Avro Tutor
Avro 621 Tutor | |
---|---|
Avro Type 621 Tutor of the Shuttleworth Collection | |
Role | Trainer |
Manufacturer | Avro |
Designer | Roy Chadwick |
First flight | 1930 |
Introduction | 1933 |
Retired | 1941 |
Primary user | Royal Air Force |
Number built | 606 |
Variants | Avro 626, PWS-18 |
A.V. Roe's Type 621 Tutor[1][2] was a two-seat British radial-engined biplane from the interwar period. It was a simple but rugged initial trainer that was used by the Royal Air Force as well as many other air arms worldwide.
Design and development
The Avro Model 621 was designed by Roy Chadwick as an Avro private venture metal replacement for the Avro 504. Conceived as a light initial pilot trainer, the biplane design featured heavily staggered equal span, single-bay wings; the construction was based on steel tubing (with some wooden components in the wing ribs) with doped linen covering. A conventional, fixed divided main undercarriage with tail skid was used in all but the latest aircraft, which had a tail wheel.
The Model 621 was powered either by a 155 hp (116 kW) Armstrong Siddeley Mongoose or Armstrong Siddeley Lynx IV (180 hp/130 kW) or IVC (240 hp/179 kW) engine; later Lynx-powered models had the engine enclosed in a Townend ring cowling. The Mongoose powered version was called the 621 Trainer and the more numerous Lynx-engined aircraft the Tutor. The Tutor also differed by having a more rounded rudder.
The first flight of the prototype G-AAKT was in September 1929, piloted by Avro chief test pilot Captain Harry Albert "Sam" Brown.
Operational history
Production was started against an order for three from the Irish Free State and 21 Trainers from the Royal Air Force. The RAF required a replacement for the wooden Avro 504, and after three years of trials against other machines such as the Hawker Tomtit it was adopted as their basic trainer, supplanting the 504 in 1933 and remaining in this role until 1939. As well as the 21 Trainers a total of 381 Tutors and 15 Avro 646 Sea Tutors were eventually ordered by the RAF. Subsequently, the Model 621 achieved substantial foreign sales. A.V. Roe and Co exported 29 for the Greek Air Force, six for the Royal Canadian Air Force, five for the Kwangsi AF, three for the Irish AF (where it was known as the Triton) and two for each of the South African and Polish AFs. In addition 57 were licence built in South Africa, and three licence built by the Danish Naval Shipyard.
A total of 30 Tutors were exported to the Greek Air Force and at least 61 were licence built [3] in Greece by KEA. A number of Greek Tutors was incorporated in combat squadrons after Greece's entrance in WWII, used as army co-operation aircraft.
Known for its good handling, the type was often featured at air shows. Over 200 Avro Tutors and five Sea Tutors remained in RAF service at the beginning of the Second World War.
The 621 was designed as a military trainer and few reached the civil registers. In the 1930s, in addition to 10 prototypes and demonstrators, two were used by Alan Cobham's Flying Circus and two trainers were retired from the RAF into private use. One 621 was used from new by Australian National Airways. After the war another four ex-RAF 621s appeared on the civil register.
Variants
- Avro 621 Trainer (Mongoose powered)
- Two-seat primary training aircraft.
- Avro 621 Tutor (Lynx powered)
- Two-seat primary training aircraft.
- Avro 621 Tutor II
- One aircraft was modified into a two bay biplane.
- Avro 621 survey version
- Three built and served in what was the Tanganyika.
- Avro 646 Sea Tutor
- Two-seat seaplane fitted with twin floats, 15 built
Operators
- Czechoslovak Air Force pilots operated at least one aircraft in 310 Fighter Squadron RAF[4].
- Danish Air Force operated five aircraft.
- Royal Canadian Air Force operated six aircraft.[5].
- Chinese Nationalist Air Force (Kwangsi Airforce ) operated five aircraft.
- Iraqi Air Force operated three aircraft.
- Irish Air Corps operated three aircraft.
- Hellenic Air Force operated about 90 aircraft.
- Polish Air Force received two aircraft.
- South African Air Force operated 60 aircraft.
- Royal Air Force received 417 aircraft.
Survivors
G-AHSA was used for communication duties during the Second World War, struck off December 1946 and purchased by Wing Commander Heywood. After suffering engine failure in the early stages of the filming of Reach for the Sky, it was purchased by the Shuttleworth Collection and restored to flying condition.[6]
Up to the end of 2003, G-AHSA was still flying as K3215 in RAF trainer yellow. Since January 2004 it has flown painted as K3241 in the colours of the Central Flying School. (The real K3241 built in 1933, served RAF College Cranwell, until transferred to the CFA in 1936.)
Specifications (Tutor)
Data from Avro Aircraft since 1908 [7]
General characteristics
- Crew: Two (student & instructor)
Performance
See also
Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
Related lists
References
Notes
- ^ Jackson 1990, pp. 283–291.
- ^ Thetford 1957, pp. 46–47.
- ^ Official Greek Air Force site, info about 621 Tutor
- ^ Vančata 2006, p. 2.
- ^ Avro 621 Tutor (RCAF)
- ^ The Shuttleworth Collection - Avro Tutor www.shuttleworth.org Retrieved: 8 April 2010
- ^ Jackson 1990, p. 290.
Bibliography
- Jackson, A.J. Avro Aircraft since 1908, 2nd edition. London: Putnam Aeronautical Books, 1990. ISBN 0-85177-834-8.
- Thetford. O. Aircraft of the Royal Air Force 1918-57. London: Putnam, 1957.
- Vančata, Pavel. "Cechoslováci v zahraničním odboji". Revi (bi-monthly magazine) #65. Ostrava-Poruba: REVI Publications, 2006. ISSN 1211-0744 (Czech language).