The Beaufighter had two qualities which the the Bristol Blenheim lacked
- speed and fire-power.
Before the advent of the Second World War the multiengined two-seat fighter had received
sporadic attention in most countries, but as the fighter was envisaged primarily as a day
interceptor, a task which could be fulfilled most effectively by the less expensive single seat
single-engined machine, little real effort was placed behind the development of the longer-ranging,
heavier combat aircraft, except in Germany where the long-range strategic fighter received close
attention from the mid-'thirties, resulting in the
Bf 110 .
Britain's lack of long-range heavy fighters
when the war started was a source of acute embarrassment to the R.A.F. Single-engined
interceptors such as the
Hurricane and
Spitfire
lacked the endurance for effective standing patrols,
and it was soon discovered that the heavy long-range fighter would be invaluable to perform a
wide variety of tasks. The result was a piece of true British improvisation--the Bristol
Beaufighter, which entered service a year after the outbreak of war, at a time when it was most
sorely needed.
Built as a company-funded long-range fighter (using major components from
the earlier
Beaufort torpedo-bomber),
the prototype Beaufighter first flew on July 17,1939, with Captain Uwins at
the controls. This was little more than eight months after the design had
been initiated. Exactly two weeks earlier, before the first flight,
a production contract for 300
machines had been placed to specification F. 17/39.
This seemingly desperate measure by the Air Ministry was,
by 1938 to 1939, not uncommon, as it helped speed up the production of
much-needed combat planes.
When No 29 Squadron of the Royal Air Force became fully operational with
the Beaufighter Mk IF in October 1940, it marked the beginning of
operations by a night fighter that was completely capable of performing its
task. For although the
Bristol Blenheim IF,
also equipped with the new A.I.
airborne interception radar, was operational, the Beaufighter had two
qualities which the other lacked - speed and fire-power. Once a Beaufighter
had detected a German
Bf 110
night bomber, a single short burst from its four cannon was often
sufficient to shoot down the enemy.
The fact that a heavy twin-engined fighter such as the Beaufighter was available as soon as the
late autumn of 1940 was largely due to the foresight and enterprise of the Bristol Aeroplane
Company in envisaging the probable need for a high-performance long-range fighter capable of
undertaking duties of a more aggressive nature than those foreseen by official specifications. At
the end of 1938 L. G. Frise and his design team began the design of what was virtually a fighter
variant of the Beaufort general reconnaissance and torpedo-bomber. The initial proposal was
framed, as far as possible, to meet the requirements of specification F.11/37, and envisaged an
aeroplane using a large proportion of Beaufort components, including the wings, tail assembly and
undercarriage, a pair of
Hercules
radial engines and carrying a battery of four
20-mm. Hispano cannon.
The economy of the proposal was of obvious appeal to the government, struggling to
meet the vast requirements of a major rearmament program, and, as the Type 156, four
prototypes were ordered.
To the Japanese, the Beaufighter became known as "The Whispering Death"
because of the speed at which one could suddenly strike and turn for home.
The Beaufighter prototype (R2052) had
two-speed supercharged
Bristol Hercules
radials which were mounted well ahead of the wing
leading edges to avoid vibration. This necessitated cutting down on other weight forward of the
c.g. and resulted in the Beaufighter's characteristic abbreviated fuselage nose. The main fuselage
and the engine mountings were, in fact, the only entirely new components. The outer wings,
including the ailerons, flaps and tanks; the whole of the retractable landing gear and hydraulic
systems; and the aft section of the fuselage, complete with tailplane, elevators, fin, rudder and tail
wheel, were identical to those of the Beaufort, while the center section, with tanks and flaps, was
similar apart from certain fittings. Official trials commenced at an all-up weight of 16,000 lb. after
the first prototype's delivery to the R.A.F. on April 2, 1940, and a maximum speed of 335 m.p.h.
was attained at 16,800 feet.
As production continued, additional versions appeared, differing in engines installed and in other
ways. Beaufighters were used in many theaters of war and for varied duties, performing
particularly well in the Western Desert thanks to their long range. Coastal Command of the RAF
received several torpedo-carrying versions which were responsible for sinking a great deal of
enemy shipping. The last and most numerous was the superb Mk X, which could carry a large
torpedo or bombs and rocket projectiles, and claimed among its victories several German
submarines.
The Beaufighter IF was soon bearing the brunt of the action against German night bombers.
weighing up to 20,800 lb., it attained a maximum speed of 323 m.p.h. at 15,000 feet, had a range
of 1,500 miles at 194 m.p.h., an initial climb rate of 1,850 ft./min., and a service ceiling of 28,900
feet. Although the Beaufighter IF handled well it was tricky under certain conditions. There was a
strong tendency to swing on take-off and the danger of flick rolling in the event of an engine
cutting suddenly. On landing, the Beaufighter's large flap area pulled the aircraft up rapidly, but
there was a tendency to veer from the straight which, if unchecked, resulted in a ground loop, the
c.g. being so far aft. The first few Beaufighter Is were delivered without the wing-mounted
machine-guns, and initially it was found that when the cannon were fired the recoil caused the
nose to dip enough for the pilot to lose his target. The seriousness of this fault was such that
thought was given to alternative armament and, with one pair of cannon and the wing-mounted
machine-guns supplanted by a Boulton Paul turret containing four 0.303-in. guns and mounted
just aft of the pilot's cockpit, the Beaufighter V was produced. Only two examples (R2274 and
R2306) were completed, both being converted
Merlin engined Mark IIs, and these were used
experimentally by No. 29 Squadron during the early months of 1942, but the installation of the
turret drastically reduced performance, and the Beaufighter V was abandoned.
The Bristol Beaufighter entered service a year after the
outbreak of war, at a time when it was most sorely needed. Shown above is
the first prototype Beaufighter (R2052)
The Beaufighter T.F.X was the final major production variant and passed through several
important modification stages without any change in its Mark number. These included, in
particular, the introduction of A.I.Mk.VIII radar in a "thimble" nose--this radar having been found
suitable for ASV use--and a large dorsal fin (after a trial installation on a Beaufighter 11, T3032)
to give the required directional stability and linked with an increase in elevator area to improve
longitudinal stability. Before deliveries of the Beaufighter X could begin, a batch of sixty
Beaufighter VIs with
Hercules XVI
engines and provision for torpedo-carrying was built. These
were designated Beaufighter VI (I.T.F.)--interim torpedo fighter--and
were converted to Mark Xs when more
Hercules XVII
engines became available.
To the Japanese, the Beaufighter became known as "The Whispering Death"
(not be confused with "Whistling Death
F4U Corsair )
which gives some idea of the speed at which one could suddenly appear,
strike and turn for home. Beaufighters were also flown by the air forces of
Australia, New Zealand and, in small numbers, the US. In Britain they
remained flying as target tugs throughout the 1950s.
When the last Beaufighter (SR919) left the Bristol Aeroplane Company's Weston-super-Mare
works on September 21, 1945, a total of 5,562 aircraft of this type had been produced in the
United Kingdom. Of these some 1,063 were Mark Vls and 2,231 were Mark
Xs. During its operational career it had played a prime role in defeating the Luftwaffe's night
"blitz" of 1940-1941, and it had operated in every major campaign of the war, carrying out the last
operational sortie of the European war, a strike against German shipping in the Skagerrak, and
serving with distinction in the Pacific until the capitulation of Japan. The Beaufighter may have
been the product of improvisation but it was a remarkably successful one.
Once a Beaufighter
had detected a German night bomber, a single short burst from its four
cannon was often sufficient to shoot down the enemy. Shown left is the
Beaufighter I (X7579) with experimental A.I.Mk.VIII radar "thimble" nose.
Specifications: Bristol Beaufighter T.F.X
Powerplants:
Two Bristol Hercules XVII fourteen-cylinder two-row sleeve-valve
radial engines rated at 1,725 h.p. (1,286 kw) @ 2,900 r.p.m. for take-off
and 1,395 h.p. (1,040 kw) @ 2,400 r.p.m. at 1,500 ft. (457 m).
Dimensions:
Length: 41 ft. 4 in. (12.59 m)
Height: 15 ft. 10 in. (4.84 m)
Wing span: 57 ft. 10 in. (17.64 m)
Weights:
Empty: 15,592 lb (7,072 kg)
Maximum: 25,400 lb. (11,521 kg)
Disposable Load: 9,808 lb. (4,448 kg)
Maximum speed:
305 m.p.h. (490 km/h) @ sea-level.
320 m.p.h. (514 km/h) @ 10,000 ft. (3,048 m)
Service ceiling: 19,000 ft. (5,791 m) (without torpedo)
Range:
1,400 miles (2,253 km) with torpedo and normal fuel.
1,750 miles (2,816 km) with torpedo and long-range tanks.
Armament: Four 20-mm. Hispano cannon in the fuselage nose and
six 0.303-in. machine-guns in the wings and one 0.303-in. Vickers "K"
or Browning gun in the dorsal position. One 18-in. torpedo
externally under fuselage. Eight rocket projectiles could be carried as
alternative to the wing guns.