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The Spitfire - an appreciation (75th anniversary)
The Scotsman ^ | 06 March 2011 | George Kerevan

Posted on 03/06/2011 7:12:13 PM PST by sukhoi-30mki

The Spitfire - - an appreciation

By George Kerevan

75 years ago today, as darkness loomed across Europe, an achingly beautiful aircraft soared into the heavens on its maiden flight. The plane would become both an eight-gunned instrument of freedom and a near-spiritual symbol of it. The Spitfire was born.

AT 4:35pm on the afternoon of 5 March, 1936, a pilot called Joseph 'Mutt' Summers walked across the grass of Southampton Airport - currently a hub for Flybe. Summers had spent a tiring day testing a new RAF bomber. Now, he had to squeeze in the first flight of a new fighter called the "Spitfire". A plane that would become a legend and - arguably - hold the pass in 1940 long enough to save us from fascism.

But in 1936, the conventional wisdom in Britain was that "the bomber would always get through". Many considered new fighter planes like the Spitfire a waste of money.

Mutt Summers pressed the starter button and the Spitfire took to the air for the first time. Unlike the wood and canvass biplanes then serving as the RAF's frontline fighters, the Spit was a monoplane of all-metal construction. It had a retractable undercarriage and a fantastic speed of over 350mph. In combat it would be armed with eight machine guns. At last, here was something that would stop any bomber.

The Spitfire was the inspired creation of a true engineering genius, Reginald Joseph Mitchell. He was born in 1895, the son of two Stoke-on-Trent primary school teachers. His poor background precluded university, so he began an

(Excerpt) Read more at living.scotsman.com ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: greatbritain; raf; spitfire; supermarinespitfire
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To: fish hawk
Someday soon, they may have a momentary flash of insight into how inverted their existential looking glass has been.

Another tactic, when a 262 was on your tail, was to drop the throttle, hit the air brakes and fall off sharply to the left or right.

Then hit the power, go nose up...and you'd find the 262 screaming past you...and straight into your sights.

81 posted on 03/06/2011 11:28:48 PM PST by okie01 (THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA: Ignorance On Parade)
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To: fish hawk

I was being sarcastic about the claim of a 550 mph top speed of later Spitfires. :)

I’ve flown a lot of the wwII fighters in online battle arenas. Those 262’s are a pain until you get up to speed. And even then, about the ONLY thing they have going for them is speed. But that can be a lot.


82 posted on 03/06/2011 11:29:10 PM PST by RobRoy (The US Today: Revelation 18:4)
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To: Attention Surplus Disorder; sukhoi-30mki

“The record for the fastest single-engined piston plane is held by a modified Grumman F8F Bearcat, the Rare Bear, with a speed of 850.24 km/h (528.31 mph) on 21 August 1989 at Las Vegas, Nevada, United States of America.”[8][9]


83 posted on 03/06/2011 11:38:59 PM PST by buccaneer81 (ECOMCON)
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To: buccaneer81

I’ve seen Rare Bear fly at Reno. You don’t so much hear it as you do feel it.


84 posted on 03/06/2011 11:45:12 PM PST by beelzepug ("Don't be a wise guy, Eddie.")
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To: CrazyIvan; sukhoi-30mki
"...hearing a Merlin engine fly by increases testosterone production..."

Works for me! ........................ FRegards

85 posted on 03/07/2011 12:08:52 AM PST by gonzo ( Buy more ammo, dammit! You should already have the firearms .................. FRegards)
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To: RobRoy

LOL...I was actually giving him the benefit of the doubt of a typo over speaking out of his butt...


86 posted on 03/07/2011 3:16:56 AM PST by rlmorel (How to relate to Liberals? Take a Conservative, remove all responsibility...logic...)
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To: CrazyIvan

About ten years ago I was working in my driveway on a lovely Saturday morning. Just then I heard the faint but increasing sound of something strangely familiar. A moment later a P-51D flew right over my house at about 1000 feet. It took me two hours to calm down. A great way to start the day!


87 posted on 03/07/2011 3:16:56 AM PST by Robulus (Be wary, be vigilant, for your enemy walketh about as a roaring lion.)
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To: hinckley buzzard

A few years later the Mustang showed up and settled the argument.

Posting HTML
The Mustang was not a good fighter until they put the Merlin engine in it.


88 posted on 03/07/2011 3:53:31 AM PST by Roklok
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To: Robulus

I had a similar experience with a P-47. It must have been unforgettable to hear a formation of those flying overhead.


89 posted on 03/07/2011 4:10:04 AM PST by Rebelbase
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To: Kirkwood

Probably the fastest propeller fighter on the allied side:

http://www.hawkertempest.se/


90 posted on 03/07/2011 4:22:37 AM PST by Hardraade (I want gigaton warheads now!!)
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To: yarddog
As I understand it,the mainstay of Englands flying force during the Battle of Britain was the Hawker Hurricane.I've also read that the Spitfire was found wanting against the FW190 and the ME262.The latter being a case of too little too late.

Still a beautifull plane after all these years.

91 posted on 03/07/2011 4:31:49 AM PST by mitch5501 (fine!)
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To: sukhoi-30mki

bttt


92 posted on 03/07/2011 10:08:49 AM PST by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: sukhoi-30mki

Look at the poor Typhoon! It has its slats and flaps out to keep from falling out out the sky!

I got to see a Spitfire fly at Duxford. What a lovely noise..


93 posted on 03/07/2011 10:18:42 AM PST by Little Ray (The Gods of the Copybook Heading, with terror and slaughter return!)
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To: fish hawk

What a coincidence, my dad was an RAF cadet who trained at Falcon Field in Mesa. The Chinese cadets would have been across town at Thunderbird Field in Glendale.

My dad’s service was fairly late in the war and though he wanted more than anything to be a front line fighter pilot, they had him stuck on an operational training squadron. He had a few fruitless shows in the Hurricane, Spitfire, and Mustang III, including a couple of unopposed bomber escorts to France and Belgium, but mostly spent his days instructing, flying radio relays, target drones, mail runs, and other such drudgery.

But he was a skilled bridge player, and was therefore recruited by an RAF Group Captain several ranks up his chain of command to be his partner. My dad helped him win for several months until the senior guy was reassigned elsewhere, and as a favor he got my dad posted to 19 Squadron late in 1944.

This late in the war the Allies had widespread air supremacy, and 19 Sqn. were getting as much fighting as anyone else in the European Theater, escorting Beaufighters to Norway in the Mustang IV (i.e. P-51D). They saw plenty of air to air and air to ground action, and even got in a big dogfight with the entire Ace of Spades squadron of the Luftwaffe. He saw two of his best friends shot down the day before VE day, can you imagine?


94 posted on 03/07/2011 11:27:12 AM PST by ccmay (Too much Law; not enough Order.)
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To: ccmay
I really enjoyed the Tuskegee Airmen movie as these young Black Heroes flew the mustangs. My Uncle is still alive but he is pushing 90 now. He was one of the N. Calif. Native American War personnel featured in the book “The Original Patriots” by Chag Lowry of my tribe: Yurok N.Calif.
95 posted on 03/07/2011 11:43:59 AM PST by fish hawk (R. Emmett Tyrrell: Liberalism is dead. What we see now is "soft Nazis-ism".)
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To: sukhoi-30mki

Nothing sounds like a Spitfire. A noise of beauty.


96 posted on 03/07/2011 11:49:38 AM PST by alarm rider (The left will always tell you who they fear the most. What are they telling you now?)
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To: fish hawk

In honor of Pulaski Day, the classic scene in The Battle of Britain, featuring the 303rd Kosciuszko Squadron. The Poles mostly flew Hurricanes, not Spitfires, though.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1pplBZu0oU


97 posted on 03/07/2011 11:54:10 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator
Yeah, I really enjoyed that too. Love the Polish people,they are great friends even in today's world. Would like to try some Polish food but not much chance of that here on Maui.
98 posted on 03/07/2011 12:06:07 PM PST by fish hawk (R. Emmett Tyrrell: Liberalism is dead. What we see now is "soft Nazis-ism".)
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To: sukhoi-30mki
I saw the thread title and thought of this 1974 Spitfire...


99 posted on 03/07/2011 12:11:21 PM PST by newfreep (Palin/West 2012 - Bolton: Secy of State)
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To: CrazyIvan
I don’t have any scientific evidence, but am absolutely convinced that hearing a Merlin engine fly by increases testosterone production.

It sure did when they used them in hydroplanes of the 50s & 60s. Especially when they hit the nitrous oxide on the back stretch !

100 posted on 03/07/2011 12:58:47 PM PST by jimt
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