- Fairey Campania
Infobox Aircraft
name=Campania
caption=
type=Carrier-borne patrol and reconnaissance aircraft
manufacturer=Fairey Aviation
designer=
first flight=16 February 1917
introduced=
retired=August 1919
status=
primary user=Royal Naval Air Service
more users=Royal Air Force
produced=
number built=62cite book|first=Kenneth|last= Munson |title=Flying Boats and Seaplanes since 1910|publisher=Blandford]
unit cost=
variants with their own articles=The Fairey Campania was a British ship-borne, patrol and reconnaissance aircraft of theFirst World War . It was a single-engine, two-seatbiplane with twin main floats and backward-folding wings. The Campania was the first aeroplane ever designed specifically for carrier operations.Development
The
Royal Navy was an early leader in carrier aviation and, in the autumn of 1914, purchased the liner "Campania" for conversion into aseaplane carrier . Operating seaplanes required the carrier to stop to hoist the aircraft out- and in-board by crane, leaving the ship exceedingly vulnerable toU-Boat attacks and the technique fell into disfavour with theAdmiralty , who began to seek alternativesTaylor 1988, p.56 ] . By the middle of 1916, the "Campania" had been fitted with a 200-foot (60.9 m)flight deck forward and experiments were being carried out into launching aircraft from this. Against this background, the Admiralty issued a specification for a purpose-built, two-seat patrol and reconnaissance aircraft.The aircraft that Fairey designed in response first flew on 16 February 1917. This was the first of two prototypes, designated F.16 and powered by a 250-hp
Rolls-Royce Eagle IV. The second, powered by an Eagle V of 275-hp, was designated F.17. Both prototypes would later see active service operating fromScapa Flow .Operational history
Trials proving satisfactory, the type went into production and service. Most of the F.17s shipped aboard the carriers "Campania", "Nairana" and "Pegasus"; the first aircraft joined the "Campania" and the type took its name from her. Only the "Campania" possessed a flight-deck; Campanias operated from this using jettisonable, wheeled
bogie s fitted to the floats. The aircraft in the other ships took off from the water in the normal way.The 27 F.22s operated from RNAS air stations. The Campania had an undistinguished career but performed useful work as a spotter aeroplane. In all, 100 aircraft were ordered but only 62 were completed.
During the War of Intervention, some Campanias from Nairana operated against the
Bolsheviks from Archangel.The Campania was declared obsolete in August 1919.
Variants
* F.16 - 250 hp
Rolls-Royce Eagle IV
* F.17 - 275 hp Rolls-Royce Eagle V or 345 hp Eagle III
* F.22 - 260 hpSunbeam Maori IIOperators
; UK
*Royal Air Force
**No. 240 Squadron RAF
**No. 241 Squadron RAF
**No. 253 Squadron RAF
*Royal Naval Air Service pecifications (F.22)
aircraft specifications
plane or copter?= plane
jet or prop?= prop
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