Avro 529

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2017}}

{{Use British English|date=May 2017}}

{{Infobox aircraft begin

| name=Avro 529

| image=Avro 529.png

| caption=

}}{{Infobox aircraft type

| type=Long-range bomber

| national origin=United Kingdom

| manufacturer=A.V. Roe & Co.

| designer=

| first flight=April 1917

| introduced=

| retired=

| status=

| primary user=

| number built=2

| developed from= Avro Pike

| variants with their own articles=

}}

The Avro 529 was a twin-engined biplane long-range bomber of the First World War. Two prototypes were built but no production ensued.

Development

File:Avro 529 front.png

The Avro 529{{harvnb|Jackson|1965|pages=92–4}} was Avro's second twin-engined aircraft and their second attempt at a heavy bomber. Their first in both categories was the Pike, developed in early 1916 to Royal Flying Corps (RFC) guidelines for a short-range bomber. The Pike arrived too late to secure orders from the RFC who would order the Handley-Page O/100 and for the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) who had ordered the Short Bomber. Nonetheless, after trials of the Pike, the Admiralty ordered two prototypes of an enlarged Pike for a long-range bomber role. This was the Type 529.

Like the Pike, it was a large twin-engined biplane of the then-standard wood and canvas construction. It had three-bay wings without sweepback, dihedral or stagger, partly to facilitate wing folding. The vertical tail was different from that of the Pike: it had a small, roughly triangular fin and a rudder with a round balance surface above the fin, a reminder of Avro's "comma" rudder form.

The fuselage was rectangular in cross-section and seated three in separate cockpits. The pilot sat just forward of the wing leading edge, there was a gunner's position (with emergency dual control) midway between the trailing edge and the tail and the front gunner/bomb-aimer's position was in the nose. Both gunners' positions were provided with a .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis Gun mounted on a Scarff ring. The landing gear used two main wheels on split axles, plus a tail-skid.

The two prototypes differed from each other chiefly in their powerplants. The first, just known as the Avro 529, had a pair of uncowled Rolls-Royce Falcon water-cooled in-line engines mounted midway between the wings. Each produced 190 hp (140 kW) and drove four-bladed, opposite-handed wooden airscrews. It carried 140 gal (636 L) of fuel in a tank in the centre fuselage.

File:Avro 529 NARA-17342061.jpg

File:Avro529 left.png

File:Avro 529A NARA-17342063.jpg

The second machine, designated the Avro 529A, had a pair 230 hp (170 kW) BHP in-line water-cooled engines, cowled and mounted in nacelles on the lower wing. These drove wooden, two-bladed airscrews. In this aircraft fuel was held in a pair of 60 gal (273 L), one in each nacelle. Fuel was pumped from these to 10 gal (45 L) tanks above the engines by wind-driven pumps, and fed to the motors under gravity.

The type 529A had slightly different wings to the first prototype, 13 in (33 cm) greater in span, smaller in area and hence of higher aspect ratio. It was about 8% lighter.

Another difference between the two prototypes were the arrangements for the bomb-aimer. In the first machine, this was done from the seat of the front cockpit, but in the 529A there was provision for a prone bomb-aimer's position with a small window, noticeable in side view. From there, he communicated with the pilot by Gosport tube. The 529A could carry 20 50 lb (20 kg) bombs racked nose up inside the fuselage between the lower wing spars.

The Type 529 was, even with the B.H.P. engines rather low powered, but seems to have handled well apart from poor elevator control. There was no production order and the type was not developed further.

Specifications (529A)

{{Aircraft specs

|ref={{harvnb|Jackson|1965|pages=93–4}}

|prime units? = imp

|crew=3

|length m=12.09

|length ft=39

|length in=8

|span m=19.53

|span ft=64

|span in=1

|height m=3.96

|height ft=13

|height in=0

|wing area sqm=84.54

|wing area sqft=910

|empty weight kg=1,978

|empty weight lb=4,361

|gross weight kg=3,236

|gross weight lb=7,135

|eng1 number=2

|eng1 name= B.H.P. (Galloway built)

|eng1 kw=170

|eng1 hp=230

|max speed kmh=187

|max speed mph=116

|endurance=5.25 hours|ceiling m=5,335

|ceiling ft=17,500

|climb rate ms=3.6

|climb rate ftmin= 715

|climb rate note=to 5,000 ft (1,525 m)

|armament = *20 × 50 lb (23 kg) bombs

  • 1 × trainable .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis Gun on Scarff ring in nose
  • 1 × trainable .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis gun on Scarff ring in dorsal position

}}

{{aircontent

|see also=

}}

References

{{commons category|Avro 529}}

{{reflist}}

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite book |title= Avro Aircraft since 1908|last= Jackson|first=A.J. |year=1965 |publisher=Putnam Publishing |location=London }}

{{refend}}

{{Avro aircraft}}

Category:Biplanes

Category:1910s British bomber aircraft

529

Category:Aircraft first flown in 1917

Category:Twin piston-engined tractor aircraft