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Encyclopedia > De Havilland Chipmunk
De Havilland Chipmunk (DHC1)
A Chipmunk in RAF colours. From the site www.deltaaviation.com used with permission.
Description
Role Basic trainer
Crew 1 or 2 (Instructor and student)
First Flight May 22, 1946
Entered Service
Manufacturer De Havilland
Dimensions
Length 25 ft 5 in 7.75 m
Wingspan 34 ft 4 in 10.47 m
Height 7 ft 2.1 m
Wing area 172 ft² 16.0 m²
Weights
Empty 1517 lb 646 kg
Loaded 2014 lb 953 kg
Maximum takeoff 2200 lb kg
Powerplant
Engines 1 x de Havilland Gipsy Major 8
Power 145 hp 108 kW
Performance
Maximum speed 138 mph 222 km/h
Range 280 miles 445 km
Service ceiling ft 5200 m
Rate of climb 900 ft/min 274 m/min


The de Havilland Chipmunk is a tandem two seat single engined training aircraft, and was the standard primary trainer for the British military though most of the post-war years.


Designed to succeed the de Havilland Tiger Moth biplane trainer, the Chipmunk flew for the first time at Downsview, Toronto on 22 May 1946. It was the first indigenous design of de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Ltd, the main designer was a Pole Wsiewolod Jakimiuk. The prototype was powered by a 108 kW (145 hp) de Havilland Gipsy Major 1C


Two were evaluated by the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment at Boscombe Down. As a result, the fully-aerobatic Chipmunk was ordered as an ab initio trainer for the Royal Air Force. Prince Philip took his first flying lesson in one in 1952. The Royal Canadian Air Force also adopted the Chipmunk as their primary trainer. British Chipmunks are notably different from Canadian ones; the latter have a bubble canopy, while British examples have the flat-panelled sliding canopy.


The RAF received 735 Chipmunks manufactured in the UK. They initially served with University Air Squadrons. A few Chipmunks were pressed into service in Cyprus on internal security flights during the troubles of 1958, and some were used for covert reconnaissance operating out of Berlin. They were still in service for ATC Air Experience Flights until 1996 when they were replaced by the Bulldog (itself replaced by the Grob Tutor in 1999-2000). The last two Chipmunks in military service are operated by the RAF Battle Of Britain Memorial Flight, to keep its pilots current on tailwheel aircraft.


Downsview built 218 Chipmunks, the last in 1951. 1014 were built in Britain. 60 Chipmunks were licence-manufactured from 1955 in Portugal for the Portuguese air force. Other users included Burma, Ceylon, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, Egypt, Eire, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Malaya, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Thailand and Uruguay.


From the 1950s onward, the Chipmunk became a popular civilian aircraft, being used for training, aerobatics and crop spraying. Most civilian aircraft were ex-military.


Units using the Chipmunk

Royal Air Force

External links

List of Aircraft | Aircraft Manufacturers | Aircraft Engines | Aircraft Engine Manufacturers


Airlines | Air Forces | Aircraft Weapons | Missiles | Timeline of aviation


  Results from FactBites:
 
De Havilland Chipmunk - definition of De Havilland Chipmunk in Encyclopedia (363 words)
The de Havilland Chipmunk is a tandem two seat single engined training aircraft, and was the standard primary trainer for the British military though most of the post-war years.
It was the first indigenous design of de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Ltd, the main designer was a Pole Wsiewolod Jakimiuk.
British Chipmunks are notably different from Canadian ones; the latter have a bubble canopy, while British examples have the flat-panelled sliding canopy.
chipmunk - definition of chipmunk in Encyclopedia (502 words)
Chipmunk is the common name for any small squirrel-like rodent species of the genus Tamias in the family Sciuridae.
Chipmunks construct expansive burrows which can be more than 3.5 m in length with several well-concealed entrances.
The characters substaintially regained popularity in the early 1980s with a new series, Alvin and the Chipmunks, and several direct-to-video releases in the 1990s, with Bagdasarian's son Ross, Jr.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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