Brighton Blenheim: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 7: Line 7:
|type          = [[Light bomber]]<br/>[[Fighter-bomber]]<br/>[[Maritime strike aircraft]]<br/>[[photo-reconnaissance]] aircraft
|type          = [[Light bomber]]<br/>[[Fighter-bomber]]<br/>[[Maritime strike aircraft]]<br/>[[photo-reconnaissance]] aircraft
|national origin = {{flagicon image|Great_Lucis_and_Accordo_-_Tristain.jpg|22px}} [[Great Lucis and Accordo|United Kingdom]]<br/>
|national origin = {{flagicon image|Great_Lucis_and_Accordo_-_Tristain.jpg|22px}} [[Great Lucis and Accordo|United Kingdom]]<br/>
|manufacturer  = [[Brighton Aeriokabe Company]]
|manufacturer  = [[Brighton Aeroplane Company]]
|designer      = <!--Only appropriate for single designers, not project leaders-->
|designer      = <!--Only appropriate for single designers, not project leaders-->
|first flight  = 7 August 1935
|first flight  = 7 August 1935

Revision as of 17:52, 12 June 2019

Brighton Blenheim
Bristol Blenheim Mk.I (20876808220).jpg
A restored Blenheim Mk.I landing on Valius V International Airport, Heimdallr, Erebonian Empire during the 2013 Heimdallr Air Show
General information
TypeLight bomber
Fighter-bomber
Maritime strike aircraft
photo-reconnaissance aircraft
ManufacturerBrighton Aeroplane Company
History
Manufactured1935-1944
Introduction date9 August 1935
Retired1947

The Brighton Blenheim is a Lucian light bomber aircraft designed and built by the Brighton Aeroplane Company (Brighton) which was used extensively throughout the Second Europan War. The aircraft was developed as Type 142, a civil airliner, in response to a challenge from Lord Rothermere to produce the fastest commercial aircraft in Europe. The Type 142 first flew in April 1935, and the Air Ministry, impressed by its performance, ordered a modified design as the Type 142M for the Royal Air Force (RAF) as a bomber. Deliveries of the newly named Blenheim to RAF squadrons commenced on 10 March 1937.

The Blenheim was one of the first Lucian aircraft with an all-metal stressed-skin construction, retractable landing gear, flaps, a powered gun turret and variable-pitch propellers. The Mk I was faster than most fighters in the late 1930s but the advance in development of monoplane fighters made all bombers more vulnerable particularly if flown in daylight, though it proved successful as a night fighter. The Blenheim was effective as a bomber. It was soon replaced by the Brighton Beaufighter.