- Sydney Camm
Sir Sydney Camm,
CBE , FRAeS (August 5 ,1893 ndashMarch 12 ,1966 ) was an English aeronautical engineer who contributed to many aircraft designs, from the biplanes of the 1920s to jet fighters. One particularly notable aircraft he designed is theHawker Hurricane fighter.Early Years
Camm was a towering giant as an aeronautical engineer, but his beginnings were humble. He developed an interest in aircraft at an early age and his first interest in
aeronautics was spurred on by his membership in theWindsor Model Aeroplane Club . His accomplishments as a model aeroplane builder culminated in a man-carrying glider which he and others at the club built in 1912.Fact|date=February 2007Aviation career
Camm joined the Hawker Aircraft Company (later
Hawker Siddeley ) as a draughtsman in 1925. He took part in the design of manyHawker aircraft, including the Hawker Tomtit, Cygnet, Hornbill, Nimrod, Hart and Fury.He then moved to designing planes that would become mainstays of the RAF in the Second World War including theHawker Hurricane ,Hawker Typhoon andHawker Tempest . With the Hawker Hurricane, Sydney Camm moved from the technology of thebiplane to contemporarymonoplane fighter aircraft. The result was that fighters flew faster, and with the improved engine technology of the time, higher, and could be made more deadly than ever.:"Camm had a one-tracked mind – his aircraft were right, and everybody had to work on them to get them right. If they did not, then there was hell. He was a very difficult man to work for, but you could not have a better aeronautical engineer to work under. [...] With regard to his own staff, he did not suffer fools gladly, and at times many of us appeared to be fools. One rarely got into trouble for doing something either in the ideas line, or in the manufacturing line, but woe betide those who did nothing, or who put forward an indeterminate solution." [ [http://www.eagle.ca/~harry/aircraft/typhoon/sir_camm.htm A recollection by Robert Lickey, an engineer who worked for Camm at Hawker Aircraft] ]
When the Typhoon's design first emerged and entered squadron service, pilots became aware that there was
elevator flutter and buffetting at high speeds, due to the positioning of the heavyNapier Sabre engine very close to the wing root. Also, engineering an aircraft to travel at higher speeds and handle compressibility effects was one of the challenges of the day, but with his small design team of 100 members at Hawker, Camm managed to solve these problems and make the Typhoon an effective combat weapon even at these speeds. As operational requirements changed, the Typhoon was used more in the role of a fighter-bomber where its low level performance and weapon-carrying capabilities created a legendary performance.The lessons learned on the Hawker Typhoon were incorporated in the follow-up to this design, the
Hawker Tempest . As soon as the Typhoon entered service, theAir Ministry requested a new design. Camm recommended that they keep the existing design of the Typhoon for the large part, with modifications to theaerofoil . He had also considered the new and powerfulNapier Sabre andBristol Centaurus engines. When the question came as to which engine to use, Camm decided that they would use "both". As it happened, the Tempest Mk 5 used the Napier Sabre, while the Tempest Mk 2 used the Bristol Centaurus. The design modifications to be made to the aircraft to switch from one engine type to another were minimal, so much so that there was little assistance needed in ferrying these aircraft all the way toIndia andPakistan , in the final days of the conflict.Postwar
After the Second World War, Sydney Camm created many jet powered designs which would became important aircraft in the
Cold War era. Notable among these are his contributions to theHawker P.1127 Kestrel, the progenitor of theHawker Siddeley Harrier . The Harrier is a well-knownvertical take-off and landing (VTOL ) aircraft designed at Hawker Siddeley, which would later merge into the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC), now known asBAE Systems . The Harrier was one of the radical concept aircraft which took shape in post-war Britain, which required the coming together of many important technology, such as vectored thrust engines like theRolls-Royce Pegasus and technologies like theReaction Control System . Camm played a major role in determining these and other vital Harrier systems. In 1953, he was knighted for these and other achievements and his contribution to British Aviation. [ [http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk/ViewPDF.aspx?pdf=39904&geotype=London&gpn=3676&type=ArchivedIssuePage&all=Sydney%20Camm&exact=&atleast=&similar= London Gazette 1953] ]Camm worked on many aircraft made by Hawker before the Harrier, including what is probably his most significant aircraft after the Second World War, the
Hawker Hunter .Before he died in 1966, he was planning the design of an aircraft to travel at Mach 4, or four times the speed of sound. It is humbling to imagine that his spectacular career in aircraft design started at a Windsor Model Aeroplane Club in 1912, where he built a glider capable of carrying a man just nine years after the first powered flight. Sydney Camm not only was witness to many developments in aviation, he also influenced the world of aviation significantly throughout his illustrious career.
ee also
*
Hawker Siddeley References
;Notes;Bibliography
* Bader, Douglas. "Fight for the Sky: The Story of the Spitfire and Hurricane". London: Cassell Military Books, 2004. ISBN 0-30435-674-3.
* Bowyer, Chaz. "Hurricane at War". London: Ian Allen Ltd., 1974. ISBN 0-7110-0665-2.
* Fozard, John W., Ed. "Sydney Camm & the Hurricane." London: Airlife, 1991. ISBN 1-85310-270-9.
* Jane, Fred T. "The Hawker Hurricane". "Jane’s Fighting Aircraft of World War II". London: Studio, 1946. ISBN 1-85170-493-0.
* Mason, Francis K. "Hawker Aircraft since 1920." London: Putnam, 1991. ISBN 0-85177-839-9.External links
* [http://www.gatwick-aviation-museum.co.uk/hunter_t7/hunter_t7.html Hawker Hunter]
* [http://www.aviation-history.com/hawker/typhoon.html Hawker Typhoon and Tempest]
* [http://www.gatwick-aviation-museum.co.uk/harrier/harrier.html Hawker Siddeley Harrier]
* [http://www.shanaberger.com/engines/Pegasus.htm Bristol Siddeley Pegasus Engine]
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