, Fairey Aviation, and Rootes Motors.[10] Because of this scheme and other initiatives, the Halifax was manufactured by a variety of aviation companies at sites across the British isles.

The Halifax was produced in large numbers during the war: of the 10,018 heavy bombers produced in Britain between 1940 and 1944, 4,046 were various models of the Halifax – in excess of 40%.[10] In all, 6,178 Halifaxes were built, the last delivered in April 1945.[12][10] At the peak, 41 separate factories and dispersed units were involved in production, along with 600 subcontractors and 51,000 employees, with one Halifax completed every hour.[10] The first English Electric-built aircraft was flown from Samlesbury on 15 August 1941.

The first production standard Halifax, the Mk.I, had a 22 ft (6.7 m) long bomb bay as well as six bomb cells in the wings, providing a bomb capacity of 13,000 lb (5,900 kg). Defensive armament consisted of two .303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine guns in a Boulton Paul Type C nose turret, with an additional four in a Boulton Paul Type E tail turret. Some aircraft included two additional .303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers K machine guns in beam (side, or "waist") positions. Subtle modifications distinguished the Mk I aircraft. Aircraft of the first batch of fifty Mk I Halifaxes were designated Mk I Series I.[citation needed]

Factories[13]
Manufacturer Location Number produced
Handley Page Radlett 1589
English Electric Preston 2145
Fairey Aviation Stockport 662
London Aircraft Production Group Leavesden[a] 710
Rootes Securities Speke 1070

Improvements edit

Handley Page were initially disappointed with the performance of the Halifax which was below their predictions,[14] much of this was because they had under estimated the aircraft's drag.[15] Another contributory factor was Handley Page sticking to the 100 ft maximum wingspan originally demanded by the Air Ministry's P13/36, the Halifax originally had a span of 98 ft 8in whereas Avro did not adhere to that with the Manchester MkIII (i.e. the Lancaster) at 102 ft 0in. The Mk III Halifax had a wider span of 103 ft 8in and had significantly improved performance.[14] Arguably the Merlin engine did not suit the Halifax as much as the Hercules (fitted from the MkIII on) which suited the Halifax better both aerodynamically[15] and power wise.

The Halifax Mk.I was quickly followed by 25 of the Mk I Series II; these featured an increased gross weight from 58,000 lb (26 t) to 60,000 lb (27 t) but with maximum landing weight unchanged at 50,000 lb (23 t). The Halifax Mk I Series III featured increased fuel capacity (1,882 imp gal (8,560 L; 2,260 US gal), and larger oil coolers, the latter of which having been adopted in order to accommodate the Merlin XX engine. A dorsally-mounted two-gun Boulton Paul Type C turret replaced the beam guns.[16]

 
Halifax B Mk II Srs I, serial V9977, in-which the first H2S radar was installed; note the early triangular fins. This aircraft crashed in June 1942 as a result of an engine fire. All on board were killed, including the electronic engineer Alan Blumlein.

Introduction of 1,390 hp (1,040 kW) Merlin XX engines and a twin .303 in (7.7 mm) dorsal turret instead of waist guns resulted in the Halifax B Mk II Series I. The Mk II Series I (Special) achieved improved performance via the removal of the nose and dorsal turrets. The Halifax Mk II Series IA was fitted with a moulded Perspex nose (this nose became standard upon future Halifax variants), a four-gun Boulton Paul Type A dorsal turret similar to that used in the Boulton Paul Defiant, and Merlin 22 engines. The rudder overbalance / directional instability with engine(s) out problem was solved on the Mk III with the fitting of a larger D type fin (40% bigger) and modified rudder.[17] The Mk III Halifax had satisfactory stability in all axes, and in fact were more stable in a dive than a Lancaster. A Lancaster tended to go deeper into a dive whereas a Halifax had to be forced to stay in the dive as the speed increased, i.e. it naturally flew out of a dive.[18]

Owing to a shortage of Messier-built landing gear and hydraulics, Dowty-built landing gear were used on some aircraft instead. As it was incompatible with the Messier equipment, this led to these Halifax bombers being given new designations: a Mark II built with Dowty gear was the Mark V.[16] The use of castings rather than forgings in the Dowty undercarriage had resulted in an increased production rate but had also led to a reduced landing weight of 40,000 lb (18,000 kg). The Halifax Mark V were manufactured by Rootes Group at Speke and Fairey at Stockport; operationally, these were generally used by Coastal Command and for training purposes. Some 904 had been built when Mark V production ended at the start of 1944,[19] compared to 1,966 Halifax Mk IIs.[citation needed]

The most numerous Halifax variant was the much improved B Mk III of which 2,091 were built. First appearing in 1943, the Mk III featured the Perspex nose and modified tail of the Mk II Series IA but replaced the Merlin with the more powerful 1,650 hp (1,230 kW) Bristol Hercules XVI radial engine. Other changes included the adoption of de Havilland Hydromatic propellers and a wider wing span with rounded wing tips.[16] With the coming of the MkIII the Halifax's performance finally matched that of the Lancaster[20] though the latter had a larger bomb load and could take larger bombs. The B.VI Halifax's performance improved still further with a cruising speed of 265 mph and a maximum speed (in 'Full Speed' supercharger mode) of 309 mph at 19,500 ft.[18] Halifax crews, though admittedly not unbiased, considered the MkIII Halifax to be the equal of any other bomber, including the Lancaster, and further improved versions (with more powerful Hercules engines) to be superior to all.[2] The improvement in the Halifax MKIII's performance could be measured objectively. In 1943 4 Group's Halifax squadrons flew 11,607 sorties for a loss of 485 aircraft, a loss rate of 4.2%. Halifax MKIII production started in early Autumn 1943 and for 1944, when the MkIII constituted an increasing percentage of the Halifax force, 4 Group flew 25,454 sorties for a loss of 402 aircraft, a loss rate of 1.6%.[21]

The Halifax B Mk IV was a converted B Mk II non-production design using the Rolls-Royce Merlin 65 engine with a two-stage supercharger and a four bladed propeller fitted. This resulted in an increase in top speed by 60 mph to 324 mph at 19,000 ft. Due to a shortage of Merlins with two stage superchargers production of the B Mk IV was not proceeded with.[22]

The definitive version of the Halifax was the B Mk VI, powered by the 1,800 hp (1,300 kW) Hercules 100. The final bomber version, the Mk VII, reverted to the less powerful Hercules XVI. However, these variants were produced in relatively small quantities.[citation needed]

The remaining variants were the Halifax C Mk VIII, an unarmed transport that was fitted with an 8,000 lb/3,630 kg cargo pannier instead of a bomb bay, which could accommodate a maximum of 11 passengers and the Mk A IX paratroop transport, which had space for up to 16 paratroopers and their equipment. A transport/cargo version of the Halifax was also produced, known as the Handley Page Halton.[23]

Design edit

Overview edit

 
Halifax cutaway model at the London Science Museum.

The Handley Page Halifax was a mostly orthodox design, a mid-wing monoplane with a tail unit featuring twin fins and rudders. The Halifax featured all-metal construction with a smooth, stressed skin covering the majority of the exterior surfaces; the flight control surfaces were an exception, being fabric-covered instead.[4] The slab-sided fuselage contained a 22-foot bomb bay, which contained the majority of the Halifax's payload, while the cockpit was flush with the upper fuselage.[4]

The Halifax was powered by four engines, two spaced evenly on each wing.[4] Early production Halifax bombers were powered by models of the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine; later aircraft were commonly powered by the larger Bristol Hercules radial engine. To contain and attach the engines to the airframe, Handley Page developed their own design for the power egg instead of using the typical, slimmer Rolls-Royce counterpart; despite generating increased drag, this in-house design was readily adaptable to the alternative Hercules engine on later aircraft.[4]

Each engine drove a Rotol-built compressed wood constant-speed propeller, enabling the Halifax B.I to attain a maximum speed of 265 mph at 17,500 feet.[24] With a typical payload of 5,800 lbs of bombs and 2,242 imp. gal. of fuel, it had a range of 1,860 miles. The defensive armaments included power-assisted gun turrets in various positions located across the aircraft.[10] Different models of the Halifax used different numbers and combinations of turrets, effectively trading speed for firepower and vice versa.[10]

Crew positions and armament edit

 
Looking upward and rearward from the navigator's position : wireless operator at lower right; pilot at upper right; flight engineer in his usual inflight position at upper left behind the pilot
 
Halifax B Mk II Series 1 : flight engineer on the fold-down seat next to the pilot, ready to assist with the throttles for takeoff, with front gunner and navigator seen below.

The bomb aimer's position was in the extreme nose with the navigator's table located behind it, both roles fulfilled by the same crew member. Above the navigator's position was the forward gun turret. The wireless (radio) operator was behind the navigator's position, separated by a half-width partition.[25] On the floor just behind the front turret (or later the nose) was the escape hatch. This was 24 in × 26.5 in (61 cm × 67 cm), the same size as the Stirling, and slightly larger than the 22 in × 26.5 in (56 cm × 67 cm) for the Lancaster. On average 25% of Halifax and Stirling crews successfully bailed out from a damaged aeroplane, but only 15% did so from Lancasters.[26]

The pilot sat on the left side in the cockpit above the wireless operator. The flight engineer filled in as a co-pilot, seated on a folding seat to the right of the pilot, during crucial manoeuvres such as take-off. Aft of the pilot and set lower than the pilot was the flight engineer's compartment with controls on the bulkhead. Another compartment aft of the flight engineer contained two bunks originally intended for resting crew members, but almost always used for treating and berthing injured crew. This area led to the two-gun dorsal turret. The tail gunner occupied a four-gun turret at the extreme aft end of the aircraft.[25]

Starting with the Halifax Mk II Series IA and from the Mk III onwards, the nose turret was deleted; instead the bomb-aimer occupied a streamlined perspex nose containing a single hand-held machine gun. On later-built aircraft, the two-gun dorsal turret was replaced by a four-gun Boulton Paul turret.

The maximum bomb load was 14,500 lb (6,600 kg), which was primarily carried in a bomb bay housed within the fuselage, divided into six separate bomb compartments, with three bomb compartments in the inboard sections of each wing; this division of the payload between multiple compartments limited the maximum size of the individual bombs which could be completely enclosed to 2,000 lb (910 kg); when carrying the 4,000lb and 8,000lb high capacity (HC) bombs the bomb bay doors could not close fully.[27]

Operational service edit

 
Halifaxes of No. 35 Squadron bombing the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau in dry dock at Brest, France, 18 December 1941

In November 1940, the Handley Page Halifax entered service with No. 35 Squadron at RAF Linton-on-Ouse. Its operational debut occurred on the night of 10–11 March 1941, when six Halifax bombers flew a bombing raid against Le Havre, targeting the area around the docks and any shipping that might be present.[10][28] The existence of the Halifax was not officially acknowledged until July 1941, after it was used in a daylight attack on La Pallice, France, against the German battleship Scharnhorst. At the end of 1941, the Halifax was withdrawn from daylight bombing operations after intensifying fighter opposition had increased the casualty rates to unsustainable levels.[10]

In the second half of 1942, No. 35 Squadron and four other squadrons were selected to form the Pathfinder Force, later expanded to become No. 8 Group.[10] Pathfinder crews flying the Halifax would mark routes and identify and mark targets for the Main Force. Effective marking greatly increased the accuracy and destructive power of Bomber Command. As a Pathfinder and Main Force aircraft, the Halifax was a core part of the bombing offensive against Germany and its Axis allies.[29]

By the end of 1943, No. 4 Group had been entirely equipped with the Halifax, and would continue to operate the aircraft until the end of the war.[10] No. 6 Group, formed of Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) squadrons, also adopted the Halifax around the same time, and would go on to operate it in each of its 14 squadrons, although it was never solely equipped with the type. At its peak strength, Bomber Command operated a total of 76 Halifax-equipped squadrons.[10]

 
Handley Page Halifax B Mk I, s/n L9530, MP-L of No. 76 Squadron RAF, Summer 1941

While the early-built models of the Halifax were heavily used by Bomber Command and made valuable contributions to operations, the aircraft's performance was considered unsatisfactory for the most part, mainly due to the underpowered Merlin engine, which meant that it could not fly at the higher altitudes needed to avoid enemy fighters, which were becoming increasingly effective throughout 1943.[16] This was answered by the Halifax Mk III, which was powered by Bristol Hercules radial engines in place of the Merlins. Introduced into service in November 1943, the Mk III was first delivered to No. 433 Squadron and No. 466 Squadron.[30] By January 1944, the Hercules-powered Halifax was available in quantity and quickly proved to have superior performance in the face of German fighter defences.[16]

Early on, Air Chief Marshal Arthur Harris, head of Bomber Command, was scathing in his criticism of the Halifax's performance in comparison to the new Avro Lancaster, primarily of its bomb-carrying capability: an average Halifax was calculated to drop 100 tons of bombs in its lifetime, compared to a Lancaster's 154. Harris continued to have a poor opinion of the Halifax, despite the fact that later Hercules-engined machines had lower loss rates and higher crew survival rates after abandoning the aircraft than Lancasters, and came very close to the Lancaster's speed and altitude performance.[31] The Halifax was progressively outnumbered in front-line service over occupied Europe as more Lancasters became available from 1943 onwards; many squadrons converted to the Lancaster.[note 1]

Production of the Halifax continued, supposedly because it was more efficient to keep building it than to stop its production and convert to building another aircraft. But any new facilities were devoted to the Lancaster.[citation needed]

 
A Halifax pilot

Harris's view of the Halifax changed sometime after spring 1942. On 2 June 1942, in a response to a telegram sent by Frederick Handley Page, congratulating Harris on the success of the first 1000 bomber Cologne raid, he stated: "My Dear Handley Page. We much appreciate your telegram of congratulation on Saturday night's work, the success of which was very largely due to your support in giving us such a powerful weapon to wield. Between us we will make a job of it."[32]

Following the invasion of Europe in 1944, the Halifax resumed daylight bombing operations, performing semi-tactical strikes upon enemy troop concentrations, gun emplacements, and strongpoints of the Atlantic Wall defences along the French coast with a reportedly high degree of accuracy.[33] Other common targets were enemy communications and the launch sites for V-1 flying bombs. Bombing activity became increasingly brazen throughout late 1944 as the Luftwaffe became incapable of putting up effective opposition against allied air forces.[33] The Halifax also found itself being increasingly tasked with transport duties around this time; in one instance, around half a million gallons of petrol was delivered to Brussels in support of the advancing Second Army, then engaged in heavy fighting at Arnhem.[33]

During the latter half of 1944, the bombing of German-held oil facilities became a major priority of the offensive.[33] On 27 August, a force of 216 Halifax bombers, alongside smaller numbers of de Havilland Mosquitos and Lancasters and a sizable escort of Supermarine Spitfires, conducted the first major daylight operation by Bomber Command against a target inside Germany that year, attacking the oil refinery at Homberg on the Ruhr. In spite of heavy fire from anti-aircraft defenses, no bombers were downed and the refinery was severely damaged in places.[34] Attacks upon oil production facilities throughout Germany would become commonplace within the remaining months of the war.[35]

 
Personnel of No. 462 Squadron operating in RAF Middle East Command, September 1942

The only Victoria Cross to be awarded to any Halifax pilot went to Cyril J. Barton of No. 578 Squadron for displaying great gallantry in bringing his heavily damaged aircraft back after a raid on Nuremberg on the night of 30/31 March 1944. Barton continued to fly the Halifax while other crew members bailed out. He was killed in the aircraft's crash-landing, but the remaining crew survived due to his actions.[33]

 
RAF airman attaches the tow rope of an Airspeed Horsa glider to the tow hook of a Halifax glider tug, of 295 Squadron, in preparation for Operation Fustian, Tunisia (July 1943)

Large numbers of Halifax bombers were also operated by Coastal Command, which used it to conduct anti submarine warfare, reconnaissance and meteorological operations. The Halifax was heavily used to deploy mines in the vicinity of enemy-held ports.[35] It served increasingly in other support capacities as the war progressed, being used as a glider tug, an electronic warfare aircraft for No. 100 Group and to conduct special operations, such as parachuting agents and arms into occupied Europe, for the Special Operations Executive (SOE).[36] As a glider tug the Halifax was superior to the Lancaster, the Halifax Mk III's "tug weight at take off" at 59,400 lbs was higher than a Lancaster Mk2 at 52,800 lbs.[37]

Throughout early 1945, the Halifax was frequently dispatched against cities within the German homeland, including Hannover, Magdeburg, Stuttgart, Cologne, Münster, Osnabrück and others.[35] During these months, infrastructure such as oil facilities and railways were given a high priority; these targets were attacked right up until the end of the war. According to Moyes, within the final few months, bomber losses had fallen to all-time lows while raids were frequently regarded as having been highly successful.[35] During the final months of the war the improved Halifax Mk VI and Mk VII were introduced. In particular, these models had been 'tropicalised' with an eye towards their potential use in the Pacific War against the Empire of Japan.[35] While some of these Mk VI and Mk VII machines were deployed to the theatre, they played little meaningful role as the war ended before larger numbers could be brought to bear against Japanese forces.[38]

On 25 April 1945, the Halifax performed its last major operation against the enemy in WWII during an attack upon coastal gun batteries on Wangerooge in the Frisian Islands of the North Sea.[39] While the type continued to fly operations after this, these were primarily diversions to other operations and sporadic, uncoordinated attacks against targets of opportunity. Upon the end of the conflict, Bomber Command quickly disbanded the majority of its Halifax-equipped squadrons; the aircraft themselves were transferred to Transport Command.[36] During the type's service with Bomber Command, Halifaxes flew 82,773 operations and dropped 224,207 tons of bombs. 1,833 aircraft were lost.[40][41]

By 1947, the majority of Halifax bombers were deemed to be surplus and scrapped.[36] The Halifax remained in widespread service with Coastal Command and RAF Transport Command, Royal Egyptian Air Force and the Armée de l'Air until early 1952.

The Royal Pakistan Air Force however continued operating them up till 1961, thus Pakistan became the last military user of the type. In 1947, the RPAF inherited two Halifax bombers from the RAF which were later heavily used during the 1st Kashmir War in 1948. RPAF Halifaxes flew several sorties in support of Pakistani and Kashmiri forces (notably in the Battle of Skardu) during which they conducted night-time Airdrop missions. After the war, six ex-RAF Halifax-BVIs were purchased in 1949. Due to their high operational costs, the RPAF Commanders decided not to enlarge the Halifax fleet too much. These airplanes were later transferred to the newly raised No. 12 Squadron PAF where they were only used in emergency situations. Gradually, they were transferred to long term storage and were later scrapped. [42]

In September 1997 Halifax 57 Rescue of Canada excavated Halifax LW682 from a bog near the River Dender in Belgium. The plane was part of RCAF 426 Squadron, and had been shot down near Geraardsbergen during a raid on Leuven, Belgium on 12 May 1944. During the excavation, the bodies of three crew members were recovered and later given proper burial. Several items from the plane were used in restoration of NA337, while other items were transferred to museums. The airframe was melted down and used to construct the ceiling of the RAF Bomber Command Memorial in London, which was unveiled in 2012.[43]

Civilian operation edit

 
Halifax C.8 freighter of Lancashire Aircraft Corporation at Manchester Airport in 1950

A number of former RAF Halifax C.8s were sold from 1945 and used as freighters by a number of mostly British airlines. In 1948, 41 civilian Halifax freighters were used during the Berlin Air Lift, operating 4,653 sorties carrying freight and 3,509 carrying bulk diesel fuel. Nine aircraft were lost during the airlift. The low-cost airline business pioneer Freddie Laker bought and serviced war-surplus Halifaxes for Bond Air Services operations in the Berlin airlift.[citation needed] With the airfreight market in decline, most of the civilian Halifaxes were scrapped on their return to England. The last civilian-operated Halifaxes were withdrawn from service in late 1952.

Variants edit

 
Comparison of the Halifax Mk I (pink) with its contemporaries, the Short Stirling (yellow) and the Avro Lancaster (blue)

Pre-Halifax designs edit

H.P.55
Proposed twin-engine bomber aircraft, never built.
H.P.56
Proposed twin-engine bomber aircraft, fitted with two Rolls-Royce Vulture engines, never built.

H.P.57 edit

H.P.57
L7244 – Prototype first flew on The first Halifax prototype with four Merlin 10 engines and no armament.
L7245 – Second prototype first flew from Radlett on 17 August 1940 and was more representative of the production configuration including armament.
Halifax B.I Series I
 
A Halifax B Mark I Series I of No. 76 Squadron undergoing maintenance at RAF Middleton St George, County Durham
Four-engined long-range heavy-bomber aircraft powered by Rolls-Royce Merlin X engines; the first production version. Armament consisted of nose turret with two guns, tail turret with four guns and two beam guns. Recognizable from large deep radiator intakes containing circular Gallay radiators and oil cooler. 50 produced.
Halifax B.I Series II
Stressed for operating at a higher gross weight. 25 produced.
Halifax B.I Series III
Re-engined with Merlin XX engines with slimmer coolers, introduced new twin-gun Boulton Paul type C upper turret in place of beam guns, with revised undercarriage and additional centre-section fuel tanks. 9 produced.

H.P.58 edit

Halifax Mk II
Projected variant with revised armament including 20 mm cannon and no tail turret. Due to problems with the new armament, the project was cancelled and the Mk II designation given to H.P.59.

H.P.59 edit

 
Halifax Mk II of No. 148 Squadron at Brindisi, Italy. Note the parachute canisters containing supplies for the Yugoslav National Liberation Army loaded into the bomb bay and wing cells
 
A Halifax A.V Series 1 (Special) glider tug of No. 295 Squadron getting airborne from RAF Portreath, Cornwall, towing an Airspeed Horsa glider to Tunisia during Operation Beggar, June 1943
Halifax Mk II
New variant with increased takeoff weight, fuel and weapons carriage.
Halifax B.II Series I
First series of the bomber variant; from March 1942 onwards, these were fitted with TR1335 navigation aids.
Halifax B.II Series I (Special), SOE
Special version for Special Operations Executive (SOE) used to drop supplies over Europe. Nose armament and dorsal turret removed, the nose being faired over, as well as changes to the fuel vent pipes and exhaust shrouds.
Halifax B.II Series I (Special)
 
Halifax B.II Series I (Special) W1057, ZA-X, No. 10 Squadron RAF, with a faired-over nose. During April–May 1942, this aircraft took part in a number of raids on the German battleship Tirpitz in Fættenfjord near Trondheim, Norway.
Generally similar to the aircraft used by the SOE, these were employed in the bombing role. These aircraft were more varied in appearance, especially concerning the fitting of dorsal armament with some aircraft retaining the standard Boulton Paul "Type C" turret in different mounts with others mounting a "Type A" turret. There were also examples with no dorsal turret, similar to the SOE-aircraft.
Halifax B.II Series IA
Modified with new glazed nose section, Merlin XX or 22 engines, new square Morris radiators and new "D" fin and rudder. The dorsal turret was changed to a four-gun Boulton Paul Type A Mk VIII, and there were improvements to the bomb bay door sealing. Some aircraft were fitted with the H2S radar.
Halifax B.II Series I, Freighter
A few Mk IIs were employed in the transport role in Great Britain (unmodified SOE-aircraft) and in the Middle East (simple modifications to allow carriage of engines or Spitfire fuselages).
Halifax B.II Series II
Single aircraft (HR756) modified with three-blade Rotol propellers and Merlin 22 engines. Rejected in favour of Mk III.
Halifax A.II
According to some sources, a handful of the airborne forces Halifaxes were converted into B.IIs. If this is true they might have been designated A.II or may have retained their bomber designations.[44]
Halifax GR.II
Coastal Command variant of the Halifax B.II.
Halifax GR.II Series I
A handful of aircraft converted from Series I or Special to GR.II standard, having differences in dorsal armament. The main difference was the fitting of a ASV.Mk 3 radar in an H2S type fairing. Sometimes, a .50 in (12.7 mm) machine gun was fitted in the faired nose.
Halifax GR.II Series IA
Definitive Coastal Command variant of the GR.II with glazed nose mounting .50 in (12.7 mm) machine gun, Merlin XX or 22 engines, B-P A-type dorsal turret and extra long-range fuel tanks in fuselage. A ventral turret holding a single .50 in (12.7 mm) machine gun was mounted on most aircraft although some employed the ASV.Mk 3 radar in its place.
Halifax Met.II
Some sources[45] suggest that there were a meteorological variant of the B.II, designated Met.II, but this is unlikely.[46]

H.P.61 edit

 
Group portrait of an air crew of No. 578 Squadron in front of a Halifax bomber, circa 1944
Halifax B.III
Main production variant, fitted with Bristol Hercules engines. B.III bombers were fitted with transparent nose dome with single machine gun, Boulton Paul dorsal turret with four guns and tail turret with four guns. All but first few had longer wing with rounded wingtips that increased wingspan to 104 ft 2 in (31.75 m). 2,091 produced.
Halifax A.III
Halifax B.III bombers converted into glider tug and paratroop transport aircraft.
Halifax C.III
Halifax B.III bombers converted into military transport aircraft.

H.P.63 edit

 
A Halifax B Mark V Series I (Special) of No. 295 Squadron undergoing a 24-hour overhaul in at RAF Holmsley South, Hampshire, 1943
 
A line of Halifax A Mark VII glider tugs attached to various General Aircraft Hamilcars via tow ropes of No. 298 Squadron and No. 644 Squadron, at RAF Woodbridge, Suffolk, prior to launch
Halifax B.V
Four-engined long-range heavy-bomber, powered by four Rolls-Royce Merlin XX engines with square empennage and wingtips. Armament as B.III. 904 produced.
Halifax B.V Series I (Special)
Halifax A.V
Halifax B.V bombers converted into glider tugs and paratroop transport aircraft.
Halifax GR.V
Coastal Command variant. Halifax B.V bombers converted into maritime reconnaissance aircraft.
Halifax B.VI
Four-engined long-range heavy-bomber, powered by four 1,615 hp (1,204 kW) Bristol Hercules XVI radial engines with H2S radar. No dorsal turret. Square empennage, round wing tips. 643 produced.
Halifax C.VI
Halifax B.VI bombers converted into military transport aircraft.
Halifax GR.VI
Coastal Command variant. Halifax B.VI bombers converted into maritime reconnaissance aircraft.
Halifax B.VII
Four-engined long-range heavy-bomber, powered by four 1,615 hp (1,204 kW) Bristol Hercules XVI radial engines. Round wing tips. Armament as B.III
Halifax A.VII
Halifax B.VIIs converted into paratroop transport and glider tug aircraft.
Halifax C.VII
Halifax B.VIIs bombers converted into military transport aircraft.

H.P.70 edit

Halifax C.VIII
Cargo and passenger transport aircraft.

H.P.71 edit

Halifax A.IX
Paratroop transport, glider tug aircraft.

H.P.70 Halton edit

Halton I
Interim civil transport version; postwar, a number of Halifax bombers were converted into civilian transport aircraft.
Halton II
VIP transport aircraft for the Maharajah Gaekwar of Baroda.[47]

Operators edit

Military operators edit

 
An Australian Halifax from No. 462 Squadron RAAF at RAF Foulsham in 1945
 
Halifax bomber OO-R of 1663 HCU from RAF Rufforth in 1944
 
Pair of Halifax bombers flying in close formation
  Australia
  Canada
  Egypt
  France
  Pakistan
  Poland
  United Kingdom

Civil operators edit

  Australia
  • Aircarrier (Former Wikner aircraft)
  • Geoffrey Wikner (B.III converted with a 15-passenger interior)
  France
  • Aero Cargo
  • CTAI
  • SANA (Societe Anonyme de Navigation Aeriennes)
  Norway
  • Peteair
  • Vingtor Airways
  Pakistan
  South Africa
  • Alpha Airways
  • LAMS (South Africa)
   Switzerland
  • Air Globe
  United Kingdom

Halton operators edit

  India
  France
  South Africa
  • Alpha Airways
  United Kingdom

Surviving aircraft edit

Of the 6,176 Halifaxes built, three complete examples remain.

Serial Geographic location Institutional location History Photo
NA337 Trenton, Ontario National Air Force Museum of Canada Built by Rootes Motors. Delivered to 644 Squadron at RAF Tarrant Rushton 5 March 1945. On 24 March 1945 it towed a glider as part of Operation Varsity – the airborne operation in support of crossing the Rhine. Completed three supply drops in Norway and Denmark in March and April 1945. On the fourth sortie, 23 April 1945, piloted by Alexander Turnbull, NA337 was sent to drop 13 supply containers and two packages at Mikkelsberget, Norway. After a successful drop, it was hit by flak in the starboard wing at 0131 hours on 24 April. After both starboard engines caught fire, NA337 ditched in Lake Mjøsa at 0145 hours. All but one crew member, Thomas Weightman, died of hypothermia. It was discovered in 1991 by Tore Marsoe and Rolf Liberg, and further raised in 1995 by Halifax 57 Rescue. Restoration was completed in November 2005.[54]  
HR792 Elvington, North Yorkshire Yorkshire Air Museum Built by Handley Page. 58 Squadron. Flew 67 sorties between 15 July 1943 and 9 December 1944. Crash landed near Stornoway, 13 January 1945. Fuselage was purchased by a chicken farmer and used as a coop. Recovered and restored in 1984 using parts from Halifaxes LW687 and JP158 as well as wings from Hastings TG536. Painted as LV907 "Friday the 13th" of 158 Squadron.[55]  
W1048 Colindale, London RAF Museum London Built by English Electric. Assigned to 102 Squadron at RAF Topcliffe on 27 March 1942. Sent to 35 Squadron at RAF Linton-on-Ouse on 9 April 1942. On 27 April, it was one of 31 Halifaxes that flew from RAF Kinloss as part of raid on the German battleship Tirpitz. W1048 made her attack at 03:00 hours, during which she was hit by the intense flak which set the starboard outer engine on fire. Pilot Don MacIntyre made a wheels-up landing on frozen Lake Hoklingen in Norway but the aircraft sank 12 hours later. It was discovered by divers in 1971 and recovered on 30 June 1973 by the RAF Sub-Aqua Association. It has been left unrestored.[56]  

Specifications (Mk III) edit

 
3-view drawingof Halifax Mark I Series III, with profile details of other variants.
 
Fuselage section of a Halifax

Data from Halifax, Second to None,[57] The Handley Page Halifax B.III, VI, VII[12]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 7 (pilot, co-pilot/flight engineer, navigator, bomb aimer, radio operator/gunner, two gunners)
  • Length: 71 ft 7 in (21.82 m)
  • Wingspan: 104 ft 2 in (31.75 m)
  • Height: 20 ft 9 in (6.32 m)
  • Wing area: 1,190 sq ft (111 m2)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 23021; tip: NACA 23007[58]
  • Empty weight: 37,870 lb (17,178 kg)
  • Gross weight: 54,400 lb (24,675 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 65,000 lb (29,484 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Bristol Hercules XVI 14-cylinder air-cooled sleeve-valve radial piston engines, 1,615 hp (1,204 kW) each
  • Propellers: 3-bladed constant-speed propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 282 mph (454 km/h, 245 kn) at 13,500 ft (4,100 m)
  • Combat range: 1,860 mi (2,990 km, 1,620 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 24,000 ft (7,300 m)
  • Rate of climb: 750 ft/min (3.8 m/s)
  • Wing loading: 45.7 lb/sq ft (223 kg/m2)
  • Power/mass: 0.12 hp/lb (0.20 kW/kg)

Armament

Avionics

  • H2S PPI radar

Halifax 57 Rescue edit

Halifax 57 Rescue is a Canadian organization dedicated to the recovery and restoration of Handley Page Halifaxes. Since its inception in 1994 the organization has recovered two aircraft, including Halifax NA337, one of only three complete examples in the world.

The organization was founded in 1994 by Karl Kjarsgaard, a Canadian former Air Canada pilot, and Ian Foster of Scotland. In 1995 they participated in their first recovery project, that of Halifax NA337 from 750 feet underwater in Lake Mjøsa, Norway. The aircraft was moved to the National Air Force Museum of Canada in Trenton, Ontario where it was unveiled in 2005 after a full restoration.[59] Their second project was the 1997 recovery of Halifax LW682 from a bog near Geraardsbergen, Belgium. During the recovery, the bodies of three crew members were removed and given a proper burial. Several parts of the aircraft were used in the restoration of NA337, and the airframe was melted down and later used to construct the RAF Bomber Command Memorial in London, which was unveiled in 2012.[43]

At present[when?], Halifax 57 Rescue is working to recover two aircraft. The first is HR871, located off the coast of Sweden.[60] Preparations are currently underway for underwater excavation. Once the aircraft has been raised, it will be moved to the Bomber Command Museum of Canada in Nanton, Alberta for restoration. The second aircraft the organization is seeking to recover is LW170 off the coast of Scotland.[61] This aircraft has yet to be located, although its general position is known.[62]

See also edit

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

Notes edit

  1. ^ The aircraft were assembled at Leavesden from components and assemblies manufactured around London

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The first "Thousand bomber raid" on Cologne on 30–31 May 1942 included 131 Halifaxes and 73 Lancasters; The attack on Berlin on 28 February 1943 included 252 Halifaxes and 457 Lancasters; The attack on Hamburg on 27–28 July 1943 included 244 Halifaxes, 353 Lancasters, 116 Stirlings and 74 Wellingtons; The attack on Nuremberg on 30–31 March 1944 included 214 Halifaxes and 572 Lancasters; The attack on Dresden on 13–14 February 1945 included 753 Lancasters and no Halifaxes with nine Mosquitoes marking.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Angelucci, Enzo (1988). Combat aircraft of World War II. p. 22. ISBN 0-517-64179-8.
  2. ^ a b Bingham 1986, p. 30.
  3. ^ a b Norris 1966, p. 3.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Moyes 1966, p. 3.
  5. ^ Bingham 1986, p. 4.
  6. ^ Buttler 2004, p. 104.
  7. ^ Buttler 2004, p. 102.
  8. ^ Buttler 2004, p. 105.
  9. ^ Barnes, C H: Handley Page Aircraft since 1907, London 1976, pp. 387–388.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Moyes 1966, p. 4.
  11. ^ Flight pp. 400–401.
  12. ^ a b Norris 1966, p. 12.
  13. ^ Barnes, C H: Handley Page Aircraft since 1907, London 1976, pp. 615-617.
  14. ^ a b Bingham 1986, p. 17.
  15. ^ a b Bingham 1986, p. 19.
  16. ^ a b c d e Norris 1966, p. 5.
  17. ^ Bingham 1986, p. 69.
  18. ^ a b Bingham 1986, p. 71.
  19. ^ Barnes 1987,[page needed]
  20. ^ Bingham 1986, p. 34.
  21. ^ Bingham 1986, p. 128.
  22. ^ Falconer, J: Handley Page Halifax 1939 onwards (all marks) Owners' Workshop Manual, Haynes 2016, page 29.
  23. ^ Barnes, C H: Handley Page Aircraft since 1907, London 1976, pp. 417, 419, 423, 603.
  24. ^ Moyes 1966, pp. 3–4.
  25. ^ a b Flight 1942, p. 401.
  26. ^ Iveson & Milton. Lancaster : A Biography. Andre Deutsch. p. 221.
  27. ^ Merrick 1980, p. 30
  28. ^ Falconer 1998, p. 232
  29. ^ Norris 1966, pp. 4–5.
  30. ^ Norris 1966, pp. 5–6.
  31. ^ Lake, Jon. "'Bomber Harris' – an enduring enigma." 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Osprey Publishing, 1 May 2002. Retrieved: 15 September 2013.
  32. ^ Bingham 1986, p. 111.
  33. ^ a b c d e Norris 1966, p. 6.
  34. ^ Norris 1966, pp. 6, 8.
  35. ^ a b c d e Norris 1966, p. 8.
  36. ^ a b c Norris 1966, p. 10.
  37. ^ Bingham 1986, p. 72.
  38. ^ Norris 1966, pp. 8, 10.
  39. ^ Norris 1966, p. 9.
  40. ^ Wings Encyclopedia of Aviation. London: Orbis Publishing, 1979.
  41. ^ Norris 1966, pp. 9–10.
  42. ^ Hali, Sultan. . PAKISTAN INSTITUTE FOR AIR DEFENCE STUDIES. Archived from the original on 16 August 2003. Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  43. ^ a b . www.bombercommandmuseum.ca. Archived from the original on 14 April 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  44. ^ Lake 1997, p. 131.
  45. ^ Robertson 1990, p. 77.
  46. ^ Lake 1997, p. 132.
  47. ^ Rapier, Brian J. Halifax at War 1994 ISBN 1856481735 pp116-7 with photo
  48. ^ a b Lake 1999, p. 93.
  49. ^ Lake 1999, pp. 92–93.
  50. ^ Robertson 1990, pp. 4, rear cover.
  51. ^ Robertson 1990, p. 64.
  52. ^ Lake 1999, pp. 91–92.
  53. ^ Lake 1999, pp. 90–96.
  54. ^ "The Story of Halifax NA337". airforcemuseum.ca. National Air Force Museum of Canada. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  55. ^ "Handley Page Halifax Mk III – Yorkshire Air Museum". Yorkshire Air Museum. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  56. ^ "Handley Page Halifax B.MK.II Series I W1048/8465M" (PDF).
  57. ^ Bingham 1986, p. 170
  58. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  59. ^ "The Story of Halifax NA337 « National Air Force Museum of Canada". airforcemuseum.ca. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  60. ^ "Support the Recovery of a RCAF Halifax Bomber". FundRazr. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  61. ^ . www.vintagewings.ca. Archived from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
  62. ^ . www.bombercommandmuseum.ca. Archived from the original on 29 August 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2017.

Bibliography edit

  • Barnes, C. H. Handley Page Aircraft since 1907. London: Putnam, 1987. ISBN 0-85177-803-8.
  • Bingham, Victor F (1986). Halifax, Second to None: The Handley Page Halifax. Airlife. ISBN 0-906393-66-3.
  • Buttler, Tony. British Secret Projects: Fighters & Bombers 1935–1950. Hinckley: Midland Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1-85780-179-2.
  • Clarke, R. M., ed. Handley Page Halifax Portfolio. Cobham, Surrey, UK: Brooklands Books, No year cited. ISBN 0-948207-89-2.
  • Clayton, Donald C. Handley Page: An Aircraft Album. Shepperton, Surrey, UK: Ian Allan Ltd., 1970. ISBN 0-7110-0094-8.
  • Jones, Geoffrey Patrick. Night Flight: Halifax Squadrons at War. London: William Kimber, 1981. ISBN 0-7183-0338-5.
  • Falconer, Jonathan. Bomber Command Handbook 1939–1945. Stroud, England:Sutton Publishing, 1998. ISBN 0-7509-3171-X.
  • Lake, Jon (1999). Halifax Squadrons of World War 2. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-85532-892-5.
  • Lake, Jon (1997). Halifax Variants. Wings of Fame, Vol. 8. Aerospace Publishing. ISBN 1-86184-009-8.
  • Merrick, Keith A. Halifax, an Illustrated History of a Classic World War II Bomber. Shepperton, Surrey, UK: Ian Allan, 1980. ISBN 0-7110-0767-5.
  • Merrick, Keith A. Handley Page Halifax: From Hell to Victory and Beyond. Hersham, Surrey, UK: Ian Allan Publishing, 2009. ISBN 978-1-906537-06-7.
  • Merrick, Keith A. The Handley Page Halifax. Bourne Ends, Buckinghamshire, UK: Aston Publications, 1990. ISBN 978-0-946627-60-8.
  • Moyes, Philip J.R. Handley Page Halifax: Merlin-Engined Variants (Aerodata International No 7). Kidlington. Oxfordshire, UK: Vintage Aviation Publications, 1979. ISBN 0-905469-50-X.
  • Moyes, Philip J.R. The Handley Page Halifax B.III, VI, VII. Leatherhead, Surrey, UK: Profile Publications, 1966.
  • Norris, Geoffrey. The Short Stirling, Aircraft in Profile Number 142. Windsor, Berkshire, UK: Profile Publications Ltd., 1966.
  • Rapier, Brian J. Halifax at War. Shepperton, Surrey, UK: Ian Allan, 1987. ISBN 0-7110-1554-6.
  • Roberts, Nicholas (1979). Aircraft Crash Log No.2: Handley Page Halifax.
  • Roberts, R. N. (1982). The Halifax File. Air Britain (Historians). ISBN 0-85130-098-7.
  • Robertson, B (1990). Halifax Special. Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-1920-7.
  • Robinson, Ian (1996). The Unbeaten Warrior Returns: The Story of Reconstructing the Handley Page Halifax at the Yorkshire Air Museum, 1983–96. Yorkshire Air Museum. ISBN 0-9512379-4-2.
  • Scutts, Jerry. Halifax in Action (Aircraft in Action series, No. 66). Carrollton, TX: Squadron/Signal Publications, Inc., 1984. ISBN 0-89747-158-X.
  • Stachiw, Anthony L. and Andrew Tattersall. Handley Page Halifax: In Canadian Service St. Catharine's, Ontario, Canada: Vanwell Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1-55125-085-3.
  • "The Halifax". Flight. flightglobal.com archive. XLI (1739). 23 April 1942. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  • Warner, Guy (July–August 2002). "From Bombay to Bombardier: Aircraft Production at Sydenham, Part One". Air Enthusiast. No. 100. pp. 13–24. ISSN 0143-5450.

Videography edit

  • Halifax at War: The Story of a Bomber (76 min. DVD). Toronto: Nightfighters Productions, 2005. ISBN 1-55259-571-4.

External links edit

  • Handley Page Halifax II (III) 26 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine at Yorkshire Air Museum
  • One of the Many The story of a 76 Squadron Flight Engineer and his Halifax aircraft in World War II
  • (2006) ISBN 9780978035808 – the true story of RCAF pilot Herbert Krentz, the sole survivor when his Halifax Mk V was shot down over Germany in early 1944
  • Halifax at the International Bomber Command Centre Digital Archive, University of Lincoln

handley, page, halifax, british, royal, force, four, engined, heavy, bomber, second, world, developed, handley, page, same, specification, contemporary, twin, engine, avro, manchester, halifax, showing, later, rectangular, fins, bristol, hercules, radial, engi. The Handley Page Halifax is a British Royal Air Force RAF four engined heavy bomber of the Second World War It was developed by Handley Page to the same specification as the contemporary twin engine Avro Manchester HalifaxHandley Page Halifax B III showing the later rectangular fins and Bristol Hercules radial enginesRole Heavy bomberNational origin United KingdomManufacturer Handley PageFirst flight 25 October 1939Introduction 13 November 1940Retired 1961 Pakistani Air Force Status RetiredPrimary users Royal Air ForceRoyal Canadian Air ForceRoyal Australian Air ForceFree French Air ForceProduced 1940 1946Number built 6 176 1 2 HP 57 PrototypesThe Halifax has its origins in the twin engine HP56 proposal of the late 1930s produced in response to the British Air Ministry s Specification P 13 36 for a capable medium bomber for world wide use The HP56 was ordered as a backup to the Avro 679 both aircraft being designed to use the underperforming Rolls Royce Vulture engine The Handley Page design was altered at the Ministry to a four engine arrangement powered by the Rolls Royce Merlin engine the rival Avro 679 was produced as the twin engine Avro Manchester which while regarded as unsuccessful mainly due to the Vulture engine was a direct predecessor of the famed Avro Lancaster Both the Lancaster and the Halifax emerged as capable four engined strategic bombers thousands of which were built and operated by the RAF and several other services during the War On 25 October 1939 the Halifax performed its maiden flight and it entered service with the RAF on 13 November 1940 It quickly became a major component of Bomber Command performing routine strategic bombing missions against the Axis Powers many of them at night Arthur Harris the Air Officer Commanding in Chief of Bomber Command described the Halifax as inferior to the rival Lancaster in part due to its smaller payload though this opinion was not shared by many of the crews that flew it particularly for the MkIII variant 2 Nevertheless production of the Halifax continued until April 1945 During their service with Bomber Command Halifaxes flew a total of 82 773 operations and dropped 224 207 tons of bombs while 1 833 aircraft were lost The Halifax was also flown in large numbers by other Allied and Commonwealth nations such as the Royal Canadian Air Force RCAF Royal Australian Air Force RAAF Free French Air Force and Polish forces Various improved versions of the Halifax were introduced incorporating more powerful engines a revised defensive turret layout and increased payload It remained in service with Bomber Command until the end of the war performing a variety of duties in addition to bombing Specialised versions of the Halifax were developed for troop transport and paradrop operations After the Second World War the RAF quickly retired the Halifax the type being succeeded as a strategic bomber by the Avro Lincoln an advanced derivative of the Lancaster During the post war years the Halifax was operated by the Royal Egyptian Air Force the French Air Force and the Royal Pakistan Air Force The type also entered commercial service for a number of years used mainly as a freighter A dedicated civil transport variant the Handley Page Halton was also developed and entered airline service 41 civil Halifax freighters were used during the Berlin Airlift In 1961 the last remaining Halifax bombers were retired from operational use Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 Prototypes 1 3 Production 1 4 Improvements 2 Design 2 1 Overview 2 2 Crew positions and armament 3 Operational service 3 1 Civilian operation 4 Variants 4 1 Pre Halifax designs 4 2 H P 57 4 3 H P 58 4 4 H P 59 4 5 H P 61 4 6 H P 63 4 7 H P 70 4 8 H P 71 4 9 H P 70 Halton 5 Operators 5 1 Military operators 5 2 Civil operators 5 2 1 Halton operators 6 Surviving aircraft 7 Specifications Mk III 8 Halifax 57 Rescue 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Citations 11 3 Bibliography 11 3 1 Videography 12 External linksDevelopment editOrigins edit nbsp Personnel in the Handley Page drawing office working on the Halifax bomber nbsp A row of Halifax bombers under assembly at the Handley Page factory at Cricklewood 1942In the 1930s the Royal Air Force RAF was primarily interested in twin engine bombers 3 These designs put significant demands on engine production and maintenance both of which were already stretched with the introduction of many new types of aircraft into service Power limitations were so serious that the British invested heavily in the development of huge engines in the 2 000 horsepower 1 500 kW class in an effort to improve performance However during the late 1930s none of these engines was ready for production Meanwhile both the United States and the Soviet Union were developing bombers powered by arrangements of four smaller engines with favorable results including excellent range and fair lifting capacity Accordingly in 1936 the RAF decided to investigate the feasibility of a four engined bomber 3 During the mid 1930s the British Air Ministry released Specification P 13 36 seeking a twin engine heavy medium bomber suitable for world wide use 4 Further requirements of the specification included the use of a mid mounted cantilever monoplane wing and all metal construction and encouraged use of the Rolls Royce Vulture engine then in development 4 In response Handley Page produced the twin engine HP56 design to meet Specification P 13 36 5 Handley Page aircraft designer George Volkert had responsibility for the design citation needed Other candidates were submitted for the same specification including the Avro 679 and designs from Fairey Boulton Paul and Shorts all submissions were designed around two engine configurations using the Rolls Royce Vulture Napier Sabre Fairey P 24 or Bristol Hercules engines The majority of these engines were under development at this point while four engined bomber designs were considered for specification B 12 36 for a heavy bomber wings mounting two pairs of engines were still in the experimental stage and required additional testing at the Royal Aircraft Establishment RAE Adopting a stronger wing also required additional strengthening of the overall aircraft structure resulting in an increase in overall weight 6 In February 1937 following consideration of the designs the Air Ministry selected Avro s submission with Handley Page s bid chosen as second string Accordingly during April 1937 the Air Ministry ordered two prototypes of each design 7 4 The introduction of the successful P 13 36 candidates was delayed by the necessity of ordering additional Armstrong Whitworth Whitley and Vickers Wellington bombers first In mid 1937 it was decided to order both the Avro 679 and HP56 designs off the drawing board in order to speed up delivery timetables citation needed During July 1937 Handley Page was instructed to redesign the HP56 to use a four engine arrangement instead of the original twin engine configuration by this point the Vulture had already been suffering from reliability and performance problems 4 The rival Avro 679 proceeded into service as the Avro Manchester powered by a pair of Vulture engines but was only built in limited quantities after suffering substantially from engine related difficulties citation needed The four engine redesign increased its wingspan from 88 ft 27 m to 99 ft 30 m and added 13 000 pounds 5 900 kg of weight 4 In September 1937 the Ministry specified the use of four Rolls Royce Merlin engines according to aviation author Phillip J R Moyes this redesign to four Merlin engines had been done much against the company s wishes 4 Towards the end of the year a full mock up of the design was assessed production of a pair of HP57 prototypes commenced in March 1938 8 Further design modifications resulted in the definitive aircraft now considerably enlarged and powered by four 1 280 hp 950 kW Rolls Royce Merlin X engines Such was the promise of the new model that in January 1938 the RAF chose to place their first production order for the type ordering 100 Mk I Halifaxes off the drawing board at which point the serials which had already been assigned to HP56 were switched to HP57 4 Prototypes edit nbsp Aerodynamic model of the Halifax undergoing wind tunnel testing 1942The first prototype was built at Handley Page s facility in Cricklewood London It was then dismantled and transported by road to RAF Bicester the nearest non operational RAF airfield with suitable facilities for reassembly On 25 October 1939 the maiden flight of the first prototype Halifax serial number L7244 was performed by chief test pilot Jim Cordes with E A Ginger Wright as flight test observer during this flight the undercarriage remained locked down as an extra safety precaution 9 4 On 17 August 1940 the first flight of the second prototype L7245 now complete with full armament and operationally representative equipment was performed by Cordes from Radlett Aerodrome 4 The HP57 was given the service name Halifax upon its acceptance This name followed the practice of naming heavy bombers after major towns in this case Halifax in the West Riding of Yorkshire In September 1941 a production Halifax Mk I participated in an official naming ceremony of the type officiated by Lord Halifax and Lady Halifax 4 Production edit nbsp Spray painters at work in the paint shop of the Handley Page s Cricklewood factory 1942Series production of the Halifax began at Handley Page s factory at Cricklewood and at English Electric s site in Samlesbury Lancashire In order to speed up production Handley Page implemented several new manufacturing techniques including two pioneering approaches photo lofting and split construction In the latter capacity each Halifax was built from various sub assemblies 10 Surface panels were flush riveted although the application of the matt black night bomber camouflage probably negated its benefit 11 Handley Page built the assemblies and components at Cricklewood and the aircraft were assembled and flown from Radlett Aerodrome the first production aircraft flew from Radlett on 11 October 1940 The sizeable production run envisioned required the involvement of several external parties in addition to Handley Page 10 The resulting Halifax Group was established to oversee the manufacturing programme comprising English Electric who had previously been a valued contributor in the production of the Handley Page Hampden various firms within the London Aircraft Production Group Fairey Aviation and Rootes Motors 10 Because of this scheme and other initiatives the Halifax was manufactured by a variety of aviation companies at sites across the British isles The Halifax was produced in large numbers during the war of the 10 018 heavy bombers produced in Britain between 1940 and 1944 4 046 were various models of the Halifax in excess of 40 10 In all 6 178 Halifaxes were built the last delivered in April 1945 12 10 At the peak 41 separate factories and dispersed units were involved in production along with 600 subcontractors and 51 000 employees with one Halifax completed every hour 10 The first English Electric built aircraft was flown from Samlesbury on 15 August 1941 The first production standard Halifax the Mk I had a 22 ft 6 7 m long bomb bay as well as six bomb cells in the wings providing a bomb capacity of 13 000 lb 5 900 kg Defensive armament consisted of two 303 in 7 7 mm Browning machine guns in a Boulton Paul Type C nose turret with an additional four in a Boulton Paul Type E tail turret Some aircraft included two additional 303 in 7 7 mm Vickers K machine guns in beam side or waist positions Subtle modifications distinguished the Mk I aircraft Aircraft of the first batch of fifty Mk I Halifaxes were designated Mk I Series I citation needed Factories 13 Manufacturer Location Number producedHandley Page Radlett 1589English Electric Preston 2145Fairey Aviation Stockport 662London Aircraft Production Group Leavesden a 710Rootes Securities Speke 1070Improvements edit Handley Page were initially disappointed with the performance of the Halifax which was below their predictions 14 much of this was because they had under estimated the aircraft s drag 15 Another contributory factor was Handley Page sticking to the 100 ft maximum wingspan originally demanded by the Air Ministry s P13 36 the Halifax originally had a span of 98 ft 8in whereas Avro did not adhere to that with the Manchester MkIII i e the Lancaster at 102 ft 0in The Mk III Halifax had a wider span of 103 ft 8in and had significantly improved performance 14 Arguably the Merlin engine did not suit the Halifax as much as the Hercules fitted from the MkIII on which suited the Halifax better both aerodynamically 15 and power wise The Halifax Mk I was quickly followed by 25 of the Mk I Series II these featured an increased gross weight from 58 000 lb 26 t to 60 000 lb 27 t but with maximum landing weight unchanged at 50 000 lb 23 t The Halifax Mk I Series III featured increased fuel capacity 1 882 imp gal 8 560 L 2 260 US gal and larger oil coolers the latter of which having been adopted in order to accommodate the Merlin XX engine A dorsally mounted two gun Boulton Paul Type C turret replaced the beam guns 16 nbsp Halifax B Mk II Srs I serial V9977 in which the first H2S radar was installed note the early triangular fins This aircraft crashed in June 1942 as a result of an engine fire All on board were killed including the electronic engineer Alan Blumlein Introduction of 1 390 hp 1 040 kW Merlin XX engines and a twin 303 in 7 7 mm dorsal turret instead of waist guns resulted in the Halifax B Mk II Series I The Mk II Series I Special achieved improved performance via the removal of the nose and dorsal turrets The Halifax Mk II Series IA was fitted with a moulded Perspex nose this nose became standard upon future Halifax variants a four gun Boulton Paul Type A dorsal turret similar to that used in the Boulton Paul Defiant and Merlin 22 engines The rudder overbalance directional instability with engine s out problem was solved on the Mk III with the fitting of a larger D type fin 40 bigger and modified rudder 17 The Mk III Halifax had satisfactory stability in all axes and in fact were more stable in a dive than a Lancaster A Lancaster tended to go deeper into a dive whereas a Halifax had to be forced to stay in the dive as the speed increased i e it naturally flew out of a dive 18 Owing to a shortage of Messier built landing gear and hydraulics Dowty built landing gear were used on some aircraft instead As it was incompatible with the Messier equipment this led to these Halifax bombers being given new designations a Mark II built with Dowty gear was the Mark V 16 The use of castings rather than forgings in the Dowty undercarriage had resulted in an increased production rate but had also led to a reduced landing weight of 40 000 lb 18 000 kg The Halifax Mark V were manufactured by Rootes Group at Speke and Fairey at Stockport operationally these were generally used by Coastal Command and for training purposes Some 904 had been built when Mark V production ended at the start of 1944 19 compared to 1 966 Halifax Mk IIs citation needed The most numerous Halifax variant was the much improved B Mk III of which 2 091 were built First appearing in 1943 the Mk III featured the Perspex nose and modified tail of the Mk II Series IA but replaced the Merlin with the more powerful 1 650 hp 1 230 kW Bristol Hercules XVI radial engine Other changes included the adoption of de Havilland Hydromatic propellers and a wider wing span with rounded wing tips 16 With the coming of the MkIII the Halifax s performance finally matched that of the Lancaster 20 though the latter had a larger bomb load and could take larger bombs The B VI Halifax s performance improved still further with a cruising speed of 265 mph and a maximum speed in Full Speed supercharger mode of 309 mph at 19 500 ft 18 Halifax crews though admittedly not unbiased considered the MkIII Halifax to be the equal of any other bomber including the Lancaster and further improved versions with more powerful Hercules engines to be superior to all 2 The improvement in the Halifax MKIII s performance could be measured objectively In 1943 4 Group s Halifax squadrons flew 11 607 sorties for a loss of 485 aircraft a loss rate of 4 2 Halifax MKIII production started in early Autumn 1943 and for 1944 when the MkIII constituted an increasing percentage of the Halifax force 4 Group flew 25 454 sorties for a loss of 402 aircraft a loss rate of 1 6 21 The Halifax B Mk IV was a converted B Mk II non production design using the Rolls Royce Merlin 65 engine with a two stage supercharger and a four bladed propeller fitted This resulted in an increase in top speed by 60 mph to 324 mph at 19 000 ft Due to a shortage of Merlins with two stage superchargers production of the B Mk IV was not proceeded with 22 The definitive version of the Halifax was the B Mk VI powered by the 1 800 hp 1 300 kW Hercules 100 The final bomber version the Mk VII reverted to the less powerful Hercules XVI However these variants were produced in relatively small quantities citation needed The remaining variants were the Halifax C Mk VIII an unarmed transport that was fitted with an 8 000 lb 3 630 kg cargo pannier instead of a bomb bay which could accommodate a maximum of 11 passengers and the Mk A IX paratroop transport which had space for up to 16 paratroopers and their equipment A transport cargo version of the Halifax was also produced known as the Handley Page Halton 23 Design editOverview edit nbsp Halifax cutaway model at the London Science Museum The Handley Page Halifax was a mostly orthodox design a mid wing monoplane with a tail unit featuring twin fins and rudders The Halifax featured all metal construction with a smooth stressed skin covering the majority of the exterior surfaces the flight control surfaces were an exception being fabric covered instead 4 The slab sided fuselage contained a 22 foot bomb bay which contained the majority of the Halifax s payload while the cockpit was flush with the upper fuselage 4 The Halifax was powered by four engines two spaced evenly on each wing 4 Early production Halifax bombers were powered by models of the Rolls Royce Merlin engine later aircraft were commonly powered by the larger Bristol Hercules radial engine To contain and attach the engines to the airframe Handley Page developed their own design for the power egg instead of using the typical slimmer Rolls Royce counterpart despite generating increased drag this in house design was readily adaptable to the alternative Hercules engine on later aircraft 4 Each engine drove a Rotol built compressed wood constant speed propeller enabling the Halifax B I to attain a maximum speed of 265 mph at 17 500 feet 24 With a typical payload of 5 800 lbs of bombs and 2 242 imp gal of fuel it had a range of 1 860 miles The defensive armaments included power assisted gun turrets in various positions located across the aircraft 10 Different models of the Halifax used different numbers and combinations of turrets effectively trading speed for firepower and vice versa 10 Crew positions and armament edit nbsp Looking upward and rearward from the navigator s position wireless operator at lower right pilot at upper right flight engineer in his usual inflight position at upper left behind the pilot nbsp Halifax B Mk II Series 1 flight engineer on the fold down seat next to the pilot ready to assist with the throttles for takeoff with front gunner and navigator seen below The bomb aimer s position was in the extreme nose with the navigator s table located behind it both roles fulfilled by the same crew member Above the navigator s position was the forward gun turret The wireless radio operator was behind the navigator s position separated by a half width partition 25 On the floor just behind the front turret or later the nose was the escape hatch This was 24 in 26 5 in 61 cm 67 cm the same size as the Stirling and slightly larger than the 22 in 26 5 in 56 cm 67 cm for the Lancaster On average 25 of Halifax and Stirling crews successfully bailed out from a damaged aeroplane but only 15 did so from Lancasters 26 The pilot sat on the left side in the cockpit above the wireless operator The flight engineer filled in as a co pilot seated on a folding seat to the right of the pilot during crucial manoeuvres such as take off Aft of the pilot and set lower than the pilot was the flight engineer s compartment with controls on the bulkhead Another compartment aft of the flight engineer contained two bunks originally intended for resting crew members but almost always used for treating and berthing injured crew This area led to the two gun dorsal turret The tail gunner occupied a four gun turret at the extreme aft end of the aircraft 25 Starting with the Halifax Mk II Series IA and from the Mk III onwards the nose turret was deleted instead the bomb aimer occupied a streamlined perspex nose containing a single hand held machine gun On later built aircraft the two gun dorsal turret was replaced by a four gun Boulton Paul turret The maximum bomb load was 14 500 lb 6 600 kg which was primarily carried in a bomb bay housed within the fuselage divided into six separate bomb compartments with three bomb compartments in the inboard sections of each wing this division of the payload between multiple compartments limited the maximum size of the individual bombs which could be completely enclosed to 2 000 lb 910 kg when carrying the 4 000lb and 8 000lb high capacity HC bombs the bomb bay doors could not close fully 27 Operational service edit nbsp Halifaxes of No 35 Squadron bombing the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau in dry dock at Brest France 18 December 1941In November 1940 the Handley Page Halifax entered service with No 35 Squadron at RAF Linton on Ouse Its operational debut occurred on the night of 10 11 March 1941 when six Halifax bombers flew a bombing raid against Le Havre targeting the area around the docks and any shipping that might be present 10 28 The existence of the Halifax was not officially acknowledged until July 1941 after it was used in a daylight attack on La Pallice France against the German battleship Scharnhorst At the end of 1941 the Halifax was withdrawn from daylight bombing operations after intensifying fighter opposition had increased the casualty rates to unsustainable levels 10 In the second half of 1942 No 35 Squadron and four other squadrons were selected to form the Pathfinder Force later expanded to become No 8 Group 10 Pathfinder crews flying the Halifax would mark routes and identify and mark targets for the Main Force Effective marking greatly increased the accuracy and destructive power of Bomber Command As a Pathfinder and Main Force aircraft the Halifax was a core part of the bombing offensive against Germany and its Axis allies 29 By the end of 1943 No 4 Group had been entirely equipped with the Halifax and would continue to operate the aircraft until the end of the war 10 No 6 Group formed of Royal Canadian Air Force RCAF squadrons also adopted the Halifax around the same time and would go on to operate it in each of its 14 squadrons although it was never solely equipped with the type At its peak strength Bomber Command operated a total of 76 Halifax equipped squadrons 10 nbsp Handley Page Halifax B Mk I s n L9530 MP L of No 76 Squadron RAF Summer 1941While the early built models of the Halifax were heavily used by Bomber Command and made valuable contributions to operations the aircraft s performance was considered unsatisfactory for the most part mainly due to the underpowered Merlin engine which meant that it could not fly at the higher altitudes needed to avoid enemy fighters which were becoming increasingly effective throughout 1943 16 This was answered by the Halifax Mk III which was powered by Bristol Hercules radial engines in place of the Merlins Introduced into service in November 1943 the Mk III was first delivered to No 433 Squadron and No 466 Squadron 30 By January 1944 the Hercules powered Halifax was available in quantity and quickly proved to have superior performance in the face of German fighter defences 16 Early on Air Chief Marshal Arthur Harris head of Bomber Command was scathing in his criticism of the Halifax s performance in comparison to the new Avro Lancaster primarily of its bomb carrying capability an average Halifax was calculated to drop 100 tons of bombs in its lifetime compared to a Lancaster s 154 Harris continued to have a poor opinion of the Halifax despite the fact that later Hercules engined machines had lower loss rates and higher crew survival rates after abandoning the aircraft than Lancasters and came very close to the Lancaster s speed and altitude performance 31 The Halifax was progressively outnumbered in front line service over occupied Europe as more Lancasters became available from 1943 onwards many squadrons converted to the Lancaster note 1 Production of the Halifax continued supposedly because it was more efficient to keep building it than to stop its production and convert to building another aircraft But any new facilities were devoted to the Lancaster citation needed nbsp A Halifax pilotHarris s view of the Halifax changed sometime after spring 1942 On 2 June 1942 in a response to a telegram sent by Frederick Handley Page congratulating Harris on the success of the first 1000 bomber Cologne raid he stated My Dear Handley Page We much appreciate your telegram of congratulation on Saturday night s work the success of which was very largely due to your support in giving us such a powerful weapon to wield Between us we will make a job of it 32 Following the invasion of Europe in 1944 the Halifax resumed daylight bombing operations performing semi tactical strikes upon enemy troop concentrations gun emplacements and strongpoints of the Atlantic Wall defences along the French coast with a reportedly high degree of accuracy 33 Other common targets were enemy communications and the launch sites for V 1 flying bombs Bombing activity became increasingly brazen throughout late 1944 as the Luftwaffe became incapable of putting up effective opposition against allied air forces 33 The Halifax also found itself being increasingly tasked with transport duties around this time in one instance around half a million gallons of petrol was delivered to Brussels in support of the advancing Second Army then engaged in heavy fighting at Arnhem 33 During the latter half of 1944 the bombing of German held oil facilities became a major priority of the offensive 33 On 27 August a force of 216 Halifax bombers alongside smaller numbers of de Havilland Mosquitos and Lancasters and a sizable escort of Supermarine Spitfires conducted the first major daylight operation by Bomber Command against a target inside Germany that year attacking the oil refinery at Homberg on the Ruhr In spite of heavy fire from anti aircraft defenses no bombers were downed and the refinery was severely damaged in places 34 Attacks upon oil production facilities throughout Germany would become commonplace within the remaining months of the war 35 nbsp Personnel of No 462 Squadron operating in RAF Middle East Command September 1942The only Victoria Cross to be awarded to any Halifax pilot went to Cyril J Barton of No 578 Squadron for displaying great gallantry in bringing his heavily damaged aircraft back after a raid on Nuremberg on the night of 30 31 March 1944 Barton continued to fly the Halifax while other crew members bailed out He was killed in the aircraft s crash landing but the remaining crew survived due to his actions 33 nbsp RAF airman attaches the tow rope of an Airspeed Horsa glider to the tow hook of a Halifax glider tug of 295 Squadron in preparation for Operation Fustian Tunisia July 1943 Large numbers of Halifax bombers were also operated by Coastal Command which used it to conduct anti submarine warfare reconnaissance and meteorological operations The Halifax was heavily used to deploy mines in the vicinity of enemy held ports 35 It served increasingly in other support capacities as the war progressed being used as a glider tug an electronic warfare aircraft for No 100 Group and to conduct special operations such as parachuting agents and arms into occupied Europe for the Special Operations Executive SOE 36 As a glider tug the Halifax was superior to the Lancaster the Halifax Mk III s tug weight at take off at 59 400 lbs was higher than a Lancaster Mk2 at 52 800 lbs 37 Throughout early 1945 the Halifax was frequently dispatched against cities within the German homeland including Hannover Magdeburg Stuttgart Cologne Munster Osnabruck and others 35 During these months infrastructure such as oil facilities and railways were given a high priority these targets were attacked right up until the end of the war According to Moyes within the final few months bomber losses had fallen to all time lows while raids were frequently regarded as having been highly successful 35 During the final months of the war the improved Halifax Mk VI and Mk VII were introduced In particular these models had been tropicalised with an eye towards their potential use in the Pacific War against the Empire of Japan 35 While some of these Mk VI and Mk VII machines were deployed to the theatre they played little meaningful role as the war ended before larger numbers could be brought to bear against Japanese forces 38 On 25 April 1945 the Halifax performed its last major operation against the enemy in WWII during an attack upon coastal gun batteries on Wangerooge in the Frisian Islands of the North Sea 39 While the type continued to fly operations after this these were primarily diversions to other operations and sporadic uncoordinated attacks against targets of opportunity Upon the end of the conflict Bomber Command quickly disbanded the majority of its Halifax equipped squadrons the aircraft themselves were transferred to Transport Command 36 During the type s service with Bomber Command Halifaxes flew 82 773 operations and dropped 224 207 tons of bombs 1 833 aircraft were lost 40 41 By 1947 the majority of Halifax bombers were deemed to be surplus and scrapped 36 The Halifax remained in widespread service with Coastal Command and RAF Transport Command Royal Egyptian Air Force and the Armee de l Air until early 1952 The Royal Pakistan Air Force however continued operating them up till 1961 thus Pakistan became the last military user of the type In 1947 the RPAF inherited two Halifax bombers from the RAF which were later heavily used during the 1st Kashmir War in 1948 RPAF Halifaxes flew several sorties in support of Pakistani and Kashmiri forces notably in the Battle of Skardu during which they conducted night time Airdrop missions After the war six ex RAF Halifax BVIs were purchased in 1949 Due to their high operational costs the RPAF Commanders decided not to enlarge the Halifax fleet too much These airplanes were later transferred to the newly raised No 12 Squadron PAF where they were only used in emergency situations Gradually they were transferred to long term storage and were later scrapped 42 In September 1997 Halifax 57 Rescue of Canada excavated Halifax LW682 from a bog near the River Dender in Belgium The plane was part of RCAF 426 Squadron and had been shot down near Geraardsbergen during a raid on Leuven Belgium on 12 May 1944 During the excavation the bodies of three crew members were recovered and later given proper burial Several items from the plane were used in restoration of NA337 while other items were transferred to museums The airframe was melted down and used to construct the ceiling of the RAF Bomber Command Memorial in London which was unveiled in 2012 43 Civilian operation edit nbsp Halifax C 8 freighter of Lancashire Aircraft Corporation at Manchester Airport in 1950A number of former RAF Halifax C 8s were sold from 1945 and used as freighters by a number of mostly British airlines In 1948 41 civilian Halifax freighters were used during the Berlin Air Lift operating 4 653 sorties carrying freight and 3 509 carrying bulk diesel fuel Nine aircraft were lost during the airlift The low cost airline business pioneer Freddie Laker bought and serviced war surplus Halifaxes for Bond Air Services operations in the Berlin airlift citation needed With the airfreight market in decline most of the civilian Halifaxes were scrapped on their return to England The last civilian operated Halifaxes were withdrawn from service in late 1952 Variants edit nbsp Comparison of the Halifax Mk I pink with its contemporaries the Short Stirling yellow and the Avro Lancaster blue Pre Halifax designs edit H P 55 Proposed twin engine bomber aircraft never built H P 56 Proposed twin engine bomber aircraft fitted with two Rolls Royce Vulture engines never built H P 57 edit H P 57 L7244 Prototype first flew on The first Halifax prototype with four Merlin 10 engines and no armament L7245 Second prototype first flew from Radlett on 17 August 1940 and was more representative of the production configuration including armament Halifax B I Series I nbsp A Halifax B Mark I Series I of No 76 Squadron undergoing maintenance at RAF Middleton St George County DurhamFour engined long range heavy bomber aircraft powered by Rolls Royce Merlin X engines the first production version Armament consisted of nose turret with two guns tail turret with four guns and two beam guns Recognizable from large deep radiator intakes containing circular Gallay radiators and oil cooler 50 produced Halifax B I Series II Stressed for operating at a higher gross weight 25 produced Halifax B I Series III Re engined with Merlin XX engines with slimmer coolers introduced new twin gun Boulton Paul type C upper turret in place of beam guns with revised undercarriage and additional centre section fuel tanks 9 produced dd H P 58 edit Halifax Mk II Projected variant with revised armament including 20 mm cannon and no tail turret Due to problems with the new armament the project was cancelled and the Mk II designation given to H P 59 H P 59 edit nbsp Halifax Mk II of No 148 Squadron at Brindisi Italy Note the parachute canisters containing supplies for the Yugoslav National Liberation Army loaded into the bomb bay and wing cells nbsp A Halifax A V Series 1 Special glider tug of No 295 Squadron getting airborne from RAF Portreath Cornwall towing an Airspeed Horsa glider to Tunisia during Operation Beggar June 1943Halifax Mk II New variant with increased takeoff weight fuel and weapons carriage Halifax B II Series I First series of the bomber variant from March 1942 onwards these were fitted with TR1335 navigation aids Halifax B II Series I Special SOE Special version for Special Operations Executive SOE used to drop supplies over Europe Nose armament and dorsal turret removed the nose being faired over as well as changes to the fuel vent pipes and exhaust shrouds Halifax B II Series I Special nbsp Halifax B II Series I Special W1057 ZA X No 10 Squadron RAF with a faired over nose During April May 1942 this aircraft took part in a number of raids on the German battleship Tirpitz in Faettenfjord near Trondheim Norway Generally similar to the aircraft used by the SOE these were employed in the bombing role These aircraft were more varied in appearance especially concerning the fitting of dorsal armament with some aircraft retaining the standard Boulton Paul Type C turret in different mounts with others mounting a Type A turret There were also examples with no dorsal turret similar to the SOE aircraft Halifax B II Series IA Modified with new glazed nose section Merlin XX or 22 engines new square Morris radiators and new D fin and rudder The dorsal turret was changed to a four gun Boulton Paul Type A Mk VIII and there were improvements to the bomb bay door sealing Some aircraft were fitted with the H2S radar Halifax B II Series I Freighter A few Mk IIs were employed in the transport role in Great Britain unmodified SOE aircraft and in the Middle East simple modifications to allow carriage of engines or Spitfire fuselages Halifax B II Series II Single aircraft HR756 modified with three blade Rotol propellers and Merlin 22 engines Rejected in favour of Mk III Halifax A II According to some sources a handful of the airborne forces Halifaxes were converted into B IIs If this is true they might have been designated A II or may have retained their bomber designations 44 Halifax GR II Coastal Command variant of the Halifax B II Halifax GR II Series I A handful of aircraft converted from Series I or Special to GR II standard having differences in dorsal armament The main difference was the fitting of a ASV Mk 3 radar in an H2S type fairing Sometimes a 50 in 12 7 mm machine gun was fitted in the faired nose Halifax GR II Series IA Definitive Coastal Command variant of the GR II with glazed nose mounting 50 in 12 7 mm machine gun Merlin XX or 22 engines B P A type dorsal turret and extra long range fuel tanks in fuselage A ventral turret holding a single 50 in 12 7 mm machine gun was mounted on most aircraft although some employed the ASV Mk 3 radar in its place Halifax Met II Some sources 45 suggest that there were a meteorological variant of the B II designated Met II but this is unlikely 46 H P 61 edit nbsp Group portrait of an air crew of No 578 Squadron in front of a Halifax bomber circa 1944Halifax B III Main production variant fitted with Bristol Hercules engines B III bombers were fitted with transparent nose dome with single machine gun Boulton Paul dorsal turret with four guns and tail turret with four guns All but first few had longer wing with rounded wingtips that increased wingspan to 104 ft 2 in 31 75 m 2 091 produced Halifax A III Halifax B III bombers converted into glider tug and paratroop transport aircraft Halifax C III Halifax B III bombers converted into military transport aircraft H P 63 edit nbsp A Halifax B Mark V Series I Special of No 295 Squadron undergoing a 24 hour overhaul in at RAF Holmsley South Hampshire 1943 nbsp A line of Halifax A Mark VII glider tugs attached to various General Aircraft Hamilcars via tow ropes of No 298 Squadron and No 644 Squadron at RAF Woodbridge Suffolk prior to launchHalifax B V Four engined long range heavy bomber powered by four Rolls Royce Merlin XX engines with square empennage and wingtips Armament as B III 904 produced Halifax B V Series I Special Halifax A V Halifax B V bombers converted into glider tugs and paratroop transport aircraft Halifax GR V Coastal Command variant Halifax B V bombers converted into maritime reconnaissance aircraft Halifax B VI Four engined long range heavy bomber powered by four 1 615 hp 1 204 kW Bristol Hercules XVI radial engines with H2S radar No dorsal turret Square empennage round wing tips 643 produced Halifax C VI Halifax B VI bombers converted into military transport aircraft Halifax GR VI Coastal Command variant Halifax B VI bombers converted into maritime reconnaissance aircraft Halifax B VII Four engined long range heavy bomber powered by four 1 615 hp 1 204 kW Bristol Hercules XVI radial engines Round wing tips Armament as B III Halifax A VII Halifax B VIIs converted into paratroop transport and glider tug aircraft Halifax C VII Halifax B VIIs bombers converted into military transport aircraft H P 70 edit Halifax C VIII Cargo and passenger transport aircraft H P 71 edit Halifax A IX Paratroop transport glider tug aircraft H P 70 Halton edit Halton I Interim civil transport version postwar a number of Halifax bombers were converted into civilian transport aircraft Halton II VIP transport aircraft for the Maharajah Gaekwar of Baroda 47 Operators editMilitary operators edit nbsp An Australian Halifax from No 462 Squadron RAAF at RAF Foulsham in 1945 nbsp Halifax bomber OO R of 1663 HCU from RAF Rufforth in 1944 nbsp Pair of Halifax bombers flying in close formation nbsp AustraliaRoyal Australian Air Force 48 No 460 Squadron RAAF No 462 Squadron RAAF No 466 Squadron RAAF nbsp CanadaRoyal Canadian Air Force 49 No 405 Squadron RCAF No 408 Squadron RCAF No 415 Squadron RCAF No 419 Squadron RCAF No 420 Squadron RCAF No 424 Squadron RCAF No 425 Squadron RCAF No 426 Squadron RCAF No 427 Squadron RCAF No 428 Squadron RCAF No 429 Squadron RCAF No 431 Squadron RCAF No 432 Squadron RCAF No 433 Squadron RCAF No 434 Squadron RCAF nbsp EgyptRoyal Egyptian Air Force 50 nbsp FranceFree French Air Forces 48 No 346 Squadron RAF GB II 23 Guyenne No 347 Squadron RAF GB I 25 Tunisie nbsp PakistanPakistan Air Force 51 No 12 Squadron nbsp PolandPolish Air Forces in exile in Great Britain 52 No 301 Polish Bomber Squadron C Flight No 138 Squadron RAF later No 1586 Polish Special Duties Flight before reforming as 301 Squadron Special Duties No 304 Polish Bomber Squadron RAF nbsp United KingdomRoyal Air Force 53 No 10 Squadron RAF No 35 Squadron RAF No 47 Squadron RAF No 51 Squadron RAF No 58 Squadron RAF No 76 Squadron RAF No 77 Squadron RAF No 78 Squadron RAF No 96 Squadron RAF No 102 Squadron RAF No 103 Squadron RAF No 108 Squadron RAF No 113 Squadron RAF No 138 Squadron RAF No 148 Squadron RAF No 158 Squadron RAF No 161 Squadron RAF No 171 Squadron RAF No 178 Squadron RAF No 187 Squadron RAF No 190 Squadron RAF No 192 Squadron RAF No 199 Squadron RAF No 202 Squadron RAF No 224 Squadron RAF No 246 Squadron RAF No 295 Squadron RAF No 296 Squadron RAF No 297 Squadron RAF No 298 Squadron RAF No 502 Squadron RAF No 517 Squadron RAF No 518 Squadron RAF No 519 Squadron RAF No 520 Squadron RAF No 521 Squadron RAF No 578 Squadron RAF No 614 Squadron RAF No 620 Squadron RAF No 624 Squadron RAF No 640 Squadron RAF No 644 Squadron RAF Civil operators edit nbsp AustraliaAircarrier Former Wikner aircraft Geoffrey Wikner B III converted with a 15 passenger interior nbsp FranceAero Cargo CTAI SANA Societe Anonyme de Navigation Aeriennes nbsp NorwayPeteair Vingtor Airways nbsp Pakistan nbsp South AfricaAlpha Airways LAMS South Africa nbsp SwitzerlandAir Globe nbsp United KingdomAir Freight Airtech Bond Air Services British American Air Services British Overseas Airways Corporation Chartair C L Air Surveys Eagle Aviation Lancashire Aircraft Corporation London Aero and Motor Services LAMS Payloads Skyflight Union Air Services V I P Services Westminster Airways converted as a bulk fuel carrier for Berlin Airlift World Air FreightHalton operators edit nbsp IndiaMaharajah Gaekwar of Baroda nbsp FranceLouis Breguet nbsp South AfricaAlpha Airways nbsp United KingdomBond Air Services British American Air Services British Overseas Airways Corporation Westminster Airways Worldair CarrierSurviving aircraft editOf the 6 176 Halifaxes built three complete examples remain Serial Geographic location Institutional location History PhotoNA337 Trenton Ontario National Air Force Museum of Canada Built by Rootes Motors Delivered to 644 Squadron at RAF Tarrant Rushton 5 March 1945 On 24 March 1945 it towed a glider as part of Operation Varsity the airborne operation in support of crossing the Rhine Completed three supply drops in Norway and Denmark in March and April 1945 On the fourth sortie 23 April 1945 piloted by Alexander Turnbull NA337 was sent to drop 13 supply containers and two packages at Mikkelsberget Norway After a successful drop it was hit by flak in the starboard wing at 0131 hours on 24 April After both starboard engines caught fire NA337 ditched in Lake Mjosa at 0145 hours All but one crew member Thomas Weightman died of hypothermia It was discovered in 1991 by Tore Marsoe and Rolf Liberg and further raised in 1995 by Halifax 57 Rescue Restoration was completed in November 2005 54 nbsp HR792 Elvington North Yorkshire Yorkshire Air Museum Built by Handley Page 58 Squadron Flew 67 sorties between 15 July 1943 and 9 December 1944 Crash landed near Stornoway 13 January 1945 Fuselage was purchased by a chicken farmer and used as a coop Recovered and restored in 1984 using parts from Halifaxes LW687 and JP158 as well as wings from Hastings TG536 Painted as LV907 Friday the 13th of 158 Squadron 55 nbsp W1048 Colindale London RAF Museum London Built by English Electric Assigned to 102 Squadron at RAF Topcliffe on 27 March 1942 Sent to 35 Squadron at RAF Linton on Ouse on 9 April 1942 On 27 April it was one of 31 Halifaxes that flew from RAF Kinloss as part of raid on the German battleship Tirpitz W1048 made her attack at 03 00 hours during which she was hit by the intense flak which set the starboard outer engine on fire Pilot Don MacIntyre made a wheels up landing on frozen Lake Hoklingen in Norway but the aircraft sank 12 hours later It was discovered by divers in 1971 and recovered on 30 June 1973 by the RAF Sub Aqua Association It has been left unrestored 56 nbsp Specifications Mk III edit nbsp 3 view drawingof Halifax Mark I Series III with profile details of other variants nbsp Fuselage section of a HalifaxData from Halifax Second to None 57 The Handley Page Halifax B III VI VII 12 General characteristicsCrew 7 pilot co pilot flight engineer navigator bomb aimer radio operator gunner two gunners Length 71 ft 7 in 21 82 m Wingspan 104 ft 2 in 31 75 m Height 20 ft 9 in 6 32 m Wing area 1 190 sq ft 111 m2 Airfoil root NACA 23021 tip NACA 23007 58 Empty weight 37 870 lb 17 178 kg Gross weight 54 400 lb 24 675 kg Max takeoff weight 65 000 lb 29 484 kg Powerplant 4 Bristol Hercules XVI 14 cylinder air cooled sleeve valve radial piston engines 1 615 hp 1 204 kW each Propellers 3 bladed constant speed propellersPerformance Maximum speed 282 mph 454 km h 245 kn at 13 500 ft 4 100 m Combat range 1 860 mi 2 990 km 1 620 nmi Service ceiling 24 000 ft 7 300 m Rate of climb 750 ft min 3 8 m s Wing loading 45 7 lb sq ft 223 kg m2 Power mass 0 12 hp lb 0 20 kW kg Armament Guns 8 303 in 7 7 mm Browning machine guns 4 in dorsal turret 4 in tail turret and 1 303 in 7 7 mm Vickers K machine gun in the nose Bombs 13 000 lb 5 897 kg of bombsAvionics H2S PPI radarHalifax 57 Rescue editThis section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message December 2018 Halifax 57 Rescue is a Canadian organization dedicated to the recovery and restoration of Handley Page Halifaxes Since its inception in 1994 the organization has recovered two aircraft including Halifax NA337 one of only three complete examples in the world The organization was founded in 1994 by Karl Kjarsgaard a Canadian former Air Canada pilot and Ian Foster of Scotland In 1995 they participated in their first recovery project that of Halifax NA337 from 750 feet underwater in Lake Mjosa Norway The aircraft was moved to the National Air Force Museum of Canada in Trenton Ontario where it was unveiled in 2005 after a full restoration 59 Their second project was the 1997 recovery of Halifax LW682 from a bog near Geraardsbergen Belgium During the recovery the bodies of three crew members were removed and given a proper burial Several parts of the aircraft were used in the restoration of NA337 and the airframe was melted down and later used to construct the RAF Bomber Command Memorial in London which was unveiled in 2012 43 At present when Halifax 57 Rescue is working to recover two aircraft The first is HR871 located off the coast of Sweden 60 Preparations are currently underway for underwater excavation Once the aircraft has been raised it will be moved to the Bomber Command Museum of Canada in Nanton Alberta for restoration The second aircraft the organization is seeking to recover is LW170 off the coast of Scotland 61 This aircraft has yet to be located although its general position is known 62 See also editAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Avro Lancaster Boeing B 17 Flying Fortress Consolidated B 24 Liberator Heinkel He 177 Petlyakov Pe 8 Short StirlingRelated lists List of aircraft of the Royal Air Force List of aircraft of World War IINotes edit The aircraft were assembled at Leavesden from components and assemblies manufactured around LondonReferences editNotes edit The first Thousand bomber raid on Cologne on 30 31 May 1942 included 131 Halifaxes and 73 Lancasters The attack on Berlin on 28 February 1943 included 252 Halifaxes and 457 Lancasters The attack on Hamburg on 27 28 July 1943 included 244 Halifaxes 353 Lancasters 116 Stirlings and 74 Wellingtons The attack on Nuremberg on 30 31 March 1944 included 214 Halifaxes and 572 Lancasters The attack on Dresden on 13 14 February 1945 included 753 Lancasters and no Halifaxes with nine Mosquitoes marking Citations edit Angelucci Enzo 1988 Combat aircraft of World War II p 22 ISBN 0 517 64179 8 a b Bingham 1986 p 30 a b Norris 1966 p 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Moyes 1966 p 3 Bingham 1986 p 4 Buttler 2004 p 104 Buttler 2004 p 102 Buttler 2004 p 105 Barnes C H Handley Page Aircraft since 1907 London 1976 pp 387 388 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Moyes 1966 p 4 Flight pp 400 401 a b Norris 1966 p 12 Barnes C H Handley Page Aircraft since 1907 London 1976 pp 615 617 a b Bingham 1986 p 17 a b Bingham 1986 p 19 a b c d e Norris 1966 p 5 Bingham 1986 p 69 a b Bingham 1986 p 71 Barnes 1987 page needed Bingham 1986 p 34 Bingham 1986 p 128 Falconer J Handley Page Halifax 1939 onwards all marks Owners Workshop Manual Haynes 2016 page 29 Barnes C H Handley Page Aircraft since 1907 London 1976 pp 417 419 423 603 Moyes 1966 pp 3 4 a b Flight 1942 p 401 Iveson amp Milton Lancaster A Biography Andre Deutsch p 221 Merrick 1980 p 30 Falconer 1998 p 232 Norris 1966 pp 4 5 Norris 1966 pp 5 6 Lake Jon Bomber Harris an enduring enigma Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Osprey Publishing 1 May 2002 Retrieved 15 September 2013 Bingham 1986 p 111 a b c d e Norris 1966 p 6 Norris 1966 pp 6 8 a b c d e Norris 1966 p 8 a b c Norris 1966 p 10 Bingham 1986 p 72 Norris 1966 pp 8 10 Norris 1966 p 9 Wings Encyclopedia of Aviation London Orbis Publishing 1979 Norris 1966 pp 9 10 Hali Sultan Halifax HP 57 bombers in the RPAF PAKISTAN INSTITUTE FOR AIR DEFENCE STUDIES Archived from the original on 16 August 2003 Retrieved 13 May 2023 a b Bomber Command Memorial in London www bombercommandmuseum ca Archived from the original on 14 April 2017 Retrieved 17 June 2017 Lake 1997 p 131 Robertson 1990 p 77 Lake 1997 p 132 Rapier Brian J Halifax at War 1994 ISBN 1856481735 pp116 7 with photo a b Lake 1999 p 93 Lake 1999 pp 92 93 Robertson 1990 pp 4 rear cover Robertson 1990 p 64 Lake 1999 pp 91 92 Lake 1999 pp 90 96 The Story of Halifax NA337 airforcemuseum ca National Air Force Museum of Canada Retrieved 17 June 2017 Handley Page Halifax Mk III Yorkshire Air Museum Yorkshire Air Museum Retrieved 17 June 2017 Handley Page Halifax B MK II Series I W1048 8465M PDF Bingham 1986 p 170 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 The Story of Halifax NA337 National Air Force Museum of Canada airforcemuseum ca Retrieved 17 June 2017 Support the Recovery of a RCAF Halifax Bomber FundRazr Retrieved 17 June 2017 Fishing For Halibags Retrieving a Halifax Bomber from the Irish Sea gt Vintage Wings of Canada www vintagewings ca Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 17 June 2017 Bomber Command Museum of Canada Halifax Project www bombercommandmuseum ca Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 17 June 2017 Bibliography edit Barnes C H Handley Page Aircraft since 1907 London Putnam 1987 ISBN 0 85177 803 8 Bingham Victor F 1986 Halifax Second to None The Handley Page Halifax Airlife ISBN 0 906393 66 3 Buttler Tony British Secret Projects Fighters amp Bombers 1935 1950 Hinckley Midland Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 85780 179 2 Clarke R M ed Handley Page Halifax Portfolio Cobham Surrey UK Brooklands Books No year cited ISBN 0 948207 89 2 Clayton Donald C Handley Page An Aircraft Album Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan Ltd 1970 ISBN 0 7110 0094 8 Jones Geoffrey Patrick Night Flight Halifax Squadrons at War London William Kimber 1981 ISBN 0 7183 0338 5 Falconer Jonathan Bomber Command Handbook 1939 1945 Stroud England Sutton Publishing 1998 ISBN 0 7509 3171 X Lake Jon 1999 Halifax Squadrons of World War 2 Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 85532 892 5 Lake Jon 1997 Halifax Variants Wings of Fame Vol 8 Aerospace Publishing ISBN 1 86184 009 8 Merrick Keith A Halifax an Illustrated History of a Classic World War II Bomber Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan 1980 ISBN 0 7110 0767 5 Merrick Keith A Handley Page Halifax From Hell to Victory and Beyond Hersham Surrey UK Ian Allan Publishing 2009 ISBN 978 1 906537 06 7 Merrick Keith A The Handley Page Halifax Bourne Ends Buckinghamshire UK Aston Publications 1990 ISBN 978 0 946627 60 8 Moyes Philip J R Handley Page Halifax Merlin Engined Variants Aerodata International No 7 Kidlington Oxfordshire UK Vintage Aviation Publications 1979 ISBN 0 905469 50 X Moyes Philip J R The Handley Page Halifax B III VI VII Leatherhead Surrey UK Profile Publications 1966 Norris Geoffrey The Short Stirling Aircraft in Profile Number 142 Windsor Berkshire UK Profile Publications Ltd 1966 Rapier Brian J Halifax at War Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan 1987 ISBN 0 7110 1554 6 Roberts Nicholas 1979 Aircraft Crash Log No 2 Handley Page Halifax Roberts R N 1982 The Halifax File Air Britain Historians ISBN 0 85130 098 7 Robertson B 1990 Halifax Special Ian Allan ISBN 0 7110 1920 7 Robinson Ian 1996 The Unbeaten Warrior Returns The Story of Reconstructing the Handley Page Halifax at the Yorkshire Air Museum 1983 96 Yorkshire Air Museum ISBN 0 9512379 4 2 Scutts Jerry Halifax in Action Aircraft in Action series No 66 Carrollton TX Squadron Signal Publications Inc 1984 ISBN 0 89747 158 X Stachiw Anthony L and Andrew Tattersall Handley Page Halifax In Canadian Service St Catharine s Ontario Canada Vanwell Publishing 2005 ISBN 1 55125 085 3 The Halifax Flight flightglobal com archive XLI 1739 23 April 1942 Retrieved 10 December 2011 Warner Guy July August 2002 From Bombay to Bombardier Aircraft Production at Sydenham Part One Air Enthusiast No 100 pp 13 24 ISSN 0143 5450 Videography edit Halifax at War The Story of a Bomber 76 min DVD Toronto Nightfighters Productions 2005 ISBN 1 55259 571 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Handley Page Halifax Photo tour of the Elvington Halifax Handley Page Halifax II III Archived 26 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine at Yorkshire Air Museum One of the Many The story of a 76 Squadron Flight Engineer and his Halifax aircraft in World War II Krentz Herbert To Hell in a Halifax 2006 ISBN 9780978035808 the true story of RCAF pilot Herbert Krentz the sole survivor when his Halifax Mk V was shot down over Germany in early 1944 Halifax at the International Bomber Command Centre Digital Archive University of Lincoln Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Handley Page Halifax amp oldid 1167086388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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