Wingleader Magazine Issue 1
Wingleader Magazine Issue 1
£12
Trudgian Part One
W
Managing Director:
Simon Parry (Co-Founder)
Editor and Design Director:
elcome to the first digital edition GET INVOLVED
Mark Postlethwaite (Co-Founder) of Wingleader Magazine. This first As you can see when you browse through
Technical Director: issue marks the culmination of a this issue, we aim to cover many genres
Wesley Cornell (Co-Founder) lot of hard work over the past twelve months such as aviation art, modelling, archaeology,
where we took a ‘bit of an idea’ and moulded it personalities, history etc so if you have an
Contributors to this issue:
into something that we hope you will all enjoy. interesting story do let us know via the
Chris Sandham-Bailey editorial@wingleadermagazine.co.uk
Nick Trudgian
Simon Parry
address. We will also be instigating a readers’
Brian Rivas For those of you who are newcomers to our letters page so please write to us on any
Alan Price project, the schedule is this; subject using the email address above.
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ISSUE ONE CONTENTS By doing this we hope to give the aviation issue possible, we hope you enjoy it!
© Wingleader Magazine Ltd 2019. All rights reserved. No part
of this magazine may be used or reproduced without the written Page 4 - Patrons community the best of both worlds, a
permission of the publisher. Wingleader Magazine is published genuinely free and readable magazine thanks
by Wing Leader Ltd (08559824), registered in England and Page 5 - The new Airfix Blenheim MkIF
Wales. Registered office: 12 Jordan Street, Liverpool, L1 0BP, to its A4 landscape format which can be read
United Kingdom. All information contained in this magazine is
for information only and is, as far as we are aware, correct at Page 19 - Still Colouring In Part Two on any laptop screen without enlargement;
the time of going to press. Wingleader Magazine cannot accept combined with a beautifully printed
any responsibility for errors or inaccuracies in such information. Page 31 - Photo Archive Halifax BB324
Any material you submit is sent at your risk and, although every collectable ‘book’ series that suits those that
care is taken, neither Wingleader Magazine nor its employees,
agents or subcontractors shall be liable for loss or damage. The Page 39 - Sound Barrier Fact and Fiction still prefer their reading material to be printed
views expressed in Wingleader Magazine are not necessarily on paper!
the views of Wing Leader Ltd, its editors or its contributors.
Mark Postlethwaite January 2019
W
hen the editor and I were
working on the Blenheim book,
we were conscious of the new
Airfix kit of the aircraft being release in the
same year, possibly around the same time as
the book. This would be an important release
for Airfix, one of their big new kit releases
this year, and for modellers too as prior to
this the there had only been one other large
scale Blenheim, a short run release by Classic
Airframes. While this kit is not bad, being
a short run kit it requires a certain level of
modelling skill to build and get the most out of
it. I built one of these kits back in 2015 and it’s
not bad at all, if rather a lot of work!
MODELLING
The pilot’s seat and controls fit to the bomb bay
and spars which form the centre section of the
model. Here is the completed cockpit interior
after painting. Photo etch seat belts from Eduard
add a touch more detail.
Above: The completed cockpit was assembled into the port side
of the fuselage. Note how the interior of the fuselage is painted in
fuselage the nose glazing was attached. While
the same manner as the cockpit.
these parts fitted well, care was required to
Below: As was expected, the fuselage halves fitted with little
ensure they lined up correctly. Work now
issue. The red areas on the fuselage are filler which will be sanded
moved on to the wings and here we have more
back later.
amazing detail. The undercarriage has to be
assembled and fixed in place before the upper
and lower wing sections can be glued together.
Airfix have moulded the entire undercarriage,
not just the bit that sticks out of the engine
nacelle. As a result there is a rather complex
assembly to build including front and rear
spars, oil tank and all the undercarriage
assembly itself. Of course, all of the parts
need to be painted and weathered as they
are built so this adds to the time taken. With
Top: The undercarriage is superbly detailed, and the wings assembled I now had the major
the delicate parts build into a surprisingly sturdy parts of the airframe complete, i.e. the wings
assembly. and fuselage. The tail surfaces and control
surfaces were all assembled and cleaned up
Inset: The complex cockpit glazing fits well but then I replaced the trim tab actuators on the
great care is required to avoid getting glue on it rudder and elevators with brass tube, this is a
during assembly! simple job but makes a huge improvement to
the look of these parts.
MODELLING
item and quite tricky to assemble and paint. Airfix
even supply a jig to help assemble the parts.
MODELLING
airbrushed with thin black paint.
very well. The huge amount of detail on the kit roundels which we now know to be incorrect
What about the results of this build - the really repays all the time and effort that went and this is also how decals have been produced
finished model? Whenever I have just finished into constructing and painting it. The cockpit to replicate this aircraft in model form.
a model I tend only to see what went wrong in particular looks superb and really draws the Finally, for those of you wondering about
- the mistakes and faults in what's there. Its viewer in when looking at the model. the airfield backgrounds in some of the
always interesting to go back a few weeks I think it gives a very good impression of photos, these are prints from the Noy's
later and look again - invariably those little what this aircraft probably looked like in 1939 Miniatures range.
niggles have been forgotten! In this case the and I believe this is the first time this aircraft
end result was very satisfying, there were a has been portrayed correctly in model form for
UNDERSIDES SCHEME
been converted to fighters with the addition of
a gun pack under the fuselage. These aircraft
had the starboard wing underside painted white.
The black and white underside was common to
all RAF fighters at the time and was intended
to aid identification of friendly forces from the
ground. This was all part of Dowding’s air defence
plan where the Observer Corps would identify
enemy or friendly aircraft from the ground and
report their positions to the Fighter Command
Operations Rooms. After various experiments, it
was found that this high contrast finish was the
only scheme that worked well above 10,000ft.
The orders were slightly vague in that they
stated that ‘the lower surface of the starboard
mainplane and half the undersurface of
the fuselage was to be painted white, the
corresponding port side to be painted black’.
These orders didn’t specifically refer to
the entire fuselage or indeed the tailplane so
variations inevitably appeared as these markings
were applied at squadron level.
With the Blenheim MkIFs, the majority of
ground crews painted the entire starboard
undersurfaces white although many avoided
painting the starboard engine cowling. Many also
left the starboard aileron black as a precaution
against unbalancing this sensitive part of the
control surfaces.
On the subject aircraft of this article, the
groundcrew appear to have taken the orders more
literally and just painted the starboard wing and
the area inboard of the wing on the fuselage.
This finish remained in service until 6th June
1940 when Signal X915 was issued which called
for all day fighters to be re-painted with Sky as the
underside colour.
MODELLING
Below: Believed to be a 600 Squadron Blenheim MkIF, this photo clearly
shows how the white undersides have been quite roughly applied. The
application of paint around the cockpit glazing would certainly lose some
points in a modelling contest! Note again with this aircraft how the
starboard engine cowling has been left black underneath.
wingleader.co.uk
Above: Another 600 Squadron Blenheim, this time with the pre-war codes of MV,
with only the starboard wing painted white. Fuselage, tailplane and starboard
aileron have all been left as black.
Below: Ever since the only currently flying Blenheim took to the air in its 23
Squadron early war scheme, historians have argued as to whether it too should
be finished in the white/black scheme. This rare and recently discovered
photo would suggest that the squadron did indeed apply the white paint to the
starboard wing although again the forward engine cowling has been left black.
Nick Trudgian
‘Still colouring in’ Part Two
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A much younger Nick with legendary German Ace Günther
Rall who is sadly no longer with us, unlike Nick’s coat
which is clearly still going strong!
AVIATION ART
MP So here we are, in part two of our covered many aspects of Luftwaffe activity
general ramble through life as an aviation as well as U-Boats and tanks. It’s a privilege
artist. We ended part one just after you left to have my artwork printed on such precious
the Military Gallery and became freelance sheets of paper.
once again. Do you still publish prints? For mostly non-German subjects I have
co-produced many prints with British-based
NT Yes, we do. Just not as many. Since Vector Fine Art and in more recent years I
2006 I have been working with a German have been painting US aviation subjects for
publisher who had the foresight, an incredible Valor Studios. I used to get fed up with the
25 to 30 years ago, to collect many sheets long drive to go to Bath to sign prints for the
of top quality art printing paper and then he Military Gallery, now I have to go to Denver!
asked many of the remaining Knight’s Cross- But they are really nice people and I usually
awarded veterans to sign them. He also asked get to see some American trains while I am
top army and submarine veterans too and he there so I come home happy. There have been
travelled far and wide to amass what is surely occasions where because of my deadlines
a unique collection of signed paper. All kept on other projects I was in America for just 24
in bank vault conditions with security and hours. Customs officials looked baffled when I
climate-control, the sheets were waiting for an told them how long I was staying, but at least I
artist to become available, and I was! Another don’t get jet-lag doing that.
stroke of luck. I do one of these big German My artwork nowadays is almost entirely
paintings per year and now the collection has commissions and much of it drawing. It’s
AVIATION ART
”Hurriedly sent by General Eisenhower to defend the town ‘at all costs’ the 101st Airborne Division put up the painting took to paint, but I really enjoyed this one. It’s always a great pleasure to meet the veterans
a valiant defence despite being greatly outnumbered. This is one of the prints I have done for Valor Studios and for this print I did a signing in Philadelphia with Edward “Babe” Heffron, one of the 101st’s famous
in Denver. My good friend Andy Keenan built all the models for me and they probably took just as long as “Band of Brothers”. Sadly, he died just a short time afterwards.”
T
he development of the Handley
Page Halifax bomber from prototype
to MkVII is a long and complicated
story, a constant process of refinement that
transformed an underpowered, draggy and
quite dangerous aircraft into a bomber that
was eventually better than the Lancaster in
many ways.
BB324 is an example taken from the early
part of that process when the RAF found
that the constant adding of equipment and
armament (in the MkII) had reduced the
aircraft’s performance to dangerous levels.
The temporary solution was the B II Series I
(Special) where squadrons removed both the
mid-upper turret and the nose turret as well as
a few other ‘lumps and bumps’. BB324 is one
of these unit modified MkIIs and over the next
few pages we’ll point out the transformations
required to make it a B II Series I (Special).
This lightened view of the undersides of BB324 shows the usual skin rippling to good effect.
If you compare it with the inset photo of W1245, a standard B II, you can see some of
the differences that were applied to the Series I (Special) including the removal of the fuel
jettison pipes under the wings (A), the streamlining of the nose by removing the nose turret
and observation blister (B) and the removal of the mid-upper turret (C).
PHOTO ARCHIVE
D B: The ‘towel rail’ aerial for the Lorenz blind landing system.
C: The ‘Wings for Victory’ nose art showing a bulldog wearing a sailor’s hat.
D: The fuel tank breather pipes.
E 70/30 chalked on all engine cowlings, possibly a reference to coolant mixture.
F: The trailing aerial fairlead.
D
F
B
PHOTO ARCHIVE
Bristol Hercules radial engines with the MkIII pictured left. The streamlining carried out
with the Mk II variants and the redesign and enlargement of the tail fins (to solve a deadly
aerodynamic problem), all contributed to make the later marks of Halifax equal and even
superior to the Lancaster in many ways.
PHOTO ARCHIVE
THE FACT AND FICTION
BEHIND THE VERY BRITISH
APPROACH TO MACH 1
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ARCHIVE
POST-WAR
CG at 0.177. At 10am, wearing a pressure As the speed built up, the familiar nose- the stick to stop the Mach number falling. This were continuously modified and shared
waistcoat and oxygen mask as on the previous heaviness started at Mach 0.91, easing off at gave a small but sudden nose-down pitch and components such as undercarriage legs
high Mach number dive, he took off from 0.93 when a wallowing motion set in, followed the aircraft felt unstable. with other de Havilland aircraft such as
Hatfield and was soon high over the Windsor- by an up and down pitching at 0.94 that was Then came a rapid succession of dramatic the Vampire.
Farnborough area in a beautifully clear sky. hard to handle, but similar to experiences on events, which Derry was able to recall in
On levelling off at 45,000ft, he could see earlier flights. Nothing unusual or worrying at exact detail in spite of heightened tension
the ground clearly. Opening the throttle he this stage. At 0.95 came the sudden curious as he and the 108 dived into completely
reached Mach 0.85 in level flight, but then steadying, at which point Derry opened up the uncharted territory.
the usual problem of escalating jet pipe Goblin to 10,750rpm - but, oddly, the extra With a little more elevon movement
temperatures took over and he had to put thrust did not result in higher Mach readings to steepen the dive, VW120 went into an
POST-WAR
‘Little time was wasted when once it was oscillation set in, pummelling an already contrast to conventional designs at transonic corrected reading was Mach 1.02: Derry had
realised that the elevons were immovable,’ he shaken Derry even further. He immediately speeds. At Mach numbers between 0.98 and done it - Britain had become the second nation
wrote afterwards. returned the trim flaps to neutral and 1.0 the machine was extremely stable, in spite officially to join the supersonic club.
There was only one thing left to try; the trim everything calmed down. The aircraft was of large amounts of negative g. And even when
flaps. It was these that saved the day. Applying flying straight and level at 23,500ft. Derry beyond control in a vertical dive, it was still Extract from ‘A Very British Sound Barrier’ by
full up-flap, the aircraft gradually began to pull then climbed to 29,000ft and cruised back ‘rock steady.’ Brian Rivas.
out, with very little g, but also losing very little to Hatfield, in his mind going through the Three-quarters of an hour after take-off
speed. At Mach 0.98 the pull-out increased extraordinary gyrations of the long dive, which he touched down at Hatfield and taxied back
and the elevons began to have some effect. itself had taken only about one minute, and towards the hangar, leaving the little aircraft
Derry knew that the trim flaps might become wondering whether the Machmeter was in the hands of the waiting ground crew. He
too effective in the denser air at lower altitude accurate when it touched unity. Once it was said nothing to them about the dive, as it
and would suddenly bite, which could stress checked and corrections for error were made, would have been such an anti-climax if the
the airframe beyond its structural limits as the he would know whether he was indeed the Machmeter turned out to be in error. He
pull-out became too violent, so he trimmed first British pilot to go supersonic. wanted the result to be official before saying
back to about four degrees. One very positive characteristic he noticed anything to anyone.
ndham-Bailey
profile by Chris Sa
An unusual guise for VW120 are the colours worn for the SBAC Challenge Trophy Race at Elmdon
Airport, Birmingham, on August Bank Holiday 1949. At this stage in its career VW120 sports the
triangular red ejection seat warning under the cockpit, and the fin flash is now red, white and blue
instead of just red and blue.
The DH108 was a purely experimental project conceived to evaluate properties of tailless aircraft,
which in 1944 were considered to be the future of advanced aircraft design. Flight characteristics and
knowledge were initially to be incorporated into the proposed tailless
DH106 ‘Comet’ airliner – but fortunately those plans were dropped in favour of a conventional tail
layout. The DH108 program continued to provide data on swept and tailless aircraft at all speeds. Just
three examples were built, this is what happened to them:
TIMELINE
15 May 1946 – TG283’s maiden flight at Woodbridge.
23 August 1946 – TG306’s maiden flight at Woodbridge.
27 September 1946 – TG306 broke up in the air over the Thames Estuary at Mach 0.9, killing
Geoffrey de Havilland.
24 July 1947 – VW120’s maiden flight.
14 October 1947 – ‘Chuck’ Yeager breaks the sound barrier in the USA with the Bell X-1.
12 April 1948 – VW120 broke the 100 km closed circuit record with 605.23 mph.
Geoffrey de Havilland brings TG/283 alongside the camera plane. First of 6 September 1948 – VW120 broke the sound barrier in a dive.
the three DH108s, TG/283 was never intended for highspeed flight as 15 February 1950 – VW120 crashed at Brickhill, Buckinghamshire, killing RAF test pilot
its purpose was to explore the properties of swept wings at slow speed. Squadron Leader Muller-Rowland.
The devices at the wing-tips contain anti-spin parachutes that could be 1 May 1950 – TG283 crashed at Hartley-Wintney, Hampshire, killing RAF test pilot
deployed if the aircraft was unable to recover normally. Squadron Leader George Genders.
POST-WAR
Based on a Vampire nose and cockpit,
this aircraft was limited to just 280 mph
and was used to test low speed handling
characteristics with a wing-sweep of 43°.
At Hatfield TG306 has been ‘cleaned up’ ready for high speed tests in preparation for an attack on the
world air speed record. The anti-spin parachute nacelles have been removed from the wingtips, the
cockpit framing has been strengthened and the aircraft sprayed light gloss grey. TG306 made just 19
flights between 23rd August and 27th September 1946 and all the flights were made by Geoffrey de
Havilland. The nation was shocked to hear that the legendary pilot had been killed when TG306 broke
up over the Thames Estuary. The largest single part found was its Goblin engine.
Rattigan, was released on 25th July 1952. played by John Austin continues the testing There are some elements in the film that public, but was simply a ‘tool’ used by David
and also gets into dive and cannot pull-out. are based on fact and David Lean did interview Lean to exemplify British ‘pluck’ and avoid a lot
Although released nearly four years after He then remembers a similar incident when some of the aircraft designers of the time. of highbrow aerodynamic gobbledygook!
John Derry first broke the ‘Sound Barrier’ flying a Spitfire and decides to push the stick Geoffrey de Havilland’s crash is mentioned,
in the UK, the film is very much a fictional forwards, whereupon it is revealed that an as are the vibrations and oscillations that
account of the story. Nigel Patrick stars as aircraft’s controls are reversed at the speed of were encountered above Mach 0.8. Aircraft
Tony Garthwaite, test pilot for the Ridgefield sound and all is well ! getting into uncontrollable dives is also true, a
Aircraft Company. The aircraft flown by ‘Tony phenomenon called ‘Mach Tuck’ where airflow
Garthwaite’ named ‘Prometheus’ is VV119 In the UK in particular, where few members over the wings no longer produces the same
the Supermarine 535 - prototype of the of the public knew that Yeager and the Bell lift above Mach 0.8.
‘Star’ of The Sound Barrier film, the Supermarine 535 VV119, which was For the full dramatic story of British
called the Ridgefield Aircraft Company’s ‘Prometheus’. VV119 was a one-off aviation’s journey through the sound
experimental development aircraft progressing from the design of Attacker barrier read Brian Rivas’s excellent book
towards the Swift. ‘A Very British Sound Barrier’ published
by Red Kite and available from;
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