De Havilland Vampire - Duxford Battle of Britain Airshow 2023

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2023
  • The Royal Norwegian Air Force Historical Squadron's De Havilland DH100 Vampire FB.52, displaying at the Imperial War Museum, Duxford, during the Battle of Britain Airshow 2023.
    De Havilland Vampire FB.52, registered LN-DHY was license built in Switzerland in 1952 as serial No.705 and was flown with the Swiss Air Force marked as Vampire J-1196 until 1990. A French owner flew it for a couple of years until it was sold to Christer Andskär in Sweden and registered SE-DXS.
    The aircraft was purchased from Sweden in May 2011 and is now operated by the Flyvåpnets Historiske Skvadron(Norwegian Historical Squadron), based at Rygge Air Base near Oslo in southern Norway.
    The aircraft is here wearing the markings of an Italian Air Force aircraft to commemorate this year's Italian Air Force's Centenary, having taken part in marking the occasion in Italy, earlier in the summer. It has also been based at IWM Duxford for much of the Summer. The aircraft normally flies wearing markings to represent Vampire PX-K, serving with 336 squadron of the Royal Norwegian Air Force in the early 50s.
    Specifications (Vampire FB.52)
    Crew: 1
    Length: 30 ft 9 in (9.37 m)
    Wingspan: 38 ft (11.58 m)
    Height: 8 ft 10 in (2.69 m)
    Wing area: 262 ft² (24.34 m²)
    Empty weight: 7,283 lb (3,304 kg)
    Max. takeoff weight: 12,390 lb (5,620 kg)
    Powerplant: 1×de Havilland Goblin 3 centrifugal turbojet, 3,350 lbf (14.90 kN)
    Performance
    Maximum speed: 548 mph (882 km/h)
    Range: 1,220 mi (1,960 km)
    Service ceiling: 42,800 ft (13,045 m)
    Rate of climb: 4,800 ft/min (24.4 m/s)
    Armament
    Guns: 4 × 20 mm (0.79 in) Hispano Mk.V cannons
    Rockets: 8 × 3-inch "60 lb" rockets
    Bombs: or 2 × 500 lb (225 kg) bombs or two drop-tanks
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    Copyright © High Flight
    This video and audio material may not be reproduced in any form (except as the videos UA-cam embedded video option on any other website), without written permission.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 8

  • @453421abcdefg12345

    A very nice display, and nice to see a Vampire flying, I think most of them have been allowed to get beyond flying. Chris B.

  • @gregmctevia5087

    That was a ball to watch. I didn’t know there were any airworthy examples of the Vampire in existence. You folks seem to have a nose for these strange and wonderful airplanes. Thanks for keeping your nose to the ground and sniffing them out. Beautiful, beautiful piece.

  • @Red-rl1xx

    Cool! You don't see many Vampires!

  • @scrappybobbarker5224

    Exellent comentary, its not echo-ee, or shoutie like some nascar annoyncer.

  • @wz2001
    @wz2001  +1

    I wonder if there's any Sea Venom's still around.