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Handley Page Hampden

The Handley Page HP.52 Hampden is a British twin-engine medium bomber that was operated by the Royal Air Force (RAF). It was part of the trio of large twin-engine bombers procured for the RAF, joining the Armstrong Whitworth Whitley and Vickers Wellington. The Hampden was powered by Bristol Pegasus radial engines but a variant known as the Handley Page Hereford had in-line Napier Daggers.

HP.52 Hampden
Hampden Mk.I of No. 455 Squadron RAAF (May 1942)
Role Medium bomber
Manufacturer Handley Page (UK)
Canadian Associated Aircraft (Canada)
Designer Gustav Lachmann
First flight 21 June 1936
Introduction 1938
Retired 1943
Primary users Royal Air Force
Royal Canadian Air Force
Soviet Naval Aviation
Royal Australian Air Force
Produced 1936–1941
Number built 1,430

The Hampden served in the early stages of the Second World War, bearing the brunt of the early bombing war over Europe, taking part in the first night raid on Berlin and the first 1,000-bomber raid on Cologne. When it became obsolete, after a period of mainly operating at night, it was retired from RAF Bomber Command service in late 1942. By 1943, the rest of the trio were being superseded by the larger four-engined heavy bombers such as the Avro Lancaster.

Development edit

Origins edit

In 1932, the Air Ministry issued Specification B.9/32 seeking a twin-engined day bomber with higher performance than any preceding bomber aircraft.[1] Handley Page and Vickers both designed aircraft to meet this specification, the Vickers design became the Wellington. The Handley Page design team, led by George Volkert, drafted a radical aircraft, initially centering upon the politically favoured Rolls-Royce Goshawk engine. By mid-1934 development of the Goshawk looked less promising and the Air Ministry relaxed the tare weight (unloaded weight) requirement of the specification, allowing for the use of heavier and more powerful radial engines such as the Bristol Perseus and Bristol Pegasus. According to aviation author Philip J.R. Moyes, the Handley Page design soon found support with the Air Ministry in part because it was judged to represent a fair compromise between range, payload, and speed.[1]

During early 1936, the first prototype, designated as the HP.52 and given the serial number K4240, was completed. On seeing the narrow-yet-deep fuselage, which was only 3 ft wide, C. G. Grey, founder of The Aeroplane magazine, remarked "it looks like a flying suitcase", a nickname that stuck with the aircraft for its lifetime.[2] On 21 June 1936, the prototype, powered by a pair of Bristol Pegasus P.E.5S(A) engines, conducted its maiden flight from Radlett Aerodrome, Hertfordshire, piloted by Handley-Page chief test pilot Major James Cordes.[1] In late June 1936, the prototype was put on public display in the New Types Park, Hendon Air Show, London. In August 1936, in response to the successful flight trials performed by K4240, the Air Ministry issued an initial production order for the type, ordering 180 production aircraft to be manufactured to meet Specification B.30/36; concurrently, a second order for 100 aircraft powered by the Napier Dagger was issued to Belfast-based Short & Harland.[3]

In early 1937, a second prototype, which received the serial number L7271, was completed; this second prototype had several differences from the first, including the pitot tube being repositioned below the fuselage, a more rounded ventral defensive gun position, and a slightly modified nose.[4] L7271 later received a pair of Dagger engines and was accordingly re-designated as the HP.53; on 1 July 1937, it performed its first flight after having received the new engines. Another prototype, L4032, was produced to serve as the production-standard prototype; on 24 June 1938, the third prototype conducted its maiden flight.[4] L4032 differed from the previous two prototypes in that it was powered by a pair of Pegasus XVIII engines, the nose incorporated an optically flat bomb-aiming panel, as well as the ventral and dorsal gun positions being revised.[4]

On 24 June 1938, L4032 was officially christened by Lady Katharine Mary Montagu-Douglas-Scott, Viscountess Hampden, at a ceremony held in Radlett Aerodrome, the same day on which its first flight took place.[3][5] Viscountess Hampden's speech invoked "the spirit of John Hampden, the defender of civil liberties" to inspire future crews of his namesake aircraft.[6] L4032 and L4033, which was the second production-standard Hampden to be produced, would be later assigned to the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment at RAF Martlesham Heath, Suffolk.[7] On 20 September 1938, the third production Hampden, designated L4034, following the completion of handling trials conducted by the Central Flying School at Upavon Aerodrome, Wiltshire, become the first aircraft to enter RAF squadron service, being delivered to No. 49 Squadron.[8]

Production edit

By late 1938, the mass manufacturing plans for the Hampden had been formalised. In addition to Handley-Page's own production line, the type was to be built under subcontract by English Electric at its factory in Preston, Lancashire; on 6 August 1938, English Electric was awarded an initial contract to manufacture 75 Hampdens.[8] In addition, Canadian interest in domestic production of the type had resulted in the establishment of the joint Anglo-Canadian Canadian Associated Aircraft company, which promptly received an initial order from the RAF for 80 Hampdens to be completed in Canada; this facility would effectively act as a shadow factory during wartime.[8] On 1 September 1938, in response to interest expressed by the Royal Swedish Air Force (RSAF) in the Hampden, including in a potential licence production arrangement for 70 aircraft to be built in Sweden, a single production Hampden was supplied to Sweden. Designated P.5 by the RSAF, it was operated by the service until November 1945, after which it was sold to Svenska Aeroplan AB (SAAB) to serve as a flying testbed before being retired in late 1947.[8]

On 22 February 1940, the first Preston-built Hampden, P2062, conducted its maiden flight. English Electric would go on to manufacture a total of 770 Hampdens, more than any other company, before delivering its final aircraft on 15 March 1942.[9] In July 1940, Handley-Page terminated its own production line for the Hampden upon the completion of its 500th aircraft.[9] On 9 August 1940, the first Canadian-built Hampden, P5298, made its debut flight; by October 1940, Canadian production had risen to 15 aircraft per month.[9] A total of 160 Hampdens were completed by Canadian Associated Aircraft, many of which were ferried to the United Kingdom for wartime service. The final Canadian-built aircraft was delivered in late 1941.[10]

Design edit

The Hampden Mk I had a pilot, navigator/bomb aimer, radio operator and rear gunner. Conceived as a fast, manoeuvrable "fighting bomber", the Hampden had a fixed forward-firing .303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine gun in the upper part of the fuselage nose. To avoid the weight penalties of powered turrets, the Hampden had a curved Perspex nose fitted with a manual .303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers K machine gun and a .303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers K installation in the rear upper and lower positions. The layout was similar to the all-guns-forward cockpits introduced about the same time in Luftwaffe medium bombers, notably the Dornier Do 17. During the Norwegian Campaign, these guns proved to be thoroughly inadequate for self-defence in daylight; the single guns were replaced by twin Vickers K guns, a process led by Air Vice Marshal Arthur Harris of No. 5 Group RAF in 1940.[11]

The Hampden had a flush-rivetted stressed skin, reinforced with a mixture of bent and extruded sections in an all-metal monocoque design.[12] A split-assembly construction technique was employed: sections were prefabricated and then joined, to enable rapid and economic manufacture.[4] The fuselage was in three big sections – front, centre and rear – that were built using jigs.[12] The centre and rear sections were made of two halves, which meant that the sections could be fitted out in part under better working conditions prior to assembly. All possible assembly work was performed at the benches prior to installation upon each aircraft.[4]

 
Hampden cockpit

The wings were made up of three large units: centre section, port outer wing and starboard outer wing, which were also subdivided.[13] Each section was built around a main girder spar, leading edge section and trailing edge section.[12] The wing made use of wingtip slots and hydraulically actuated trailing edge flaps; the flaps and ailerons had stress-bearing D-spars.[12] According to Moyes, the configuration of the wing was a key feature of Hampden, being highly tapered and designed to exert low levels of drag; these attributes were responsible for the aircraft's high top speed for the era of 265 mph (230 kn; 426 km/h) while retaining a reasonably low landing speed of 73 mph (63 kn; 117 km/h).[4]

The Hampden's flying qualities were typically described as being favourable; Moyes described it as being "extraordinarily mobile on the controls".[14] Pilots were provided with a high level of external visibility, assisting the execution of steep turns and other manoeuvres. The control layout required some familiarisation, as some elements such as the hydraulic controls were unobtrusive and unintuitive.[14] Upon introduction, the Hampden exhibited greater speeds and initial climb rates than any of its contemporaries while still retaining favourable handling qualities.[4]

The slim and compact fuselage of the aircraft was quite cramped, being wide enough only for a single person. The navigator sat behind the pilot and access in the cockpit required folding down the seats. Once in place, the crew had almost no room to move and were typically uncomfortable during long missions.[14] Aircrews referred to the Hampden by various nicknames due to this, such as Flying Suitcase, Panhandle, and Flying Tadpole.[4]

I did my first flight and first tour on Hampdens. A beautiful aeroplane to fly, terrible to fly in! Cramped, no heat, no facilities where you could relieve yourself. You got in there and you were stuck there. The aeroplane was like a fighter. It was only 3 feet wide on the outside of the fuselage and the pilot was a very busy person. There were 111 items for the pilot to take care of because on the original aircraft he had not only to find the instruments, the engine and all that, but also he had all the bomb switches to hold the bombs.

— Wilfred John 'Mike' Lewis[15]

The newest of the three medium bombers, the Hampden was often referred to by aircrews as the "Flying Suitcase" because of its cramped crew conditions,[16] or more plausibly, because of the unusually thin, deep, slab-sided and rectangular shape of the fuselage was reminiscent of that of a suitcase.[17]

Operational history edit

UK service edit

 
Scale comparison diagram of the trio of British twin-engined medium bombers at the outbreak of the Second World War; the Hampden (yellow), the Vickers Wellington (blue) and the Armstrong Whitworth Whitley (pink)

In September 1938, No. 49 Squadron received the first Hampdens; by the end of the year, both 49 and 83 Squadrons at RAF Scampton had re-equipped with the type.[18] A total of 226 Hampdens were in service with ten squadrons by the start of the Second World War, with six forming the operational strength of 5 Group of Bomber Command based in Lincolnshire.[18][19]

With the outbreak of war in 1939, Hampdens were initially used to perform armed aerial reconnaissance missions, observing German naval activity during daylight.[20] However, despite its speed and manoeuvrability, the Hampden proved to be no match for Luftwaffe fighters; in December 1939, Bomber Command is claimed to have discarded the belief that aircraft such as the Hampden could realistically operate by day and instead chose to predominantly employ them under the cover of darkness during nighttime operations.[20] During 1940, Hampdens of 5 Group conducted 123 nighttime airborne leaflet propaganda missions, losing only a single aircraft in the process.[20]

On 13 April 1940, days after Germany's invasion of Norway, a large number of Hampdens were dispatched on night-time mine-laying (code-named "gardening") flights in the North Sea in areas deemed unapproachable by British shipping. According to Moyes, this activity proved highly effective, experiencing a low casualty rate of less than 1.9 aircraft per mission.[20] The Hampden also saw a return to its use as a daytime bomber during the Norwegian Campaign, but quickly proved to be under-gunned in the face of German fighters.[11]

On 19 March 1940, Hampdens took part in the first deliberate bombing of German soil in a nighttime raid upon the seaplane hangars and slipways in Hörnum, Sylt.[9] The type continued to operate at night on bombing raids over Germany. Flight Lieutenant Rod Learoyd of 49 Squadron was awarded the Victoria Cross for a low-level attack on the Dortmund-Ems canal on 12 August 1940 where two of five aircraft failed to return.[21][22] On 25 August 1940, Hampdens from various squadrons participated in the RAF's first bombing raid on Berlin.[23] Sergeant John Hannah was the wireless operator/air gunner of an 83 Squadron Hampden and was awarded the Victoria Cross on 15 September 1940, when he fought the flames of the burning aircraft, allowing the pilot to return it to base.[21]

In April 1942, the Hampden-equipped 144 Squadron and 455 Squadron RAAF were transferred from Bomber Command to Coastal Command to perform the torpedo bomber role. Later that year, detachments from both squadrons were dispatched to Vaenga airfield, Murmansk, Russia, to help safeguard the Arctic convoys in the vicinity.[23] A total of four squadrons assigned to Coastal Command would be equipped with Hampdens. These squadrons continued to use the type into late 1943; the last Coastal Command squadron transitioned from the type on 10 December 1943.[24]

Almost half of the Hampdens built, 714, were lost on operations, with 1,077 crew killed and 739 reported as missing. German Flak accounted for 108, one hit a German barrage balloon, 263 Hampdens crashed because of "a variety of causes" and 214 others were classed as "missing". Luftwaffe pilots claimed 128 Hampdens, shooting down 92 at night.[25]

The last Bomber Command sorties by Hampdens were flown on the night of 14/15 September 1942 by 408 Squadron, RCAF against Wilhelmshaven.[26] After being withdrawn from Bomber Command in 1942, it operated with RAF Coastal Command until 1943 as a long-range torpedo bomber (the Hampden TB Mk I with a Mk XII torpedo in an open bomb bay and a 500-pound (230 kg) bomb under each wing) and as a maritime reconnaissance aircraft.

Non-UK service edit

 
A RAAF Hampden of No. 455 Squadron at RAF Wigsley, Nottinghamshire, circa 1942

The Hampden was also used by the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF), Aviatsiya Voenno-Morskogo Flota (AV-MF: Maritime Military Fleet Aviation) of the Soviet Union and the Swedish Flygvapnet (Air Force).

The Hampden in RCAF service included the 160 examples manufactured in Canada by the Canadian Associated Aircraft consortium. Of the total built, 84 were shipped by sea to Great Britain, while the remainder came to Patricia Bay (Victoria Airport) B.C., to set up No. 32 OTU (RAF) used for bombing and gunnery training. Typical exercises at 32 OTU consisted of patrolling up the West Coast of Vancouver Island at night or flying out into the Pacific to a navigational map co-ordinate, often in adverse and un-forecast inclement weather. Due to attrition from accidents, about 200 "war weary" Hampdens were later flown from the U.K. to Patricia Bay as replacements.[27]

In Operation Orator, during September 1942, the crews of 32 Hampden TB.1 torpedo bombers from No. 144 Squadron RAF and No. 455 Squadron RAAF flew to Northwest Russia, to protect arctic convoy PQ 18 from German surface vessels, such the battleship Tirpitz. The Hampden crews flew from Sumburgh in the Shetland Islands to Vaenga (Vayenga; later known as Severomorsk) in Murmansk Oblast, Russia. This was a hazardous route, often subject to poor weather and spanning more than 2,100 nautical miles (3,900 km), partly over enemy-occupied territory in Norway and Finland. Eight Hampdens were lost or damaged beyond repair en route.[28][29][30] 144 and 455 Squadrons flew a small number of sorties from Vaenga. While it was originally intended that the Hampdens would be flown back to Scotland, the prevailing west–east headwinds on such a flight might have pushed the Hampdens beyond their maximum endurance and it was decided to transport the wing's personnel back to Britain by sea and gift the Hampdens to the Soviet Navy.

Aircrews and mechanics from Maritime Military Fleet Aviation (Aviatsiya Voenno-Morskogo Flota; VMF) were trained by members of 144 and 455 Squadrons, before their return to Britain in October.[31] The 3rd Squadron, 24th Mine-Torpedo Aviation Regiment (24 Минно-торпедный авиаполк; 24 MTAP) operated the "balalaika" – the Russian nickname for the Hampden, in reference to its unusual shape – until mid-1943,[32] when losses, a lack of replacements and a shortage of spares forced its retirement. 24 MTAP then reverted to the Ilyushin DB-3/Ilyushin Il-4.

In Sweden, the Flygvapnet assigned an HP.52 to Reconnaissance Wing F 11 at Nyköping for evaluation, under the designation P5. After the war, the aircraft was sold to SAAB where it was used as an avionics testbed.

Variants edit

The Hampden was powered by two 980 hp (730 kW) Bristol Pegasus XVIII nine-cylinder radial engines. A Mk II variant, designated the HP.62, was developed by converting two Hampdens to use the 1,000 hp (750 kW) Wright Cyclone engine in 1940, but no further work was done on that project.[23]

Interest in the HP.52 by the Swedish Air Force led to the creation of the HP.53 prototype, which was subsequently used as a testbed for a pair of 1,000 hp (750 kW) Napier Dagger VIII 24-cylinder H-block air-cooled inline engines.

In August 1936, the Air Ministry placed an order for 100 Hampdens equipped with the Dagger engine. Those aircraft subsequently received the designation HP.53, along with the name Hereford.[3] Manufactured by Short & Harland in Belfast, their performance was almost identical to that of their Hampden cousins, but there were problems with the engines.[33] The Dagger engine proved to be noisy and unreliable. Cooling problems plagued the engine while being run on the ground, resulting in distortions and premature failures.[34] The problems were not satisfactorily resolved, with the result that most of the Herefords on order were converted to Hampdens, while those that were constructed were often re-engined to become Hampdens. A limited number of Herefords did enter squadron service but were only used by training units.[12]

Operators edit

Hampden edit

  Australia
  Canada
  New Zealand
  Soviet Union
  Sweden
  • Swedish Air Force
    • Reconnaissance Wing F 11 based at Nyköping operated a single HP.52 for evaluation under designation P 5. After the war, the aircraft was sold to SAAB where it was operated for testing avionics.
  United Kingdom
 
Handley Page Hampden of No. 83 Squadron with crew, seated on a loaded bomb trolley at Scampton, October 1940
 
Hampden in the process of being loaded with bombs by ground crew
 
Aircrews of No. 50 Squadron in front of their Hampdens at Waddington, Lincolnshire, shortly after returning from a raid on the German fleet in the Bergen Fjord, Norway, on 9 April 1940

Hereford edit

  United Kingdom

Survivors edit

 
Hampden P5436 at the Canadian Museum of Flight at Langley, British Columbia c.2006

No Hampdens remain in flying condition today, although examples do remain on display or undergoing restoration:

Hampden I P1344

Recovered from a crash-site in Russia in 1991, the aircraft is being reconstructed at the Michael Beetham Conservation Centre at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford. During the Second World War, it served with No. 144 Squadron RAF, part of Coastal Command. In September 1942, the squadron was transferred to the Kola Peninsula in northern Russia to help protect the Arctic convoys. While in transit over Finland, P1344 accidentally flew close by a German airfield and was shot down by two scrambled Messerschmitt Bf 109s. It crashed in a wooded area of the Kola Peninsula, with three crew members killed and two taken prisoner. After its recovery by another party, the RAF Museum gained ownership of the aircraft in 1992. It was reported in 2016 that, with the help of volunteers, work on the fuselage could be completed by 2018.[36]
An update in October 2020 stated that "aircraft now has all four fuselage components fully assembled, attached and painted in its original 144 Squadron colour scheme and serial number". It was expected to be moved to the RAF Museum London.[37]

Hampden, P5436

This aircraft has been reconstructed largely from parts of the last Canadian-built example, ditched on a training flight in November 1942 when the pilot lost control after a practice torpedo drop. The remains were recovered from 600 ft of water in Saanich Inlet on Vancouver Island in 1989. Along with recovered components from two other Hampden crashes in Canada, reconstruction was about 97 per cent complete by 2007. The restored aircraft became the showpiece exhibit at the Canadian Museum of Flight at Langley, British Columbia, in the Fraser Valley, east of Vancouver.[38]
In January 2009, a heavy snowfall snapped off the aircraft's left wing. Despite the efforts of Museum staff to clear the accumulating snow, the wing's internal structure failed and the wing separated from the fuselage, falling onto a display case containing one of the aircraft's original engines. The wing suffered considerable damage and there was additional damage to the tail and propeller.[39] The wing had largely been restored using wood parts because most of the metal parts of the wing structure had corroded so it did not possess the structural integrity of the original aircraft. The museum is currently seeking donations to repair the aircraft.[40] The repairs, in 2011, included the mating of the wing and propeller to the fuselage and engine.[41] As of November 2013, the repairs to the CMF Handley Page Hampden have been completed. The wing has been re-secured and the complete aircraft has been repainted.[42] By 20 April 2015 the two gunner sections were open.[citation needed]

The Wings Aviation Museum in the United Kingdom owns the wings and tail of "P1273"; the Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Centre is currently restoring AE436 to flying condition. Both of these were also 144 Squadron aircraft, lost during the transfer to Russia. The former, "P1273" was shot down by mistake by Soviet fighters over Petsamo. The latter was lost over Sweden, its remains discovered in a remote region by hikers in 1976.[43]

In popular culture edit

The HP Hampden had a featured role in The Big Blockade, a 1941 Second World War propaganda film showing "blockade" bombing and its effects on the German war industry,[44] with Michael Rennie and John Mills as two of its four-man crew.[45]

Specifications (Hampden Mk I) edit

 
3-view drawing Hampden Mark I, with side view of the Hereford Mark I
 
Bristol Pegasus engine from a crashed Hampden

Data from Hampden: Defender of Liberty,[46] The Handley Page Hampden (Aircraft in Profile 58)[14]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 4 (pilot, navigator/bomb aimer, radio operator/dorsal gunner, ventral gunner)
  • Length: 53 ft 7 in (16.33 m)
  • Wingspan: 69 ft 2 in (21.08 m)
  • Height: 14 ft 11 in (4.55 m)
  • Wing area: 668 sq ft (62.1 m2)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 2317; tip: NACA 2311[47]
  • Empty weight: 12,764 lb (5,790 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 22,500 lb (10,206 kg)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Bristol Pegasus XVIII 9-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engines, 1,000 hp (750 kW) each at 3,000 ft (910 m)
  • Propellers: 3-bladed variable-pitch propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 247 mph (398 km/h, 215 kn) at 13,800 ft (4,200 m)
  • Cruise speed: 206 mph (332 km/h, 179 kn) at 15,000 ft (4,600 m)
  • Range: 1,720 mi (2,770 km, 1,490 nmi) maximum fuel and 2,000 lb (910 kg) bombs at 206 mph (179 kn; 332 km/h)
  • Service ceiling: 19,000 ft (5,800 m)

Armament

See also edit

External videos
  Period Aircraft Identification film on the Hampden
  Colour Footage of Hampden operations

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Moyes 1965, p. 3.
  2. ^ Eden, 2004, p.220
  3. ^ a b c Moyes 1965, pp. 3–4.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Moyes 1965, p. 4.
  5. ^ "Latest bomber type christened 1938". British Pathe.
  6. ^ "Britain's New Bomber". Aberdeen Press and Journal. 25 June 1938 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  7. ^ Moyes 1965, pp. 4–5.
  8. ^ a b c d Moyes 1965, p. 5.
  9. ^ a b c d Moyes 1965, p. 7.
  10. ^ Moyes 1965, pp. 7–8.
  11. ^ a b Moyes 1965, pp. 6–7.
  12. ^ a b c d e Moyes 1965, p. 10.
  13. ^ Flight May 1939
  14. ^ a b c d Moyes 1965, p. 12.
  15. ^ "Before the Lancs", Early Days, Personal Stories, The Bomber Command Association
  16. ^ Crosby 2007, p. 104.
  17. ^ Eden 2004, p.220, 221
  18. ^ a b Air International November 1984, p. 248.
  19. ^ Richards 1995, pp. 17–18.
  20. ^ a b c d Moyes 1965, p. 6.
  21. ^ a b "Campaign Diary: The Battle of Britain (June–October 1940)", Royal Air Force Bomber Command 60th Anniversary, 6 April 2005, archived from the original on 6 July 2007
  22. ^ Bowman, Martin (2015). RAF Night Operations. Pen and Sword. pp. 24–25. ISBN 9781783831944. OCLC 923645398.
  23. ^ a b c Moyes 1965, p. 8.
  24. ^ Moyes 1965, pp. 8–9.
  25. ^ Moyle 1989, p. 20
  26. ^ Air International November 1984, p. 251.
  27. ^ "Handley Page Hampden." The Canadian Museum of Flight. Retrieved: 9 October 2011.
  28. ^ "1942-09-05 Handley-Page HP 52 Hampden TB 1 – Serial # P5304". Forced Landing Collection (in Swedish). 2012. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  29. ^ Walling, Michael G. (2011). Forgotten sacrifice: the Arctic convoys of World War II. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. pp. 201–9.
  30. ^ Sorenson, Kjell. . Archived from the original on 18 January 2019. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  31. ^ Geoff Raebel, 2010, RAAF in Russia <. Archived from the original on 15 October 2009.> (19 November 2016).
  32. ^ "9th Guards Kirkenesskiy Red Banner Maritime Missile Aviation Regiment." ww2.dk. Retrieved: 8 October 2011.
  33. ^ Moyes 1965, pp. 9–10.
  34. ^ Moyes 1965, pp. 10, 12.
  35. ^ "RAAF Handley Page HP.52 Hampden Mk.I & TB.I 455 Sqn, RAAF". ADF-Serials. 4 April 2015.
  36. ^ "Hampden restoration hastens". Aviation News. Key Publishing Ltd. July 2016.
  37. ^ Aircraft conservation work goes on show 14 October 2020
  38. ^ Handley Page Hampden
  39. ^ Day 2009, p. 20.
  40. ^ Niles, Russ. "Snowfall Snaps Wing Off Rare Vintage Plane." 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine avweb.co, 4 January 2009. Retrieved: 29 July 2011.
  41. ^ "Press: Hampden repair progresses." Canadian Museum of Flight, 5 March 2011.
  42. ^ CMF update. "Canadian Museum of Flight: Collection: Handley Page Hampden"
  43. ^ Simpson, Andrew. "Individual History, Handley Page Hampden TB1 P1344/9175M." RAF Museum. Retrieved: 26 September 2010.
  44. ^ . ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. 16 March 2014. Archived from the original on 16 March 2014. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
  45. ^ . ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. 16 March 2014. Archived from the original on 16 March 2014. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
  46. ^ Air International November 1984, p. 249.
  47. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.

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  • Roberts, Nicholas. Crash Log: Handley Page Hampden & Hereford. Earl Shilton, Leicestershire, UK: Midland Counties Publications, 1980. ISBN 0-904597-34-2.
  • Thetford, Owen. Aircraft of the Royal Air Force 1918–1957. London: Putnam, 1957.
  • 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.

External links edit

  • "'Hampden'—New H.P. Bomber Christened and Launched". Flight. 30 June 1938.
  • "Fast and Formidable: The Handley Page Hampden Bomber — a Special Drawing by Max Millar". Flight: 444–445. 4 May 1939.
  • . Flight. 4 May 1939. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016.
  • "The O/400 Tradition". Flight. 1940.

handley, page, hampden, handley, page, hampden, british, twin, engine, medium, bomber, that, operated, royal, force, part, trio, large, twin, engine, bombers, procured, joining, armstrong, whitworth, whitley, vickers, wellington, hampden, powered, bristol, peg. The Handley Page HP 52 Hampden is a British twin engine medium bomber that was operated by the Royal Air Force RAF It was part of the trio of large twin engine bombers procured for the RAF joining the Armstrong Whitworth Whitley and Vickers Wellington The Hampden was powered by Bristol Pegasus radial engines but a variant known as the Handley Page Hereford had in line Napier Daggers HP 52 Hampden Hampden Mk I of No 455 Squadron RAAF May 1942 Role Medium bomber Manufacturer Handley Page UK Canadian Associated Aircraft Canada Designer Gustav Lachmann First flight 21 June 1936 Introduction 1938 Retired 1943 Primary users Royal Air ForceRoyal Canadian Air ForceSoviet Naval AviationRoyal Australian Air Force Produced 1936 1941 Number built 1 430 The Hampden served in the early stages of the Second World War bearing the brunt of the early bombing war over Europe taking part in the first night raid on Berlin and the first 1 000 bomber raid on Cologne When it became obsolete after a period of mainly operating at night it was retired from RAF Bomber Command service in late 1942 By 1943 the rest of the trio were being superseded by the larger four engined heavy bombers such as the Avro Lancaster Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 Production 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 UK service 3 2 Non UK service 4 Variants 5 Operators 5 1 Hampden 5 2 Hereford 6 Survivors 7 In popular culture 8 Specifications Hampden Mk I 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment editOrigins edit In 1932 the Air Ministry issued Specification B 9 32 seeking a twin engined day bomber with higher performance than any preceding bomber aircraft 1 Handley Page and Vickers both designed aircraft to meet this specification the Vickers design became the Wellington The Handley Page design team led by George Volkert drafted a radical aircraft initially centering upon the politically favoured Rolls Royce Goshawk engine By mid 1934 development of the Goshawk looked less promising and the Air Ministry relaxed the tare weight unloaded weight requirement of the specification allowing for the use of heavier and more powerful radial engines such as the Bristol Perseus and Bristol Pegasus According to aviation author Philip J R Moyes the Handley Page design soon found support with the Air Ministry in part because it was judged to represent a fair compromise between range payload and speed 1 During early 1936 the first prototype designated as the HP 52 and given the serial number K4240 was completed On seeing the narrow yet deep fuselage which was only 3 ft wide C G Grey founder of The Aeroplane magazine remarked it looks like a flying suitcase a nickname that stuck with the aircraft for its lifetime 2 On 21 June 1936 the prototype powered by a pair of Bristol Pegasus P E 5S A engines conducted its maiden flight from Radlett Aerodrome Hertfordshire piloted by Handley Page chief test pilot Major James Cordes 1 In late June 1936 the prototype was put on public display in the New Types Park Hendon Air Show London In August 1936 in response to the successful flight trials performed by K4240 the Air Ministry issued an initial production order for the type ordering 180 production aircraft to be manufactured to meet Specification B 30 36 concurrently a second order for 100 aircraft powered by the Napier Dagger was issued to Belfast based Short amp Harland 3 In early 1937 a second prototype which received the serial number L7271 was completed this second prototype had several differences from the first including the pitot tube being repositioned below the fuselage a more rounded ventral defensive gun position and a slightly modified nose 4 L7271 later received a pair of Dagger engines and was accordingly re designated as the HP 53 on 1 July 1937 it performed its first flight after having received the new engines Another prototype L4032 was produced to serve as the production standard prototype on 24 June 1938 the third prototype conducted its maiden flight 4 L4032 differed from the previous two prototypes in that it was powered by a pair of Pegasus XVIII engines the nose incorporated an optically flat bomb aiming panel as well as the ventral and dorsal gun positions being revised 4 On 24 June 1938 L4032 was officially christened by Lady Katharine Mary Montagu Douglas Scott Viscountess Hampden at a ceremony held in Radlett Aerodrome the same day on which its first flight took place 3 5 Viscountess Hampden s speech invoked the spirit of John Hampden the defender of civil liberties to inspire future crews of his namesake aircraft 6 L4032 and L4033 which was the second production standard Hampden to be produced would be later assigned to the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment at RAF Martlesham Heath Suffolk 7 On 20 September 1938 the third production Hampden designated L4034 following the completion of handling trials conducted by the Central Flying School at Upavon Aerodrome Wiltshire become the first aircraft to enter RAF squadron service being delivered to No 49 Squadron 8 Production edit By late 1938 the mass manufacturing plans for the Hampden had been formalised In addition to Handley Page s own production line the type was to be built under subcontract by English Electric at its factory in Preston Lancashire on 6 August 1938 English Electric was awarded an initial contract to manufacture 75 Hampdens 8 In addition Canadian interest in domestic production of the type had resulted in the establishment of the joint Anglo Canadian Canadian Associated Aircraft company which promptly received an initial order from the RAF for 80 Hampdens to be completed in Canada this facility would effectively act as a shadow factory during wartime 8 On 1 September 1938 in response to interest expressed by the Royal Swedish Air Force RSAF in the Hampden including in a potential licence production arrangement for 70 aircraft to be built in Sweden a single production Hampden was supplied to Sweden Designated P 5 by the RSAF it was operated by the service until November 1945 after which it was sold to Svenska Aeroplan AB SAAB to serve as a flying testbed before being retired in late 1947 8 On 22 February 1940 the first Preston built Hampden P2062 conducted its maiden flight English Electric would go on to manufacture a total of 770 Hampdens more than any other company before delivering its final aircraft on 15 March 1942 9 In July 1940 Handley Page terminated its own production line for the Hampden upon the completion of its 500th aircraft 9 On 9 August 1940 the first Canadian built Hampden P5298 made its debut flight by October 1940 Canadian production had risen to 15 aircraft per month 9 A total of 160 Hampdens were completed by Canadian Associated Aircraft many of which were ferried to the United Kingdom for wartime service The final Canadian built aircraft was delivered in late 1941 10 Design editThe Hampden Mk I had a pilot navigator bomb aimer radio operator and rear gunner Conceived as a fast manoeuvrable fighting bomber the Hampden had a fixed forward firing 303 in 7 7 mm Browning machine gun in the upper part of the fuselage nose To avoid the weight penalties of powered turrets the Hampden had a curved Perspex nose fitted with a manual 303 in 7 7 mm Vickers K machine gun and a 303 in 7 7 mm Vickers K installation in the rear upper and lower positions The layout was similar to the all guns forward cockpits introduced about the same time in Luftwaffe medium bombers notably the Dornier Do 17 During the Norwegian Campaign these guns proved to be thoroughly inadequate for self defence in daylight the single guns were replaced by twin Vickers K guns a process led by Air Vice Marshal Arthur Harris of No 5 Group RAF in 1940 11 The Hampden had a flush rivetted stressed skin reinforced with a mixture of bent and extruded sections in an all metal monocoque design 12 A split assembly construction technique was employed sections were prefabricated and then joined to enable rapid and economic manufacture 4 The fuselage was in three big sections front centre and rear that were built using jigs 12 The centre and rear sections were made of two halves which meant that the sections could be fitted out in part under better working conditions prior to assembly All possible assembly work was performed at the benches prior to installation upon each aircraft 4 nbsp Hampden cockpit The wings were made up of three large units centre section port outer wing and starboard outer wing which were also subdivided 13 Each section was built around a main girder spar leading edge section and trailing edge section 12 The wing made use of wingtip slots and hydraulically actuated trailing edge flaps the flaps and ailerons had stress bearing D spars 12 According to Moyes the configuration of the wing was a key feature of Hampden being highly tapered and designed to exert low levels of drag these attributes were responsible for the aircraft s high top speed for the era of 265 mph 230 kn 426 km h while retaining a reasonably low landing speed of 73 mph 63 kn 117 km h 4 The Hampden s flying qualities were typically described as being favourable Moyes described it as being extraordinarily mobile on the controls 14 Pilots were provided with a high level of external visibility assisting the execution of steep turns and other manoeuvres The control layout required some familiarisation as some elements such as the hydraulic controls were unobtrusive and unintuitive 14 Upon introduction the Hampden exhibited greater speeds and initial climb rates than any of its contemporaries while still retaining favourable handling qualities 4 The slim and compact fuselage of the aircraft was quite cramped being wide enough only for a single person The navigator sat behind the pilot and access in the cockpit required folding down the seats Once in place the crew had almost no room to move and were typically uncomfortable during long missions 14 Aircrews referred to the Hampden by various nicknames due to this such as Flying Suitcase Panhandle and Flying Tadpole 4 I did my first flight and first tour on Hampdens A beautiful aeroplane to fly terrible to fly in Cramped no heat no facilities where you could relieve yourself You got in there and you were stuck there The aeroplane was like a fighter It was only 3 feet wide on the outside of the fuselage and the pilot was a very busy person There were 111 items for the pilot to take care of because on the original aircraft he had not only to find the instruments the engine and all that but also he had all the bomb switches to hold the bombs Wilfred John Mike Lewis 15 The newest of the three medium bombers the Hampden was often referred to by aircrews as the Flying Suitcase because of its cramped crew conditions 16 or more plausibly because of the unusually thin deep slab sided and rectangular shape of the fuselage was reminiscent of that of a suitcase 17 Operational history editUK service edit nbsp Scale comparison diagram of the trio of British twin engined medium bombers at the outbreak of the Second World War the Hampden yellow the Vickers Wellington blue and the Armstrong Whitworth Whitley pink In September 1938 No 49 Squadron received the first Hampdens by the end of the year both 49 and 83 Squadrons at RAF Scampton had re equipped with the type 18 A total of 226 Hampdens were in service with ten squadrons by the start of the Second World War with six forming the operational strength of 5 Group of Bomber Command based in Lincolnshire 18 19 With the outbreak of war in 1939 Hampdens were initially used to perform armed aerial reconnaissance missions observing German naval activity during daylight 20 However despite its speed and manoeuvrability the Hampden proved to be no match for Luftwaffe fighters in December 1939 Bomber Command is claimed to have discarded the belief that aircraft such as the Hampden could realistically operate by day and instead chose to predominantly employ them under the cover of darkness during nighttime operations 20 During 1940 Hampdens of 5 Group conducted 123 nighttime airborne leaflet propaganda missions losing only a single aircraft in the process 20 On 13 April 1940 days after Germany s invasion of Norway a large number of Hampdens were dispatched on night time mine laying code named gardening flights in the North Sea in areas deemed unapproachable by British shipping According to Moyes this activity proved highly effective experiencing a low casualty rate of less than 1 9 aircraft per mission 20 The Hampden also saw a return to its use as a daytime bomber during the Norwegian Campaign but quickly proved to be under gunned in the face of German fighters 11 On 19 March 1940 Hampdens took part in the first deliberate bombing of German soil in a nighttime raid upon the seaplane hangars and slipways in Hornum Sylt 9 The type continued to operate at night on bombing raids over Germany Flight Lieutenant Rod Learoyd of 49 Squadron was awarded the Victoria Cross for a low level attack on the Dortmund Ems canal on 12 August 1940 where two of five aircraft failed to return 21 22 On 25 August 1940 Hampdens from various squadrons participated in the RAF s first bombing raid on Berlin 23 Sergeant John Hannah was the wireless operator air gunner of an 83 Squadron Hampden and was awarded the Victoria Cross on 15 September 1940 when he fought the flames of the burning aircraft allowing the pilot to return it to base 21 In April 1942 the Hampden equipped 144 Squadron and 455 Squadron RAAF were transferred from Bomber Command to Coastal Command to perform the torpedo bomber role Later that year detachments from both squadrons were dispatched to Vaenga airfield Murmansk Russia to help safeguard the Arctic convoys in the vicinity 23 A total of four squadrons assigned to Coastal Command would be equipped with Hampdens These squadrons continued to use the type into late 1943 the last Coastal Command squadron transitioned from the type on 10 December 1943 24 Almost half of the Hampdens built 714 were lost on operations with 1 077 crew killed and 739 reported as missing German Flak accounted for 108 one hit a German barrage balloon 263 Hampdens crashed because of a variety of causes and 214 others were classed as missing Luftwaffe pilots claimed 128 Hampdens shooting down 92 at night 25 The last Bomber Command sorties by Hampdens were flown on the night of 14 15 September 1942 by 408 Squadron RCAF against Wilhelmshaven 26 After being withdrawn from Bomber Command in 1942 it operated with RAF Coastal Command until 1943 as a long range torpedo bomber the Hampden TB Mk I with a Mk XII torpedo in an open bomb bay and a 500 pound 230 kg bomb under each wing and as a maritime reconnaissance aircraft Non UK service edit nbsp A RAAF Hampden of No 455 Squadron at RAF Wigsley Nottinghamshire circa 1942 The Hampden was also used by the Royal Canadian Air Force RCAF Royal Australian Air Force RAAF Royal New Zealand Air Force RNZAF Aviatsiya Voenno Morskogo Flota AV MF Maritime Military Fleet Aviation of the Soviet Union and the Swedish Flygvapnet Air Force The Hampden in RCAF service included the 160 examples manufactured in Canada by the Canadian Associated Aircraft consortium Of the total built 84 were shipped by sea to Great Britain while the remainder came to Patricia Bay Victoria Airport B C to set up No 32 OTU RAF used for bombing and gunnery training Typical exercises at 32 OTU consisted of patrolling up the West Coast of Vancouver Island at night or flying out into the Pacific to a navigational map co ordinate often in adverse and un forecast inclement weather Due to attrition from accidents about 200 war weary Hampdens were later flown from the U K to Patricia Bay as replacements 27 In Operation Orator during September 1942 the crews of 32 Hampden TB 1 torpedo bombers from No 144 Squadron RAF and No 455 Squadron RAAF flew to Northwest Russia to protect arctic convoy PQ 18 from German surface vessels such the battleship Tirpitz The Hampden crews flew from Sumburgh in the Shetland Islands to Vaenga Vayenga later known as Severomorsk in Murmansk Oblast Russia This was a hazardous route often subject to poor weather and spanning more than 2 100 nautical miles 3 900 km partly over enemy occupied territory in Norway and Finland Eight Hampdens were lost or damaged beyond repair en route 28 29 30 144 and 455 Squadrons flew a small number of sorties from Vaenga While it was originally intended that the Hampdens would be flown back to Scotland the prevailing west east headwinds on such a flight might have pushed the Hampdens beyond their maximum endurance and it was decided to transport the wing s personnel back to Britain by sea and gift the Hampdens to the Soviet Navy Aircrews and mechanics from Maritime Military Fleet Aviation Aviatsiya Voenno Morskogo Flota VMF were trained by members of 144 and 455 Squadrons before their return to Britain in October 31 The 3rd Squadron 24th Mine Torpedo Aviation Regiment 24 Minno torpednyj aviapolk 24 MTAP operated the balalaika the Russian nickname for the Hampden in reference to its unusual shape until mid 1943 32 when losses a lack of replacements and a shortage of spares forced its retirement 24 MTAP then reverted to the Ilyushin DB 3 Ilyushin Il 4 In Sweden the Flygvapnet assigned an HP 52 to Reconnaissance Wing F 11 at Nykoping for evaluation under the designation P5 After the war the aircraft was sold to SAAB where it was used as an avionics testbed Variants editThe Hampden was powered by two 980 hp 730 kW Bristol Pegasus XVIII nine cylinder radial engines A Mk II variant designated the HP 62 was developed by converting two Hampdens to use the 1 000 hp 750 kW Wright Cyclone engine in 1940 but no further work was done on that project 23 Interest in the HP 52 by the Swedish Air Force led to the creation of the HP 53 prototype which was subsequently used as a testbed for a pair of 1 000 hp 750 kW Napier Dagger VIII 24 cylinder H block air cooled inline engines In August 1936 the Air Ministry placed an order for 100 Hampdens equipped with the Dagger engine Those aircraft subsequently received the designation HP 53 along with the name Hereford 3 Manufactured by Short amp Harland in Belfast their performance was almost identical to that of their Hampden cousins but there were problems with the engines 33 The Dagger engine proved to be noisy and unreliable Cooling problems plagued the engine while being run on the ground resulting in distortions and premature failures 34 The problems were not satisfactorily resolved with the result that most of the Herefords on order were converted to Hampdens while those that were constructed were often re engined to become Hampdens A limited number of Herefords did enter squadron service but were only used by training units 12 Operators editHampden edit nbsp Australia Royal Australian Air Force No 455 Squadron RAAF Used between July 1941 and December 1943 Code letters UB 35 nbsp Canada Royal Canadian Air Force No 408 Goose Squadron RCAF Used with RAF Bomber Command between July 1941 and September 1942 Code letters EQ No 415 Swordfish Squadron RCAF Used as a torpedo bomber with RAF Coastal Command between February 1942 and November 1943 Code letters GX No 420 Snowy Owl Squadron RCAF Used with RAF Bomber Command between December 1941 and August 1942 Code letters PT No 32 Operational Training Unit RAF RCAF Used in Canada between May 1942 and February 1944 Code letters DK LB OP and RO nbsp New Zealand Royal New Zealand Air Force No 489 Squadron RNZAF Used between February 1942 and November 1943 Code letters XA nbsp Soviet Union Soviet Naval Aviation 24th Mine Torpedo Aviation Regiment 24 MTAP nbsp Sweden Swedish Air Force Reconnaissance Wing F 11 based at Nykoping operated a single HP 52 for evaluation under designation P 5 After the war the aircraft was sold to SAAB where it was operated for testing avionics nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Handley Page Hampden of No 83 Squadron with crew seated on a loaded bomb trolley at Scampton October 1940 nbsp Hampden in the process of being loaded with bombs by ground crew nbsp Aircrews of No 50 Squadron in front of their Hampdens at Waddington Lincolnshire shortly after returning from a raid on the German fleet in the Bergen Fjord Norway on 9 April 1940 Royal Air Force No 7 Squadron RAF April 1939 to April 1940 code letters LT pre war and MG wartime No 44 Squadron RAF February 1939 and December 1941 code letters JW pre war and KM wartime No 49 Squadron RAF October 1938 and April 1942 code letters XU pre war and EA wartime No 50 Squadron RAF December 1938 and April 1942 code letters QX pre war and VN wartime No 61 Squadron RAF February 1939 and October 1941 code letters LS pre war and QR wartime No 76 Squadron RAF March 1939 and April 1940 code letters NM pre war and MP wartime No 83 Squadron RAF November 1938 and January 1942 code letters QQ pre war and OL wartime No 97 Squadron RAF July August 1941 squadron code OF No 106 Squadron RAF March 1939 to March 1942 code letters XS pre war and ZN wartime No 144 Squadron RAF March 1939 to October 1942 code letters NV pre war and PL wartime No 185 Squadron RAF June 1939 to April 1940 code letters ZM pre war and GL wartime No 207 Squadron RAF July August 1941 squadron code EM No 517 Squadron RAF August to November 1943 No 519 Squadron RAF August to November 1943 code letters Z9 No 521 Squadron RAF September to December 1943 code letters 5O No 5 C OTU RAF Used between July 1942 and September 1943 Only individual code letters and numbers No 14 Operational Training Unit RAF Used between 5 May 1940 and December 1942 code letters AM GL and VB No 16 Operational Training Unit RAF Used between 18 April 1940 and September 1942 code letters GA JS and XG No 25 Operational Training Unit RAF Used between February and December 1941 code letters ZP No 1401 Meteorological Flight RAF at RAF Bircham Newton RAF Docking No 1402 Meteorological Flight RAF at Aldergrove No 1403 Meteorological Flight RAF at Gosport Bircham Newton Gibraltar No 1404 Meteorological Flight RAF at St Eval No 1406 Meteorological Flight RAF at Wick No 1407 Meteorological Flight RAF at Reykjavik Hereford edit nbsp United Kingdom Royal Air Force No 185 Squadron RAF at Cottesmore used in April 1940 No 14 Operational Training Unit at Cottesmore used from April 1940 No 16 Operational Training Unit at Upper Heyford Oxfordshire used from 7 May 1940 Torpedo Development Unit at Gosport operated one aircraft Survivors edit nbsp Hampden P5436 at the Canadian Museum of Flight at Langley British Columbia c 2006 No Hampdens remain in flying condition today although examples do remain on display or undergoing restoration Hampden I P1344 Recovered from a crash site in Russia in 1991 the aircraft is being reconstructed at the Michael Beetham Conservation Centre at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford During the Second World War it served with No 144 Squadron RAF part of Coastal Command In September 1942 the squadron was transferred to the Kola Peninsula in northern Russia to help protect the Arctic convoys While in transit over Finland P1344 accidentally flew close by a German airfield and was shot down by two scrambled Messerschmitt Bf 109s It crashed in a wooded area of the Kola Peninsula with three crew members killed and two taken prisoner After its recovery by another party the RAF Museum gained ownership of the aircraft in 1992 It was reported in 2016 that with the help of volunteers work on the fuselage could be completed by 2018 36 An update in October 2020 stated that aircraft now has all four fuselage components fully assembled attached and painted in its original 144 Squadron colour scheme and serial number It was expected to be moved to the RAF Museum London 37 Hampden P5436 This aircraft has been reconstructed largely from parts of the last Canadian built example ditched on a training flight in November 1942 when the pilot lost control after a practice torpedo drop The remains were recovered from 600 ft of water in Saanich Inlet on Vancouver Island in 1989 Along with recovered components from two other Hampden crashes in Canada reconstruction was about 97 per cent complete by 2007 The restored aircraft became the showpiece exhibit at the Canadian Museum of Flight at Langley British Columbia in the Fraser Valley east of Vancouver 38 In January 2009 a heavy snowfall snapped off the aircraft s left wing Despite the efforts of Museum staff to clear the accumulating snow the wing s internal structure failed and the wing separated from the fuselage falling onto a display case containing one of the aircraft s original engines The wing suffered considerable damage and there was additional damage to the tail and propeller 39 The wing had largely been restored using wood parts because most of the metal parts of the wing structure had corroded so it did not possess the structural integrity of the original aircraft The museum is currently seeking donations to repair the aircraft 40 The repairs in 2011 included the mating of the wing and propeller to the fuselage and engine 41 As of November 2013 the repairs to the CMF Handley Page Hampden have been completed The wing has been re secured and the complete aircraft has been repainted 42 By 20 April 2015 the two gunner sections were open citation needed The Wings Aviation Museum in the United Kingdom owns the wings and tail of P1273 the Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Centre is currently restoring AE436 to flying condition Both of these were also 144 Squadron aircraft lost during the transfer to Russia The former P1273 was shot down by mistake by Soviet fighters over Petsamo The latter was lost over Sweden its remains discovered in a remote region by hikers in 1976 43 In popular culture editThe HP Hampden had a featured role in The Big Blockade a 1941 Second World War propaganda film showing blockade bombing and its effects on the German war industry 44 with Michael Rennie and John Mills as two of its four man crew 45 Specifications Hampden Mk I edit nbsp 3 view drawing Hampden Mark I with side view of the Hereford Mark I nbsp Bristol Pegasus engine from a crashed Hampden Data from Hampden Defender of Liberty 46 The Handley Page Hampden Aircraft in Profile 58 14 General characteristicsCrew 4 pilot navigator bomb aimer radio operator dorsal gunner ventral gunner Length 53 ft 7 in 16 33 m Wingspan 69 ft 2 in 21 08 m Height 14 ft 11 in 4 55 m Wing area 668 sq ft 62 1 m2 Airfoil root NACA 2317 tip NACA 2311 47 Empty weight 12 764 lb 5 790 kg Max takeoff weight 22 500 lb 10 206 kg Powerplant 2 Bristol Pegasus XVIII 9 cylinder air cooled radial piston engines 1 000 hp 750 kW each at 3 000 ft 910 m Propellers 3 bladed variable pitch propellers Performance Maximum speed 247 mph 398 km h 215 kn at 13 800 ft 4 200 m Cruise speed 206 mph 332 km h 179 kn at 15 000 ft 4 600 m Range 1 720 mi 2 770 km 1 490 nmi maximum fuel and 2 000 lb 910 kg bombs at 206 mph 179 kn 332 km h Service ceiling 19 000 ft 5 800 m Armament Guns 1 fixed forward firing 303 in 7 7 mm M1919 Browning machine gun in nose 3 5 Vickers K machine guns one flexibly mounted in the nose one or two each in dorsal and ventral positions Bombs 4 000 lb 1 800 kg bombload or 1 18 in 457 mm torpedo or minesSee also editExternal videos nbsp Period Aircraft Identification film on the Hampden nbsp Colour Footage of Hampden operations Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Armstrong Whitworth A W 23 Blackburn Botha Bristol Beaufort Bristol Blenheim Dornier Do 17 Douglas A 20 Havoc Fiat BR 20 Fokker T V Ilyushin DB 3 Junkers Ju 88 Liore et Olivier LeO 45 Martin B 10 Martin Baltimore Petlyakov Pe 2 PZL 37 Los Savoia Marchetti SM 79 Tupolev SB Vickers Crecy Yokosuka P1Y Related lists List of aircraft of World War II List of bomber aircraft List of aircraft of the Royal Air Force List of aircraft of the Royal New Zealand Air Force and Royal New Zealand NavyReferences editNotes edit a b c Moyes 1965 p 3 Eden 2004 p 220 a b c Moyes 1965 pp 3 4 a b c d e f g h Moyes 1965 p 4 Latest bomber type christened 1938 British Pathe Britain s New Bomber Aberdeen Press and Journal 25 June 1938 via British Newspaper Archive Moyes 1965 pp 4 5 a b c d Moyes 1965 p 5 a b c d Moyes 1965 p 7 Moyes 1965 pp 7 8 a b Moyes 1965 pp 6 7 a b c d e Moyes 1965 p 10 Flight May 1939 a b c d Moyes 1965 p 12 Before the Lancs Early Days Personal Stories The Bomber Command Association Crosby 2007 p 104 Eden 2004 p 220 221 a b Air International November 1984 p 248 Richards 1995 pp 17 18 a b c d Moyes 1965 p 6 a b Campaign Diary The Battle of Britain June October 1940 Royal Air Force Bomber Command 60th Anniversary 6 April 2005 archived from the original on 6 July 2007 Bowman Martin 2015 RAF Night Operations Pen and Sword pp 24 25 ISBN 9781783831944 OCLC 923645398 a b c Moyes 1965 p 8 Moyes 1965 pp 8 9 Moyle 1989 p 20 Air International November 1984 p 251 Handley Page Hampden The Canadian Museum of Flight Retrieved 9 October 2011 1942 09 05 Handley Page HP 52 Hampden TB 1 Serial P5304 Forced Landing Collection in Swedish 2012 Retrieved 19 November 2016 Walling Michael G 2011 Forgotten sacrifice the Arctic convoys of World War II Oxford UK Osprey Publishing pp 201 9 Sorenson Kjell 144 Squadron RCAF attached to Coastal Command serial AE436 code PL J 04 09 1942 Archived from the original on 18 January 2019 Retrieved 22 November 2016 Geoff Raebel 2010 RAAF in Russia lt Vladimir Kroupnik RAAF in Russia Archived from the original on 15 October 2009 gt 19 November 2016 9th Guards Kirkenesskiy Red Banner Maritime Missile Aviation Regiment ww2 dk Retrieved 8 October 2011 Moyes 1965 pp 9 10 Moyes 1965 pp 10 12 RAAF Handley Page HP 52 Hampden Mk I amp TB I 455 Sqn RAAF ADF Serials 4 April 2015 Hampden restoration hastens Aviation News Key Publishing Ltd July 2016 Aircraft conservation work goes on show 14 October 2020 Handley Page Hampden Day 2009 p 20 Niles Russ Snowfall Snaps Wing Off Rare Vintage Plane Archived 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine avweb co 4 January 2009 Retrieved 29 July 2011 Press Hampden repair progresses Canadian Museum of Flight 5 March 2011 CMF update Canadian Museum of Flight Collection Handley Page Hampden Simpson Andrew Individual History Handley Page Hampden TB1 P1344 9175M RAF Museum Retrieved 26 September 2010 The Big Blockade ftvdb bfi org uk 16 March 2014 Archived from the original on 16 March 2014 Retrieved 16 March 2014 Cast The Big Blockade ftvdb bfi org uk 16 March 2014 Archived from the original on 16 March 2014 Retrieved 16 March 2014 Air International November 1984 p 249 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography edit Barnes C H and Derek N James Handley Page Aircraft since 1907 London Putnam amp Company 1987 ISBN 0 85177 803 8 Bowyer Chaz Hampden Special Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan Ltd 1976 ISBN 0 7110 0683 0 Clayton Donald C Handley Page an Aircraft Album Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan Ltd 1969 ISBN 0 7110 0094 8 Crosby Francis The World Encyclopedia of Bombers London Anness Publishing Ltd 2007 ISBN 1 84477 511 9 Day Jerry Hurt Hampden Air Classics Volume 45 Issue 4 April 2009 Donald David and Jon Lake eds Encyclopedia of World Military Aircraft London AIRtime Publishing 1996 ISBN 1 880588 24 2 Eden Paul Ed Encyclopedia of Aircraft of World War II London Amber Books 2004 ISBN 1 904687 83 0 Green William Famous Bombers of the Second World War London Macdonald and Jane s Publishers Ltd 1977 ISBN 0 356 08333 0 Green William and Gordon Swanborough WW2 Aircraft Fact Files RAF Bombers Part 2 London Jane s Publishing Company Ltd 2nd edition revised 1981 ISBN 0 7106 0118 2 Gunston Bill Classic World War II Aircraft Cutaways London Osprey 1995 ISBN 1 85532 526 8 Hampden Defender of Liberty Air International Vol 27 No 5 November 1984 pp 244 252 Mondey David The Hamlyn Concise Guide to British Aircraft of World War II London Hamlyn Aerospace 1982 ISBN 0 600 34951 9 Moyes Philip J R Bomber Squadrons of the RAF and their Aircraft London Macdonald and Jane s 1964 2nd edition 1976 ISBN 0 354 01027 1 Moyes Philip J R The Handley Page Hampden Aircraft in Profile 58 Leatherhead Surrey UK Profile Publications Ltd 1965 Moyes Philip J R Royal Air Force Bombers of World War Two Volume Two Chalfont St Giles Buckinghamshire UK Hylton Lacy Publishers 1968 ISBN 0 85064 000 8 Moyle Harry The Hampden File Tonbridge UK Air Britain Historians Ltd 1989 ISBN 0 85130 128 2 Postlethwaite Mark Hampden Squadrons in Focus Walton on Thames UK Red Kite 2003 ISBN 978 0953806164 Richards Denis The Hardest Victory RAF Bomber Command in the Second World War London Cornet 1995 ISBN 0 340 61720 9 Roba Jean Louis amp Cony Christophe October 2001 Donnerkeil 12 fevrier 1942 Operation Donnerkeil 12 February 1942 Avions Toute l Aeronautique et son histoire in French 103 25 32 ISSN 1243 8650 Roberts Nicholas Crash Log Handley Page Hampden amp Hereford Earl Shilton Leicestershire UK Midland Counties Publications 1980 ISBN 0 904597 34 2 Thetford Owen Aircraft of the Royal Air Force 1918 1957 London Putnam 1957 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 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Handley Page Hampden Hampden New H P Bomber Christened and Launched Flight 30 June 1938 Fast and Formidable The Handley Page Hampden Bomber a Special Drawing by Max Millar Flight 444 445 4 May 1939 A Very Remarkable Aeroplane Flight 4 May 1939 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 The O 400 Tradition Flight 1940 Hampden at the Canadian Museum of Flight Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Handley Page Hampden amp oldid 1218944003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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