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Supermarine Stranraer
British flying boat introduced in 1937 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Supermarine Stranraer is a flying boat designed and built by the British Supermarine Aviation Works company at Woolston, Southampton. It was developed during the 1930s on behalf of its principal operator, the Royal Air Force (RAF). It was the RAF's last and fastest biplane flying boat.
Derived from the Supermarine Scapa, the aircraft's design was heavily shaped by Specification R.24/31, issued in 1931. After an initial rejection by the Air Ministry, Supermarine persisted with development as a private venture under the designation Southampton V. During 1933, a contract was placed for a single prototype; it was around this time that the type was named after Stranraer. First flown on 24 July 1934, the Stranraer entered frontline service with the RAF during 1937; most examples of the type were in service by the outbreak of World War II.
The Stranraers typically undertook anti-submarine and convoy escort patrols during the early years of the conflict. During March 1941, the model was withdrawn from frontline service, but continued to be operated in a training capacity until October 1942. In addition to the British-built aeroplanes, the Canadian Vickers company in Montreal, Quebec, also manufactured 40 Stranraers under licence for the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF). These Canadian Stranraers served in anti-submarine and coastal defence capacities on both Canada's Atlantic and Pacific coasts, and were in regular service until 1946. Following their withdrawal from military service, many ex-RCAF Stranraers were sold off to fledgling regional airlines, with whom they served in various commercial passenger and freighter operations into the 1950s.
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Design and development
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Background

The Supermarine Stranraer, which was directly derived from the Supermarine Scapa, was the final aircraft in a series of flying boats designed by R. J. Mitchell[1] for the Royal Air Force (RAF).[2] It was produced by Supermarine at Woolston, Southampton between 1925 and 1936.[3] Development of the series began during the early 1930s, with Supermarine's design team headed by Mitchell.[4]
The project was pursued as a response to the Air Ministry's issuing of Specification R.24/31 in 1931,[5] which called for a general purpose coastal reconnaissance flying boat for the RAF.[4] This specification demandeds included a payload 1,000 pounds (450 kg) greater than that of the Scapa and the ability to maintain level flight on only a single engine, which the Scapa could not do. Supermarine's initial response to the specification was a larger model of the Scapa; the company competed against a bid from Saunders-Roe.[4]
The Air Ministry favoured Saunders-Roe's proposal and rejected Supermarine's design.[4] Despite this, Supermarine chose to continue development work on the design as a private venture, which was first known as the Supermarine Southampton V.[4]
Prototypes and production
In 1933[6] a contract was placed for a single prototype powered by two 820 horsepower (610 kW) Bristol Pegasus IIIM engines, and the type was named the Stranraer. On 27 July 1934 the first prototype, K3973, made its maiden flight, piloted by Joseph Summers.[7] Over the following months, a relatively intense initial flight test programme was conducted. On 24 October 1934 it was delivered to the Marine Aircraft Experimental Establishment (MAEE) at RAF Felixstowe for official trials.[8]
On 29 August 1935, soon after the completion of proving flights, an initial order for 17 aircraft (serial numbers K7287 to K7303) was placed by the Air Ministry to fulfil Specification 17/35;[9] six more aircraft (K9676 to K9681) were ordered in May 1936.[10] The first production standard aircraft made its first flight in December 1936, and entered service operation with the RAF on 16 April 1937.[11] The final Stranraer was delivered on 3 April 1939. In addition, a total of 40 Stranraers were manufactured under licence in Canada by Canadian Vickers Limited, as both Supermarine and Canadian Vickers were subsidiaries of Vickers-Armstrongs.
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Description
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The Stranraer was a six-seater, twin-engined biplane flying boat.[1][12] Its empty weight was 11,250 pounds (5,100 kg), with a maximum take-off weight of 19,000 pounds (8,600 kg).[13]}
As the design of the Stranraer progressed, it was changed from that of the Scapa, having a two-bay structure.[4] The Stranraer's weight, and the surface area and span of its wings, were 12 per cent greater; the elevator was also 7 per cent larger, while the rudders featured trim tabs capable of holding the aircraft straight under single-engine flight. The Rolls-Royce Kestrel was initially considered as a powerplant, but eventually the moderately supercharged Bristol Pegasus IIIM radial engine was selected, .[14] Much of the airframe was alclad, while detailed fittings were made of stainless steel; metal components were anodised as an anti-corrosion measure.[7] For additional strength, a second pair of interplane struts were added.[15] The hull was considerably larger, its cross-section being increased by 18 per cent, yet it had identical hydrodynamic performance. The forward gun was redesigned to be retractable, the middle gunner's position was lowered, and a tail gunner position was added just aft of the control surfaces, completed with a hooded windshield.[15] In general, the equipment of which the aircraft was to be fitted with were the result of lessons learnt from operations of the earlier Southamptons.[7]
The production model of the Stranraer differed in a few ways from the first prototype, chiefly of which was the use of the more powerful 920 horsepower (690 kW) Pegasus X engine.[9] The engines were placed in nacelles under the upper wing, so that the propellers were well clear of any sea spray. Two petrol tanks, each of 250 imperial gallons (1,100 L; 300 US gal) capacity, were placed in the centre section of the upper wing; petrol was fed by gravity, but fuel pumps were also incorporated.[12]
The two-bladed wooden propellers of the prototype were replaced by three-bladed metal Fairey-Reed propellers when the aircraft went into production.[13] The wing structure was redesigned to have two bays. The wings were swept back to move the centre of pressure aft.[16][17]
The Stranraer was armed with three 0.303-inch (7.7 mm) Lewis guns, positioned in the nose, dorsal and tail.[13] The aircraft could carry up to 1,000 pounds (450 kg) of bombs.[13]
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Operational history
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Military use prior to September 1939
The Stranraer and its contemporary, the Saro London, were the last multi-engine, biplane flying-boats to see service with the RAF.[18] The RAF operated 17 Stranraers from 1937, although they were already considered obsolete when they entered service.[6][note 1] Before the war, the type served primarily with No. 228 Squadron, No. 209 Squadron and No. 240 Squadron.[9] Generally, the aircraft was not well-received, with numerous pilots considering its performance being typically marginal.[19] Others noted that it had superior seaworthiness to several aircraft in common use, such as the Consolidated PBY Catalina.[20] As early as 1938, some Stranraer squadrons had begun to re-equip themselves with other aircraft, such as the Short Sunderland and Short Singapore flying boats.[9]
Early on in its career, Stranraers made several challenging long-distance flights; one such flight, covering 4,000 miles (6,400 km), was performed during a single exercise during September 1938.[9]
Action during the Second World War
No Stranraers saw action away from UK territorial waters during World War II.[6] Immediately following the outbreak of the war in September 1939, Stranraers patrolled the North Sea, intercepting enemy shipping between Scotland and Norway. Aircraft assigned to such duties were typically armed with bombs underneath one wing and a single overload fuel tank underneath the other one. Use of the Stranraer for such patrols came to an end on 17 March 1941.[9] Stranraers saw service with No. 240 Squadron, and limited numbers were deployed at the No. 4 (Coastal) Operational Training Unit.[9] The final Stranraer flight in RAF service was conducted by K7303 at Felixstowe on 30 October 1942.[9]

Having acquired a less than favourable reception by flight and ground crews alike, the Stranraer gained a large number of derisive nicknames during its service life. It was sometimes referred to as a "whistling shithouse" because the toilet opened out directly to the air and when the seat was lifted, the airflow caused the toilet to make a whistling sound.[22] The Stranraer also acquired "Flying Meccano Set", "The Marpole Bridge", "Seymour Seine Net", "Strainer", "Flying Centre Section of the Lion's Gate Bridge", as well as a more genteel variant of its usual nickname, "Whistling Birdcage".[22]
The Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) Stranraers were exact equivalents of their RAF counterparts. In Canadian service, they were usually employed in coastal patrol against submarine threats in a similar role to the British Stranraers. Aviation author Dirk Septer stated that no enemy action was ever recorded by the RCAF's Stranraers.[23] However, the crew of a 5 Squadron Stranraer, flown by Flight Lieutenant Leonard Birchall, were responsible for the capture of an Italian merchant ship, the Capo Nola, in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, hours after Canada issued its declaration of war on Italy on 10 June 1940.[24][note 2] The Canadian Vickers-built Stranraers served with the RCAF throughout the war, the last example being withdrawn on 20 January 1946.[25]
Civilian use
From May 1935, the Stranraer was developed for civilian use into the Type 237.[6] All the RCAF's Stranraers were struck off charge between June 1939 and January 1946. Of the 40 aircraft acquired by the RCAF, half survived being destroyed or damaged during the war. In November 1944, 20 aircraft that had been withdrawn from active service in February earlier that year were purchased for civilian use, before being registered in Canada or the US.[26]
After the end of World War II, 13 examples were sold through Crown Assets (Canadian government) and passed into civilian use; several served with Queen Charlotte Airlines (QCA) in British Columbia, operating until 1958.[27] A re-engine project by the airline substituted 1,200 horsepower (890 kW) Wright GR-1820-G202GA engines in place of the original Pegasus units.[20]
Queen Charlotte Airlines became at one point the third-largest airline in Canada; it was popularly known as the Queer Collection of Aircraft. With limited money, it flew a mixture of types that were often the cast-offs of other operators. In QCA use, the Stranraer gained a more suitable reputation and was "well liked" by its crews.[28] A total of eight surplus Stranraers were also sold to Aero Transport Ltd. of Tampa, Florida.[29]
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Operators
Military

- RCAF – Operational Squadrons of the Home War Establishment (HWE) (Based in Canada)
- Eastern Air Command
- No. 5 Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Nov 38 – Sep 41)[30]
- No. 117 Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Sep 41 – Oct 41)[31]
- Western Air Command
- No. 4 Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Jul 39 – Sep 43)[32]
- No. 6 Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Nov 41 – May 43)[33]
- No. 7 Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Feb 43 – Mar 44)[34]
- No. 9 Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Dec 41 – Apr 43)[35]
- No. 13 (OT) Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Oct 41 – Nov 42)[36]
- No. 120 Squadron RCAF Used Supermarine Stranraer (Nov 41 – Oct 43)[37]
- (OT)-Operational Training;
- Eastern Air Command

Civilian
- Aero Transport Ltd.[11]
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Specifications
Data from Supermarine Aircraft since 1914,[41] Database: Supermarine Stranraer[42]
General characteristics
- Crew: 6–7
- Length: 54 ft 9 in (16.69 m)
- Wingspan: 85 ft 0 in (25.91 m)
- Height: 21 ft 9 in (6.63 m)
- Wing area: 1,457 sq ft (135.4 m2)
- Empty weight: 11,250 lb (5,103 kg)
- Gross weight: 19,000 lb (8,618 kg)
- Powerplant: 2 × Bristol Pegasus X nine-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engines, 920 hp (690 kW) each
- Propellers: 3-bladed variable-pitch metal propellers
Performance
- Maximum speed: 165 mph (266 km/h, 143 kn) at 6,000 ft (1,800 m)
- Alighting speed: 58.5 mph (50.8 kn; 94.1 km/h)
- Cruise speed: 105 mph (169 km/h, 91 kn)
- Range: 1,000 mi (1,600 km, 870 nmi) at 105 mph (91 kn; 169 km/h) and 5,000 ft (1,500 m)
- Service ceiling: 18,500 ft (5,600 m)
- Rate of climb: 1,350 ft/min (6.9 m/s)
- Time to altitude: 10,000 ft (3,000 m) in 10 minutes
- Wing loading: 13 lb/sq ft (63 kg/m2)
- Power/mass: 0.097 hp/lb (0.159 kW/kg)
Armament
- Guns: Three × 0.303 in (7.70 mm) Lewis guns
- Bombs: 1,000 lb (454 kg) of bombs or depth charges on external racks under the mainplanes
- Eight × 20 lb (9 kg) bombs housed in internal bays in the lower mainplanes
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Surviving aircraft
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A single Stranraer, 920/CF-BXO, survives in the collection of the Royal Air Force Museum London.[43][44] This aircraft was built in 1940, one of 40 produced by Canadian Vickers. In service with the RCAF, it flew with several squadrons, on anti-submarine patrols, as a training aircraft and carrying passengers. In 1944, it was disposed of. It was flown by the civilian airline Canadian Pacific Airlines until 1947, then by Queen Charlotte Airlines, who replaced its original engines with American Wright R-1820 Cyclone engines. Queen Charlotte Airlines flew the aircraft on passenger flights until 1952, flying from Vancouver along the Pacific coast of British Columbia. It flew with several other private owners until it was damaged by a ship in 1966. In 1970, it was bought by the RAF Museum and transported to the UK.[40]
Parts of a second Stranraer, 915/CF-BYJ, are owned by the Shearwater Aviation Museum, Halifax, Canada. This aircraft also operated with Queen Charlotte Airlines until it crashed on Christmas Eve 1949 at Belize Inlet, British Columbia. Most of the aircraft was recovered in the 1980s, with the exception of the forward fuselage and cockpit.[40]
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See also
Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
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Notes
- Flight Lieutenant Birchall had been tasked with locating any Italian vessels still in Canadian waters as war became imminent. On 10 June, he located the Capo Nola, which had recently departed from Quebec. Birchall had been informed of the declaration of war by radio and so made a low pass over the freighter, as if making an attack. This panicked the captain into running his vessel aground against a sandbank. Birchall then touched down nearby and waited until Royal Canadian Navy vessels reached the scene. The Capo Nola's crew were the first Italian prisoners taken by the Allies during the war.[24]
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