Wed May 30, 2012 1:14 pm
Wed May 30, 2012 5:38 pm
Cvairwerks wrote:Does anyone happen to know if there are any Foxes still in existance?
Wed May 30, 2012 5:41 pm
Wed May 30, 2012 7:18 pm
Wed May 30, 2012 7:46 pm
Cvairwerks wrote:Thanks for the info James. I'll drop you a pm for the contact info for Judwin in the next day or two.
As to an American powerplant???? Not unless the Kestrel, the Hispano or the Armstrong were made in the US...
On seeing the Curtiss CR, powered by a Curtiss D-12 V-12 liquid-cooled engine of low frontal area and in a low drag installation, win the 1923 Schneider Trophy race, Fairey realised that this engine would be well suited to a new bomber and acquired an example of the engine and a licence for production.[2][3]
Fairey commenced design of a bomber around this engine, with detailed design carried out by a team at first led by Frank Duncanson and then by the Belgian Marcel Lobelle. The resultant aircraft, the Fairey Fox, was a single-bay biplane with highly staggered wings,[2] with a composite wood and metal structure.[4] The Curtiss D-12 was installed in a closely cowled tractor installation, ...
...
there was much resistance to the new bomber within the Air Ministry, with the Fox not designed to an official specification and having several features, such as fuel tanks within the fuselage, that went against official norm, and most importantly, it featured an American engine.[8] (Although Fairey had negotiated a license for the D-12, in the end it built no engines, with 50 engines being imported.[2])