
Mo | 5 May | Closed: Liberation Day |
Th | 29 May | Closed: Ascension Day |
Mo | 9 June | Closed: Whit Monday |
Collect Megapoints for Megavouchers
Read the conditions...
Aviation Megastore offers unique Hold & Store service © for internet customers that wish to combine several individual orders to one single shipment, reducing the overall shipping cost significantly.
Read more...
Series Warpaint Series No 105
Publisher/Brand Hall Park
Author Matthew Willis
Format a4
No. Pages 125
Version Soft cover
Language English
Category Aviationbooks
Subcategory World Wars » WW1
Availability Temporarily Out of Stock.
Click here to be notified when this product becomes available again
This product was added to our database on Wednesday 11 November 2015.
Your reliable Aviation Book Source since 1989
product | Publisher/Brand | Series/scale | Price € | ||
![]() | Avro Lancaster | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 89 | € 18.30 | |
![]() | Fairey Albacore | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 52 | € 15.55 | |
![]() | Fairey Battle | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 83 | € 15.55 | |
![]() | Fairey Firefly F.Mk.1 to U.Mk.9 | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 28 | € 17.39 | |
![]() | Hunting-Percival Pembroke, Prince & Sea Prince | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 145 | € 18.30 | |
![]() | Lockheed F104 Starfighter | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 43 | € 17.39 | |
![]() | Martin B26 Marauder | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 69 | € 15.55 | |
![]() | Messerschmitt Me262 | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 93 | € 15.55 | |
![]() | Republic F105 Thunderchief | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 38 | € 15.55 | |
![]() | Short Sunderland | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 25 | € 16.47 |
The Sopwith Pup, as it is unofficially but universally known, was one of the first true British fighter aircraft, and one of the most significant of the First World War. It played a key part in maintaining control of the skies over the Western Front during and after the RFC's toughest period, Bloody April, 1917. Its superb flying qualities kept it competitive as ever-faster and more powerful opposition appeared, and it played an unglamorous but important role in the defence of the UK against zeppelin and heavy bomber attacks, and was fundamental to the development of ship-based aviation. With the very well-established categories of military aircraft that are familiar today, it is hard to comprehend the world in which the Pup was born, where these clear delineations did not exist. Certainly the idea of the fast, agile single-seat fighter was barely thought of when the Pup's outline was first chalked on the floor of the experimental workshop at Sopwith's Kingston-upon-Thames premises in 1915. The new aircraft was known as the 'Sparrow', was powered by a 50hp Gnome rotary. Test pilot Harry Hawker took the aircraft to Brooklands and amazed trainee RFC pilots by flying it under the bridge across the Byfleet Banking. It was fully aerobatic and capable of a speed just shy of 85mph despite the low engine power. It is unclear whether Sopwith intended the machine to form the basis of a military aircraft but in any event, its performance and handling, even on such low power, must have recommended it for that purpose. The 'Sparrow' therefore became the progenitor of the aircraft that would become the 'Pup'. It was around the time of the prototype's first appearance that the Pup seems to have gained its popular name. Brigadier-General SeftonBrancker, then the RFC's Director of Air Organisation, is reputed to have remarked, on seeing the prototype Scout beside its larger sibling at Brooklands, 'Your 1½ Strutter has had a pup!' For all its value as a front line fighting aeroplane, the Pup had a potentially even greater impact on the development of naval aviation; in particular, the sometimes tortuous path of launching aircraft from, and returning them safely to, ships at sea. Moreover, the Pup became one of the more successful operational aircraft in this fledgling area of combat. This is the first WWI title in the series and includes all the usual Warpaint features – historical text, modellers glossary, colour artwork by Richard Caruana and a three page colour walkaround by author Matthew Willis.