Avro 504
The Avro 504 was a First World War biplane aircraft made by the Avro aircraft company and under licence by others. Production during the war totalled 8,970 and continued for almost 20 years, making it the most-produced aircraft of any kind that served in the First World War, in any military capacity, during that conflict. More than 10,000 were built from 1913 until production ended in 1940.
Design and development
First flown from Brooklands by Fred "Freddie" Raynham on 18 September 1913, powered by an 80 hp Gnome Lambda seven-cylinder rotary engine, the Avro 504 was a development of the earlier Avro 500, designed for training and private flying. It was a two-bay all-wooden biplane with a square-section fuselage.Operational history
Small numbers of early aircraft were purchased by the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service prior to the start of the First World War, and were taken to France when the war started. One of the RFC aircraft was the first British aircraft to be shot down by the Germans, on 22 August 1914. The pilot was 2nd Lt. Vincent Waterfall and his navigator Lt Charles George Gordon Bayly The RNAS used four 504s to form a special flight in order to bomb the Zeppelin works at Friedrichshafen on the shores of Lake Constance. Three set out from Belfort in north-eastern France on 21 November 1914, carrying four 20 lb bombs each. While one aircraft was shot down, the raid was successful, with several direct hits on the airship sheds and the destruction of the hydrogen generating plant.Soon obsolete as a frontline aircraft, it came into its own as a trainer, with thousands being built during the war, with the major production types being the 504J and the mass production 504K, designed with modified engine bearers to accommodate a range of engines in order to cope with engine shortages. 8,340 Avro 504s had been produced by the end of 1918.
on night fighter Avro 504K
In the winter of 1917–18 it was decided to use converted 504Js and 504Ks to equip Home Defence squadrons of the RFC, replacing ageing B.E.2cs, which had poor altitude performance. These aircraft were modified as single-seaters, armed with a Lewis gun above the wing on a Foster mounting, and powered by 100 hp Gnome or 110 hp Le Rhône engines. 274 converted Avro 504Js and Ks were issued to eight home defence squadrons in 1918, with 226 still being used as fighters at the end of the First World War.
Following the end of the war, while the type continued in service as the standard trainer of the RAF, large numbers of surplus aircraft were available for sale, both for civil and military use. More than 300 504Ks were placed on the civil register in Britain. Used for training, pleasure flying, banner towing and even barnstorming exhibitions ; civil 504s continued flying in large numbers until well into the 1930s.
The embryonic air service of the Soviet Union, formed just after the First World War, used both original Avro 504s and their own Avrushka copy of it for primary training as the U-1 in the early 1920s, usually powered by Russian-made copies of the Gnome Monosoupape rotary engine. This Russian version of the 504 was replaced by what would become the most produced biplane in all of aviation history, the Polikarpov Po-2, first known as the U-2 in Soviet service in the late 1920s.
Although Avro 504s sold to China were training versions, they participated in battles among warlords by acting as bombers with the pilot dropping hand grenades and modified mortar shells.
The improved, redesigned and radial-engined 504N with a new undercarriage was produced by Avro in 1925. After evaluation of two prototypes, one powered by the Bristol Lucifer and the other by the Armstrong-Siddeley Lynx, the Lynx-powered aircraft was selected by the RAF to replace the 504K. 592 were built between 1925 and 1932, equipping the RAF's five flying training schools, while also being used as communication aircraft. The 504N was also exported to the armed forces of Belgium, Brazil, Chile, Denmark, Greece, Siam and South Africa, with licensed production taking place in Denmark, Belgium, Canada, Siam and Japan.
The RAF's 504Ns were finally replaced in 1933 by the Avro Tutor, with small numbers continuing in civilian use until 1940, when seven were impressed into RAF service, where they were used for target- and glider-towing.
The 504 was the first British aeroplane to strafe troops on the ground as well as the first British aircraft to make a bombing raid over Germany. It was also the first Allied aeroplane to be downed by enemy anti-aircraft fire and was the first aircraft flown by many future aces, including Billy Bishop.
The 504 is easily recognisable because of the single skid between the wheels, referred to as the "tooth pick" in the RAF.
Variants
- 504: Gnome Lambda engine.
- 504A:
- 504B
- 504C
- 504D
- 504E: Gnome Monosoupape engine. Ten built.
- 504F: Rolls-Royce Hawk engine. One built.
- 504G: Gnome engine.
- 504H
- 504J
- 504K
- 504K Mk.II
- 504L
- 504M
- 504N
- 504O
- 504P
- 504Q
- 504R Gosport
- 504S
- Yokosuka K2Y1
- Yokosuka K2Y2
- U-1 Avrushka
- MU-1
- Orlogsværftet Flyvemaskineværksted LB.I - Danish production at the Royal Naval Dockyard
Operators
- Argentine Army Aviation Service
- Australian Flying Corps
- *No. 5 Squadron in the United Kingdom
- *No. 6 Squadron in the United Kingdom
- *No. 7 Squadron in the United Kingdom
- *No. 8 Squadron in the United Kingdom
- *Central Flying School AFC at Point Cook, Victoria
- Royal Australian Air Force
- *No. 1 Flying Training School RAAF at Point Cook
- Western Australian Airways
- Qantas
- Belgian Air Force purchased 50 British-built 504Ks from 1920 to 1922, with a further 27 being built under license by SABCA These were replaced by the 504N, 17 being built by Avro in 1929–31, and 31 being built under license.
- Bolivian Air Force 11 Avro 504R Gosport
- Brazilian Air Force
- Brazilian Naval Aviation
- Royal Canadian Air Force
- Chilean Air Force
- Chilean Navy
- Republic of China Air Force
- Royal Danish Air Force
- Royal Danish Navy
- Estonian Air Force
- Finnish Air Force
- Hellenic Air Force
- Hellenic Navy
- Guatemalan Air Force
- Imperial Iranian Air Force
- Irish Air Service
- Irish Air Corps
- Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service
- Latvian Air Force
- Aizsargi
- Mexican Air Force
- *Models made in Mexico were called "Avro Anáhuac"
- Mongolian People's Army Air Corps
- Dutch Army Aviation Group -
- Royal Netherlands East Indies Army Air Force
- New Zealand Permanent Air Force
- Norwegian Army Air Service
- Peruvian Air Force
- Polish Air Force - 1 Avro 504K.
- Portuguese Air Force
- Portuguese Navy
- Imperial Russian Air Service
- South African Air Force
- Soviet Air Force - With original British-built examples, and Soviet built U-1 Avrushka copy.
- Spanish Navy
- Spanish Republican Navy
- Swedish Air Force
- Swedish Navy
- Swiss Air Force
- Royal Siamese Air Force - 40 Avro 504N.
- Royal Thai Navy
- Turkish Air Force - Two aircraft
- Royal Flying Corps
- Royal Air Force
- Royal Naval Air Service
- American Expeditionary Force
- United States Army Air Service
- Uruguayan Air Force
Surviving aircraft and replicas
- A3-4 – 504K on static display at the Australian War Memorial in Campbell, Australian Capital Territory. It was initially given the serial number H2174 before being sent to Australia in 1918-19. It was donated to the memorial in August 1929.
- H2453 – 504K on static display at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa, Ontario. It was previously registered as G-CYFG and before that owned by Cole Palen.
- Replica – 504K on static display at the Base Borden Military Museum at CFB Borden near Angus, Ontario. It is on loan from the Canada Aviation and Space Museum, was previously registered as G-CYCK, and before that was owned by J.S. Appleby.
- AV-57 – 504K in storage at the Finnish Airforce Museum in Tikkakoski, Jyväskylä.
- ZK-ACU – 504K purchased by the New Zealand Permanent Air Force in 1925, allocated serial A202, and subsequently operated as a civilian aircraft. The restored aircraft is airworthy and owned by The Vintage Aviator.
- Unknown – 504K on static display at the Norwegian Aviation Museum in Bodø, Nordland. It was in service from July 1921 to 1928 and has been on display at the museum since 1995. It is painted with the registration number 103, which belonged to 504A that crashed in 1919.
- Replica – 504K airworthy in Russia. It was previously on display at the Military Aviation Museum in Virginia Beach, Virginia. It has been given the serial number "H5991" and is painted in Royal Flying Corps colors.
- BK892 – 504K airworthy at the Shuttleworth Collection in Old Warden, Bedfordshire. It was originally given the serial number H5199, but was converted to a 504N and sold into civilian ownership. However, it was later impressed into RAF service during World War II as a glider tug, at which point it was given a new serial number. Again returned to civilian use after the war, it was used in the filming of Reach for the Sky.
- C4451 - Replica 504J on static display at Solent Sky in Southampton built by ADJ, BAPC No 210
- D7560 – 504K on static display at the Science Museum in London.
- G-ABAA – 504K on static display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester.
- Composite – 504K on static display at the Royal Air Force Museum London in London. It is made up of the fuselage of G-EBJE and the wings of G-EBKN.
- G-AACA - Replica 504K originally built as a taxiable replica for the 1970s BBC TV series 'Wings'; later acquired by the RAF Museum, Hendon and stored at RAF Henlow then loaned to Brooklands Museum c.1987. Later donated to Brooklands Museum, fitted with a genuine rotary engine and restored to represent one of two 504s used by the Brooklands School of Flying in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Displayed in the Fight Shed exhibition hall from late 2017.
- A company in Virginia named Blue Swallow Aircraft is building two reproduction Avro 504s.
- Original Avro 504 serial number A201 under restoration by Blue Swallow Aircraft, LLC in Earlysville, VA. Sister ship to Stuart Tantrums A202 restored in New Zealand prior to his death.
- Replica – 504K undergoing work to airworthy at the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome in Red Hook, New York. It has been flying since 1971.
- Replica – 504K on static display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio. It was built in 1966-1967 by the Royal Canadian Air Force's Aircraft Maintenance & Development Unit and arrived at the museum in May 2003. It was previously registered as G-CYEI.
Specifications (Avro 504K)
Manufacturers
The following companies are recorded as manufacturing the Avro 504 under licence.- A. V. Roe and Co Ltd., Park Works, Newton Heath, Manchester; and at Hamble Aerodrome, near Southampton, Hants.
- Australian Aircraft and Engineering, Sydney, NSW, Australia
- Bleriot and SPAD Aircraft Works, Addlestone
- The Brush Electrical Engineering Co Ltd, Loughborough
- Canadian Aeroplanes Ltd, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- The Eastbourne Aviation Co Ltd, Eastbourne
- Aero Historic, Parana, Argentina
- Fabrica Militar de Aviones, Cordoba, Argentina
- Frederick Sage and Co Ltd, Peterborough and London
- The Grahame-White Aviation Co Ltd, Hendon Aerodrome, London
- Harland and Wolff Ltd, Belfast
- The Henderson Scottish Aviation Factory, Aberdeen
- Hewlett and Blondeau Ltd, Luton.
- Humber Limited, Coventry
- Morgan and Co, Leighton Buzzard
- Nakajima Hikoki Seisaku Sho, Ohta-Machi, Tokyo, Japan
- Parnall & Sons, Bristol
- Regent Carriage, Fulham
- S. E. Saunders Ltd, East Cowes, Isle of Wight
- Savages Ltd, King's Lynn,
- Societe Anonyme Belge de Constructions Aeronautiques Haren, Brussels, Belgium
- The Sunbeam Motor Car Co Ltd, Wolverhampton
- TNCA, Balbuena field in Mexico City.
- Yokosuka Naval Arsenal, Japan
Notable appearances in media