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Vickers Wellesley



         



Vickers Wellesley
Description
RoleGeneral-purpose bomber
Crew2
First FlightJune 19, 1935
Entered ServiceApril 1937
ManufacturerVickers (Aviation) Ltd
Dimensions
Length39 ft 3 in11.96 m
Wingspan74 ft 7 in22.73 m
Height12 ft 4 in3.75 m
Wing area630 ft²58.5 m²
Weights
Empty6,369 lb2,889 kg
Loaded11,000 lb5,035 kg
Maximum takeoff12,500 lb5,670 kg
Powerplant
Engines1 x Bristol Pegasus XX
Power925 hp690 kW
Performance
Maximum speed228 mph369 km/h
Combat range1,110 miles1,786 km
Ferry rangemileskm
Service ceiling33,000 ft10,060 m
Rate of climb1,200 ft/min366 m/min
Wing loading17.5 lb/ft²86 kg/m²
Power/Mass0.084 hp/lb0.137 kW/kg
Armament
Guns1 x .303 in Vickers machine gun in right wing
1 x .303 Vickers K machine gun in rear cockpit
Bombs2,000 lbs908 kg


The Vickers Wellesley was a 1930s light bomber built by Vickers for the Royal Air Force. While it was obsolete by the start of World War II, and unsuited to the European air war, the Wellesley prospered in the desert theatres of East Africa, Egypt and the Middle East from 1940 to 1942.

The Wellesley utilised a radical geodetic construction that was derived from the airship structural developments of Barnes Wallis. Vickers originally used the technique to build a biplane to meet Air Ministry Specification G.4/31 but the result was a failure. Modifying it to make the monoplane Wellesley resulted in a successful aircraft capable of long range and high altitude flight. The RAF ordered a total of 176 Wellesleys.

Three aircraft were modified to become a long-range variant. These had a crew of three and were fitted with extra fuel tanks. On November 5, 1938 two of them flew non-stop for two days from Egypt to Darwin, Australia (7,162 miles, 11,525 km).

While the Wellesley was not a significant combat aircraft, the design principles that were tested in its construction were put to good use with the Wellington heavy bomber that became on of the main types of RAF Bomber Command in the early years of the European war.


Related content
Related Development None
Similar Aircraft
Designation Series Wellesley - Wellington - Warwick
Related Lists List of aircraft of the RAF


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