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Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8

The Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8 is a British two-seat biplane reconnaissance and bomber aircraft of the First World War that was designed and produced at the Royal Aircraft Factory. It was also built under contract by Austin Motors, Daimler, Standard Motors, Siddeley-Deasy and the Coventry Ordnance Works.

Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8
A vintage R.E.8 performing over the Duxford Jubilee Airshow 2012
Role Reconnaissance, Bomber
Manufacturer Royal Aircraft Factory
Designer John Kenworthy / Walter Barling
First flight 17 June 1916
Introduction 1916
Retired 1918
Status Retired
Primary users RFC/RAF
Australian Flying Corps
Aviation Militaire Belge
Produced 1916–1918
Number built 4,077[1]
Variants Siddeley-Deasy R.T.1

Intended as a replacement for the vulnerable B.E.2, the R.E.8 was widely regarded as more difficult to fly and gained a reputation in the Royal Flying Corps for being "unsafe" that was never entirely dispelled. Although eventually it gave reasonably satisfactory service, it was never an outstanding combat aircraft. Nonetheless, it remained the standard British reconnaissance and artillery observation aircraft from mid-1917 to the end of the war, serving alongside the rather more popular Armstrong Whitworth F.K.8.

More than 4,000 R.E.8s were eventually produced; these aircraft saw service in a range of different theatres, including Italy, Russia, Palestine and Mesopotamia, as well as the Western Front. The R.E.8 was rapidly withdrawn from service after the end of the war, by which time it was regarded as totally obsolete.

Development Edit

Background Edit

Design of the new type had begun in late 1915,[2] so that it was conceptually at least almost contemporary with the B.E.12 and the B.E.2e – like these earlier types, it was designed for inherent stability in line with the dominant pre-war belief in the necessity of stability to perform the aerial observation role.[3]

The B.E.2 had already been subject to considerable criticism, and a deliberate effort was made to address each of the earlier type's failings. In particular, the more powerful motor was intended to improve the feeble speed and climb of the B.E.2 and to allow a better payload; this permitted the type to operate as a true two-seater: the observer no longer had to be left behind when bombs or a full fuel load were carried. There was no need for his seat to be at the centre of gravity; seated behind the pilot, instead of in front as in the B.E.2, he was in the proper position to operate a machine-gun. Another consequence of the additional engine power was the possibility of fitting a forward-mounted gun for the pilot.[4][3]

Design and testing Edit

 
Early production R.E.8 with the small vertical fin. There is no fairing over the sump.

As early as March 1916, the design appears to have mostly been settled; features included the selection of a Royal Aircraft Factory 4a air-cooled V12 engine (capable of 140 hp) to power the type along with a sizable fin and rudder. During the early design process, a smaller tail fin was substituted for the original, a step which later caused some controversy.[3] By early April 1916 a mock-up of the R.E.8 had been completed, and construction of a pair of prototypes was underway. On 16 June 1916, the first of these prototypes was submitted for its final pre-flight inspection in advance of the type's maiden flight.[3]

On 17 June 1916, the first R.E.8 test flight was conducted by F.W. Goodden.[5] Goodden would perform all of the early flights with the type; on 1 July 1916, Sefton Brancker was flown by Goodden in the type to Hounslow, London. On 16 July 1916, the second prototype, furnished with a different design of propeller, performed its first flight.[3] During late July 1916, the second of two prototypes was dispatched to France for service trials, the results of which were largely successful, with aircrew being generally quite favourably impressed. During August 1916, the second prototype returned to Farnborough, Hampshire, where it underwent modification based upon its experiences in France.[6]

The R.E.8 possessed a conventional wire-braced fabric-covered wooden structure, along with an unequal-span wing arrangement.[3] The engine installation closely resembled that of the B.E.12, complete with the same large air scoop and similar vertically mounted exhausts protruding over the upper wing to carry the fumes clear of the crew. Apart from the disposition of the cockpits, the main visually distinguishable difference was that the engine was slightly raked back, to improve take off and landing characteristics.[7] The early production R.E.8s were more or less identical to the prototypes.[8]

 
R.E.8 with enlarged fin, at training unit

The R.E.8 adopted a set of single bay, unequal span wings, identical to those of the earlier B.E.2e; although the span (and thus the wing area) had been increased slightly by the use of a wider upper centre section, and lower stub wings to match. On the B.E.2e, these wings functioned to maintain the stability of the B.E.2c while providing the aircraft with superior levels of manoeuvrability; although the long extensions on the upper wing gave rise to fears they would be prone to collapse if the aircraft was dived too sharply, which in turn did not help to build trust in the aircraft.[4] Several other features, such as the tailplane, were also identical to those previously used upon the B.E.2e.

 
R.E.8s of No 3 Sqn AFC

For the purpose of making the R.E.8 less tiring to fly, the pilot's controls included a wheel to adjust the tailplane incidence in flight and a primitive form of rudder trim (applied to the rudder bar) was provided to alleviate the constant pressure necessary to counteract the torque generated by the propeller. Basic flight controls were installed in the observer's cockpit, which folded out of the way when not in use; these were connected to the elevators, rudder and throttle, but not to the ailerons, and were intended to give observers a chance to make a forced landing if the pilot was killed or incapacitated rather than to offer true dual control.[9]

Although not so underpowered as the B.E.2, the R.E.8 was still handicapped by a less than adequate powerplant, and a model re-engined with the Hispano-Suiza engine was projected as the R.E.8a from quite an early stage. The cowling designed for the liquid-cooled engine closely resembled that of the B.E.12b or the S.E.5a. Supplies of Hispano-Suiza engines, more urgently required for other types, never permitted production of the R.E.8a, although a prototype was constructed and underwent trials during December 1916.[10] Plans to mount Rolls-Royce aero engines, such as the Eagle or Falcon were also abortive, for similar reasons. These engines were in chronically short supply and reserved for various other types in British service, including the Airco DH.4 and the Bristol Fighter.

Production Edit

During August 1916, production of an initial batch of 50 aircraft was commenced by the Royal Aircraft Factory itself.[6] On 25 August, a contract was placed with Austin Motors for the completion of 100 R.E.8s; on 30 August, Siddeley-Deasy was also contracted to produce a further 100 examples.[8] By September 1916, full-scale production was well under way.[11] By the end of September, a further 850 R.E.8s had been ordered from a range of manufacturers.[8] During December 1916, the first contractor-produced R.E.8s began to appear.[12]

The Vickers-Challenger interrupter gear and the Scarff ring were still in short supply, being required for the Sopwith 1½ Strutter and other types; accordingly, a few early R.E.8s were built with a pillar mounting for the observer's gun as an interim measure. An alternative to the pilot's synchronised Vickers had been designed, consisting of a fixed Lewis gun with deflector plates fitted to the propeller, although this was never used, a Vickers gun for the pilot being mounted on the port side of the fuselage in a similar position to that on the B.E.12, at first synchronised by the Vickers-Challenger gear and then by the improved Constantinesco hydraulic gear.[13][8] Photographs of this armament installation make it clear that the cocking handle of the Vickers gun was in easy reach of the pilot and that a normal Aldis sight was often mounted in the pilot's windscreen, giving the lie to statements that the forward firing gun could not be sighted properly due to its position, although the lack of standisation complicated maintenance in operational squadrons.[14]

In total, 4,077 R.E.8s were constructed; a further 353 aircraft that had been on order were cancelled following the end of the war. Only a handful of production aircraft were actually completed by the Royal Aircraft Factory; the bulk of the work was issued out to several private companies including Austin Motors, Daimler, Standard Motors, Siddeley-Deasy and the Coventry Ordnance Works, which were responsible for the type throughout its production life.[15]

Operational history Edit

The first production aircraft reached 52 Squadron Royal Flying Corps (RFC) in France in November 1916. The inexperienced pilots of 52 Squadron found their new mounts thoroughly dangerous and several were killed spinning in off a stall while attempting to land; they were grateful to return to the B.E.2e by exchanging aircraft with 34 Squadron in January 1917. Experienced pilots had fewer problems with the new type and re-equipment of B.E.2 squadrons continued. Pilot's notes for the R.E.8, prepared in the field, drew attention to the fact that it had a higher landing speed than the B.E.2e (hardly surprising, since it was heavier and had almost the same wing area) and that it gave almost no warning of a stall.[13] This seems to have been the source of most complaints about the type's "trickiness".

 
Preparing an R.E.8 for a night bombing raid

The Royal Aircraft Factory conducted spinning tests on the type, concluding that the R.E.8 was quite hard to spin and recovered easily; but the fin was redesigned with slightly increased area to improve spin recovery. The modification resulted in the production version being no less stable than the B.E.2e; and while this was an advantage for artillery observation and photography it gave the R.E.8 little chance to out-manoeuvre enemy fighters. An even larger fin was fitted to some R.E.8s used as trainers. Some pilots flew the R.E.8 with an empty reserve fuel tank (or even filled the tank with fire extinguisher fluid) to avoid a perceived tendency of R.E.8s to burn on crashing. None of these measures would have made the aircraft any "safer", if the problem was one of poor stalling characteristics. Several pilots who flew the type mentioned that they had no problems but were careful to keep the airspeed well above stalling point.[16]

 
Preparing for a night take off

R.E.8s began to arrive at the front in numbers just as the period of German air superiority known as "Bloody April" was taking a heavy toll of all types in the RFC; and early service was not auspicious. On 13 April 1917, six R.E.8s from 59 Squadron were sent on a long range photo reconnaissance mission, missed their intended escorts, and were met by the picked fighter pilots of Jasta 11, who shot them all down within five minutes.[17]

The casualty rate in R.E.8 squadrons became more sustainable as new Allied fighter types regained air superiority and pilot training and tactics improved. Although never a popular aeroplane, it was reasonably satisfactory for the tasks demanded of it and was even regarded with some affection, gaining the rhyming slang nickname "Harry Tate" (after a popular music hall artist of the time). Some crews flew their slow, cumbersome mounts quite aggressively; the German fighter ace Eduard Ritter von Dostler was shot down by an R.E.8 of 7 Squadron, while 3 Squadron Australian Flying Corps (AFC) was credited with 50 air victories in 12 months of operations.[18] Lts Pithey and Rhodes of 12 Squadron were the most successful R.E.8 crew in air-to-air combat, being credited with twelve victories.[19]

 
An R.E.8 crew are briefed before a mission

Although supplemented by other types, the R.E.8 remained the standard RFC artillery observation, air photography and general short range reconnaissance aircraft for the remainder of the war, equipping 18 RFC squadrons in 1917 and 19 squadrons in 1918. Belgium was the only country other than Britain and the Dominions to operate the R.E.8 during the First World War, receiving 22 in July 1917. At least some of the Belgian examples were fitted with Hispano-Suiza engines, in a SPAD type cowling, rather than the S.E.5a type cowling of the R.E.8a.[10]

It was hoped to be able to replace the R.E.8 with a version of the Bristol Fighter powered by the Sunbeam Arab engine but the combination proved unsuccessful and few "Arab Bristols" were ever built.[20] A few R.E.8 squadrons were issued with one or two standard (Falcon engined) F.2bs in the last weeks of the war.[21] By November 1918, the R.E.8 was regarded as totally obsolete and surviving examples were quickly retired after the Armistice. Nor was the type popular with the private owners who purchased surplus RAF aircraft after the war and no R.E.8s came onto the civil register.

Variants Edit

R.E.8
Standard general purpose aircraft, powered by 140 hp (104 kW) RAF 4a engine.
R.E.8a
Conversion of one R.E.8 with 200 hp (149 kW) Hispano-Suiza engine in a square, S.E.5 (or B.E.12b) type cowling. No production due to shortage of Hispano engines.[22] At least some of the R.E.8s supplied to Belgium were also re-engined with Hispanos – in this case in a cowling resembling that of the later SPADs.
R.E.9
R.E.8 modified with equal-span wings similar to those of the B.E.2c/d and the larger fin and rudder fitted to some R.E.8s at training units. Two were converted in 1917, but they showed no advantage over the standard R.E.8 (climb and manoeuvrability were worse) and no production followed.[22]
 
R.E.8 F3556 preserved at the Imperial War Museum Duxford
 
Belgian R.E.8 with water-cooled Hispano-Suiza engine in revised cowling
Siddeley-Deasy R.T.1
Development of R.E.8 with equal span biplane wings of a new design.

Survivors Edit

Only two "original" R.E.8s survive from World War One.[1]

The restoration of R.E.8 F3556 at the Imperial War Museum Duxford was completed in 2004. This aircraft, built by Daimler, arrived in France on Armistice Day, still in its original packing case. It is currently displayed suspended from the roof of the AirSpace hangar at Duxford.[23]

The other surviving R.E.8 is a former Aviation Militaire Belge machine preserved at the Brussels Air Museum. It is fitted with the usual Hispano-Suiza engine typical of R.E.8s in Belgian service, in the usual SPAD type cowling and circular frontal radiator.[24]

The Royal Air Force Museum at Hendon has a full size replica R.E.8, which was built by The Vintage Aviator Ltd ( TVAL ) in New Zealand in 2011. It is fitted with a "new build" RAF 4a engine and was successfully test flown at Masterton, NZ, on 1 January 2012, with the registration ZK-TVC. Crated and shipped to England, it was reassembled at The Shuttleworth Collection at Old Warden Airfield in June 2012 and undertook a number of flights painted as 'A3930' of No. 9 Squadron Royal Flying Corps, before being sent by road to Hendon in November 2012. It is now on static display in the Grahame-White Factory.[25]

The Royal Australian Air Force has an airworthy replica R.E.8, built in 2012 and painted in late WW1 era Australian Flying Corps livery. It was previously part of the RAAF Museum collection and as of 2021 is with the Air Force Heritage Squadron.

Operators Edit

  Australia
  Belgium
  Estonia
  Soviet Union
  United Kingdom

Specifications Edit

 
R.A.F. R.E.8 drawing

Data from The Royal Aircraft Factory[27]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Length: 27 ft 10.5 in (8.496 m)
  • Wingspan: 42 ft 7 in (12.98 m)
  • Height: 11 ft 4.5 in (3.467 m)
  • Wing area: 377.5 sq ft (35.07 m2)
  • Empty weight: 1,803 lb (818 kg)
  • Gross weight: 2,678 lb (1,215 kg) [28]
  • Max takeoff weight: 2,869 lb (1,301 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Royal Aircraft Factory RAF 4a V-12 air-cooled piston engine, 140 hp (100 kW)
  • Propellers: 4-bladed fixed-pitch propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 103 mph (166 km/h, 90 kn)
  • Stall speed: 47 mph (76 km/h, 41 kn)
  • Endurance: 4 hours 15 minutes
  • Service ceiling: 13,500 ft (4,100 m)
  • Time to altitude: 6,500 ft (1,981 m) in 21 minutes

Armament

  • Guns: 1 x .303 in (7.7 mm) forward-firing Vickers gun and 1 or 2 x .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis guns in rear cockpit
  • Bombs: up to 224 lb (102 kg) bombs

See also Edit

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Bruce 1966, p. 10.
  2. ^ Hare 1990, p. 258.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Bruce 1966, p. 3.
  4. ^ a b Cheesman 1962, pp. 50–56.
  5. ^ Mason 1994, p. 61.
  6. ^ a b Bruce 1966, pp. 4–5.
  7. ^ Bruce 1954, p. 577.
  8. ^ a b c d Bruce 1966, p. 5.
  9. ^ Hare 1990, pp. 259–260.
  10. ^ a b Bruce 1966, p. 9.
  11. ^ Hare 1990, p. 259.
  12. ^ Bruce 1966, p. 6.
  13. ^ a b Hare 1990, p. 261.
  14. ^ Bruce 1966, pp. 5–6.
  15. ^ Bruce 1966, p. 12.
  16. ^ Rowe 2001 pp. 64–70
  17. ^ Bruce 1954, pp. 577–578.
  18. ^ Schaedel 1972, p. 23.
  19. ^ Franks (et al.) 1997 pp. 72–73
  20. ^ Cheesman 1962, p.62
  21. ^ Molkentin 2010, caption to plate 28 (between pp. 184–185)
  22. ^ a b Hare 1990, p. 267.
  23. ^ "Royal Aircraft Factory RE.8." Imperial War Museum, Retrieved: 28 December 2017.
  24. ^ "Brussels Air Museum." 25 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine sbap.be, Retrieved: 28 December 2017.
  25. ^ "Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8." RAF Museum, Retrieved: 28 December 2017.
  26. ^ Gerdessen 1982, p. 76.
  27. ^ Hare 1990, pp. 266–267.
  28. ^ Bruce 1954, p. 581.

Bibliography Edit

  • Bruce, J.M. "The R.E.8: Historic Military Aircraft: No. 8". Flight, 15 October 1954, pp. 575–581.
  • Bruce, J.M. The R.E.8 (Aircraft in Profile number 85). London: Profile Publications, 1966. No ISBN.
  • Cheesman, E.F. (ed.) Reconnaissance & Bomber Aircraft of the 1914–1918 War. Letchworth, UK: Harleyford, 1962.
  • Forder, Nick (May–June 1999). "Round-Out". Air Enthusiast (81): 79. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Franks, Norman, Russell Guest, Gregory Alegi. Above the War Fronts: The British Two-seater Bomber Pilot and Observer Aces, the British Two-seater Fighter Observer Aces, and the Belgian, Italian, Austro-Hungarian and Russian Fighter Aces, 1914–1918: Volume 4 of Fighting Airmen of WWI Series: Volume 4 of Air Aces of WWI. Grub Street, 1997 ISBN 1-898697-56-6, ISBN 978-1-898697-56-5.
  • Gerdessen, F. "Estonian Air Power 1918–1945". Air Enthusiast, No. 18, April–July 1982, pp. 61–76. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Hare, Paul R. The Royal Aircraft Factory. London: Putnam, 1990. ISBN 0-85177-843-7.
  • Jarlevik, Stig (March–April 1999). "Round-Out". Air Enthusiast (80): 79. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Mason, Francis K. The British Bomber since 1914. London: Putnam, 1994. ISBN 0-85177-861-5.
  • Molkentin, Michael Fire in the Sky:The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War. Sydney:Allen & Unwin, 2010 ISBN 978-1-74237-072-9
  • Munson, Kenneth. Bombers, Patrol and Reconnaissance Aircraft 1914–1919. London: Blandford, 1968. ISBN 0-7137-0484-5.
  • Penrose, Harald. (1969). [British Aviation, The Great War and Armistice 1915–1919]. [Putnam, London]. p. 438. ISBN 0-370-00128-1.
  • Rowe, Allan, The RE8 Controversy Revisited in The '14–'18 Journal. Australian Society of World War One Aero Historians, 2001
  • Schaedel, Charles. Men and Machines of the Australian Flying Corps 1914–1919. Melbourne: Kookaburra Technical Publications, 1972.
  • Taylor, John W.R. "Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8." Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1969. ISBN 0-425-03633-2.

External links Edit

  • , by Alan Rowe, The '14-'18 Journal, 2001

royal, aircraft, factory, british, seat, biplane, reconnaissance, bomber, aircraft, first, world, that, designed, produced, royal, aircraft, factory, also, built, under, contract, austin, motors, daimler, standard, motors, siddeley, deasy, coventry, ordnance, . The Royal Aircraft Factory R E 8 is a British two seat biplane reconnaissance and bomber aircraft of the First World War that was designed and produced at the Royal Aircraft Factory It was also built under contract by Austin Motors Daimler Standard Motors Siddeley Deasy and the Coventry Ordnance Works Royal Aircraft Factory R E 8A vintage R E 8 performing over the Duxford Jubilee Airshow 2012Role Reconnaissance BomberManufacturer Royal Aircraft FactoryDesigner John Kenworthy Walter BarlingFirst flight 17 June 1916Introduction 1916Retired 1918Status RetiredPrimary users RFC RAFAustralian Flying CorpsAviation Militaire BelgeProduced 1916 1918Number built 4 077 1 Variants Siddeley Deasy R T 1Intended as a replacement for the vulnerable B E 2 the R E 8 was widely regarded as more difficult to fly and gained a reputation in the Royal Flying Corps for being unsafe that was never entirely dispelled Although eventually it gave reasonably satisfactory service it was never an outstanding combat aircraft Nonetheless it remained the standard British reconnaissance and artillery observation aircraft from mid 1917 to the end of the war serving alongside the rather more popular Armstrong Whitworth F K 8 More than 4 000 R E 8s were eventually produced these aircraft saw service in a range of different theatres including Italy Russia Palestine and Mesopotamia as well as the Western Front The R E 8 was rapidly withdrawn from service after the end of the war by which time it was regarded as totally obsolete Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Design and testing 1 3 Production 2 Operational history 3 Variants 4 Survivors 5 Operators 6 Specifications 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksDevelopment EditBackground Edit Design of the new type had begun in late 1915 2 so that it was conceptually at least almost contemporary with the B E 12 and the B E 2e like these earlier types it was designed for inherent stability in line with the dominant pre war belief in the necessity of stability to perform the aerial observation role 3 The B E 2 had already been subject to considerable criticism and a deliberate effort was made to address each of the earlier type s failings In particular the more powerful motor was intended to improve the feeble speed and climb of the B E 2 and to allow a better payload this permitted the type to operate as a true two seater the observer no longer had to be left behind when bombs or a full fuel load were carried There was no need for his seat to be at the centre of gravity seated behind the pilot instead of in front as in the B E 2 he was in the proper position to operate a machine gun Another consequence of the additional engine power was the possibility of fitting a forward mounted gun for the pilot 4 3 Design and testing Edit Early production R E 8 with the small vertical fin There is no fairing over the sump As early as March 1916 the design appears to have mostly been settled features included the selection of a Royal Aircraft Factory 4a air cooled V12 engine capable of 140 hp to power the type along with a sizable fin and rudder During the early design process a smaller tail fin was substituted for the original a step which later caused some controversy 3 By early April 1916 a mock up of the R E 8 had been completed and construction of a pair of prototypes was underway On 16 June 1916 the first of these prototypes was submitted for its final pre flight inspection in advance of the type s maiden flight 3 On 17 June 1916 the first R E 8 test flight was conducted by F W Goodden 5 Goodden would perform all of the early flights with the type on 1 July 1916 Sefton Brancker was flown by Goodden in the type to Hounslow London On 16 July 1916 the second prototype furnished with a different design of propeller performed its first flight 3 During late July 1916 the second of two prototypes was dispatched to France for service trials the results of which were largely successful with aircrew being generally quite favourably impressed During August 1916 the second prototype returned to Farnborough Hampshire where it underwent modification based upon its experiences in France 6 The R E 8 possessed a conventional wire braced fabric covered wooden structure along with an unequal span wing arrangement 3 The engine installation closely resembled that of the B E 12 complete with the same large air scoop and similar vertically mounted exhausts protruding over the upper wing to carry the fumes clear of the crew Apart from the disposition of the cockpits the main visually distinguishable difference was that the engine was slightly raked back to improve take off and landing characteristics 7 The early production R E 8s were more or less identical to the prototypes 8 R E 8 with enlarged fin at training unitThe R E 8 adopted a set of single bay unequal span wings identical to those of the earlier B E 2e although the span and thus the wing area had been increased slightly by the use of a wider upper centre section and lower stub wings to match On the B E 2e these wings functioned to maintain the stability of the B E 2c while providing the aircraft with superior levels of manoeuvrability although the long extensions on the upper wing gave rise to fears they would be prone to collapse if the aircraft was dived too sharply which in turn did not help to build trust in the aircraft 4 Several other features such as the tailplane were also identical to those previously used upon the B E 2e R E 8s of No 3 Sqn AFCFor the purpose of making the R E 8 less tiring to fly the pilot s controls included a wheel to adjust the tailplane incidence in flight and a primitive form of rudder trim applied to the rudder bar was provided to alleviate the constant pressure necessary to counteract the torque generated by the propeller Basic flight controls were installed in the observer s cockpit which folded out of the way when not in use these were connected to the elevators rudder and throttle but not to the ailerons and were intended to give observers a chance to make a forced landing if the pilot was killed or incapacitated rather than to offer true dual control 9 Although not so underpowered as the B E 2 the R E 8 was still handicapped by a less than adequate powerplant and a model re engined with the Hispano Suiza engine was projected as the R E 8a from quite an early stage The cowling designed for the liquid cooled engine closely resembled that of the B E 12b or the S E 5a Supplies of Hispano Suiza engines more urgently required for other types never permitted production of the R E 8a although a prototype was constructed and underwent trials during December 1916 10 Plans to mount Rolls Royce aero engines such as the Eagle or Falcon were also abortive for similar reasons These engines were in chronically short supply and reserved for various other types in British service including the Airco DH 4 and the Bristol Fighter Production Edit During August 1916 production of an initial batch of 50 aircraft was commenced by the Royal Aircraft Factory itself 6 On 25 August a contract was placed with Austin Motors for the completion of 100 R E 8s on 30 August Siddeley Deasy was also contracted to produce a further 100 examples 8 By September 1916 full scale production was well under way 11 By the end of September a further 850 R E 8s had been ordered from a range of manufacturers 8 During December 1916 the first contractor produced R E 8s began to appear 12 The Vickers Challenger interrupter gear and the Scarff ring were still in short supply being required for the Sopwith 1 Strutter and other types accordingly a few early R E 8s were built with a pillar mounting for the observer s gun as an interim measure An alternative to the pilot s synchronised Vickers had been designed consisting of a fixed Lewis gun with deflector plates fitted to the propeller although this was never used a Vickers gun for the pilot being mounted on the port side of the fuselage in a similar position to that on the B E 12 at first synchronised by the Vickers Challenger gear and then by the improved Constantinesco hydraulic gear 13 8 Photographs of this armament installation make it clear that the cocking handle of the Vickers gun was in easy reach of the pilot and that a normal Aldis sight was often mounted in the pilot s windscreen giving the lie to statements that the forward firing gun could not be sighted properly due to its position although the lack of standisation complicated maintenance in operational squadrons 14 In total 4 077 R E 8s were constructed a further 353 aircraft that had been on order were cancelled following the end of the war Only a handful of production aircraft were actually completed by the Royal Aircraft Factory the bulk of the work was issued out to several private companies including Austin Motors Daimler Standard Motors Siddeley Deasy and the Coventry Ordnance Works which were responsible for the type throughout its production life 15 Operational history EditThe first production aircraft reached 52 Squadron Royal Flying Corps RFC in France in November 1916 The inexperienced pilots of 52 Squadron found their new mounts thoroughly dangerous and several were killed spinning in off a stall while attempting to land they were grateful to return to the B E 2e by exchanging aircraft with 34 Squadron in January 1917 Experienced pilots had fewer problems with the new type and re equipment of B E 2 squadrons continued Pilot s notes for the R E 8 prepared in the field drew attention to the fact that it had a higher landing speed than the B E 2e hardly surprising since it was heavier and had almost the same wing area and that it gave almost no warning of a stall 13 This seems to have been the source of most complaints about the type s trickiness Preparing an R E 8 for a night bombing raidThe Royal Aircraft Factory conducted spinning tests on the type concluding that the R E 8 was quite hard to spin and recovered easily but the fin was redesigned with slightly increased area to improve spin recovery The modification resulted in the production version being no less stable than the B E 2e and while this was an advantage for artillery observation and photography it gave the R E 8 little chance to out manoeuvre enemy fighters An even larger fin was fitted to some R E 8s used as trainers Some pilots flew the R E 8 with an empty reserve fuel tank or even filled the tank with fire extinguisher fluid to avoid a perceived tendency of R E 8s to burn on crashing None of these measures would have made the aircraft any safer if the problem was one of poor stalling characteristics Several pilots who flew the type mentioned that they had no problems but were careful to keep the airspeed well above stalling point 16 Preparing for a night take offR E 8s began to arrive at the front in numbers just as the period of German air superiority known as Bloody April was taking a heavy toll of all types in the RFC and early service was not auspicious On 13 April 1917 six R E 8s from 59 Squadron were sent on a long range photo reconnaissance mission missed their intended escorts and were met by the picked fighter pilots of Jasta 11 who shot them all down within five minutes 17 The casualty rate in R E 8 squadrons became more sustainable as new Allied fighter types regained air superiority and pilot training and tactics improved Although never a popular aeroplane it was reasonably satisfactory for the tasks demanded of it and was even regarded with some affection gaining the rhyming slang nickname Harry Tate after a popular music hall artist of the time Some crews flew their slow cumbersome mounts quite aggressively the German fighter ace Eduard Ritter von Dostler was shot down by an R E 8 of 7 Squadron while 3 Squadron Australian Flying Corps AFC was credited with 50 air victories in 12 months of operations 18 Lts Pithey and Rhodes of 12 Squadron were the most successful R E 8 crew in air to air combat being credited with twelve victories 19 An R E 8 crew are briefed before a missionAlthough supplemented by other types the R E 8 remained the standard RFC artillery observation air photography and general short range reconnaissance aircraft for the remainder of the war equipping 18 RFC squadrons in 1917 and 19 squadrons in 1918 Belgium was the only country other than Britain and the Dominions to operate the R E 8 during the First World War receiving 22 in July 1917 At least some of the Belgian examples were fitted with Hispano Suiza engines in a SPAD type cowling rather than the S E 5a type cowling of the R E 8a 10 It was hoped to be able to replace the R E 8 with a version of the Bristol Fighter powered by the Sunbeam Arab engine but the combination proved unsuccessful and few Arab Bristols were ever built 20 A few R E 8 squadrons were issued with one or two standard Falcon engined F 2bs in the last weeks of the war 21 By November 1918 the R E 8 was regarded as totally obsolete and surviving examples were quickly retired after the Armistice Nor was the type popular with the private owners who purchased surplus RAF aircraft after the war and no R E 8s came onto the civil register Variants EditR E 8 Standard general purpose aircraft powered by 140 hp 104 kW RAF 4a engine R E 8a Conversion of one R E 8 with 200 hp 149 kW Hispano Suiza engine in a square S E 5 or B E 12b type cowling No production due to shortage of Hispano engines 22 At least some of the R E 8s supplied to Belgium were also re engined with Hispanos in this case in a cowling resembling that of the later SPADs R E 9 R E 8 modified with equal span wings similar to those of the B E 2c d and the larger fin and rudder fitted to some R E 8s at training units Two were converted in 1917 but they showed no advantage over the standard R E 8 climb and manoeuvrability were worse and no production followed 22 R E 8 F3556 preserved at the Imperial War Museum Duxford Belgian R E 8 with water cooled Hispano Suiza engine in revised cowlingSiddeley Deasy R T 1 Development of R E 8 with equal span biplane wings of a new design Survivors EditOnly two original R E 8s survive from World War One 1 The restoration of R E 8 F3556 at the Imperial War Museum Duxford was completed in 2004 This aircraft built by Daimler arrived in France on Armistice Day still in its original packing case It is currently displayed suspended from the roof of the AirSpace hangar at Duxford 23 The other surviving R E 8 is a former Aviation Militaire Belge machine preserved at the Brussels Air Museum It is fitted with the usual Hispano Suiza engine typical of R E 8s in Belgian service in the usual SPAD type cowling and circular frontal radiator 24 The Royal Air Force Museum at Hendon has a full size replica R E 8 which was built by The Vintage Aviator Ltd TVAL in New Zealand in 2011 It is fitted with a new build RAF 4a engine and was successfully test flown at Masterton NZ on 1 January 2012 with the registration ZK TVC Crated and shipped to England it was reassembled at The Shuttleworth Collection at Old Warden Airfield in June 2012 and undertook a number of flights painted as A3930 of No 9 Squadron Royal Flying Corps before being sent by road to Hendon in November 2012 It is now on static display in the Grahame White Factory 25 The Royal Australian Air Force has an airworthy replica R E 8 built in 2012 and painted in late WW1 era Australian Flying Corps livery It was previously part of the RAAF Museum collection and as of 2021 is with the Air Force Heritage Squadron Operators Edit AustraliaAustralian Flying Corps No 1 Squadron AFC in Egypt and Palestine No 3 Squadron AFC in France No 7 Training Squadron in United Kingdom BelgiumAviation Militaire Belge 6me Escadrille EstoniaEstonian Air Force 26 Soviet Union United KingdomRoyal Flying Corps and the Royal Air ForceNo 4 Squadron RAF No 5 Squadron RAF No 6 Squadron RAF No 7 Squadron RAF No 8 Squadron RAF No 9 Squadron RAF No 12 Squadron RAF No 13 Squadron RAF No 14 Squadron RAF No 15 Squadron RAF No 16 Squadron RAF No 21 Squadron RAF No 30 Squadron RAF No 34 Squadron RAF No 37 Squadron RAF No 42 Squadron RAF No 50 Squadron RAF No 52 Squadron RAF No 53 Squadron RAF No 59 Squadron RAF No 63 Squadron RAF No 67 Squadron RAF No 69 Squadron RAF No 89 Squadron RAF No 91 Squadron RAF No 105 Squadron RAF No 106 Squadron RAF No 110 Squadron RAF No 113 Squadron RAF No 117 Squadron RAF No 139 Squadron RAF No 142 Squadron RAF No 144 Squadron RAF No 208 Squadron RAFSpecifications Edit R A F R E 8 drawingData from The Royal Aircraft Factory 27 General characteristicsCrew 2 Length 27 ft 10 5 in 8 496 m Wingspan 42 ft 7 in 12 98 m Height 11 ft 4 5 in 3 467 m Wing area 377 5 sq ft 35 07 m2 Empty weight 1 803 lb 818 kg Gross weight 2 678 lb 1 215 kg 28 Max takeoff weight 2 869 lb 1 301 kg Powerplant 1 Royal Aircraft Factory RAF 4a V 12 air cooled piston engine 140 hp 100 kW Propellers 4 bladed fixed pitch propellerPerformance Maximum speed 103 mph 166 km h 90 kn Stall speed 47 mph 76 km h 41 kn Endurance 4 hours 15 minutes Service ceiling 13 500 ft 4 100 m Time to altitude 6 500 ft 1 981 m in 21 minutesArmament Guns 1 x 303 in 7 7 mm forward firing Vickers gun and 1 or 2 x 303 in 7 7 mm Lewis guns in rear cockpit Bombs up to 224 lb 102 kg bombsSee also EditAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Royal Aircraft Factory B E 2 Rumpler C I Albatros C IIIRelated lists List of aircraft of the RAF List of bomber aircraftReferences EditCitations Edit a b Bruce 1966 p 10 Hare 1990 p 258 a b c d e f Bruce 1966 p 3 a b Cheesman 1962 pp 50 56 Mason 1994 p 61 a b Bruce 1966 pp 4 5 Bruce 1954 p 577 a b c d Bruce 1966 p 5 Hare 1990 pp 259 260 a b Bruce 1966 p 9 Hare 1990 p 259 Bruce 1966 p 6 a b Hare 1990 p 261 Bruce 1966 pp 5 6 Bruce 1966 p 12 Rowe 2001 pp 64 70 Bruce 1954 pp 577 578 Schaedel 1972 p 23 Franks et al 1997 pp 72 73 Cheesman 1962 p 62 Molkentin 2010 caption to plate 28 between pp 184 185 a b Hare 1990 p 267 Royal Aircraft Factory RE 8 Imperial War Museum Retrieved 28 December 2017 Brussels Air Museum Archived 25 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine sbap be Retrieved 28 December 2017 Royal Aircraft Factory R E 8 RAF Museum Retrieved 28 December 2017 Gerdessen 1982 p 76 Hare 1990 pp 266 267 Bruce 1954 p 581 Bibliography Edit Bruce J M The R E 8 Historic Military Aircraft No 8 Flight 15 October 1954 pp 575 581 Bruce J M The R E 8 Aircraft in Profile number 85 London Profile Publications 1966 No ISBN Cheesman E F ed Reconnaissance amp Bomber Aircraft of the 1914 1918 War Letchworth UK Harleyford 1962 Forder Nick May June 1999 Round Out Air Enthusiast 81 79 ISSN 0143 5450 Franks Norman Russell Guest Gregory Alegi Above the War Fronts The British Two seater Bomber Pilot and Observer Aces the British Two seater Fighter Observer Aces and the Belgian Italian Austro Hungarian and Russian Fighter Aces 1914 1918 Volume 4 of Fighting Airmen of WWI Series Volume 4 of Air Aces of WWI Grub Street 1997 ISBN 1 898697 56 6 ISBN 978 1 898697 56 5 Gerdessen F Estonian Air Power 1918 1945 Air Enthusiast No 18 April July 1982 pp 61 76 ISSN 0143 5450 Hare Paul R The Royal Aircraft Factory London Putnam 1990 ISBN 0 85177 843 7 Jarlevik Stig March April 1999 Round Out Air Enthusiast 80 79 ISSN 0143 5450 Mason Francis K The British Bomber since 1914 London Putnam 1994 ISBN 0 85177 861 5 Molkentin Michael Fire in the Sky The Australian Flying Corps in the First World War Sydney Allen amp Unwin 2010 ISBN 978 1 74237 072 9 Munson Kenneth Bombers Patrol and Reconnaissance Aircraft 1914 1919 London Blandford 1968 ISBN 0 7137 0484 5 Penrose Harald 1969 British Aviation The Great War and Armistice 1915 1919 Putnam London p 438 ISBN 0 370 00128 1 Rowe Allan The RE8 Controversy Revisited in The 14 18 Journal Australian Society of World War One Aero Historians 2001 Schaedel Charles Men and Machines of the Australian Flying Corps 1914 1919 Melbourne Kookaburra Technical Publications 1972 Taylor John W R Royal Aircraft Factory R E 8 Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present New York G P Putnam s Sons 1969 ISBN 0 425 03633 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Royal Aircraft Factory R E 8 The R E 8 Controversy Revisited by Alan Rowe The 14 18 Journal 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Aircraft Factory R E 8 amp oldid 1161683427, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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