Fairey Albacore
Template:Infobox Aircraft The Fairey Albacore was a single-engine carrier-borne biplane torpedo bomber built by Fairey Aviation between 1939 and 1943 for the Fleet Air Arm. It had a three-man crew and was designed for spotting and reconnaissance as well as delivering bombs and torpedoes. The Albacore, popularly known as the "Applecore", was conceived as a replacement for the ageing Fairey Swordfish, which had entered service in 1936. However, the Albacore served with the Swordfish and was retired before it, being replaced by the monoplane Fairey Barracuda torpedo bomber.
Development
The Albacore prototypes were built to meet Specification S.41/36 for a three-seat TSR (torpedo/spotter/reconnaissance) for the FAA to replace the Swordfish. While the Albacore had a more powerful engine than the Swordfish, and was more aerodynamically refined, being fitted with an enclosed canopy for the tree man crew, it was still a biplane, and so offered little performance advantage over the Swordfish, being outperformed by its foreign contemporaries such as the TBD Devastator or the Nakajima B5N. The first of two prototypes flew on December 12 1938 [1] and production of the first batch of 98 aircraft began in 1939. Early Albacores were fitted with the Bristol Taurus II engine and those built later received the more powerful Taurus XII.
A total of 800 Albacores were built [1].
Operational History
No. 826 Squadron FAA was specially formed to operate the first Albacores in March, 1940 [2], being used for attacks against harbours and shipping in the English Channel, operating from shore bases, and for convoy escort for the rest of 1940. Carrier-based squadrons began operating the Albacore in 1941. Initially, the Albacore suffered from reliability problems with the Taurus engine, although these were later solved, so that the failure rate was no worse than the Pegasus that equipped the Swordfish [1]. It remained less popular than the Swordfish, however, as it was less agile, with the controls being too heavy for a pilot to take effective evasive action after dropping a torpedo [1].
Eventually there were 15 FAA squadrons equipped with the plane [2] which operated widely in the Mediterranean. Albacores participated in the Battle of Cape Matapan and the fighting at El Alamein as well as supporting the landings at Sicily and Salerno. During the period September 1941 to end of June 1943 No. 828 Squadron FAA, Hal-Far, Malta, operated a squadron of TSR Fairey Albacores under some of the most severe blitz conditions imaginable during the siege of Malta, mainly against Italian shipping and shore targets in Sicily.
In 1943 the Albacore was progressively replaced in Fleet Air Arm service by the Barracuda. The last FAA Albacore squadron, No. 841, (which had been used for shore based attacks against shipping in the Channel for the whole of its career with the Albacore) [2], disbanded in late 1943. The Royal Canadian Air Force took over the Albacores and used them during the Normandy invasion, for a similar role until July 1944.
Operators
Specifications (Albacore)
Data from The British Bomber since 1914[1]
General characteristics
- Crew: Three
Performance
- Climb to 6000 ft 8 min
Armament
- One fixed forward-firing 0.303 in (7.7 mm) machine gun in starboard wing
- One or two Vickers K machine guns in rear cockpit.
- 1 x 1,670 lb (760 kg) torpedo or 2,000 lb (900 kg) bombs
References
External links
One Fairey Albacore claimed to have shot down a JU87 in combat at Kirkenes in 1941, although this does not come clear from this article from the Fleet Air Arm Archive. It is said to be the only kill ever achieved by an Albacore. The JU87 was one of several returning to base in Kirkenes from a bomb raid at Murmansk and enganged in the combat against the Albacores almost by accident.
Related content
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era Fairey Swordfish