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Sopwith Camel

The Sopwith Camel is a British First World War single-seat biplane fighter aircraft that was introduced on the Western Front in 1917. It was developed by the Sopwith Aviation Company as a successor to the Sopwith Pup and became one of the best-known fighter aircraft of the Great War. In total, Camel pilots were credited with downing 1,294 enemy aircraft, more than their counterparts flying any other Allied fighter of the conflict. Towards the end of the war, the type also saw use as a ground-attack aircraft, partly because the capabilities of fighter aircraft on both sides had advanced rapidly and left the Camel somewhat outclassed.

Camel
Sopwith Camel
Role Biplane fighter
Manufacturer Sopwith Aviation Company
Designer Herbert Smith[1]
First flight 22 December 1916
Introduction June 1917
Retired January 1920
Primary users Royal Flying Corps
Royal Naval Air Service
Royal Air Force
Number built 5,490
Developed from Sopwith Pup

The Camel was powered by a single rotary engine and was armed with twin synchronized Vickers machine guns. It was difficult to fly, with 90% of its weight in the front seven feet of the aircraft, but it was highly manoeuvrable in the hands of an experienced pilot, a vital attribute in the relatively low-speed, low-altitude dogfights of the era. Its pilots joked that their fates would involve "a wooden cross, the Red Cross, or a Victoria Cross".

The main variant of the Camel was designated as the F.1. Other variants included the 2F.1 Ship's Camel, which operated from aircraft carriers; the Comic night fighter variant; and the T.F.1, a "trench fighter" armoured for attacks on heavily defended ground targets. A two-seat variant served as a trainer. The last Camels were withdrawn from RAF service in January 1920.

Development edit

 
Harry Cobby sitting in the cockpit of a Sopwith Camel

When it became clear the Sopwith Pup was no match for the newer German fighters such as the Albatros D.III, the Camel was developed to replace it,[2] as well as the Nieuport 17s that had been purchased from the French as an interim measure. It was recognised that the new fighter needed to be faster and have a heavier armament. The design effort to produce this successor, initially designated as the Sopwith F.1, was headed by Sopwith's chief designer, Herbert Smith.[3][4]

Early in its development, the Camel was simply referred to as the "Big Pup". A metal fairing over the gun breeches, intended to protect the guns from freezing at altitude, created a "hump" that led pilots to call the aircraft "Camel", although this name was never used officially.[2][5] On 22 December 1916, the prototype Camel was first flown by Harry Hawker at Brooklands, Weybridge, Surrey; it was powered by a 110-horsepower (82 kW) Clerget 9Z.[4]

In May 1917, the first production contract for an initial batch of 250 Camels was issued by the British War Office.[6] Throughout 1917, a total of 1,325 Camels were produced, almost entirely the initial F.1 variant. By the time that production of the type came to an end, approximately 5,490 Camels of all types had been built.[7] In early 1918, production of the naval variant of the Sopwith Camel, the "Ship's" Camel 2F.1 began.[8]

Design edit

Overview edit

 
Replica Sopwith Camel showing internal structure

The Camel had a conventional design for its era, with a wire-braced wooden box-girder fuselage structure, an aluminium engine cowling, plywood panels around the cockpit, and a fabric-covered fuselage, wings and tail. While possessing some clear similarities with the Pup, it had a noticeably bulkier fuselage.[3] For the first time on an operational British-designed fighter, two 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers machine guns were mounted directly in front of the cockpit, synchronised to fire forwards through the propeller disc[4][2] – initially this consisted of the fitment of the Sopwith firm's own synchronizer design, but after the mechanical-linkage Sopwith-Kauper units began to wear out, the more accurate and easier-to-maintain, hydraulic-link Constantinesco-Colley system replaced it from November 1917 onward. In addition to the machine guns, a total of four Cooper bombs could be carried for ground attack purposes.[4]

The bottom wing was rigged with 5° dihedral while the top wing lacked any dihedral; this meant that the gap between the wings was less at the tips than at the roots; this change had been made at the suggestion of Fred Sigrist, the Sopwith works manager, as a measure to simplify the aircraft's construction.[9] The upper wing featured a central cutout section for the purpose of providing improved upwards visibility for the pilot.[10]

Production Camels were powered by various rotary engines, most commonly either the Clerget 9B or the Bentley BR1.[11] In order to evade a potential manufacturing bottleneck being imposed upon the overall aircraft in the event of an engine shortage, several other engines were adopted to power the type as well.[12]

Flight characteristics edit

 
1917 Sopwith F.1 Camel at Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
 
Pilot's view from the cockpit of a Camel, June 1918

Unlike the preceding Pup and Triplane, the Camel was considered to be difficult to fly.[13] With light and sensitive controls the type owed both its extreme manoeuvrability and its difficult handling to the close placement of the engine, pilot, guns and fuel tank (some 90% of the aircraft's weight) within the front seven feet (2.1 m) of the aircraft, and to the strong gyroscopic effect of the rotating mass of the cylinders common to rotary engines.[Note 1]

Due to the torque of the rotary engine the Camel turned more slowly to the left, which resulted in a nose-up attitude, but the torque also resulted in being able to turn to the right quicker than other fighters,[14] although that resulted in a tendency towards a nose-down attitude from the turn. Because of the faster turning capability to the right, some pilots preferred to change heading 90° to the left by turning 270° to the right.[15]

Upon entering service, the Camel gained an unfortunate reputation with pilots,[16] with inexperienced ones crashing on take-off when the full fuel load pushed the aircraft's centre of gravity beyond the rearmost safe limit.

When in level flight, the Camel was markedly tail-heavy. Unlike the Sopwith Triplane, the Camel lacked a variable incidence tailplane, so that the pilot had to apply constant forward pressure on the control stick to maintain a level attitude at low altitude. The aircraft could be rigged so that at higher altitudes it could be flown "hands off". A stall immediately resulted in a dangerous spin. RFC pilots used to joke that it offered the choice between "a wooden cross, the Red Cross, or a Victoria Cross".[17][15]

A two-seat trainer version was later built to ease the transition process:[18] in his Recollections of an Airman, Lieutenant Colonel L. A. Strange, who served with the central flying school, wrote: "In spite of the care we took, Camels continually spun down out of control when flew [sic] by pupils on their first solos. At length, with the assistance of Lieut Morgan, who managed our workshops, I took the main tank out of several Camels and replaced [them] with a smaller one, which enabled us to fit in dual control." Such conversions, and dual instruction, went some way to alleviating the previously unacceptable casualties incurred during the critical type-specific solo training stage.[16]

Despite these issues, its agility in combat made the Camel one of the best-remembered Allied aircraft of the First World War. Aviation author Robert Jackson notes that: "in the hands of a novice it displayed vicious characteristics that could make it a killer; but under the firm touch of a skilled pilot, who knew how to turn its vices to his own advantage, it was one of the most superb fighting machines ever built".[4]

Operational history edit

Western front edit

 
Camels being prepared for a sortie.
 
A downed Sopwith Camel near Zillebeke, West Flanders, Belgium, 26 September 1917

In June 1917, the Sopwith Camel entered service with No. 4 Squadron of the Royal Naval Air Service, which was stationed near Dunkirk, France; this was the first squadron to operate the type.[19] Its first combat flight and reportedly its first victory claim were both made on 4 July 1917.[6] By the end of July, the Camel also equipped No. 3 and No. 9 Naval Squadrons; and it had become operational with No. 70 Squadron of the Royal Flying Corps.[8] By February 1918, 13 squadrons had Camels as their primary equipment.[20]

The Camel proved in service to have better manoeuvrability than the Albatros D.III and D.V and offered heavier armament and better performance than the Pup and Triplane. Together with the S.E.5a and the SPAD S.XIII, it helped to re-establish the Allied aerial superiority that lasted well into 1918.[citation needed]

Major Billy Barker used his personal Sopwith Camel (serial no. B6313, the aircraft in which he scored the majority of his victories)[21] to shoot down 46 aircraft and balloons from September 1917 to September 1918 in 404 operational flying hours, making it the most successful fighter in RAF history.[citation needed]

Home defence and night fighting edit

An important role for the Camel was home defence. The RNAS flew Camels from Eastchurch and Manston airfields against daylight raids by German bombers, including Gothas, from July 1917.[18] The public outcry against the night raids and the poor response of London's defences resulted in the RFC deciding to divert Camels that had been heading to the frontlines in France to Britain for the purposes of home defence; in July 1917, 44 Squadron RFC reformed and reequipped with the Camel to conduct the home defence mission.[22] By March 1918, the home defence squadrons had been widely equipped with the Camel and by August 1918, a total of seven home defence squadrons were operating these aircraft.[23]

When the Germans switched to performing nighttime attacks, the Camel proved capable of being flown at night as well.[19] Accordingly, those aircraft assigned to home defence squadrons were quickly modified with navigation lights in order that they could serve as night fighters. A smaller number of Camels were more extensively reconfigured; on these aircraft, the Vickers machine guns were replaced by overwing Lewis guns and the cockpit was moved rearwards so the pilot could reload the guns. This modification, which became known as the "Sopwith Comic" allowed the guns to be fired without affecting the pilot's night vision, and allowed the use of new, more effective incendiary ammunition that was considered unsafe to fire from synchronised Vickers guns.[24][25][Note 2]

The Camel was successfully used to intercept and shoot down German bombers on multiple occasions during 1918, serving in this capacity through to the final German bombing raid upon Britain on the night of the 20/21 May 1918.[27] During this air raid, a combined force of 74 Camels and Royal Aircraft Factory S.E.5s intercepted 28 Gothas and Zeppelin-Staaken R.VIs; three German bombers were shot down, while two more were downed by anti-aircraft fire from the ground and a further aircraft was lost to engine failure, resulting in the heaviest losses suffered by German bombers during a single night's operation over England.[28]

 
Navalised Camels on the aircraft carrier HMS Furious prior to raiding the Tondern airship hangars

The Camel night fighter was also operated by 151 Squadron to intercept German night bombers operating over the Western Front.[29] These aircraft were not only deployed defensively, but often carried out night intruder missions against German airstrips. After five months of operations, 151 Squadron had claimed responsibility for shooting down 26 German aircraft.[29]

Shipboard and parasite fighter edit

 
Sopwith 2F.1 Camel suspended from airship R 23 prior to a test flight

The RNAS operated a number of 2F.1 Camels that were suitable for launching from platforms mounted on the turrets of major warships as well as from some of the earliest aircraft carriers to be built. Furthermore, the Camel could be deployed from aircraft lighters, which were specially modified barges; these had to be towed fast enough that a Camel could successfully take off. The aircraft lighters served as means of launching interception sorties against incoming enemy air raids from a more advantageous position than had been possible when using shore bases alone.

During the summer of 1918, a single 2F.1 Camel (N6814) participated in a series of trials as a parasite fighter. The aircraft used Airship R23 as a mothership.[30]

Ground attack edit

By mid-1918, the Camel had become obsolescent as a day fighter as its climb rate, level speed and performance at altitudes over 12,000 ft (3,650 m) were outclassed by the latest German fighters, such as the Fokker D.VII. However, it remained viable as a ground-attack and infantry support aircraft and instead was increasingly used in that capacity. The Camel inflicted high losses on German ground forces, albeit suffering from a high rate of losses itself in turn, through the dropping of 25 lb (11 kg) Cooper bombs and low-level strafing runs.[31] The protracted development of the Camel's replacement, the Sopwith Snipe, resulted in the Camel remaining in service in this capacity until well after the signing of the Armistice.[32]

During the German spring offensive of March 1918, squadrons of Camels participated in the defence of the Allied lines, harassing the advancing German Army from the skies.[31] Jackson observed that "some of the most intense air operations took place" during the retreat of the British Fifth Army, in which the Camel provided extensive aerial support. Camels flew at multiple altitudes, some as low as 500 feet (150 m) for surprise strafing attacks upon ground forces, while being covered from attack by hostile fighters by the higher altitude aircraft.[32] Strafing attacks formed a major component of British efforts to contain the offensive, the attacks often having the result of producing confusion and panic amongst the advancing German forces. As the March offensive waned, the Camel was able to operate within and maintain aerial superiority for the remainder of the war.[32]

Postwar service edit

In the aftermath of the First World War, the Camel saw further combat action. Multiple British squadrons were deployed into Russia as a part of the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War.[32] Between the Camel and the S.E.5, which were the two main types deployed to the Caspian Sea area to bomb Bolshevik bases and to provide aerial support to the Royal Navy warships present, Allied control of the Caspian region had been achieved by May 1919. Starting in March 1919, direct support was also provided for White Russian forces, carrying out reconnaissance, ground attack, and escort operations.[33] During the summer of 1919, Camels of No. 47 Squadron conducted offensive operations in the vicinity of Tsaritsyn, primarily against Urbabk airfield; targets including enemy aircraft, cavalry formations, and river traffic. In September 1919, 47 Squadron was relocated to Kotluban, where its aircraft operations mainly focused on harassing enemy communication lines.[34] During late 1919 and early 1920, the RAF detachment operated in support of General Vladimir May-Mayevsky's counter-revolutionary volunteer army during intense fighting around Kharkiv. In March 1920, the remainder of the force was evacuated and their remaining aircraft were deliberately destroyed to avoid them falling into enemy hands.[34]

Variants edit

Camels were powered by several makes of rotary engines:

Sopwith Camel F.1 edit

The F.1 was the main production version. It was armed with twin synchronised Vickers guns.

Sopwith Camel 2F.1 edit

 
The Sopwith 2F.1 Camel used to shoot down Zeppelin L 53, at the Imperial War Museum, London. Note mounting of twin Lewis guns over the top wing

The 2F.1 was a shipboard variant, flown from HMS Furious.[35] It had a slightly shorter wingspan and a Bentley BR1 as its standard engine. Additionally, one Vickers gun was replaced by an overwing Lewis gun to assist in destroying Zeppelins using incendiary ammunition.

Sopwith Camel "Comic" Night fighter edit

The "Comic" was a Camel variant designed specifically for night-fighting duties. The twin Vickers guns were replaced by two Lewis guns on Foster mountings firing forward over the top wing, as the muzzle flash of the Vickers guns could blind the pilot. The second reason to use Lewis guns was to facilitate the use of incendiary ammunition because of the risk of using it in synchronized guns. To allow reloading of the guns, the pilot was moved about 12 inches (30 cm) to the rear, and to compensate the fuel tank was moved forward.[36] It served with Home Defence Squadrons against German air raids. The "Comic" nickname was unofficial, and was shared with the night fighter version of the Sopwith 1½ Strutter.

F.1/1 edit

The F1/1 was a version with tapered wings.

T.F.1 edit

The T.F.1 was an experimental trench fighter used for development work for the Sopwith Salamander. Its machine guns were angled downwards for efficient strafing, and it featured armour plating for protection.

Trainer edit

The trainer variant had a second cockpit behind the normal pilot's position. The weapons were removed, although the hump was sometimes kept.

Operators edit

 
Belgian Sopwith Camel flown by Adj. Léon Cremers with n° 11 Squadron "Cocotte" marking
 
Major Wilfred Ashton McCloughry MC, the commanding officer of No. 4 Squadron AFC, and his Sopwith Camel, 6 June 1918
  Australia
  Belgium
  Canada
  Estonia
  France
  • French Government
 
  Greece
  Latvia
  Netherlands
  Poland

  Russian Empire

  Soviet Union
  United Kingdom
 
USAS Sopwith Camel
  United States

Surviving aircraft edit

  Media related to Sopwith Camel museum aircraft at Wikimedia Commons

 
Sopwith Camel at the Royal Air Force Museum

There are eight known original Sopwith Camels left:[42]

Reproductions edit

  Media related to Sopwith Camel replicas at Wikimedia Commons

 
Replica of Camel F.1 flown by Lt. George Vaughn Jr., 17th Aero Squadron at the USAF Museum

Specifications (F.1 Camel) edit

 
Sopwith F.1 Camel drawing

Data from Quest for Performance,[81] Profile Publications[82]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 18 ft 9 in (5.72 m)
  • Wingspan: 28 ft 0 in (8.53 m)
  • Height: 8 ft 6 in (2.59 m)
  • Wing area: 231 sq ft (21.5 m2)
  • Aspect ratio: 4.11
  • Airfoil: RAF 16[83]
  • Empty weight: 930 lb (422 kg)
  • Gross weight: 1,453 lb (659 kg)
  • Zero-lift drag coefficient: CD0.0378
  • Frontal area: 8.73 square feet (0.811 m2)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Clerget 9B 9-cylinder air-cooled rotary piston engine, 130 hp (97 kW)
  • Propellers: 2-bladed fixed-pitch wooden propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 113 mph (182 km/h, 98 kn)
  • Stall speed: 48 mph (77 km/h, 42 kn)
  • Range: 300 mi (480 km, 260 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 19,000 ft (5,800 m)
  • Rate of climb: 1,085 ft/min (5.51 m/s)
  • Lift-to-drag: 7.7
  • Wing loading: 6.3 lb/sq ft (31 kg/m2)
  • Power/mass: 0.09 hp/lb (0.15 kW/kg)

Armament

Notable appearances in media edit

Biggles flies a Sopwith Camel in the novels by W. E. Johns during Biggles's spell in 266 Squadron during the First World War. The first collection of Biggles stories, titled The Camels are Coming, was published in 1932. The first two collections of stories (broken into three books in Australia) were all true stories or events, lightly fictionalised—some of them are identifiable in official war records, e.g., the accidental discovery of a major camouflaged airfield when rescuing a downed pilot.[84]

The Camel is the "plane" of Snoopy in the Peanuts comic strip, when he imagines himself as a World War I flying ace and the nemesis of the Red Baron.[85]

See also edit

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ As compared with radial engines in which a conventional rotating crankshaft is driven by a fixed engine block.
  2. ^ The ammunition in question was the RTS (Richard Thelfall and Sons) round, a combined incendiary and explosive round with a nitroglycerin and phosphorus filling. While more effective than earlier incendiary bullets such as the phosphorus-filled Buckingham bullet, they required careful handling, and were initially banned from synchronised weapons, both because of fears about the consequences of bullets striking the propeller of the fighter, and to prevent cooking off of the sensitive ammunition in the chambers of the Vickers guns, which fired from a closed bolt—a required feature for guns used in synchronized mounts—where heat could build up much quicker than in the open bolted Lewis gun.[24][26]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Mason 1992, p. 89.
  2. ^ a b c Bruce Flight 22 April 1955, p. 527.
  3. ^ a b Bruce 1965, p. 3.
  4. ^ a b c d e Jackson 2007, p. 2.
  5. ^ Bruce 1965, pp. 4-5.
  6. ^ a b Bruce 1965, p. 5.
  7. ^ Bruce Flight 29 April 1955, p. 563.
  8. ^ a b Bruce 1965, p. 6.
  9. ^ Jon., Guttman (2012). Sopwith Camel. Oxford: Osprey. pp. 9, 16, 30. ISBN 9781780961767. OCLC 775415602.
  10. ^ Bruce 1965, pp. 3-5.
  11. ^ Bruce 1968, pp. 148-149.
  12. ^ Bruce 1965, pp. 7-8.
  13. ^ Bruce 1965, pp. 5-6.
  14. ^ Clark 1973, p. 134.
  15. ^ a b Hoyland, Graham (2021). Merlin: The Power behind the Spitfire, Mosquito and Lancaster (paperback). London: William Collins. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-00-835930-0.
  16. ^ a b Jackson 2005, pp. 15–16.
  17. ^ Leinburger 2008, p. 30.
  18. ^ a b Bruce 1965, p. 9.
  19. ^ a b Jackson 2007, p. 3.
  20. ^ Sturtevant, Ray; Page, Gordon (1993). The Camel File. UK: Air-Britain, Ltd. p. 6. ISBN 0-85130-212-2.
  21. ^ Ralph 1999, p. 80.
  22. ^ a b Davis 1999, p. 96.
  23. ^ Davis 1999, p. 98.
  24. ^ a b Davis 1999, p. 97.
  25. ^ Bruce 1968, p. 151, 153.
  26. ^ Williams and Gustin 2003, pp. 11, 14.
  27. ^ Jackson 2007, pp. 3-6.
  28. ^ Jackson 2007, p. 6.
  29. ^ a b Davis 1999, pp. 98–99.
  30. ^ Fitzsimons, p.521.
  31. ^ a b Jackson 2007, pp. 7-8.
  32. ^ a b c d Jackson 2007, p. 8.
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  83. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  84. ^ Butts, D (2000). "Biggles – Hero of the Air". In Watkins, T; Jones, D (eds.). A Necessary Fantasy?: The Heroic Figure in Children's Popular Culture. New York: Garland Publishing. pp. 137–152. ISBN 0-8153-1844-8.
  85. ^ Murphy and McNiece 2003, p. 87.

Bibliography edit

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  • Jackson, Robert. Britain's Greatest Aircraft. Pen and Sword, 2007. ISBN 1-84415-600-1.
  • Klaauw, Bart van der (March–April 1999). "Unexpected Windfalls: Accidentally or Deliberately, More than 100 Aircraft 'arrived' in Dutch Territory During the Great War". Air Enthusiast. No. 80. pp. 54–59. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Leinburger, Ralf. Fighter: Technology, Facts, History. London: Parragon Inc., 2008. ISBN 978-1-40549-575-2.
  • Mason, Francis K. The British Fighter. London: Putnam, 1992. ISBN 0 85177 852 6
  • Murphy, Justin D. and Matthew A. McNiece. Military Aircraft, 1919-1945: An Illustrated History of their Impact. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2009. ISBN 1-85109-498-9.
  • Ralph, Wayne. Barker VC: The Classic Story of a Legendary First World War Hero. London: Grub Street, 1999. ISBN 1-902304-31-4.
  • Robertson, Bruce. Sopwith: The Man and His Aircraft. London: Harleyford, 1970. ISBN 0-900435-15-1.
  • Sturtivant, Ray and Gordon Page. The Camel File. Tunbridge Wells, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd., 1993. ISBN 0-85130-212-2.
  • Thomas, Andrew. "In the Footsteps of Daedulus: Early Greek Naval Aviation". Air Enthusiast, No. 94, July–August 2001, pp. 8–9. ISSN 0143-5450
  • United States Air Force Museum Guidebook. Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio: Air Force Museum Foundation, 1975.
  • Williams, Anthony G. and Emmanuel Gustin. Flying Guns: World War I and its Aftermath 1914–32. Ramsbury, Wiltshire: Airlife, 2003. ISBN 1-84037-396-2.
  • Winchester, Jim, ed. "Sopwith Camel." Biplanes, Triplanes and Seaplanes (Aviation Factfile). London: Grange Books plc, 2004. ISBN 1-84013-641-3.

External links edit

  • Camel photos and links to museums with Camels
  • Canadian Aviation Museum Camel 26 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Sopwith fighters in Russia
  • Sopwith Camel Replica Kit from Airdrome Aeroplanes

sopwith, camel, this, article, about, fighter, aircraft, 1960s, psychedelic, rock, band, band, british, first, world, single, seat, biplane, fighter, aircraft, that, introduced, western, front, 1917, developed, sopwith, aviation, company, successor, sopwith, b. This article is about the fighter aircraft For the 1960s psychedelic rock band see Sopwith Camel band The Sopwith Camel is a British First World War single seat biplane fighter aircraft that was introduced on the Western Front in 1917 It was developed by the Sopwith Aviation Company as a successor to the Sopwith Pup and became one of the best known fighter aircraft of the Great War In total Camel pilots were credited with downing 1 294 enemy aircraft more than their counterparts flying any other Allied fighter of the conflict Towards the end of the war the type also saw use as a ground attack aircraft partly because the capabilities of fighter aircraft on both sides had advanced rapidly and left the Camel somewhat outclassed Camel Sopwith Camel Role Biplane fighter Manufacturer Sopwith Aviation Company Designer Herbert Smith 1 First flight 22 December 1916 Introduction June 1917 Retired January 1920 Primary users Royal Flying CorpsRoyal Naval Air Service Royal Air Force Number built 5 490 Developed from Sopwith Pup The Camel was powered by a single rotary engine and was armed with twin synchronized Vickers machine guns It was difficult to fly with 90 of its weight in the front seven feet of the aircraft but it was highly manoeuvrable in the hands of an experienced pilot a vital attribute in the relatively low speed low altitude dogfights of the era Its pilots joked that their fates would involve a wooden cross the Red Cross or a Victoria Cross The main variant of the Camel was designated as the F 1 Other variants included the 2F 1 Ship s Camel which operated from aircraft carriers the Comic night fighter variant and the T F 1 a trench fighter armoured for attacks on heavily defended ground targets A two seat variant served as a trainer The last Camels were withdrawn from RAF service in January 1920 Contents 1 Development 2 Design 2 1 Overview 2 2 Flight characteristics 3 Operational history 3 1 Western front 3 2 Home defence and night fighting 3 3 Shipboard and parasite fighter 3 4 Ground attack 3 5 Postwar service 4 Variants 4 1 Sopwith Camel F 1 4 2 Sopwith Camel 2F 1 4 3 Sopwith Camel Comic Night fighter 4 4 F 1 1 4 5 T F 1 4 6 Trainer 5 Operators 6 Surviving aircraft 6 1 Reproductions 7 Specifications F 1 Camel 8 Notable appearances in media 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 10 3 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment edit nbsp Harry Cobby sitting in the cockpit of a Sopwith Camel When it became clear the Sopwith Pup was no match for the newer German fighters such as the Albatros D III the Camel was developed to replace it 2 as well as the Nieuport 17s that had been purchased from the French as an interim measure It was recognised that the new fighter needed to be faster and have a heavier armament The design effort to produce this successor initially designated as the Sopwith F 1 was headed by Sopwith s chief designer Herbert Smith 3 4 Early in its development the Camel was simply referred to as the Big Pup A metal fairing over the gun breeches intended to protect the guns from freezing at altitude created a hump that led pilots to call the aircraft Camel although this name was never used officially 2 5 On 22 December 1916 the prototype Camel was first flown by Harry Hawker at Brooklands Weybridge Surrey it was powered by a 110 horsepower 82 kW Clerget 9Z 4 In May 1917 the first production contract for an initial batch of 250 Camels was issued by the British War Office 6 Throughout 1917 a total of 1 325 Camels were produced almost entirely the initial F 1 variant By the time that production of the type came to an end approximately 5 490 Camels of all types had been built 7 In early 1918 production of the naval variant of the Sopwith Camel the Ship s Camel 2F 1 began 8 Design editOverview edit nbsp Replica Sopwith Camel showing internal structure The Camel had a conventional design for its era with a wire braced wooden box girder fuselage structure an aluminium engine cowling plywood panels around the cockpit and a fabric covered fuselage wings and tail While possessing some clear similarities with the Pup it had a noticeably bulkier fuselage 3 For the first time on an operational British designed fighter two 0 303 in 7 7 mm Vickers machine guns were mounted directly in front of the cockpit synchronised to fire forwards through the propeller disc 4 2 initially this consisted of the fitment of the Sopwith firm s own synchronizer design but after the mechanical linkage Sopwith Kauper units began to wear out the more accurate and easier to maintain hydraulic link Constantinesco Colley system replaced it from November 1917 onward In addition to the machine guns a total of four Cooper bombs could be carried for ground attack purposes 4 The bottom wing was rigged with 5 dihedral while the top wing lacked any dihedral this meant that the gap between the wings was less at the tips than at the roots this change had been made at the suggestion of Fred Sigrist the Sopwith works manager as a measure to simplify the aircraft s construction 9 The upper wing featured a central cutout section for the purpose of providing improved upwards visibility for the pilot 10 Production Camels were powered by various rotary engines most commonly either the Clerget 9B or the Bentley BR1 11 In order to evade a potential manufacturing bottleneck being imposed upon the overall aircraft in the event of an engine shortage several other engines were adopted to power the type as well 12 Flight characteristics edit nbsp 1917 Sopwith F 1 Camel at Steven F Udvar Hazy Center nbsp Pilot s view from the cockpit of a Camel June 1918 Unlike the preceding Pup and Triplane the Camel was considered to be difficult to fly 13 With light and sensitive controls the type owed both its extreme manoeuvrability and its difficult handling to the close placement of the engine pilot guns and fuel tank some 90 of the aircraft s weight within the front seven feet 2 1 m of the aircraft and to the strong gyroscopic effect of the rotating mass of the cylinders common to rotary engines Note 1 Due to the torque of the rotary engine the Camel turned more slowly to the left which resulted in a nose up attitude but the torque also resulted in being able to turn to the right quicker than other fighters 14 although that resulted in a tendency towards a nose down attitude from the turn Because of the faster turning capability to the right some pilots preferred to change heading 90 to the left by turning 270 to the right 15 Upon entering service the Camel gained an unfortunate reputation with pilots 16 with inexperienced ones crashing on take off when the full fuel load pushed the aircraft s centre of gravity beyond the rearmost safe limit When in level flight the Camel was markedly tail heavy Unlike the Sopwith Triplane the Camel lacked a variable incidence tailplane so that the pilot had to apply constant forward pressure on the control stick to maintain a level attitude at low altitude The aircraft could be rigged so that at higher altitudes it could be flown hands off A stall immediately resulted in a dangerous spin RFC pilots used to joke that it offered the choice between a wooden cross the Red Cross or a Victoria Cross 17 15 A two seat trainer version was later built to ease the transition process 18 in his Recollections of an Airman Lieutenant Colonel L A Strange who served with the central flying school wrote In spite of the care we took Camels continually spun down out of control when flew sic by pupils on their first solos At length with the assistance of Lieut Morgan who managed our workshops I took the main tank out of several Camels and replaced them with a smaller one which enabled us to fit in dual control Such conversions and dual instruction went some way to alleviating the previously unacceptable casualties incurred during the critical type specific solo training stage 16 Despite these issues its agility in combat made the Camel one of the best remembered Allied aircraft of the First World War Aviation author Robert Jackson notes that in the hands of a novice it displayed vicious characteristics that could make it a killer but under the firm touch of a skilled pilot who knew how to turn its vices to his own advantage it was one of the most superb fighting machines ever built 4 Operational history editWestern front edit nbsp Camels being prepared for a sortie nbsp A downed Sopwith Camel near Zillebeke West Flanders Belgium 26 September 1917 In June 1917 the Sopwith Camel entered service with No 4 Squadron of the Royal Naval Air Service which was stationed near Dunkirk France this was the first squadron to operate the type 19 Its first combat flight and reportedly its first victory claim were both made on 4 July 1917 6 By the end of July the Camel also equipped No 3 and No 9 Naval Squadrons and it had become operational with No 70 Squadron of the Royal Flying Corps 8 By February 1918 13 squadrons had Camels as their primary equipment 20 The Camel proved in service to have better manoeuvrability than the Albatros D III and D V and offered heavier armament and better performance than the Pup and Triplane Together with the S E 5a and the SPAD S XIII it helped to re establish the Allied aerial superiority that lasted well into 1918 citation needed Major Billy Barker used his personal Sopwith Camel serial no B6313 the aircraft in which he scored the majority of his victories 21 to shoot down 46 aircraft and balloons from September 1917 to September 1918 in 404 operational flying hours making it the most successful fighter in RAF history citation needed Home defence and night fighting edit An important role for the Camel was home defence The RNAS flew Camels from Eastchurch and Manston airfields against daylight raids by German bombers including Gothas from July 1917 18 The public outcry against the night raids and the poor response of London s defences resulted in the RFC deciding to divert Camels that had been heading to the frontlines in France to Britain for the purposes of home defence in July 1917 44 Squadron RFC reformed and reequipped with the Camel to conduct the home defence mission 22 By March 1918 the home defence squadrons had been widely equipped with the Camel and by August 1918 a total of seven home defence squadrons were operating these aircraft 23 When the Germans switched to performing nighttime attacks the Camel proved capable of being flown at night as well 19 Accordingly those aircraft assigned to home defence squadrons were quickly modified with navigation lights in order that they could serve as night fighters A smaller number of Camels were more extensively reconfigured on these aircraft the Vickers machine guns were replaced by overwing Lewis guns and the cockpit was moved rearwards so the pilot could reload the guns This modification which became known as the Sopwith Comic allowed the guns to be fired without affecting the pilot s night vision and allowed the use of new more effective incendiary ammunition that was considered unsafe to fire from synchronised Vickers guns 24 25 Note 2 The Camel was successfully used to intercept and shoot down German bombers on multiple occasions during 1918 serving in this capacity through to the final German bombing raid upon Britain on the night of the 20 21 May 1918 27 During this air raid a combined force of 74 Camels and Royal Aircraft Factory S E 5s intercepted 28 Gothas and Zeppelin Staaken R VIs three German bombers were shot down while two more were downed by anti aircraft fire from the ground and a further aircraft was lost to engine failure resulting in the heaviest losses suffered by German bombers during a single night s operation over England 28 nbsp Navalised Camels on the aircraft carrier HMS Furious prior to raiding the Tondern airship hangars The Camel night fighter was also operated by 151 Squadron to intercept German night bombers operating over the Western Front 29 These aircraft were not only deployed defensively but often carried out night intruder missions against German airstrips After five months of operations 151 Squadron had claimed responsibility for shooting down 26 German aircraft 29 Shipboard and parasite fighter edit nbsp Sopwith 2F 1 Camel suspended from airship R 23 prior to a test flight The RNAS operated a number of 2F 1 Camels that were suitable for launching from platforms mounted on the turrets of major warships as well as from some of the earliest aircraft carriers to be built Furthermore the Camel could be deployed from aircraft lighters which were specially modified barges these had to be towed fast enough that a Camel could successfully take off The aircraft lighters served as means of launching interception sorties against incoming enemy air raids from a more advantageous position than had been possible when using shore bases alone During the summer of 1918 a single 2F 1 Camel N6814 participated in a series of trials as a parasite fighter The aircraft used Airship R23 as a mothership 30 Ground attack edit By mid 1918 the Camel had become obsolescent as a day fighter as its climb rate level speed and performance at altitudes over 12 000 ft 3 650 m were outclassed by the latest German fighters such as the Fokker D VII However it remained viable as a ground attack and infantry support aircraft and instead was increasingly used in that capacity The Camel inflicted high losses on German ground forces albeit suffering from a high rate of losses itself in turn through the dropping of 25 lb 11 kg Cooper bombs and low level strafing runs 31 The protracted development of the Camel s replacement the Sopwith Snipe resulted in the Camel remaining in service in this capacity until well after the signing of the Armistice 32 During the German spring offensive of March 1918 squadrons of Camels participated in the defence of the Allied lines harassing the advancing German Army from the skies 31 Jackson observed that some of the most intense air operations took place during the retreat of the British Fifth Army in which the Camel provided extensive aerial support Camels flew at multiple altitudes some as low as 500 feet 150 m for surprise strafing attacks upon ground forces while being covered from attack by hostile fighters by the higher altitude aircraft 32 Strafing attacks formed a major component of British efforts to contain the offensive the attacks often having the result of producing confusion and panic amongst the advancing German forces As the March offensive waned the Camel was able to operate within and maintain aerial superiority for the remainder of the war 32 Postwar service edit In the aftermath of the First World War the Camel saw further combat action Multiple British squadrons were deployed into Russia as a part of the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War 32 Between the Camel and the S E 5 which were the two main types deployed to the Caspian Sea area to bomb Bolshevik bases and to provide aerial support to the Royal Navy warships present Allied control of the Caspian region had been achieved by May 1919 Starting in March 1919 direct support was also provided for White Russian forces carrying out reconnaissance ground attack and escort operations 33 During the summer of 1919 Camels of No 47 Squadron conducted offensive operations in the vicinity of Tsaritsyn primarily against Urbabk airfield targets including enemy aircraft cavalry formations and river traffic In September 1919 47 Squadron was relocated to Kotluban where its aircraft operations mainly focused on harassing enemy communication lines 34 During late 1919 and early 1920 the RAF detachment operated in support of General Vladimir May Mayevsky s counter revolutionary volunteer army during intense fighting around Kharkiv In March 1920 the remainder of the force was evacuated and their remaining aircraft were deliberately destroyed to avoid them falling into enemy hands 34 Variants editCamels were powered by several makes of rotary engines Bentley BR1 150 hp standard for RNAS aircraft Clerget 9B 130 hp standard powerplant Clerget 9Bf 140 hp Le Rhone 9J 110 hp Gnome Monosoupape 9B 2 100 hp Gnome Monosoupape 9N 160 hp Sopwith Camel F 1 edit The F 1 was the main production version It was armed with twin synchronised Vickers guns Sopwith Camel 2F 1 edit nbsp The Sopwith 2F 1 Camel used to shoot down Zeppelin L 53 at the Imperial War Museum London Note mounting of twin Lewis guns over the top wing The 2F 1 was a shipboard variant flown from HMS Furious 35 It had a slightly shorter wingspan and a Bentley BR1 as its standard engine Additionally one Vickers gun was replaced by an overwing Lewis gun to assist in destroying Zeppelins using incendiary ammunition Sopwith Camel Comic Night fighter edit The Comic was a Camel variant designed specifically for night fighting duties The twin Vickers guns were replaced by two Lewis guns on Foster mountings firing forward over the top wing as the muzzle flash of the Vickers guns could blind the pilot The second reason to use Lewis guns was to facilitate the use of incendiary ammunition because of the risk of using it in synchronized guns To allow reloading of the guns the pilot was moved about 12 inches 30 cm to the rear and to compensate the fuel tank was moved forward 36 It served with Home Defence Squadrons against German air raids The Comic nickname was unofficial and was shared with the night fighter version of the Sopwith 1 Strutter F 1 1 edit The F1 1 was a version with tapered wings T F 1 edit The T F 1 was an experimental trench fighter used for development work for the Sopwith Salamander Its machine guns were angled downwards for efficient strafing and it featured armour plating for protection Trainer edit The trainer variant had a second cockpit behind the normal pilot s position The weapons were removed although the hump was sometimes kept Operators edit nbsp Belgian Sopwith Camel flown by Adj Leon Cremers with n 11 Squadron Cocotte marking nbsp Major Wilfred Ashton McCloughry MC the commanding officer of No 4 Squadron AFC and his Sopwith Camel 6 June 1918 nbsp Australia Australian Flying Corps No 4 Squadron AFC in France No 5 Squadron AFC in the United Kingdom No 6 Training Squadron AFC in the United Kingdom No 8 Training Squadron AFC in the United Kingdom nbsp Belgium Aviation Militaire Belge 1ere Escadrille de Chasse Groupe de Chasse 22 9eme Escadrille de Chasse 11eme Escadrille de Chasse nbsp Canada Royal Canadian Air Force nbsp Estonia Estonian Air Force nbsp France French Government nbsp Georgian Air Force 3 4 aircraft 1920 nbsp Greece Hellenic Navy 37 nbsp Latvia Latvian Air Force nbsp Netherlands Royal Netherlands Air Force nbsp Poland Polish Air Force operated 1 Camel post war 1921 nbsp Russian Empire Imperial Russian Air Service nbsp Soviet Union Soviet Air Force Postwar nbsp United Kingdom Royal Flying Corps Royal Air Force 3 Squadron 17 Squadron 28 Squadron 37 Squadron 43 Squadron 44 Squadron 45 Squadron 46 Squadron 47 Squadron 50 Squadron 51 Squadron 54 Squadron 61 Squadron 65 Squadron 66 Squadron 70 Squadron 71 Squadron 73 Squadron 75 Squadron 78 Squadron 80 Squadron 81 Squadron 89 Squadron 94 Squadron 112 Squadron 139 Squadron 143 Squadron 150 Squadron 151 Squadron 152 Squadron 155 Squadron 187 Squadron 188 Squadron 189 Squadron 198 Squadron 201 Squadron 203 Squadron 204 Squadron 208 Squadron 209 Squadron 210 Squadron 212 Squadron 213 Squadron 219 Squadron 220 Squadron 222 Squadron 225 Squadron 230 Squadron 233 Squadron 273 Squadron Royal Naval Air Service No 1 Squadron RNAS No 3 Squadron RNAS No 4 Squadron RNAS No 6 Squadron RNAS No 8 Squadron RNAS No 9 Squadron RNAS No 10 Squadron RNAS No 12 Squadron RNAS No 13 Squadron RNAS nbsp USAS Sopwith Camel nbsp United States American Expeditionary Force United States Army Air Service 9th Aero Squadron 38 17th Aero Squadron 39 27th Aero Squadron 40 37th Aero Squadron 41 148th Aero Squadron United States NavySurviving aircraft edit nbsp Media related to Sopwith Camel museum aircraft at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Sopwith Camel at the Royal Air Force Museum There are eight known original Sopwith Camels left 42 B5747 F 1 on static display at the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History in Brussels 43 B6291 F 1 on display at the National Air and Space Museum s Steven F Udvar Hazy Center in Chantilly Virginia After being discovered in the 1960s by Desmond St Cyrien the aircraft was restored through the 1980s with the restoration being completed by Tony Ditheridge at AJD Engineering in the United Kingdom first flying in 1992 44 From 2005 the aircraft was part of the Javier Arango Collection in Paso Robles California and was donated to the NASM on Arango s death in April 2017 45 B7280 F 1 on static display at the Polish Aviation Museum in Krakow Lesser Poland The aircraft was built in Lincoln by Clayton amp Shuttleworth On 5 September 1918 when being flown by Captain Herbert A Patey of No 210 Squadron RAF over Belgium it was shot down by Ludwig Beckmann of Jasta 56 Patey survived and was taken prisoner The Germans repaired the aircraft and flew it until the end of the war It was then taken to Berlin and exhibited at the Deutsche Luftfahrt Sammlung German Aviation Collection During World War II it was moved to Poland for safekeeping and put into storage Restoration began in 2007 and was completed by 2010 46 47 C8228 F 1 on static display at the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola Florida 48 49 F6314 F 1 on static display at the Royal Air Force Museum London in London It was built by Boulton amp Paul and is painted to represent an aircraft coded B of No 65 Squadron RAF 50 51 N6812 2F 1 on static display at the Imperial War Museum in London It was built by William Beardmore and was flown by Flight Sub Lieutenant Stuart Culley on 11 August 1918 when he shot down Zeppelin LZ 100 52 53 N8156 2F 1 on static display at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa Ontario Manufactured in 1918 by Hooper and Company Limited it was purchased by the RCAF in 1925 and last flew in 1967 54 ZK SDL F 1 airworthy in New Zealand with The Vintage Aviator Ltd TVAL 55 and painted as B5663 It was previously displayed in the Aerospace Education Center in Little Rock Arkansas until it closed in December 2010 and the aircraft was sold to help pay debts The Camel was sold to TVAL and restored to flying condition 56 failed verification It was previously registered as N6254 57 Reproductions edit nbsp Media related to Sopwith Camel replicas at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Replica of Camel F 1 flown by Lt George Vaughn Jr 17th Aero Squadron at the USAF Museum Replica F 1 airworthy in Oliver BC Canada operated as C FGHT by the Royal Flying Corps School of Aerial Fighting Ltd Built from Replicraft plans by Rolland Carlson in Wi Powered by a Warner Super Scarab 165 hp engine Replica Type T 57 on static display at the Fleet Air Arm Museum at RNAS Yeovilton near Yeovil Somerset It was built in 1969 Slingsby for use in a Biggles film It has a Warner Scarab engine installed and is painted as B6401 58 59 Replica F 1 on static display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton Ohio This aircraft was built by museum personnel from original First World War factory drawings and was completed in 1974 It is painted and marked as the Camel flown by Lt George A Vaughn Jr while flying with the 17th Aero Squadron 60 Replica F 1 airworthy at the Cavanaugh Flight Museum formerly in Addison Texas It was built by Dick Day from original factory drawings The aircraft is fitted with original instruments machine guns and an original Gnome rotary engine It is painted in the scheme of the World War I flying ace Captain Arthur Roy Brown RAF officer a Canadian who flew with the Royal Air Force 61 62 The museum closed indefinitely on 1 January 2024 and announced that its aircraft would be relocated to North Texas Regional Airport in Denison Texas 63 Replica F 1 on display at the Brooklands Museum in Weybridge Surrey It was built in 1977 by Viv Bellamy at Lands End as a flyable reproduction for Leisure Sport Ltd Painted to represent B7270 of 209 Squadron RAF the machine which Captain Roy Brown flew when officially credited with shooting down Baron Manfred von Richthofen it has a Clerget rotary engine of 1916 and was registered as G BFCZ until 2003 First displayed at the museum in January 1988 for Sir Thomas Sopwith s 100th birthday celebrations it was purchased by the museum later that year 64 failed verification 65 failed verification Replica B6299 at the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome in Red Hook New York It was completed in 1992 with a 160 hp Gnome Monosoupape model 9N rotary built by Nathaniel deFlavia and Cole Palen 66 67 It replaced one of the Dick Day built and flown Camel reproductions formerly flown at Old Rhinebeck by Mr Day in their weekend vintage airshows which had left the Aerodrome s collection some years earlier citation needed Replica F 1 airworthy with the Javier Arango Collection in Paso Robles California It was constructed by Dick Day is powered by a 160 hp Gnome Monosoupape 9N rotary and is registered as N8343 68 failed verification Replica Unknown airworthy with the Vintage Aviator Collection in Masterton New Zealand It was originally built by Carl Swanson for Gerry Thornhill It is powered by a 160 hp Gnome Monosoupape rotary engine and is painted as B3889 citation needed Replica F 1 on static display at the Canadian Museum of Flight in Langley British Columbia Lacking an engine a full reproduction 130 hp rotary engine has been installed 69 Replica F 1 on static display at the Aviation Heritage Museum in Bull Creek Western Australia The engine is original and the propeller is suspected to also be genuine 70 Replica F 1 airworthy at the Shuttleworth Collection in Old Warden Bedfordshire It was built by the Northern Aeroplane Workshops 71 72 Replica F 1 under construction by Koz Aero in Comstock Park Michigan It is based on original factory drawings and using many original parts including an original engine and instruments 73 74 Replica F 1 under construction by John S Shaw It has an original Clerget 9B 130 CV engine 75 76 Replica F 1 under construction by John S Shaw It has a new build Gnome Monosoupape 9B 2 100 hp engine 77 78 Replica F 1 on static display at Montrose Air Station Heritage Centre in Montrose Angus It is painted and marked as B7320 flown by Captain John Todd of 70 Squadron Royal Flying Corps 79 Replica F 1 on static display at The Museum of Flight near Seattle Washington 80 Specifications F 1 Camel edit nbsp Sopwith F 1 Camel drawing Data from Quest for Performance 81 Profile Publications 82 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 18 ft 9 in 5 72 m Wingspan 28 ft 0 in 8 53 m Height 8 ft 6 in 2 59 m Wing area 231 sq ft 21 5 m2 Aspect ratio 4 11 Airfoil RAF 16 83 Empty weight 930 lb 422 kg Gross weight 1 453 lb 659 kg Zero lift drag coefficient CD0 0378 Frontal area 8 73 square feet 0 811 m2 Powerplant 1 Clerget 9B 9 cylinder air cooled rotary piston engine 130 hp 97 kW Propellers 2 bladed fixed pitch wooden propeller Performance Maximum speed 113 mph 182 km h 98 kn Stall speed 48 mph 77 km h 42 kn Range 300 mi 480 km 260 nmi Service ceiling 19 000 ft 5 800 m Rate of climb 1 085 ft min 5 51 m s Lift to drag 7 7 Wing loading 6 3 lb sq ft 31 kg m2 Power mass 0 09 hp lb 0 15 kW kg Armament Guns 2 0 303 in 7 70 mm Vickers machine gunsNotable appearances in media editBiggles flies a Sopwith Camel in the novels by W E Johns during Biggles s spell in 266 Squadron during the First World War The first collection of Biggles stories titled The Camels are Coming was published in 1932 The first two collections of stories broken into three books in Australia were all true stories or events lightly fictionalised some of them are identifiable in official war records e g the accidental discovery of a major camouflaged airfield when rescuing a downed pilot 84 The Camel is the plane of Snoopy in the Peanuts comic strip when he imagines himself as a World War I flying ace and the nemesis of the Red Baron 85 See also editAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Albatros D V Fokker Dr I Fokker D VI Fokker D VII Hanriot HD 1 Nieuport 24 Royal Aircraft Factory S E 5 SPAD S XIII Vickers F B 19 Related lists List of aircraft of the Royal Air Force List of aircraft of the Royal Flying Corps List of aircraft of the Royal Naval Air Service List of fighter aircraftReferences editNotes edit As compared with radial engines in which a conventional rotating crankshaft is driven by a fixed engine block The ammunition in question was the RTS Richard Thelfall and Sons round a combined incendiary and explosive round with a nitroglycerin and phosphorus filling While more effective than earlier incendiary bullets such as the phosphorus filled Buckingham bullet they required careful handling and were initially banned from synchronised weapons both because of fears about the consequences of bullets striking the propeller of the fighter and to prevent cooking off of the sensitive ammunition in the chambers of the Vickers guns which fired from a closed bolt a required feature for guns used in synchronized mounts where heat could build up much quicker than in the open bolted Lewis gun 24 26 Citations edit Mason 1992 p 89 a b c Bruce Flight 22 April 1955 p 527 a b Bruce 1965 p 3 a b c d e Jackson 2007 p 2 Bruce 1965 pp 4 5 a b Bruce 1965 p 5 Bruce Flight 29 April 1955 p 563 a b Bruce 1965 p 6 Jon Guttman 2012 Sopwith Camel Oxford Osprey pp 9 16 30 ISBN 9781780961767 OCLC 775415602 Bruce 1965 pp 3 5 Bruce 1968 pp 148 149 Bruce 1965 pp 7 8 Bruce 1965 pp 5 6 Clark 1973 p 134 a b Hoyland Graham 2021 Merlin The Power behind the Spitfire Mosquito and Lancaster paperback London William Collins p 93 ISBN 978 0 00 835930 0 a b Jackson 2005 pp 15 16 Leinburger 2008 p 30 a b Bruce 1965 p 9 a b Jackson 2007 p 3 Sturtevant Ray Page Gordon 1993 The Camel File UK Air Britain Ltd p 6 ISBN 0 85130 212 2 Ralph 1999 p 80 a b Davis 1999 p 96 Davis 1999 p 98 a b Davis 1999 p 97 Bruce 1968 p 151 153 Williams and Gustin 2003 pp 11 14 Jackson 2007 pp 3 6 Jackson 2007 p 6 a b Davis 1999 pp 98 99 Fitzsimons p 521 a b Jackson 2007 pp 7 8 a b c d Jackson 2007 p 8 Jackson 2007 pp 8 10 a b Jackson 2007 p 10 Sopwith 2F 1 Ship s Camel Their Flying Machines Retrieved 10 June 2016 Mason 1992 p 91 Davis 1999 p 102 9 Bomb Squadron ACC Archived 27 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved 19 December 2010 17 Weapons Squadron ACC Archived 25 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved 19 December 2010 27 Fighters Squadron ACC Archived 23 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved 19 December 2010 37 Bomb Squadron ACC Archived 25 September 2011 at the Wayback MachineAir Force Historical Research Agency Retrieved 19 December 2010 Sopwith Camel Demobbed Out of Service British Military Aircraft 2015 Retrieved 28 July 2015 Airframe Dossier Sopwith Camel s n B5747 RAF Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 12 May 2017 New Aircraft On Display at NASM s Udvar Hazy Center Warbirds News 27 December 2017 Glenshaw Paul Javier Arango s Extraordinary Gifts Air amp Space Magazine Aeroplane Sopwith F 1 Camel Polish Aviation Museum NeoServer Retrieved 12 May 2017 Lincoln built Sopwith Camel from the First World War is restored to its former glory LincolnshireLive Local World 22 July 2010 Retrieved 12 May 2017 permanent dead link Sopwtih Camel National Naval Aviation Museum Naval Aviation Museum Foundation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Aircraft A5658 Data Airport Data com Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sopwith F1 Camel Royal Air Force Museum Trustees of the Royal Air Force Museum Retrieved 12 May 2017 Simpson Andrew 2015 INDIVIDUAL HISTORY F6314 PDF Royal Air Force Museum Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sopwith Camel Imperial War Museums Retrieved 12 May 2017 Ellis 2008 p 148 SOPWITH 2F 1 SHIP CAMEL Canada Aviation and Space Museum Canada Science and Technology Museums Corporation Archived from the original on 22 July 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sopwith Camel F 1 3 Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand Retrieved 27 March 2021 Oman Noel 16 March 2011 History Takes Flight Vintage aircraft sold to pay center s bills Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette Northwest Arkansas Newspapers LLC Retrieved 12 May 2017 FAA Registry N6254 Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Jackson 1988 p 349 Sopwith Camel replica B6401 Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm Museum Fleet Air Arm Museum Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sopwith F 1 Camel National Museum of the US Air Force 17 July 2015 Retrieved 12 May 2017 Aircraft Cavanaugh Flight Museum Retrieved 12 May 2017 FAA Registry N86678 Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sullivan Cole 1 January 2024 Historic Addison flight museum announces closure WFAA Dallas Texas Retrieved 4 January 2024 Sopwith Camel F1 replica Brooklands Museum Retrieved 12 May 2017 GINFO Search Results G BFCZ Civil Aviation Authority Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sopwith Camel Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2017 FAA Registry N7157Q Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 12 May 2017 FAA Registry N8343 Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sopwith Camel Replica The Canadian Museum of Flight Retrieved 27 January 2017 Sopwith F 1 Camel Aviation Heritage Museum Retrieved 12 May 2017 Sopwith Camel Shuttleworth Retrieved 12 May 2017 Civil Aviation Authority G BZSC Civil Aviation Authority Retrieved 12 May 2017 Kozura Tom Sopwith F1 Camel Koz Aero Retrieved 12 May 2017 FAA Registry N6557 Federal Aviation Administration U S Department of Transportation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Shaw John S Sopwith Camel Introduction John S Shaw Aviation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Shaw John S Le Clerget 9ba rotary engine John S Shaw Aviation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Shaw John S F AZZB John S Shaw Aviation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Shaw John S Gnome John S Shaw Aviation Retrieved 12 May 2017 Heritage Centre Layout Montrose Air Station Heritage Centre Ian McIntosh Memorial Trust Retrieved 12 November 2018 Sopwith Camel F 1 Reproduction The Museum of Flight Retrieved 6 November 2017 Loftin LK Jr Quest for Performance The Evolution of Modern Aircraft NASA SP 468 NASA Retrieved 22 April 2006 Bruce 1965 p 12 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Butts D 2000 Biggles Hero of the Air In Watkins T Jones D eds A Necessary Fantasy The Heroic Figure in Children s Popular Culture New York Garland Publishing pp 137 152 ISBN 0 8153 1844 8 Murphy and McNiece 2003 p 87 Bibliography edit Bowyer Chaz Sopwith Camel King of Combat Falmouth Cornwall UK Glasney Press 1978 ISBN 0 9502825 7 X Bruce J M Sopwith Camel Historic Military Aircraft No 10 Part I Flight 22 April 1955 pp 527 532 Bruce J M Sopwith Camel Historic Military Aircraft No 10 Part II Flight 29 April 1955 pp 560 563 Bruce J M Aircraft Profile No 31 The Sopwith Camel F 1 Profile Publications 1965 Bruce J M War Planes of the First World War Volume Two Fighters London Macdonald 1968 ISBN 0 356 01473 8 Clark Alan Aces High The War In The Air Over The Western Front 1914 1918 New York G P Putnam s Sons 1973 ISBN 0 297 99464 6 Cony Christophe April 1999 Une deception les Sopwith Camel belges A Disappointment The Belgian Sopwith Camels Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French No 73 pp 19 23 ISSN 1243 8650 Davis Mick Sopwith Aircraft Ramsbury Malborough UK The Crowood Press 1999 ISBN 1 86126 217 5 Ellis Ken Wrecks amp Relics 21st edition Manchester UK Crecy Publishing 2008 ISBN 978 0 85979 134 2 Gerdessen F July August 1999 Round Out More Windfalls Air Enthusiast No 82 pp 79 80 ISSN 0143 5450 Gerdessen Frederik Estonian Air Power 1918 1945 Air Enthusiast No 18 April July 1982 pp 61 76 ISSN 0143 5450 Guttman Jon Sopwith Camel Air Vanguard 3 Oxford Osprey Publishing 2012 ISBN 978 1 78096 176 7 Jackson A J British Civil Aircraft 1919 1972 Volume III London Putnam 1988 ISBN 0 85177 818 6 Jackson Robert Infamous Aircraft Dangerous Designs and their Vices Barnsley UK Pen and Sword 2005 ISBN 978 1 84415 172 1 Jackson Robert Britain s Greatest Aircraft Pen and Sword 2007 ISBN 1 84415 600 1 Klaauw Bart van der March April 1999 Unexpected Windfalls Accidentally or Deliberately More than 100 Aircraft arrived in Dutch Territory During the Great War Air Enthusiast No 80 pp 54 59 ISSN 0143 5450 Leinburger Ralf Fighter Technology Facts History London Parragon Inc 2008 ISBN 978 1 40549 575 2 Mason Francis K The British Fighter London Putnam 1992 ISBN 0 85177 852 6 Murphy Justin D and Matthew A McNiece Military Aircraft 1919 1945 An Illustrated History of their Impact Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO 2009 ISBN 1 85109 498 9 Ralph Wayne Barker VC The Classic Story of a Legendary First World War Hero London Grub Street 1999 ISBN 1 902304 31 4 Robertson Bruce Sopwith The Man and His Aircraft London Harleyford 1970 ISBN 0 900435 15 1 Sturtivant Ray and Gordon Page The Camel File Tunbridge Wells Kent UK Air Britain Historians Ltd 1993 ISBN 0 85130 212 2 Thomas Andrew In the Footsteps of Daedulus Early Greek Naval Aviation Air Enthusiast No 94 July August 2001 pp 8 9 ISSN 0143 5450 United States Air Force Museum Guidebook Wright Patterson AFB Ohio Air Force Museum Foundation 1975 Williams Anthony G and Emmanuel Gustin Flying Guns World War I and its Aftermath 1914 32 Ramsbury Wiltshire Airlife 2003 ISBN 1 84037 396 2 Winchester Jim ed Sopwith Camel Biplanes Triplanes and Seaplanes Aviation Factfile London Grange Books plc 2004 ISBN 1 84013 641 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sopwith Camel Cole Palen Nat deFlavia reproduction Camel at Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome Camel photos and links to museums with Camels Canadian Aviation Museum Camel Archived 26 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Sopwith fighters in Russia Sopwith Camel Replica Kit from Airdrome Aeroplanes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sopwith Camel amp oldid 1219418833, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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