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THE JET AGE RESERVE MODEL COLLECTION

PRESENTS

EASTER PARADE 2010

 
 

   
  The Polikarpov I-16 Ishak (Little Donkey) - pictured above - was the World's first monoplane with a fully enclosed cockpit and retractable landing gear - not to mention a remarkable development story!
 
 

   
 

The announcement of Open Days at the Brockworth Tithe Barn Arts and Crafts Centre over Easter 2010 gave the Jet Age Reserve Model Collection an opportunity to display many items rarely or never seen in public in the 21st Century.  These were arranged in national themes and are described below.
 
 

   

THE RUSSIAN FRONT



POLIKARPOV I-16


   

The Polikarpov I-16 Ishak (Little Donkey) - pictured above - was the World's first monoplane with a fully enclosed cockpit and retractable landing gear - not to mention a remarkable development story!

The prototype fighter that emerged from State Aircraft Factory No. 39 near Moscow in December 1933 bore a curious designation on its fuselage: the letters VT boldly inscribed inside a red star. The red star was of course familiar as the symbol of the Bolshevik Revolution. But the VT stood for Vnutrennaya Tyur'ma, literally "internal prison".

State Aircraft Factory No. 39 was in fact a Soviet penitentiary. Not only was the plane the product of convict labour but the two inmates who designed it were among the nation's most talented aeronautical engineers. One was Dmitri Grigorovich, creator of the flying boats that had served the Czar's Navy in World War 1. The other was Nikolai Polikarpov, who had succeeded Igor Sikorsky in overseeing production of Ilya Muromets bombers at the Russo-Baltic Railcar Factory. 

Polikarpov had designed several highly successful craft, among them the omnipresent PO-2 biplane. But in 1927 Joseph Stalin had demanded a superior Soviet-designed, Soviet-built fighter for the Red Air Force. When two years had passed and neither Grigorovich nor Polikarpov had produced a serviceable fighter, both designers were clapped into prison and ordered to create under the unrelenting eye of the state.

Design work on the I-16 began during the summer of 1932 at the Central Aero and Hydrodynamic Institute. At this juncture Polikarpov was in a uniquely Soviet situation. His career which had entailed a swift ascent to the top post of the OSS (the department for experimental land plane construction), had taken a sudden downward plunge upon the occasion of his arrest during the 1929 purge. Instead of a firing squad or a gulag, however, Polikarpov and his design team were sentenced to an "internal prison," there to continue their work under the close supervision and scrutiny of the state.

The faith of the Soviet judiciary paid off when the tiny I-16 flew for the first time. It was far ahead of any other fighter design in the world, featuring retractable landing gear, a cantilever wing and variable pitch propeller. Although not among the best remembered aircraft of the 1930s, it was nevertheless a very able and rugged machine and featured prominently in the events of the time.

When it first appeared, the I-16 Ishak (Little Donkey) was powered by a radial engine which developed a modest 450 hp. Even with this it achieved a creditable 376 km/h (234 mph) and, as the world's first single-seat fighter to have low monoplane wings, an enclosed cockpit (on some versions) and a retractable undercarriage. It was immediately put into mass production alongside the Polikarpov I-15 biplane fighter. Development led eventually to one version of the I-16 reaching over 520km/h (325 mph), with an engine of about two-and-a-half times the original power.

At this point the I-16 might well have faded into obscurity, if not for the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in July 1936.

This conflict drew support from all over the world. The Nationalists, supported mainly by German and Italian forces, were the better equipped although Britain, France, the United States, the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia and Turkey all sent an assortment of aircraft to the Republican forces, directly or indirectly. But by far the major supporter of the Republicans was the Soviet Union, which supplied 1,409 of the 1947 aircraft contributed by other countries. 475 of these aircraft were Polikarpov I-16s.

The outstanding manoeuvrability, firepower and rate of climb of the Polikarpov I-16 surprised Franco's Nationalists, leading to their nickname of Rata (Rat) while the Republicans dubbed their new ally Mosca (Fly).

They first entered combat in Spain in November 1936. Flown in many cases by Soviet pilots, they proved more than a match for German Heinkel He 51 and Arado Ar 68 fighters, but met their equals in the Italian C.R.32 biplanes and were overpowered by Messerschmitt Bf 109s. From March 1937, all remaining I-16s were concentrated into Fighter Group 31, and this was by far the most successful of all Soviet-equipped units.

Equipped with Soviet 20 mm canon, the Polikarpov I-16 was the most powerful fighter aircraft in front line service with any nation on the eve of World War II. It had a very high rate of fire and was extremely reliable. Another batch of I-16s was purchased by China to fight the Japanese, again surprising the other side with excellent performance, and also helped defend the Soviet territory of Mongolia against the Empire of the Sun in 1939.

The final fling of the Polikarpov I-16 came during the early part of the Second World War, but by then they were overshadowed by more advanced foreign types. Suffering the brunt of the German invasion, those remaining were replaced by more modern fighters in 1942-1943.

Under the lash or not, Soviet aviation made great strides throughout the decade. By the mid-1930s, the industry employed 350,000 workers, who laboured in three shifts around the clock.

"The impression is that with 10 times as many personnel employed as the French, the Soviet industry is producing 20 times as many aircraft," wrote Louis Charles Breguet, a French aircraft maker who toured the Soviet Union in 1936. With their new, and by now all-Russian, planes the Soviets avidly competed for every record in the skies, and claimed no fewer than 62 world marks for speed, altitude and distance by 1938.

Other viewpoints tell nevertheless, for all their numbers and much-publicized peacetime triumphs, Soviet planes and Soviet fliers often proved unexpectedly weak when called upon to fight in the Spanish Civil War when matched against the emerging modern fighters of Germany's Luftwaffe. In Manchuria they struggled against an inferior Japanese air force. In Finland, where, certainty of immediate victory was expected, they were grievously embarrassed by a minuscule band of doughty fliers in obsolete craft. All the while, the Soviets inexplicably failed to prepare for, or even apparently perceive, the growing menace of Nazi Germany, which by decade's end was flying unfriendly reconnaissance missions over Russian soil.

The end product of this bewildering mixture of successes and failures, of keen perception and abysmal blindness, was the air force with which the Soviets entered World War II in 1941. The story can be said to have begun with the demands on Polikarpov and Grigorovich to build a proper fighter plane.

The Polikarpov I-16 achieved classic status at a time when the Soviet Union seemed, to many, to be incapable of producing anything worthwhile. In the years just preceding World War II, when the I-16 debuted, the Soviet Union was disparaged in the West as a technologically backward nation. It was believed that whatever advanced technology the Soviets possessed had been copied from Western sources rather than endogenously produced; and that these copies were themselves of inferior quality.

There was considerable truth to this view. But not when it was applied to the sphere of weaponry and weapons systems. For example, in the 1930s (and indeed, for many years thereafter) Soviet artillery, tanks, and aircraft were often equal, and in many instances superior to the same items produced in Europe and the United States.

Prior to the outbreak of World War II in 1939, the high quality of Soviet arms was already well known by the Soviet Union's adversaries: namely, Germany, Italy, and Japan. The armed forces of these three nations had fought against Soviet tanks and aircraft in conflicts ranging from Spain to Mongolia. To say the least, it had not been a pleasant experience. In the Spanish Civil War (1936-39), German and Italian expeditionary forces were sent to assist the Nationalist rebellion led by General Francisco Franco, were hard-pressed to overcome the Soviet-supplied Republican armies, and in the undeclared war that pitted Japan against the Soviet Union in the summer of 1939, Japan's vaunted Kwantung Army was severely trounced by Soviet forces in the Nomenhan region of Outer Mongolia.

When the Germans invaded Russia in June 1941, the I-16 was still Russia's most important fighter and, in spite of being obsolete, well over half of the 7,000 built were flown in action until 1943. One of the most startling uses of the tiny but rugged fighter came ramming attacks. Pilots were taught to hit the tail surfaces of German bombers, then bail out. In theory, the strength of the I-16 would allow the pilot time to bail out afterwards.

If German pilots decided to out turn the I-16 in dogfights, which invariably cost them airspeed, they were usually caught by surprise as the Russian pilot quickly got the upper hand. However, against slashing climbing and diving attacks, the I-16 was in trouble.






LAVOTCHKIN LA-7


 
The Lavotchkin La-7 marked the peak of development of a series of piston engined single seat fighters which, like the Poliarkov I-16 and the British De Havilland Mosquito, was largely made of wood. 
 
 

   

The Lavotchkin La-7 marked the peak of development of a series of piston engined single seat fighters which, like the Poliarkov I-16 and the British De Havilland Mosquito, was largely made of wood.

The basic LaGG-3 was probably the greatest under achiever of early World War II fighter aircraft, being inferior to the German Messerschmitt Me 109 and Focke-Wulf 190 and even the Italian Macchi 202.  

In 1941 however, the much improved La-5 was created by the substitution of the in-line V-12 engine with a Shvetsov M-82 twin row radial engine while the La- 5FN's powerplant had a two stage supercharger giving a maximum speed of 403 mph.  This could outperform any other Soviet - or enemy - piston engined fighter and could deliver a small but deadly punch with its two 20mm canon.

The La-7 high altitude fighter appeared in 1943 as the result of weight saving and aerodynamic fine tuning and over 5 500 were built by 1946.  Although soon outclassed by jet fighters, La-7s survived in North Korean service long enough to take on USAF North American Mustangs in the Korean War.



 GRIBOVSKI G-11 GLIDER  
 

   
 
 The USSR had pioneered the use of transport gliders in the 1930s but had none in production before the Nazi invasion of 1941.  Vladimir Gribovski designed an 11 man glider in two months and testing began on 1 September that year.  The G-11 was later used to supply anti-freeze to Soviet tanks during the Battle of Stalingrad, for supplying partisans and in the crossing of te River Dneiper.
 
 

   
The USSR had pioneered the use of transport gliders in the 1930s but had none in production before the Nazi invasion of 1941.  Vladimir Gribovski designed an 11 man glider in two months and testing began on 1 September that year.  The G-11 was later used to supply anti-freeze to Soviet tanks during the Battle of Stalingrad, for supplying partisans and in the crossing of te River Dneiper.
 

   

PZL 11C
 

   
Designed by Ing Wsiewolod Jakimiuk,, the first PZL P11C entered Polish Air Force service in 1935 and was powered by a version of the Bristol Mercury IVS2 built in the Czech Skoda works.  Popularly known as the Jedenaska (Eleventh) , the P11C equipped twelve squadrons at the outbreak of war in September 1939.  During the seventeen days of the Polish campaign, 114 P11Cs were lost but not before they had accounted for over 120 Luftwaffe aircraft and extensively strafed the advancing Wehrmacht formations.


Designed by Ing Wsiewolod Jakimiuk,, the first PZL P11C entered Polish Air Force service in 1935 and was powered by a version of the Bristol Mercury IVS2 built in the Czech Skoda works.  Popularly known as the Jedenaska (Eleventh) , the P11C equipped twelve squadrons at the outbreak of war in September 1939.  During the seventeen days of the Polish campaign, 114 P11Cs were lost but not before they had accounted for over 120 Luftwaffe aircraft and extensively strafed the advancing Wehrmacht formations.