Airspeed Oxford and Consul
Product code ws-136
Airspeed
Series Warpaint Series No 136
Publisher/Brand Hall Park
Author William Harrison
Format a4
No. Pages 52
Version Soft cover
Language English
Category Aviationbooks
Subcategory WW2 UK » WW2 UK Aircraft
Availability only 1 remaining
This product was added to our database on Monday 23 January 2023.
Your reliable Aviation Book Source since 1989
Also in this series:
| Product | Publisher/Brand | Series/scale | Price € | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Blackburn Firebrand and Firecrest | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 56 | € 18.30 | |
![]() | Boeing B29 & B50 Superfortress | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 143 | € 26.56 | |
![]() | De Havilland DH112 Venom and Sea Venom | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 44 | € 18.30 | |
![]() | De Havilland Vampire (REISSUE!) | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 27 | € 20.14 | |
![]() | Fairey Swordfish | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 12 | € 14.63 | |
![]() | General Dynamics F111 Aardvark and EF111A RavenTemporarily Out of Stock. | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 104 | € 22.89 | |
![]() | Grumman F6F Hellcat | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 84 | € 18.30 | |
![]() | Hawker Hunter | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 8 | € 17.39 | |
![]() | Panavia Tornado ADV | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 113 | € 17.39 | |
![]() | Vickers Wellesley | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 86 | € 16.47 |
With more than 8,750 built the Oxford was a well thought-out design that was based on their Airspeed Envoy, a similar shaped twin-engine executive air-craft that was used in the early 1930s but the more advanced design of the Oxford suited the military requirement for a three-seat training aircraft. The Oxford was a low-wing cantilever monoplane of advanced design and was produced for the training of pilots in handling modern, multi-engine bomber aircraft. Wooden construction was employed throughout making for a simpler design and easier repairs. Provision was made for instruction in pilot train-ing, aerial photography, navigation, aerial photography, and bombing train-ing. An Armstrong-Whitworth gun turret could be installed for training in aeri-al gunnery. After the War the Consul was conceived as a small airliner, chief-ly converted from ex-military Oxfords with more than 160 rebuilt. These quickly sold to potential airline operators and were eventually used in many countries, some changing hands four or five times. The Oxford and the Con-sul were relatively safe flying machines and with thousands of bomber pilots undertaking their flying training in the type it played a major part in the RAF's war effort, and is widely regarded as a design the manufacturers could be proud of.
This book is written by William Harrison with artwork by Sam Pear-son.
10 pages of Colour Profiles
detailed plans
Over 150 many never seen before images











