 | Firefly night fighters| Aircraft Requests Discuss Firefly night fighters in the Aviation forums; Were the Firefly night fighters (NF I or NF II versions) deployed with RN during WW2? AFAIK they arrived too ... |
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08-02-2007, 02:45 PM
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#1 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 194
Country: | Firefly night fighters Were the Firefly night fighters (NF I or NF II versions) deployed with RN during WW2? AFAIK they arrived too late to see combat with British Pacific Fleet.
Max |
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08-23-2007, 12:23 PM
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#2 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 194
Country: | And what about Fulmar night fighters? I can't find the number of them converted, and I have few informations about them as well (what kind of radar/equipmente did they have??).
I hope to get some answers.
Thanks in advance
Max |
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08-23-2007, 06:03 PM
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#3 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: London
Posts: 2,607
| I don't think any of these, Firefly or Fulmar were deployed. |
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08-24-2007, 01:34 AM
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#4 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,139
Country: | The Fairey Firefly NF Mk II (third from the top), was never used operationally. In fact the 37 examples that were produced from the Hayes assembly line were converted back to Mk I standard, and the contract for Mk Is was eventually cut back by a similar quantity. And no production aircraft were destined to be delivered to the NF Mk I standard. Instead the FR Mk I, also carrying the ASH radar (top profile) became numerically the most important production variant of the initial mark of Firefly, deliveries to the FAA commencing late in 1944. F Mk Is subsequently converted to FR Mk I standard by the addition of ASH radar, being redesignated F Mk IAs.
I think. Sounds complicated. 
Last edited by Graeme : 08-24-2007 at 03:34 AM.
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08-24-2007, 04:32 AM
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#5 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,139
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by maxs75 And what about Fulmar night fighters? I can't find the number of them converted, and I have few informations about them as well (what kind of radar/equipmente did they have??).
I hope to get some answers.
Thanks in advance
Max | The Fulmar Mk II was fitted with Air Interception (AI) radar Mark VI at Lee-on-Solent, but the results were poor and this led to the installation of the modified AI Mk IV being substituted. Extra drag and other problems held up the issue to front-line squadrons until February 1944, but this version was used from June 1942 to train night fighters crews in preparation for the Fairey Firefly.
Around 100 Fulmar IIs were converted to night fighters, in more or less equal numbers for operational and training purposes. The arrival of of a new lightweight high-frequency wireless telegraphy set', in early 1942, enabled the Fulmars to operate effectively as long-range reconnaissance aircraft over the Indian Ocean. |
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08-24-2007, 06:20 AM
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#6 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: London
Posts: 2,607
| I dread to think of the performance of the Fulmar with a radar set. |
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08-24-2007, 12:48 PM
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#7 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 194
Country: | Graeme, Thank you very much!
Anyway, the Firefly NF I was built (converted from Mk I) carrying radar (ASH???).
Can you list the models of the Firefly profiles?
From top:
FR I / F IA (NF I similar?)
???
NF II
....
And do you have a profile for Fulmar NF?
Thanks
Max |
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08-24-2007, 05:01 PM
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#8 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,139
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by maxs75 Graeme, Thank you very much!
Anyway, the Firefly NF I was built (converted from Mk I) carrying radar (ASH???).
Can you list the models of the Firefly profiles?
From top:
FR I / F IA (NF I similar?)
???
NF II
....
And do you have a profile for Fulmar NF?
Thanks
Max | Good breakdown of numerous Firefly variants at this site. British Aircraft of World War II - Fairey Firefly
Resident radar experts. http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/rad...adar-5069.html (AN/APS-4A Radar)
Profiles from top to bottom;
FR Mk 1
T Mk 2
NF Mk 2
TT Mk 1
FR Mk 4 (Mks 5 and 6 similar)
T Mk 7
U Mk 8
U Mk 9
Have Fulmar profiles, but not with radar attached. |
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08-25-2007, 07:18 AM
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#9 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Elbląg/Poland
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Originally Posted by Graeme | Who is the expert? Me?
My knowlege about Firefly is rather poor, but I can say about radars:
FR Mk I - yes, that's AN/APS-4 (ASH) radar on external pod
NF Mk II - the AI Mk X is an British designation of the US SCR-720B microwave radar (lighter and simplified version of SCR-520 radar)
__________________ "Polish soldier fights for freedom of the other nations, but dies only for Poland" - gen. Stanisław Maczek |
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08-25-2007, 07:34 AM
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#10 | | Senior Member
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Originally Posted by net_sailor Who is the expert? Me?  | I googled ' ASH Radar World War 2' and there you were, at the top of the list! Congratulations! |
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08-25-2007, 05:33 PM
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#11 | | Senior Member
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Originally Posted by Glider I dread to think of the performance of the Fulmar with a radar set. | Not good!
I've read that two Fulmar Mk Is (N1856 and N1857) were earmarked to receive floats. However the decision (wisely) was made to complete them as land planes.
Diving a Fulmar must have been interesting...
From A.&A.E.E. Boscombe Down Report No. 757. Quote: |
Dive tests with N1855 from 16,000ft at an angle of 90 degrees took the machine to 415mph: with throttle closed and pulling out of the dive at 4,000ft it reached 4g. The aircraft was extremely steady in the dive but the covers of both starboard inner stowage and the rear ammunition box were torn off, the lower portion of the engine cowling bulged inwards and the starboard side of the cowling cracked along its lower edge. During the dive recovery the pilot’s canopy closed itself although it was locked back open.
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08-27-2007, 03:53 PM
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#12 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 194
Country: | Thanks,
the anwers are clear.
Wasn't the SCR-720 radar the model that equipped P-61? I guess that the space in front of a P-61 is much larger than the one that can be fitted in an external pod of a Firefly. Was the antenna different?
Max |
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08-28-2007, 02:24 AM
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#13 | | Senior Member
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Originally Posted by maxs75 Wasn't the SCR-720 radar the model that equipped P-61? I guess that the space in front of a P-61 is much larger than the one that can be fitted in an external pod of a Firefly. Was the antenna different? | Yes, SCR-720 was installed on P-61 but radar insltallation could differ on different aircrafts. The weight of full radar equipment colud reach 850lb, but in poorer version 412 lb only (very fexible, isn't?). There were some differences also between British and American version. For example US SCR-720 radar has an AN/CPN-6 IFF interogator included in the set which wasn't used on British AI Mk. X sets due to incompatability with their IFF systems.
However the antenna housing seems too small to cover the rotaiting dish, I think it could be fixed.
I foud AI Mk. X set fitted on Mosqito, see how big radome is needed to cover the rotating dish: Mosquito_NF-30_AI_Mk_X_radar.pdf
__________________ "Polish soldier fights for freedom of the other nations, but dies only for Poland" - gen. Stanisław Maczek |
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08-28-2007, 04:16 PM
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#14 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 194
Country: | Thanks.
Smaller and fixed antenna. Probably this is another cause of the NF II failure...
Do you have any profile or description of the Fulmar radar installation (AI Mk IV) ?
Max |
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08-29-2007, 12:08 PM
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#15 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Elbląg/Poland
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Country: | I found some info in "Fairey Fulmar Mks I & II" by David Brown Aircraft Profile No. 254, Profile Publications 1973. I'm too lazy to rewrite all description of radar installation, so i scanned this text: Fulmar NF.jpg
and the single photo (the same source): Fulmar NF_photo.jpg
__________________ "Polish soldier fights for freedom of the other nations, but dies only for Poland" - gen. Stanisław Maczek |
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