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Allied and Soviet Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the Air Forces of the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. |
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Mosquito Prototypes W4050 etc
Apparently the first prototype W4050 was dismantled and taken to Hatfield for its fist flight, but I understand that W4051 and W4052 were flown out of a nearby field adjacent to Salisbury Hall.
How many of the W4050-W4099 batch were built at Salisbury Hall. I guess they stopped at prototypes rather than any production aircraft at Salisbury Hall? Also I understand that W4050 actually has the fuselage on W4051, as W4050 was cracked beyond repair when the talewheel broke sometime during its testing days. Sadly I can't find confirmation.
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Larry Hayward |
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Re: Mosquito Prototypes W4050 etc
Your best person to speak to is Ian Thirsk-I can forward an email to him if you want
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Re: Mosquito Prototypes W4050 etc
Hello,
From Ian Thirsk's , de Havilland Mosquito Vol.2: W4050, The Mosquito Prototype. In early February 1941 W4050 received a coat of Dark Earth and Dark Green camouflage on its upper surfaces in readiness for service acceptance trials at the A&AEE Boscombe Down (large 'circle P' markings also being applied to the fuselage sides aft of the roundel). Delivered to the Performance Testing Squadron at Boscombe Down on 19 February, W4050 greatly impressed the A&AEE test pilots, but on 24 February, while being taxied by Flt Lt Slee, W4050's fuselage fractured after after the tailwheel jammed (due to a castoring problem) on Boscombe's rough aerodrome surface.The late Air Commodore Allen Wheeler was in charge of the Performance Testing Squadron at this time and recalled that Flt Lt Slee was initially unaware of the problem until all of W4050's controls tightened up. Airmen were called over to check through the control lines, one of them eventually shouting out from beneath the Mosquito: ' It's all right, sir, there's nothing wrong with the controls but she's broken here bleeding' back.' The fuselage had fractured around the access hatch cut out on the starboard side, damage being extensive enough for the decision to be taken to change the fuselage with that destined for W4051, the Photo Reconnaissance prototype. A small working party was despatched to Boscombe Down to fit this new fuselage, W4050 returning to Hatfield on 14 March (an externally mounted longitudinal stiffening strake was subsequently mounted above the hatch cut-out, this later becoming a standard feature of production aircraft). See: de Havilland Mosquito An Illustrated History Volume 2. Thirsk, Ian. Manchester:Crecy Publishing,2006. p.15. Col. |