Here are some images of Wingnut Wings 1/32 scale Felixstowe F.2A early.
With a three foot wingspan this is one impressive kit. Plus despite its high detail and complexity is a pretty straight forward kit with no real issues, fit or otherwise.
My only complaint is that the high detail interior is mostly hidden by the fuselage. Oh well.
From Wikipedia"
The Felixstowe F.2 was a 1917 British flying boat class designed and developed by Lieutenant Commander John Cyril Porte RN at the naval air station, Felixstowe during the First World War adapting a larger version of his superior Felixstowe F.1 hull design married with the larger Curtiss H-12
flying boat. The Felixstowe hull had superior water contacting
attributes and became a key base technology in most seaplane designs
thereafter.
Before the war Porte had worked with American aircraft designer Glenn Curtiss on a flying boat, America in which they intended to cross the Atlantic in order to win the £10,000 prize offered by the British Daily Mail
newspaper for the first aircraft to cross the Atlantic. Following the
outbreak of war in Europe, Porte returned to England and rejoined the Royal Navy, eventually becoming commander of the naval air station at Felixstowe where he recommended the purchase from Curtiss of an improved version of the America flying boat on which he had worked, the Curtiss H-4 type, resulting in the RNAS receiving two prototype Americas and 62 H-4s.
The Curtiss H-4 was found to have a number of problems, being both
underpowered and having a hull too weak for sustained operations and
having poor handling characteristics when afloat or taking off.
One flying boat pilot, Major Theodore Douglas Hallam, wrote that they
were "comic machines, weighing well under two tons; with two comic
engines giving, when they functioned, 180 horsepower; and comic control,
being nose heavy with engines on and tail heavy in a glide."
To try to resolve the H-4's hydrodynamic issues, in 1915 Porte
carried out a series of experiments on four H-4s fitted with a variety
of modified hulls,using the results of these tests to design a new 36-foot-long (11 m) hull which was fitted to the wings and tail of an H-4, serial number 3580, with a pair of 150 hp (112 kW) Hispano-Suiza 8 engines as the Felixstowe F.1.
Rather than the lightweight boat-type structure of the Curtiss boats,
the F.1's hull was based around a sturdy wooden box-girder similar to
that used in contemporary landplanes, to which were attached a
single-step planing bottom and side sponsons. Once modified by the
fitting of a further two steps, the new hull proved to give much better
take off and landing characteristics and was much more seaworthy.
Porte then designed a similar hull, for the larger Curtiss H-12
flying boat, which while larger and more capable than the H-4s, shared
failings of a weak hull and poor water handling. The combination of the
new Porte II hull, this time fitted with two steps, with the wings of the H-12, a new tail and powered by two Rolls-Royce Eagle engines was named the Felixstowe F.2; its first flight was in July 1916,[10] proving greatly superior to the Curtiss on which it was based.
The F.2 entered production as the Felixstowe F.2A, being used as a
patrol aircraft, with about 100 being completed by the end of World War
I. Another seventy were built, and these were followed by two F.2C which
were built at Felixstowe.
In February 1917, the first prototype of the Felixstowe F.3
was flown. This was larger and heavier than the F.2, giving it greater
range and heavier bomb load, but poorer agility. Approximately 100
Felixstowe F.3s were produced before the end of the war.
The Felixstowe F.5
was intended to combine the good qualities of the F.2 and F.3, with the
prototype first flying in May 1918. The prototype showed superior
qualities to its predecessors but the production version was modified to
make extensive use of components from the F.3, in order to ease
production, giving lower performance than either the F.2A or F.3.
The Felixstowe F.2A was used as a patrol aircraft over the North Sea
until the end of the war. Its excellent performance and maneuverability
made it an effective and popular type, often fighting enemy patrol and
fighter aircraft, as well as hunting U-boats and Zeppelins.
The larger F.3, which was less popular with its crews than the more
maneuverable F.2A, served in the Mediterranean and the North Sea.
The F.5 did not enter service until after the end of World War I, but
replaced the earlier Felixstowe boats (together with Curtiss flying
boats) to serve as the RAF's standard flying boat until being replaced by the Supermarine Southampton in 1925.
Wooow... Those are some really old planes, like the ones they had in Looney Tunes! I hope some day I can build a hot air balloon.
ReplyDeleteYou must have really tiny fingers to make those little models!
Thanks CanF - Actually my hands are quite large. It's the tools that are tiny.
ReplyDeleteI hope some day I can build a hot air balloon.
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Hello Warren
ReplyDeleteThe Me and the Curtiss are extraordinary, as always, but Felixstowe is beautiful and I did not know him.
Happy summer
Tienes un gran verano también Diego!
ReplyDeleteI am writing to a Canadian site on models of WW1 aeroplanes. I wonder if readers are aware that a Canadian, Lieutenant Arnold Bonnell Massey, AFC was the first man to fly to the Shetland Isles in June 1918, to RAF Catfirth. That flight was in a Porte Boat (often known as a Porte Baby) no. 9807 and the two patrol flying boats he flew from Catfirth were Felixstowe F3s, nos. 4407 and 4232.
ReplyDeleteI have just published a book on this entitled RAF Catfirth 1918 and can be bought online from Bassman Books at www.bassmanbooks.co.uk The book was written after several years of research into this WW1 flying boat station. The book sells for £8.50 in the UK. It would be a fine Canadian project for a model-maker over there to built either a Porte Boat of an F3 as flown by Arnold massey.
Yours........Simon Gunn. (I have a facebook page: RAF Catfirth 1918)
Thanks Simon I'll take a look.
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