Supermarine 'Floattacker'

Started by CammNut, May 07, 2017, 01:53:56 PM

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CammNut

As the war in the Pacific dragged on into the late 1940s, after the US decided not to drop the Bomb, the British Air Ministry decided it needed a flying-boat fighter to support forces fighting from island to island toward the Japanese homeland.

A contract had been awarded to Saunders-Roe in 1944 to develop the SR/A.1 flying-boat fighter but, frustrated by delays in flying the aircraft, the Ministry in early 1947 awarded a second contract to Supermarine to develop a floatplane version of the Attacker, which had flown in July 1946.

The SR/A.1 finally flew in July 1947 but, by modifying an existing aircraft, Supermarine was able to move quickly and flew the float-equipped Attacker just two months later in September 1947. The floats were developed from those that had been tested on the Spitfire in 1942 and 1944.

Although developed rapidly, the "Floattacker" was significantly different to the carrier-based version. The fuselage was stretched to house a bigger, 6,500-lb.-thrust jet engine and extra fuel, and the horizontal and vertical tails were significantly enlarged to improve stability and control with the floats.

Replacing the Attacker's 5,000lb-thrust Rolls-Royce Nene, the engine was an uprated version of the Metropolitan-Vickers F.2/4 Beryl used in the SR/A.1 and a precursor to the Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire. Metrovick exited the jet engine business in 1947, Armstrong taking over and developing the Beryl into the Sapphire.

The success of the Floattacker led to cancellation of the heaver, slower SR/A.1 - and caused a problem. The SR/A.1 had been developed for the Royal Air Force, but the Attacker was a Royal Navy aircraft. After a tussle between the services, the Fleet Air Arm won the right to operate the floatplane fighter.

It was to be a short-lived victory. Japan surrendered in 1949 and the island-to-island battles ceased. But by then several small wars were being fought as the liberated British colonies sought independence, so the handful of operational Floattackers were kept on in the Pacific theatre for a few more years.

The surviving aircraft ended their lives back in the UK being used as personal transports by a handful of Royal Navy admirals who had once been FAA pilots. They would be spotted from time to time at naval bases around the country up to the early 1960s, when the Floattacker was finally retired for scrap.



When I first came across a three-view of a Supermarine Attacker floatplane project, I thought it would be just:



I was looking for a quick build, and what could be easier? Take one Novo/Frog Attacker kit, glue on one pair of PM Models Spitfire floats and, hey presto, Floaty McFloatface is your uncle.

But then, when I scaled the 3-view drawing up 1/72, I discovered there was quite a bit more to it than that. Not least, I had to stretch the Spitfire floats by about a third in length. Through no skill of mine, they both turned out about the same shape.



I also had to stretch the fuselage forward of the intakes and make the tails bigger by enlarging both fixed stabilizers and control surfaces, separately. And being an early Frog mould, I had to make a cockpit. The canopy is Falcon vacform.



But, surprisingly, it didn't fight me. I swithered for ages over the color scheme. I wanted to do a Fleet Air Arm aircraft (not remembering the SR/A.1 was RAF), but couldn't face having to hand-paint most of it in Sky.





Then I saw some old Flight magazine ads for the SR/A.1 and a follow-on project, Saro's P.121, in a late-war mostly Dark Sea Grey scheme that I could do with a Tamiya spray can, and only the undersides by hand in Sky.





In the end, the Sky went on smoothly - it's Floquil paint, which I am told is good stuff, but not longer available, which is a shame. Luckily I have a tin or two. The markings come from an Xtradecal Hawker Sea Fury sheet.



The floatplane ramp comes from Coastal Kits, www.coastalkits.co.uk, and looks fab. I finished this one a while ago, but was waiting for better weather to photograph it, but kept forgetting. So finally I said, what the heck, and took pics yesterday. Now today is sun is shining...Oh well, all in all, this one came out way better than I expected.

PR19_Kit

Oh yes, an excellent job there. The colour scheme really suits it too.  :thumbsup:
Kit's Rule 1 ) Any aircraft can be improved by fitting longer wings, and/or a longer fuselage
Kit's Rule 2) The backstory can always be changed to suit the model

...and I'm not a closeted 'Take That' fan, I'm a REAL fan! :)

Regards
Kit

Snowtrooper

Never enough floaty jetplanes, especially when they're as nice as this :thumbsup: The extensions are subtle and done really well!

James W.

#3
Very clean crisp job there C-N, a creditable effort.
Just to be picky though, ought the roundels not be 'D-type', given the timing?

& the R-R Nene being a centrifugal turbine dictated the porky barrel fuselage a la MiG 15,
but wouldn't the change to an axial turbine allow/require a 'coke-bottle' shape re-profiling?

( Check the relative differences in Meatbox engine nacelles when so equipped).

Edit: fixed typo.

Captain Canada

That looks perfect ! Love the extension to the fuselage, it really makes it look good as a float plane.

:wub:
CANADA KICKS arse !!!!

Long Live the Commonwealth !!!
Vive les Canadiens !
Where's my beer ?

TallEng

I can only agree with the others :thumbsup:
That is very nice :wub:
Subtly done to.
Regards
Keith
The British have raised their security level from "Miffed" to "Peeved". Soon though, security levels may be raised yet again to "Irritated" or even "A Bit Cross". Londoners have not been "A Bit Cross" since the Blitz in 1940 when tea supplies ran out for three weeks

comrade harps

 :wub:

The head-on shot with the dark colour,  cockpit canopy, straight wings and the floats reminds me of a U-2S with the long wing pods.
Whatever.

zenrat

 
Quote from: Snowtrooper on May 07, 2017, 02:23:15 PM
Never enough floaty jetplanes, especially when they're as nice as this :thumbsup: The extensions are subtle and done really well!

Hmmmm, yes.  We should have a floaty GB  ;D ;D ;D

Good job CammNut.

:thumbsup:
Fred

- Can't be bothered to do the proper research and get it right.

Another ill conceived, lazily thought out, crudely executed and badly painted piece of half arsed what-if modelling muppetry from zenrat industries.

zenrat industries:  We're everywhere...for your convenience..

Dizzyfugu

Nice one, esp. when you know the Attacker kit "behind" this build. Well done!  :thumbsup:

loupgarou

Very interesting and well done build. I had no idea a "real" project for a floatplane Attacker did exist.
Owing to the current financial difficulties, the light at the end of the tunnel will be turned off until further notice.

CammNut

Thanks folks.

James W - I postulated that the change to D-type roundels would have waited until after the delayed ending of the war (to avoid having to do a mostly Sky scheme). And, as Supermarine did with the Swift, I also postulated that it stayed with the porky fuselage even when changing to an axial-flow turbine engine.

James W.

Quote from: CammNut on May 08, 2017, 04:30:18 AM
Thanks folks.

James W - I postulated that the change to D-type roundels would have waited until after the delayed ending of the war (to avoid having to do a mostly Sky scheme). And, as Supermarine did with the Swift, I also postulated that it stayed with the porky fuselage even when changing to an axial-flow turbine engine.

Yeah C-M, actually the red centre roundel of whatever numerical code - was right out, far east in the orient - its just too much like the Nippon 'meatballs'..
& re: with the Swift that was a major fail though, & Supermarine was finished.. compare  Nene Sea Hawk to Sapphire Hunter..

dwomby

Excellent.  Thanks for detailing the work with that pictorial showing all the changes.   

David   

CammNut

No one expects the Spanish Inquisition!

I suspect you are a closet real-world modeler, James W, but you are correct. However, I found enough pictures of Fleet Air Arm aircraft in the Pacific late in the war still with the original roundels to stick with them. And, yes, the Swift was a dud, but nowhere in the Whifland Constitution does it say a whiffed aircraft has to be a good design.

NARSES2

Quote from: PR19_Kit on May 07, 2017, 01:58:15 PM
Oh yes, an excellent job there. The colour scheme really suits it too.  :thumbsup:

My thoughts exactly, which worries me slightly   :angel:

Great build  :thumbsup:
Do not condemn the judgement of another because it differs from your own. You may both be wrong.