- Fairey Fox
Infobox Aircraft
name = Fairey Fox
type = Light bomber
manufacturer =Fairey Aviation
caption = Fairey Fox Mk.IV of the Belgian Air Force.
designer =Marcel Lobelle
first flight =January 3 ,1925 (Mk.I)
introduced = June, 1926 (Mk.I)
retired =
status =
primary user =Royal Air Force
more users =Belgian Air Force
Air Force of Peru
produced =
number built =
unit cost =
variants with their own articles = The Fairey Fox was alight bomber and fighter biplane of the 1920s and 1930s. It was originally produced in Britain for the RAF, but continued in production and use inBelgium long after it was retired in Britain.The Fox Mk.I had equal chord upper and lower wings, single forward and rear guns. It was powered by the 450hp (340kW)
Curtiss D-12 in-line liquid-cooled engine, which had caught C.R. Fairey's attention when a Curtiss seaplane won the 1923Schneider Trophy race. Twenty-eight were built and served withNo. 12 Squadron RAF , which later adopted a fox's mask as squadron badge in memory of their sole usage of the aircraft. They were faster than any contemporary fighter aircraft.Two superannuated Fox Mk.Is took part in the 1934
MacRobertson Air Race fromLondon toMelbourne . Sadly, one of them occasioned the only fatalities of the race when it crashed inItaly . The other, commanded by AustralianRay Parer (a veteran of the 1919 England to Australia Air Race), had struggled no further thanParis when news came through that the race winner had completed the course. Parer and co-pilot Geoff Hemsworth continued an epic and eventful journey, taking nearly four months to reach Melbourne.Variants
The Fox Mk.IIM had a narrower chord lower wing and 480hp (360kW)
Rolls-Royce Kestrel engine. It was delivered to the Belgian Air Force from 1931. Twelve were built in Britain, and a further 31 under licence by Belgian Avions Fairey atGosselies .The Fox Mk III was a privately-funded version, which later became the one and only Fox Mk.IV prototype. The Fox Mk.IV was powered by a 578-kW (775-hp)
Hispano-Suiza engine.The Fox Mk.III Trainer was a two-seat training version, powered by a 269-kW (360-hp)
Armstrong Siddeley Serval engine. Only one aircraft was built. The Fox Mk.IIIS was the same aircraft, fitted with a supercharged Rolls-Royce Kestrel IIMS engine.The Fox Mk.III was a two-seat reconnaissance fighter version, armed with two forward-firing FN-Browning 7.62-mm (0.30-inch) machine-guns. Thirteen were built in Belgium.
The Fox Mk.IIIC two-seat army co-operation, reconnaissance biplane. The Mk.IIIC had an enclosed cockpit, and raised the forward fire-power to two machine guns, in a trough on the port side of the fuselage. Forty-eight were built in Belgium, including one Fox Mk IIICS dual-control trainer.
The Fox Mk.IV Floatplane was produced as a seaplane. Six were produced for the
Peru vian Air Force to serve during theColombia-Peru War of 1933, but by the time they had been delivered (in October 1933), Taylor 1974, p.202] the war was over. von Rauch 1984, p.4.] They later (with the floats removed) carried out observation duties in theEcuadorian-Peruvian war in 1941.The Fox Mk.VI, introduced in 1934, was a major improvement, with an enclosed cockpit, spatted wheels, and a much more powerful 641-kW (860-hp) Hispano-Suiza engine. About 85 were built, plus 15 Fox Mk.VIII fighters. The Mk.VIII was an improved version with two additional wing-mounted 7.62-mm (0.30-inch) FN-Browning machine-guns.
The Fox Mk.VIC was a two-seat fighter version, and the Fox Mk.VIR was a two-seat reconnaissance-fighter version.
The Fox Mk.V was the designation given by the parent company, to a single Fox Mk.VI aircraft in the United Kingdom, fitted with enclosed cockpits and wheel spats. When the aircraft returned to Belgium, it was fitted with the 619-kW (830-hp) Hispano-Suiza 12Y drs engine, and its wheel spats removed.
The Fox Mk.VII was a single-seat fighter version of the Fox Mk.VIR, it was armed with six machine-guns. Only two aircraft were built.
Over 100 Foxes were still in front-line service with the Belgian Air Force at the time of the German invasion on
May 10 ,1940 . Although massively outclassed by the aircraft of theLuftwaffe they flew about 100 sorties and even claimed one kill of aMesserschmitt Bf 109 .Operators
;BEL;PER;UK
*Royal Air Force
**No. 12 Squadron RAF pecifications (Fairey Fox Mk.VI)
aircraft specifications
plane or copter?=plane
jet or prop?=prop
ref=
crew=2
capacity=
payload main=
payload alt=
length main= 29 ft 8 in
length alt= 9 m
span main= 37 ft 8 in
span alt= 11.5 m
height main= 10 ft 10 in
height alt= 3.3 m
area main= 370 ft²
area alt= 34.4 m²
airfoil=
empty weight main= 3,950 lb
empty weight alt= 1,790 kg
loaded weight main= 5,400 lb
loaded weight alt= 2,450 kg
useful load main=
useful load alt=
max takeoff weight main=
max takeoff weight alt=
more general=
engine (jet)=
type of jet=
number of jets=
thrust main=
thrust alt=
thrust original=
afterburning thrust main=
afterburning thrust alt=
engine (prop)= Hispano-Suiza 12 Ybrs
type of prop=
number of props=1
power main= 860 hp
power alt= 640 kW
power original=
max speed main= 230 mph @ 13,120 ft
max speed alt= 370 km/h @ 4,000 m
cruise speed main=
cruise speed alt=
stall speed main=
stall speed alt=
never exceed speed main=
never exceed speed alt=
range main= 370 miles
range alt= 600 km
ceiling main= 23,000 ft
ceiling alt= 7,000 m
climb rate main= 2,500 ft/min
climb rate alt= 760 m/min
loading main=
loading alt=
thrust/weight=
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power/mass alt=
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armament=
* Guns
** 2 forward machine guns
** 1 rearLewis Gun
* Bombs
** 528 lb (240 kg)
avionics=ee also
aircontent
|related=
*Fairey Firefly similar aircraft=
*Hawker Hart
*Renard R.31 References
Notes
Bibliography
* Pacco, John. "Fairey Fox" "Belgisch Leger/Armee Belge: Het militair Vliegwezen/l'Aeronautique militaire 1930-1940". Artselaar, Belgium, 2003, pp. 39-48. ISBN 90-801136-6-2.
* von Rauch, Herbert. "A South American Air War...The Letcia Conflict." "Air Enthusiast ". Issue 26, December 1984-March 1985. Bromley, Kent, UK: Pilot Press Ltd. Pages 1-8. ISSN 0143-5450.
* Taylor, H A. "Fairey Aircraft since 1915". London: Putnam and Company, 1974. ISBN 0-370-00065-X.
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