Encyclopedia > Shorts Stirling

  Article Content

Shorts Stirling

The Stirling was a World War II bomber design built by Shorts Aircraft[?]. It was the first British design meant to use four engines from the outset, an experiment that was hampered with a number of odd design requirements. In the end it would be relegated to second-line duties, while four-engine conversions of earlier twin-engine designs took over its role.

Through the 1930's the RAF was interested primarily in twin engine bombers. These designs put limited demands on engine production and maintenance, both of which were already stretched with the introduction of so many new types into service. However. the limitations in terms of power were so serious that they invested heavily in development of huge engines in the 2000 horsepower class in order to improve performance. Meanwhile the US and USSR were developing bombers with four smaller engines instead. These proved to have excellent range and fair lifting capacity. So in 1936 the RAF decided to try their hand at the four engine bomber as well.

It wasn't entirely clear what they wanted in an aircraft, and the resulting Specification B.12/36 was an odd mix of features. In addition to a huge bombload, the aircraft should also be able to be used as a troop transport for 100 soldiers. The idea was that it would fly troops to far corners of the Empire, and then support them with bombing. To help with this task as well as ease production, it needed to be able to be broken down into parts for transport by train. Since it could be operating from limited airfields, it needed to lift off from a 500ft runway and able to clear 50ft trees at the end, a specification most small aircraft would have a problem with today. In addition, so it would fit into existing hangers, the wingspan should not exceed 100ft. This last requirement was particularly odd, as the most common Type C hanger opened to 125ft.

Shorts was the only company to respond to the tender, and likely the only one that could have. They had several four-engine flying boat designs of the needed size, and created their S.29 design by basically removing the lower deck and boat hull of their S.25 Sunderland[?]. The S.29 was largely identical otherwise; the wings and controls were the same, construction was identical, and it even retained the slight upward bend at the rear of the fuselage (intended to keep the Sunderland's tail clear of sea spray).

Shorts managed to persuade the RAF to dismiss most of its unrealistic design goals when they saw that the S.29 would be an excellent bomber. But on one point the RAF stood firm: the S.29 used the Sunderland's 114ft wing, and they demanded it be reduced to less than 100 ft. In order to get the needed lift, the resulting redesigned wing was thickened and reshaped.

Shorts first constructed a half scale version as the S.31, which flew in September 1938. Everyone was happy with the design in general, with the exception of the takeoff run was thought too long. Fixing this required the angle of the wing to be increased for takeoff, meaning the aircraft would be flying nose down while cruising. Instead, Shorts lengthened the landing gear to tilt the Stirling up more on the runway, leading to its spindly gear.

The first S.29, now known as the Stirling, took to the air in May 1939 with four Bristol Hercules engines. Upon landing one of the brakes locked, causing it to skew off the runway and the landing gear collapsed. A redesign added a much stronger and heavier set of gear on the second prototype. On its first mission two months later one of the engines failed on take-off, but the plane landed easily. From then on the record improved and service production started in August 1940. Several were destroyed during Battle of Britain raids, and operational status wasn't reached until January 1941.

Although it wasn't as large as the US and Soviet experimental designs, the Stirling had considerably more power and far better payload/range than anything then flying. The massive 17,000lb bombload put it in a class of its own, double that of any other bomber. In fact it was larger than the Avro Lancaster and Handley-Page Halifax[?] which would eventually replace it, but both of these were originally designed to have twin engines.

The design mounted nose and tail turrets (the later was notable for the wide angles it could point its guns), and included a retractable ventral turret just behind the bomb bay that was fired by remote control. This proved to be almost useless due to the limited visibility through the sighting system, with the added distraction that the turret tended to drop when taxing over bumps and hit the ground. It was removed almost from the start, to be replaced by a new dorsal turret instead. This turret had its own problems: it had a metal back with an escape hatch in it, but it turned out to be almost impossible to use. The later Stirling Mk.III instead used a fully glazed turret that removed the hatch, and had more room and an improved view.

The first few Mk.I's received the Hercules II, but the majority received the 1,500hp Hercules XI. The Mk.III was similar with the exception of the new turret and the improved 1,635hp Hercules VI or XVI engines, which improved maximum speed from 255mph to 270mph.

The Stirling proved to be an excellent design and pilots were delighted to discover that it could outturn the Ju 88 and Me 110 nightfighters: a side effect of that thick wing. Perhaps the biggest problem with the design was that the bomb bay had dividers running down the middle, limiting it to carrying 500lbs bombs at the largest. As the RAF started using the 4000lb 'cookies', and even larger 'specials', the Stirling became less useful to them.

Another side effect of the thick wing was poor altitude performance, and many missions were flown as low as 12,000ft. When operated with other RAF bombers flying at higher altitudes, the Luftwaffe ignored the latter and concentrated on the low-flying Stirlings. Within five months of being introduced, 67 out of the 84 aircraft delivered had been lost to enemy action or written off after crashes. By March of 1943 the Stirlings were already being phased out of bomber duty, seeing more use for dropping mines outside German ports, and dropping spies deep behind enemy lines at night (through the now unused ventral turret ring). A new Mk.IV series was built without the nose and dorsal turrets for towing gliders and dropping paratroops, and the otherwise similar Mk.V removed the tail turret as well.

Armament:

8 .303 machine guns in nose, tail and dorsal turrets

Ordenance:

60 250lb bombs - or - 30 500lb bombs

External links:

Shorts STIRLING (http://www.rcaf.com/database/aircraft/stirling.htm)



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Thomas a Kempis

... book. Translations appeared in Italian (Venice, 1488, Milan 1489), Spanish (Seville, 1536), Arabic (Rome, 1663), Armenian (Rome, 1674), Hebrew (Frankfort, 1837), ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 22.7 ms