Product Code Database
Example Keywords: playbook -battlefield $50
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Miles Kestrel
Tag Wiki 'Miles Kestrel'.
Tag

The Miles M.9 Kestrel was a 1930s British single-engined seat , intended as an advanced trainer. Only one Kestrel was built but it was developed into the for the and produced in large numbers at the start of the Second World War.


Design and development
The Kestrel was Miles' first high powered aircraft and was an aerodynamically clean monoplane with wings and . It is not recorded whether it was named after a bird of prey, like many aircraft designed by F. G. Miles, or after its Rolls-Royce Kestrel engine.

The Kestrel had thick wings, perhaps influenced by the experiments with the , with a root thickness to chord ratio of about 23%. They had inverted gull form, with anhedral inboard, giving way to dihedral on the outer part. The wings carried immediately outboard of Miles split trailing edge flaps in two sections on each wing. The main was attached at the lowest point of the wing, keeping the legs short; they retracted backwards, with the wheels rotating into the plane of the wings. A tail wheel was fitted. Both and elevators were horn balanced and fitted with .

The aircraft was wooden throughout, with spruce frames covered in beech and a doped fabric sheath. Instructor and pupil sat in tandem under a simple perspex canopy, with the minimum of framing and with extra clear panels in the fuselage sides behind the rear seat. The forward seat was positioned at about mid-chord. The 745 hp (556 kW) Kestrel engine drove a three-bladed and had a chin radiator under the nose.


Operational history
The sole Kestrel (G-AEOC) was built as a private venture, and first flew in May 1937. "G-AEOC". CAA. Retrieved: 30 May 2013. On 26 June 1937, it appeared at the . Its performance was remarkable for a trainer; it reached 295 mph (475 km/h) at 14,000 ft (4,270 m), only 15 mph slower than the contemporary single-seat Hawker Hurricane with its much more powerful engine. The Kestrel did not carry the same military load, though there was provision for a single 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine gun in the starboard wing outboard of the landing gear, and for a camera in the matching port side position. There is no record that this gun was fitted. There was also provision for eight practice bombs on two centre section racks.

After the Hendon event, it flew on manufacturer's trials, under B conditions (in Class B markings) as U-5, until it was transferred to military markings as N3300. It was test flown at the Royal Aircraft Establishment at Farnborough, and by the Aeroplane & Armament Experimental Establishment at . On 20 August 1941, it was struck off RAF charge, and in 1943 was scrapped at the Miles base at Woodley Aerodrome.

The Kestrel had not been built to an specification, and did not immediately go into production, being described by some as "premature". However, in 1938, the de Havilland Don, that had won the Air Ministry specification T.6/36 contract, proved unsuitable in service, so orders were placed for a production development of the Kestrel called the . At the time, it was the largest ever order for an RAF training aircraft. The Master I had some noticeable differences from the Kestrel, such as in the shape of the rear fuselage and fin, the rudder and elevator balancing, the cockpit glazing, and the relocation of the radiator from nose to belly, but was otherwise very similar.


Specifications

Notes

Bibliography
  • (1993). 9780851302089, Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd..
  • (1974). 037010014X, Putnam & Co Ltd. 037010014X


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs