Gloster E.28/39
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Gloster E.28/39 | |
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The first E.28/39 prototype | |
Type | Experimental prototype |
Manufacturer | Gloster Aircraft Company |
Designed by | George Carter |
Maiden flight | 15 May 1941 |
Primary user | Royal Aircraft Establishment |
Number built | 2 prototypes |
The Gloster E.28/39, (also referred to as the "Gloster Whittle", "Gloster Pioneer", or "Gloster G.40") was the first jet engined aircraft to fly in the United Kingdom. Developed to test the new Whittle jet engine in flight, the test results would influence the development of an operational fighter, the Gloster Meteor.
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[edit] Design and development
In September 1939, the Air Ministry issued a specification to Gloster for an aircraft to test one of Frank Whittle's turbojet designs in flight. Working closely with Whittle, Gloster's chief designer George Carter laid out a small low-wing aircraft of conventional configuration. The jet intake was in the nose, and the tail-fin and elevators were mounted above the jet-pipe. A contract for two prototypes was signed by the Air Ministry on 3 February 1940 and the first of these was completed by April 1941.
The E.28/39 name comes from the aircraft having been built to the 28th "Experimental" specification issued by the Air Ministry in 1939.
[edit] Testing
The aircraft was delivered to Hucclecote for ground tests beginning on April 7, using a non-flightworthy version of the Power Jets W.1 engine. With these satisfactorily completed, the aircraft was fitted with a new engine, and on 15 May, Gloster's chief test pilot, Flight Lieutenant Gerry Sayer flew the aircraft under jet power for the first time from RAF Cranwell, near Sleaford in Lincolnshire. The flight lasted 17 minutes and was a complete success. Tests continued with increasingly refined versions of the engine over the following months. Later in the test program, small, auxiliary fins were added near the tips of the tailplanes to provide additional stability in high-speed flight. [1]
The E.28/39 specification had actually required the aircraft to carry two Browning .303 machine guns in each wing, but these were never fitted.
The second prototype (Serial W4046) joined the test programme on March 1, 1943, initially powered by a Rover W2B engine. Testing had revealed problems with engine oil and lubricants. The second prototype was destroyed on 30 July in a crash resulting from an aileron failure, attributed to the use of the wrong type of grease in the aileron controls. One aileron had "stuck in position, sending the aircraft out of control" [2]. The test pilot successfully bailed out.
The first prototype continued flight tests until 1944 by which time, more advanced turbojet-powered aircraft were available. Although the Gloster E.28/39 was not able to achieve high speeds, it proved to be a capable experimental platform and exhibited a "good climb rate and ceiling" [3]. Moreover, experience with the E.28/39 paved the way for Britain's first operational jet fighter aircraft, the Gloster Meteor.
[edit] Survivors
In 1946, the first prototype (Serial W4041) was placed in the British Science Museum (London), where it is still exhibited. A full-size replica has been placed on an obelisk on a roundabout near the northern perimeter of Farnborough airfield in Hampshire as a memorial to Sir Frank Whittle. A similar full-size model is on display in the middle of a roundabout at Lutterworth in Leicestershire (pictured below) where the aircraft's engine was produced.
[edit] Specifications (Gloster E.28/39)
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General characteristics
- Crew: One
- Length: 25 ft 4 in (7.74 m<)
- Wingspan: 29 ft 0 in (8.84 m)
- Height: 8 ft 10 in (2.70 m)
- Wing area: 146 ft² (13.6 m²)
- Empty weight: 2,886 lb (1,309 kg)
- Loaded weight: 3,748 lb (1,700 kg)
- Powerplant: 1× Power Jets W.1 turbojet, 860 lb.ft (3.8 kN)
Performance
- Maximum speed: 466 mph at 10,000 ft (750 km/h at 3,050 m)
- Range: 410 mi (660 km)
- Service ceiling: 32,000 ft (9,755 m)
- Rate of climb: 1,363 ft/min (6.9 m/s)
- Wing loading: lb/ft² (kg/m²)
- Thrust/weight: 0.23
Armament
- None; provision for 4× 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine guns
[edit] References
- Winchester, Jim. X-Planes and Prototypes. London: Amber Books Ltd., 2005. ISBN 1-904687-40-7.
[edit] External links
[edit] Related content
Designation sequence
Gauntlet - Gladiator - F.9/37- E.28/39 - Meteor - E.1/44 - Javelin
Related lists
List of World War II jet aircraft
See also
- Heinkel He 178 - world's first turbojet aircraft.
- Heinkel He 280 - first turbojet-powered fighter design
- Messerschmitt Me 262 - The world's first operational jet fighter.
- Bell P-59A
- P-80 Shooting Star - The first US operational jet-fighter aircraft.
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