Blackburn Botha

1938 reconnaissance aircraft series


title: "Blackburn Botha" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["blackburn-aircraft", "1930s-british-bomber-aircraft", "high-wing-aircraft", "history-of-west-dunbartonshire", "aircraft-first-flown-in-1938", "twin-piston-engined-tractor-aircraft", "aircraft-with-retractable-conventional-landing-gear"] description: "1938 reconnaissance aircraft series" topic_path: "history" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackburn_Botha" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary 1938 reconnaissance aircraft series ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox aircraft"]

FieldValue
nameB.26 Botha
image15 Blackburn Botha I Bristol Perseus Engine (15837310772).jpg
captionBlackburn B.26 Botha
typeTorpedo bomber
manufacturerBlackburn Aircraft
first_flight28 December 1938
introduction12 December 1939
retiredSeptember 1944
primary_userRoyal Air Force
number_built580
::

|name= B.26 Botha |image= 15 Blackburn Botha I Bristol Perseus Engine (15837310772).jpg |caption= Blackburn B.26 Botha |type= Torpedo bomber |manufacturer= Blackburn Aircraft |designer= |first_flight= 28 December 1938 |introduction= 12 December 1939 |retired= September 1944 |status= |primary_user= Royal Air Force |produced= |number_built= 580 |unit cost= |variants= The Blackburn B.26 Botha was a four-seat reconnaissance and torpedo bomber. It was produced by the British aviation company Blackburn Aircraft at its factories at Brough and Dumbarton.

The Botha was developed during the mid 1930s in response to Air Ministry Specification M.15/35, and was ordered straight off the drawing board alongside the competing Bristol Beaufort. On 28 December 1938, the first production aircraft made the type's maiden flight; almost exactly one year later, it entered service with the RAF. During official evaluation testing of the Botha, stability issues were revealed, as well as the fact that it was underpowered. It was only briefly used in frontline operations before being withdrawn to secondary roles during 1941. It continued to be flown in these roles, largely being used for training and as a target tug, before being fully withdrawn in September 1944.

Development

During September 1935, the British Air Ministry issued specification M.15/35, which called for a new reconnaissance/torpedo bomber to reequip RAF Coastal Command. Among the stipulations set out were a twin-engined arrangement, a crew of three, and the provision of internal stowage to accommodate a single torpedo. Blackburn opted to produce a design to meet this requirement. During early 1936, two submissions that fulfilled this requirement were accepted, one being Blackburn's and the other being the Type 152 from Bristol. The Blackburn design would receive the name Botha after General Botha, while the rival Type 152 would be named Beaufort after the Duke of Beaufort.

Both of the proposed aircraft were originally intended to be powered by the Bristol Perseus radial engine, capable of producing 850 hp (634 kW). At a late stage, the Air Ministry decided to revise the specification and re-issue it as M.10/36; the principal change was that the aircraft was abruptly required to accommodate a crew of four, along with an enlarged fuselage that increased the aircraft's overall weight. It was also intended that this change would allow the successful design to be ordered straight from the drawing board. A consequence of the weight increase was that both designs suddenly required more power to be able to achieve their envisioned performance; however, while the Taurus, capable of producing up to 1,130 hp (840 kW), was provided for the Beaufort, the Botha only received the Perseus X, capable of up to 880 hp (660 kW), due to limited supplies of the Taurus engine.

Early on, Blackburn made several proposals to address the engine shortfall; the adoption of the large Bristol Hercules radial engine was the main element of the proposed Botha II, however, it was not pursued. During December 1936, the Air Ministry ordered 442 Bothas, it placed orders for the competing Beaufort as well. Immediately upon receipt of the order, Blackburn set about establishing two production lines for the Botha at its main factory at Brough and its new facility in Dumbarton, Scotland; additional component manufacturing was performed at the Olympia works in Leeds.

On 28 December 1938, the first flight of the Botha took place at Brough , piloted by H. Bailey. This was the first production aircraft, since there was no prototypes as such. On 25 March 1939 it was delivered to RAF Martlesham Heath for performance and handling trials by the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE). The first production aircraft was found to have inadequate elevator control; this was rectified on a second aircraft sent for trials by a slight increase in the tailplane area and a larger horn-balanced elevator.

A total of 380 aircraft were produced at Brough, while another 200 Bothas were constructed at Dumbarton for a total of 580. Peak production was attained in June 1940, during that month alone the two sites produced 58 aircraft. Limited modifications were implemented during the production run, such as the addition of a jettisonable main entrance door, non-retractable bulged navigator windows, new flap jacks, and an improved undercarriage retraction mechanism; several proposed changes, such as larger propellers and flame dampers, were not implemented.

Design

In basic configuration, the Blackburn Botha was a twin-engined cantilever monoplane; the high-mounted wing was a deliberate design decision, intended to provide the best possible downward view for its crew. The pilot, seated in a relatively spacious and well-instrumented cabin at the front of the aircraft, had an exceptionally unobstructed forward-facing field of view, although the rearwards view was restricted by the position of the engines. The navigator and wireless operator's positions were within a separate central cabin reached via an entrance door with a built-in stepladder on the starboard side of the fuselage. Crew members could move between their positions via a narrow gangway; the observer had to use this passage to reach the prone bombing position in the aircraft's nose. The final crew member, the gunner, was positioned to the rear of the wing in an egg-shaped power-assisted turret on the upper fuselage.

The forward fuselage was reminiscent of the Blackburn Skua, and had a flush-riveted Alclad plated covering, while the rear portion of the fuselage was a metal skin over a tubular metal structure. Flight surfaces such as the rudder, elevator, and ailerons had fabric coverings. The centre section of the wing housed the three main fuel tanks, with a normal combined maximum capacity of 435.75 gallons; this could be increased to 565.75 gallons for special operations. Fuel tank selection was by a panel behind the cockpit, out of reach of the pilot, and where it was possible to accidentally select all tanks off, leading to engine failure a few minutes into the flight. This panel could not be reached by the pilot, and such a fuel starvation problem could not be cured in flight, when flown by a single ferry pilot. Hydraulically-actuated split flaps were present on the central section of the wing's trailing edge, while balanced ailerons were fitted on the sharply-tapered outer wing panels. The fin and tailplane were unbraced cantilevers with stressed-skin construction.

The undercarriage consisted of two oleo-pneumatic legs that retracted rearwards into the nacelles, which were fitted with spring-loaded doors; hand-operated hydraulic brakes were fitted. As built, the Botha I was powered by a pair of Bristol Perseus X radial engines, each driving a de Havilland Type 5/11 Hydromatic three-bladed constant-speed propeller. The engines, mounted on the central section of the wing in wide-chord cowlings, were fitted with controllable cooling grills. A special cell in the fuselage could accommodate a single torpedo, a single 500lb bomb, or two 250lb bombs; additional bombs could be carried on external bomb racks on the mainplane. Other armaments included the pilot's forward-firing .303-inch Vickers machine gun and the twin Lewis guns installed in the turret. Comprehensive marine gear, including a collapsible dinghy, was also provided.

Operational history

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5e/Blackburn_Botha_at_RAF_Silloth_WWII_IWM_CH_1907.jpg" caption="Silloth]], [[Cumberland"] ::

The RAF's first Botha was delivered to No. 5 Maintenance Unit at RAF Kemble, Gloucestershire on 12 December 1939. Service testing of the Botha was marred by a series of accidents, although no common cause was ever discovered according to the aviation author Aubrey Joseph Jackson; nor did he consider the loss rate to be excessive for the era. However, the aircraft was commonly considered to be somewhat underpowered.

According to aviation author Roger Haywood, concerns were raised regarding its poor lateral stability, while the crew's view to the side or rearward was virtually non-existent owing to the positioning of the engines, the poor view making the aircraft "useless as a GR [General Reconnaissance] aircraft". Although the Botha passed torpedo and mine-dropping tests, the aircraft's poor general performance resulted in the decision in April 1940 to issue the Botha only to four general reconnaissance squadrons equipped with the Avro Anson, rather than the torpedo bomber squadrons previously planned.

During June 1940, the Botha entered squadron service with No. 608 Squadron and began conducting convoy escort duties two months later. This was the only squadron to fly the type operationally. While flying these patrols, the typical bomb load carried was three 100 lb anti-submarine bombs plus two 250 lb general-purpose bombs. According to Jackson, operational need for aircraft such as the Botha had greatly diminished following the Fall of France that year.

Efforts aimed at addressing some of the aircraft's shortcomings led to both the airframe and engines being subject to further development work. However, the Air Staff decided to withdraw the Botha from frontline service and transfer the surviving aircraft to secondary duties. Accordingly, numerous training units received the type; at one point in 1941, one unit had over a hundred Bothas on its inventory. However, the combination of inexperienced pilots and its unfavourable flight characteristics resulted in further casualties. Some Bothas were converted to target tugs, these aircraft being redesignated as TT Mk.I. In August 1943, the type was officially declared obsolete, with many aircraft being broken up either on site or after their return to Blackburn. During September 1944, the Botha was fully retired from RAF service.

Variants

  • Botha Mk I : Four-seat reconnaissance, torpedo bomber aircraft.
  • Botha TT Mk I : Target tug aircraft.

Operators

Poland

United Kingdom

Specifications (Botha Mk.I - Perseus XA)

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f9/Blackburn_Botha_3-view_line_drawing.svg" caption="Orthographic projection of the Botha, with inset detail showing the asymmetrical nose glazing."] ::

|ref= Blackburn aircraft since 1909, The Hamlyn Concise Guide to British Aircraft of World War II |prime units?= imp General characteristics

|crew= 4 |length ft= 51 |length in= 0.5 |length note= |span ft= 59 |span in= 0 |span note= |height ft= 14 |height in= 7.5 |height note= |wing area sqft= 518 |wing area note= |aspect ratio= |airfoil= |empty weight lb= 12,036 |empty weight note= |gross weight lb= 18,450 |gross weight note= |max takeoff weight lb= |max takeoff weight note= |fuel capacity= 435.75 impgal normal fuel in three wing tanks and a distributor/collector tank, with 565.75 impgal available for special operations. |more general= Powerplant

|eng1 number= 2 |eng1 name= Bristol Perseus XA |eng1 type= nine-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engines |eng1 hp= 930 |eng1 note=

|prop blade number= 3 |prop name= de Havilland Hydromatic Type 5/11 constant-speed propellers |prop dia ft= |prop dia in= |prop dia note= Performance

|max speed mph= 209 |max speed note= at sea level ::::220 mph at 15000 ft |cruise speed mph= 212 |cruise speed note= |stall speed mph= 75 |stall speed note= with flaps and undercarriage down |never exceed speed mph= |never exceed speed note= |minimum control speed mph= |minimum control speed note= |range miles= 1,270 |range note= |combat range miles= |combat range note= |ferry range miles= |ferry range note= |endurance= |ceiling ft= 18,400 |ceiling note=

  • Absolute ceiling: 19700 ft |climb rate ftmin =985 |climb rate note= initial ::::355 ft/min at 15000 ft |time to altitude= |lift to drag= |wing loading lb/sqft= |wing loading note= |fuel consumption lb/mi= |power/mass= |more performance=
  • Take-off run: ft
  • Take-off distance to 50 ft: ft
  • Landing run: ft
  • Landing distance from 50 ft: ft-- Armament -- |guns= Three × 0.303 in (7.7 mm) machine guns (one fixed forward-firing, two in dorsal turret) |bombs= internal torpedo, depth charges or bombs up to 2,000 lb (907 kg)

References

Citations

Bibliography

  • {{Cite book |last =Bergel |first = Hugh |title = Fly & Deliver |publisher = Airlife |year = 1982 |isbn = 0-906393-17-5 |pages=31–32

References

  1. {{Harvnb. Mason. 1994
  2. {{Harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  3. {{harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  4. {{harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  5. {{harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  6. {{harvnb. Haywood ''Aeroplane Monthly'' February 2013
  7. {{harvnb. Haywood ''Aeroplane Monthly'' February 2013
  8. {{harvnb. Haywood ''Aeroplane Monthly'' February 2013
  9. {{harvnb. Haywood ''Aeroplane Monthly'' February 2013
  10. {{harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  11. {{harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  12. {{harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  13. {{harvnb. Jackson. 1968
  14. (1 April 1989). "Blackburn aircraft since 1909". Naval Institute Press.
  15. {{Harvnb. Mondey. 1994
  16. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage".
  17. {{harvnb. "Botha I". ''Air Transport Auxiliary Ferry Pilots Notes''

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blackburn-aircraft1930s-british-bomber-aircrafthigh-wing-aircrafthistory-of-west-dunbartonshireaircraft-first-flown-in-1938twin-piston-engined-tractor-aircraftaircraft-with-retractable-conventional-landing-gear