Fairey Swordfish Article Index for
Fairey
Website Links For
Swordfish
 

Information About

Fairey Swordfish




The Fairey Swordfish was a Torpedo Bomber built by the Fairey Aviation Company and used by the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy during World War II . Affectionately known as the ''Stringbag'' by its crews, it was outdated by 1939, but achieved some spectacular successes during the war, such as the destruction of the Regia Marina (the Italian Navy ) in Taranto and the famous crippling of the German Battleship Bismarck . It was operated primarily as a fleet attack aircraft, however, during its later years it was also used as an anti- Submarine and training craft. Designed in the 1930s, Swordfish was active until 1942, and not retired until 1945.


HISTORY

The Swordfish was based on the Fairey Private Venture (PV), a proposed solution to the Air Ministry requirements for a Spotter-Reconnaissance plane - Spotter referring to observing the fall of a warship's gunfire. A subsequent Air Ministry specification added the torpedo bomber role. The prototype TSR II (Torpedo-Spotter-Reconnaissance), the PV was the TSR I, first flew on April 17 , 1934 . It was a large Biplane with a metal frame covered in fabric, with folding wings for Carrier use. An order was placed in 1935 and the aircraft entered service in 1936 , replacing the Fairey Seal in the torpedo bomber role. By 1939 the Royal Navy had thirteen Squadron s equipped with the '''Swordfish Mark I'''.


COMBAT HISTORY

The primary weapon was the torpedo, but the low speed of the biplane and the need for a long straight approach made it difficult to deliver against well defended targets. However, Swordfish flying from HMS ''Illustrious'' made a very significant strike, on November 11 , 1940 , against the Italian navy at Taranto , Italy and in May 1941 a Swordfish strike was vital in damaging the German battleship ''Bismarck'' . The low speed of the attacking aircraft may have acted in their favour, as the planes were too slow for the Fire-control Predictors of the German gunners. This successful attack may have given inspiration or confidence to the Japanese who would later attack Pearl Harbor . Swordfish also flew anti-shipping sorties from Malta .

The problems with the aircraft were starkly demonstrated in February 1942 when a strike on German Battlecruiser s during the Channel Dash resulted in the loss of all attacking aircraft. With the development of new torpedo attack aircraft the Swordfish was soon redeployed in an Anti-submarine role, equipped with depth-charges or ten 60 lb (27 kg) RP-3 Rocket s and flying from the smaller Escort Carrier s or even Merchant Aircraft Carriers with RATO . The Swordfish was meant to be replaced by the Fairey Albacore , also a biplane, but actually outlived its intended successor. It was, however, succeeded by the Fairey Barracuda Monoplane torpedo bomber.


VARIANTS


The Mark II and Mark III variants were both introduced in 1943 . The Swordfish Mark II had metal lower wings to allow the use of rockets and the '''Swordfish Mark III''' added a large centrimetric Radar unit. Production ended in 1944 with the '''Swordfish Mark IV''', which had an enclosed cabin for use by the RCAF , and the aircraft was withdrawn from active service on May 21 , 1945 . Almost 2,400 had been built, 692 by Fairey and 1,699 in Sherburn by the Blackburn Aircraft Company , which were sometimes dubbed the "Blackfish". The most built version was the Mark II, of which 1,080 were made.


OPERATORS

  • Canada, United Kingdom (Royal Air Force, Royal Navy),



SPECIFICATIONS (FAIREY SWORDFISH)

  plane Or Copter plane
  jet Or Prop prop
  crew 3
  length Main 35 ft 8 in
  length Alt 1087 m
  span Main 45 ft 6 in
  span Alt 1387 m
  height Main 12 ft 4 in
  height Alt 376 m
  area Main 542 ft&2
  area Alt 504 m&2
  empty Weight Main 4,195 lb
  empty Weight Alt 1,900 kg
  loaded Weight Main 7,720 lb
  loaded Weight Alt 3,500 kg
  max Takeoff Weight Main lb
  max Takeoff Weight Alt kg
  engine (prop) Bristol Pegasus IIIM3 or XXX
  type Of Prop Radial Engine
  number Of Props 1
  power Main 690 hp (IIIM3) or 750 hp (XXX)
  power Alt 510 kW / 560 kW
  max Speed Main 138 mph at 5,000 ft
  max Speed Alt 222 km/h at 1,500 m
  range Main 546 mi combat 1,025 mi ferry
  range Alt 879 km / 1,650 km
  ceiling Main 19,250 ft
  ceiling Alt 5,870 m
  climb Rate Main 1,220 ft/min
  climb Rate Alt 62 m/s
  loading Main lb/ft&sup2
  loading Alt kg/m&sup2
  power/mass Main hp/lb
  power/mass Alt kW/kg




RELATED CONTENT