Westland Weasel
Westland Weasel
Prototype Fighter / Reconnaissance Aircraft
The Westland Weasel was a prototype two-seat fighter / reconnaissance aircraft of the First World War. The Weasel was a single engine tractor biplane designed to replace the Bristol Fighter. Four prototypes were built, but no production followed owing to the failure of its original engine. However, the prototypes were used as engine test beds for the successful Armstrong Siddeley Jaguar and Bristol Jupiter engines.
The Westland Weasel was designed by Westland Aircraft to meet the Royal Air Force's Type IIIA Specification for a two-seat fighter / reconnaissance aircraft to replace the successful Bristol Fighter. An order for three prototypes was placed in April 1918, together with orders for competing designs from Bristol (the Badger) and Austin Motors (the Greyhound).
The Weasel was a two-bay biplane of wood and fabric construction, with the pilot and observer/gunner seated close together in separate cockpits, with the upper wing above the pilot being cut away to improve the upwards view. Armament was similar to the Bristol Fighter, with two synchronised Vickers guns and one or two Lewis guns for the observer. Like the other two competitors, the Weasel was powered by the officially encouraged ABC Dragonfly 9-cylinder air-cooled radial engine.
The first prototype, although largely complete by the end of June, had to wait for delivery of an engine, and did not fly until late November 1918, after the Armistice ended World War I. As with the many other British aircraft projects of 1918, use of the Dragonfly engine proved a disaster, with the engine not only being underpowered and overweight, but more seriously, plagued with rapid overheating and severe vibration. These problems were unsolvable, and although the Weasel had slightly better performance than the Bristol and Austin designs, the failure of the Dragonfly and the lack of urgent need to replace the excellent Bristol Fighter meant that large scale orders did not follow.
Despite this, an
order was placed
for a fourth
prototype to
serve as an
engine test bed.
The first and
third prototypes
were fitted with
the Armstrong
Siddeley Jaguar
radial, while
the second and
fourth aircraft
were fitted with
the Bristol
Jupiter engine.
These aircraft
proved valuable
test beds, with
the last Weasel
remaining in use
until May 1925.
General characteristics | |
Crew: | Two |
Length: | 24 ft 10 in (7.57 m) |
Wingspan: | 35 ft 6 in (10.82 m) |
Height: | 10 ft 1 in (3.07 m) |
Wing area: | 368 ft² (34.2 m²) |
Empty weight: | 1,867 lb (849 kg) |
Loaded weight: | 3,071 lb (1,396 kg) |
Powerplant: | 1 × ABC Dragonfly I 9-cylinder radial engine, 320hp (239kW) |
Performance | |
Maximum speed: | 130.5 mph (113 knots, 210 km/h) at 6,500 ft (1,980 m) |
Service ceiling: | 20,700 ft (6,310 m) |
Climb to 15,000 ft (4,570 m): | 19 minutes |
Armament | |
Guns: | 2x synchronised 0.303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers machine guns |
1 or 2 × Lewis guns on Scarff ring in rear cockpit | |
Production | |
Number built: | Four. |
First flight: | November 1918 |
All the above text based on / 'borrowed' from Wikipedia.
gallery
A Westland Weasel photographed in April 1922 with a Bristol Jupiter II engine.
A Westland Weasel seen from the side.
A front three-quarter view of the Westland Weasel.