Westland Lysander

Lysander Mk.III

In 1934, the British Air Ministry issued Specification A.39/34 for an army co-operation aircraft to replace the Hawker Hector. Initially, Hawker Aircraft, Avro and Bristol were invited to submit designs, but after some debate within the Ministry, a submission from Westland was invited as well. The Westland design, internally designated P.8, was the work of Arthur Davenport under the direction of W.E.W. (Teddy) Petter. It was Petter’s second aircraft design and he spent considerable time interviewing Royal Air Force pilots to find out what they wanted from such an aircraft. There was no clear idea of what the new aircraft needed to be able to do, and so in 1935 Petter spent some time with the army co-operation squadrons. Even there he found no consensus, but most pilots agreed that the most important requirements for the new aircraft were to be able to operate from small spaces, be able to fly at low speeds without stalling or losing control and that the pilot needed a clear forward view.

Westland Lysander Article

Davenport and Petter worked to design an aircraft around these features: the result was unconventional and looked, by its 15 June 1936 maiden flight, rather antiquated. However, it was also the first custom-designed army cooperation aircraft to be built for the RAF since the Armstrong Whitworth Atlas of the late 1920s.

With a distinctive high-set wing and small stub-wings attached to the main wheel struts to carry weapons/stores, despite its appearance, the Lysander was aerodynamically advanced with automatic wing slats, slotted flaps and a variable incidence tailplane. These refinements gave the Lysander a very low stalling speed. One of the original STOL (Short Take Off and Landing) designs, the Lysander could land and take off in the length of a football field.

The Lysander was a two seater, powered by a Bristol Mercury air-cooled radial engine, metal structured with top mounted wings and a fixed undercarriage inside large, streamlined spats. The wings had an unusual reverse taper towards the root, which gave the impression of a gull wing, although in fact the spars were perfectly straight. The wings were supported by V struts that linked to the undercarriage and had a girder type construction with a light wood frame around that to give the aerodynamic shape. The forward part was duralumin tube joined with brackets and plates, and the after part welded stainless steel tubes. Plates and brackets were cut from channel extrusions rather than forming from sheet steel. The front spar and lift struts were extrusions. The wing itself was fabric covered. The wheels were contained within streamlined spats, which also contained the forward firing guns. The spats also had mountings for small, removable stub wings that could be used to carry light bombs or supply canisters. Twelve small antipersonnel bombs could be carried under small stub-wings fitted to the spats.

Armament consisted of one 0.303 in Browning machine gun operated by the pilot, in each wheel spat, firing outside the propeller disc, and a free Browning in the rear cockpit.

Despite its appearance, the Lysander was aerodynamically advanced; it was equipped with automatic wing slats, slotted flaps and a variable incidence tailplane. These refinements gave the Lysander a stalling speed of only 65 mph (104 km/h, 56.5 knots). It also featured the largest Elektron alloy extrusion made at the time: a single piece inside the spats supporting the wheels. The Air Ministry requested two prototypes of the P.8.

The first prototype made its first taxiing test on 10 June 1936 and the first of two prototypes was flown initially on 15 June 1936 at Boscombe Down. The Air Ministry preferred the Lysander to the competing Bristol Type 148, quickly selecting the Westland aircraft for production, issuing a contract in September 1936. On 11 December 1936 Westland received a first order for 169 Lysanders. The first production aircraft appeared in March 1938, and were delivered to No. 16 squadron, at Old Sarum. This base was also the home of the School of Army Cooperation, another early recipient of the aircraft. Early aircraft were also sent to No. 5 Squadron in India for tropical trials. Like other British army air co-operation aircraft, it was given the name of a military leader; in this case, the Spartan General, Lysander.

The type began to enter service with No. 16 Squadron RAF in June 1938, and they were the first British aircraft to be based in France at the beginning of World War II and the last to see action in France during the evacuation from Dunkirk. Four Lysander squadrons moved to France during the phoney war period (Nos. 2, 4, 13 and 26). When the Germans attacked in May 1940, their armies were supported by swarms of Bf 109s. Allied fighters were overwhelmed. While the Fairey Battle was the most famous victim of this period, the four Lysander squadrons suffered very nearly as badly. Of 174 Lysanders sent to France, 88 were lost in aerial combat and 30 were destroyed on the ground. 120 crewmen were lost. Only 50 aircraft survived to return to Britain.

After the withdrawal from France Lysanders patrolled the coastal areas of south and east England at dawn and dusk as an anti-invasion reconnaissance measure. It was planned that in the event of an invasion the Lysanders would bomb and machine gun German troops on the beaches.

The majority of Lysander squadrons were actually formed after the fall of France, performing vital air-sea rescue duties. Its low speed allowed it to drop dinghies and supplies close to downed aircrew. The Lysander was also used for radar calibration and as target tugs. Of the (probably) 1,670 aircraft built, some 964 were Mk III aircraft, which first appeared in August 1940. The Lysander is most famous for its work with the Special Operations Executive. Two squadrons were formed to support the SOE, first No. 138 (Special Duties) squadron in August 1941 and then No. 161 (SD) squadron. These squadrons were given a mix of aircraft, including Hudsons, Whitleys and Halifaxes as well as the Lysander. The larger aircraft were used for parachute drops, either of agents or supplies. The aircraft’s exceptional short-field performance made possible clandestine missions behind enemy lines that placed or recovered agents, particularly in occupied France. For this role, the Mk IIIs were fitted with a fixed entry/exit ladder over the port side to hasten access to the rear cockpit and a large drop tank under the belly. In order to slip in unobtrusively, the Lysanders were painted matt black, and operations were often planned for moonless nights. Flying without any navigation equipment other than a map and compass, Lysanders would land on short strips of land, such as fields, marked out by four or five torches. They were only designed to carry one passenger in the rear cockpit, but in case of urgent necessity, two could be carried in extreme discomfort. The Lysander proved to be a success in this role and continued to undertake such duties until the liberation of France. Between August 1941, when No. 138 squadron began Lysander operations, and the end of 1944 when the fighting had moved out of France, the Lysanders made at least 400 sorties. No. 161 squadron along took 293 people into France and retrieved 500. The ‘Lizzie’ was also used for glider towing at 5 Glider training School (GTS), Shobdon, Hereford.

After the Russian invasion of Finland in 1940, slowly reinforcements began to arrive for the Finnish air force. The first to come were 5 Gloster Gladiators, 12 Hurricanes, 17 Lysanders and 24 Blenheims, all from Britain. After that, 76 Morane-Saulnier and Koolhoven F.K. fighters arrived from France. Italy sent 17 Fiat fighters, Sweden 12 Gloster Gladiators, and the USA 44 Brewster Buffalo, of which however only 5 reached Finland in time. Even the Union of South Africa sent 25 Gloster Gladiators. Pilots and ground personnel from a number of countries also volunteered to assist them.

The Lysander III was manufactured by National Steel Car Company at Malton (Toronto) under license from Westland Aircraft Corporation, England. In Canada, Lysander aircraft were chiefly used for target towing at training schools, limited navigational training, communications duty, search and rescue operations.

A Westland Lysander Mk.III Special Duty aircraft built to the specifications of the SOE (Special Operations Executive) featured a jettisonable fuel tank and a boarding ladder. The first pick-up operation was carried out on 4 September 1941 near Chateauroux 150 miles south of Paris, by Sqn.Ldr. John-Nesbitt-Dufort of 138 Squadron.

Lysander III

They also saw service in Burma, Egypt, Greece, India and Palestine.

1,372 Lysanders were built on a cottage industry basis in Britain. Parts were built by small firms and individuals and trucked to locations where they were assembled into components. These parts were taken to yet another location where they were assembled into an airplane. Canadian production of the Lysander began in Malton, Ontario in October 1938, with the first flight in August 1939. 225 were built there and another 104 Lysanders were shipped over from the U.K. Most of the world’s few surviving Lysanders are ex-RCAF.

After the outbreak of the Winter War, 17 Lysander aircraft were ordered from England on 8 Jan, 1940. The first 9 were shipped to Gothenburg, Sweden, on 24 Feb. 1940. These were assembled at the Götaverken factory in Torslanda and were flown to Finland between 21 March and 3 May. The rest of the order were flown directly from England to Finland, with 2 arriving on 8 March. One of these was damaged near Stavanger, Norway.

A destroyed Ilmavoimat Westland Lysander LY-124 on the island of Buoy, close to Stavanger, Norway

The remaining Lysanders from the order left England in early March and arrived in Finland on the 15th of the same month. The Lysanders that entered service remained in use until 1945, although some were lost in action.

Ilmavoimat Westland Lysander in service in the Winter War

Gallery

Lysander Mk.I
Engine: Bristol Mercury, 890 hp

Lysander Mk.II
Engine: Bristol Perseus, 905 hp
TO to 50ft: 245 yd
Max speed: 230 mph
Min speed: 55 mph

Lysander Mk.III
Engine: Bristol Mercury XX, 870 hp / 649kW
Wing Span: 50ft (15.24m)
Length: 30ft 6in (9.3m)
Height: 14ft 6in (4,42m)
Wing area: 14.15 sq.m / 152.31 sq ft
Empty weight: 1980 kg / 4365 lb
Max TO wt: 5920 lb (2685 kg)
Service ceiling: 6555 m / 21500 ft
Range: 522 nm / 600 miles (970 km)
Max level speed: 229 mph (369 kph).
Stall speed: under 60 mph (96 km/h)
Crew: 2 (Pilot and Observer)
Armament: 2 x .303in / 7.7mm Browning machine-guns in wheel fairings / 2 x .303in / 7.7mm Lewis guns for observer
Bombload: four 20 lb (9 kg) bombs under the rear fuselage / 500 lb (227 kg) of bombs on stub wings if fitted.

Westland Lysander

Westland F.20/27 Interceptor

Despite the known antipathy of the Air Ministry towards the monoplane as a fighter configuration, and its lack of success with the Wizard, Westland chose a low-wing monoplane design for its response to Specification F.20/27. An air-cooled radial engine and twin-gun armament were specified. From numerous proposals, the Air Ministry chose to order prototypes of two biplanes and two monoplanes, including that offered by Westland. First flown in August 1928 and known as the Interceptor, this was of metal construction and fabric covering except the forward fuselage, which had detachable metal panels. Two 7.7mm Vickers guns were installed low in the open cockpit and were totally enclosed behind a series of louvres along the line of the blast tubes. As first flown, the F.20/27 was powered by an uncowled 440hp Bristol Mercury IIA nine-cylinder air-cooled radial, but this was soon replaced by a 480hp Mercury IIIA and, eventually, a 420hp Bristol Jupiter VII, to which a Townend ring was later added. To overcome handling problems, successive modifications were introduced, including automatic wing slots on the wing roots, redesigned wing fillets and a modified, taller fin and rudder. Performance remained mediocre, however, and the Hawker biplane design to F.20/27 was chosen instead, evolving into the Fury.

Max take-off weight: 1508 kg / 3325 lb
Empty weight: 1066 kg / 2350 lb
Wingspan: 11.58 m / 38 ft 0 in
Length: 7.73 m / 25 ft 4 in
Height: 2.95 m / 10 ft 8 in
Wing area: 18.95 sq.m / 203.98 sq ft
Max. speed: 309 km/h / 192 mph

Westland F.20/27 Interceptor

Westland Witch

In the middle 1920’s, the Air Ministry issued a Specification for a single-engined high-altitude day-bomber and the Westland design staff, by then thoroughly monoplane-minded, seized the opportunity to produce the Witch, a two-seat parasol monoplane. Judged by its contemporaries this machine was impressive, and a well-considered attempt at securing an aerodynamic advance in design. Compared with biplanes it had a not disadvantageous structural weight, adding its quota of evidence that the high-wing type advocated by Westland was the lighter manner of building a monoplane.
First flown in 1928, by Flt.-Lt. L. G. Paget, A.F.C., the Witch had an ingenious external structure, forming part of the wing bracing system, which enabled a large clear space to be left in the fuselage for internal bomb-stowage. The bomb compartment closed by four flap-doors in the front fuselage floor, and was so arranged that they would flick open by the weight of the bombs, in the event of an emergency release preventing manual opening.
Although it was a good weight lifter, neither the Witch nor its competitors showed a performance which gave a sufficient improvement above the existing day-bombers, and the class was dropped. However, the Westland example, J.8596, had a useful career as an experimental aircraft and finally served for a long period with the Parachute Training Unit at Henlow.

Engine: 1 x 480hp Bristol Jupiter VIIIF 9-cylinder air-cooled geared radial
Max take-off weight: 2744 kg / 6050 lb
Empty weight: 1533 kg / 3380 lb
Wingspan: 18.5 m / 61 ft 8 in
Length: 11.4 m / 37 ft 5 in
Height: 3.4 m / 11 ft 2 in
Wing area: 49.6 sq.m / 533.89 sq ft

Westland Witch

Westland Wapiti

The Wapiti was a two-seat general-purpose biplane incorporating in its design several de Havilland D.H.9A component parts including wings as requested by the Air Ministry. The prototype first flew in March 1927 and the initial order for 25 production Mk I included one specially modified aircraft with a more luxurious rear cockpit for the Prince of Wales to fly in.

Mk I were powered by 313kW Bristol Jupiter VI engines, but subsequent Mk II and Mk IIA had 343kW Jupiter VI and 391.2kW Jupiter VIIIF or similar engines respectively.

The Mk.II switched to metal construction.

Small numbers of lengthened Wapiti V and unarmed Mk VI trainers brought total production for the RAF to 501; while the type was also adopted by Australia, South Africa (also built under licence), Canada, India and China.

An initial order for 38 for the RAAF was placed in October 1928 to replace DH.9s and DH.9As. These were delivered between April 1929 and March 1931. A further six ex-RAF Wapitis were purchased in 1937.

RAAF Wapiti

Wapiti Mk I
Engine: 313kW Bristol Jupiter VI

Wapiti Mk II
Engine: 343kW / 460 hp Jupiter VI

Wapiti Mk IIA
Engine: 391.2kW Jupiter VIIIF
Wingspan: 14.15 m / 46 ft 5 in
Length: 9.65 m / 32 ft 8 in
Height: 3.61 m / 12 ft 10 in
Wing area: 43.48 sq.m / 468.01 sq ft
Max take-off weight: 2449 kg / 5399 lb
Empty weight: 1728 kg / 3810 lb
Max. speed: 225 km/h / 140 mph
Cruising speed: 96 kts / 177 km/h
Service ceiling: 20600 ft / 6280 m
Range: 853 km / 530 miles
Armament: 2 x .303in / 7.7mm machine-guns
Bombload: 263kg

Wapiti Mk V

Wapiti Mk VI
Armament: none

Westland Wapiti

Westland Westbury

Specification 4/24 issued by the Air Ministry during 1924 called for the design of a heavily armed, twin-engined, night defence fighter, although the precise nature of the planned armament was not made known to the two companies that successfully tendered for prototype contracts, Westland and Bristol (with the Bagshot). Two prototypes of the Westland submission were ordered in 1925, and only late in that year was the armament specified as two 37mm Coventry Ordnance Works (COW) cannon, to be disposed in front and dorsal positions, plus a 7.7mm Lewis gun firing through a ventral hatch in the rear fuselage. Powered by a pair of uncowled 450hp Bristol Jupiter VI nine-cylinder radial engines, the Westbury – as the Westland fighter was duly named – was a three-bay biplane of mixed construction, combining a wooden wing with a fuselage of composite steel and wood, duralumin wing spars being introduced in the second prototype. Open cockpits were provided for the two gunners and the pilot, who was located ahead of the upper wing, which attached directly to the deep fuselage. The nose COW gun was on a rotating mounting, and that in the aft cockpit fired forwards and upwards (aimed by the pilot). A second cockpit, to the rear, carried a 7.7mm Lewis gun on a Scarff ring, and the rear gunner also had the use of a second Lewis gun fired downwards through the entrance hatch. Flight testing of the Westbury began in September 1926, and the COW gun was successfully fired from both cockpits during later trials with the second aircraft, but no requirement was found for production of this category of fighter. The second prototype, as the Westbury II, was fitted with 480hp Jupiter VIII engines and had a rounded, rather than blunt, nose profile and aft-extended nacelle tails, features that were also introduced later on the first aircraft.

Max take-off weight: 3573 kg / 7877 lb
Empty weight: 2198 kg / 4846 lb
Wingspan: 20.73 m / 68 ft 0 in
Length: 13.23 m / 43 ft 5 in
Height: 4.19 m / 14 ft 9 in
Wing area: 79.89 sq.m / 859.93 sq ft
Max. speed: 201 km/h / 125 mph
Ceiling: 6400 m / 21000 ft

Westland Westbury

Westland Racer / Wizard

The first attempt by Westland to develop a monoplane fighter evolved from a private venture prototype designed – by the company’s draughtsmen in their spare time – during 1926 with high speed performance the primary objective. Known simply as the Racer, this unarmed parasol monoplane of mixed construction was powered by a 275hp Rolls Royce Falcon III inline engine and flew in November 1926. Badly damaged in a forced landing in 1927, the Racer was rebuilt in much modified form as the Wizard fighter. In this form, it was primarily of metal construction and had a 490hp unsupercharged Rolls-Royce F.XI 12-cylinder Vee-type water:cooled engine in a more streamlined nose cowling, with a retractable radiator in the underside of the fuselage. The Wizard – which was flying by late 1927 – used a similar parasol wing to that of the Racer, this being mounted close to the fuselage on tandem pylons on the fuselage centreline. Two 7.7mm Vickers guns were mounted semi-externally in the fuselage sides. The Wizard’s performance, and particularly its rate of climb, attracted a modicum of Air Ministry interest and a contract to cover testing at Martlesham Heath. There, the pilot’s forward view was found unsatisfactory, leading Westland to design and fit a new wing with changed planform outboard, new inset ailerons and a thinner centre section, mounted on more conventional cabane strutting. A supercharged 500hp Kestrel II (F.XIS) was fitted, but in this final form, the Wizard II, as it was sometimes known, demonstrated a reduced performance and failed to persuade the Air Ministry to change its policy towards monoplane fighters.

Max take-off weight: 1486 kg / 3276 lb
Empty weight: 1067 kg / 2352 lb
Wingspan: 12.04 m / 40 ft 6 in
Length: 8.18 m / 27 ft 10 in
Height: 2.84 m / 9 ft 4 in
Wing area: 22.11 sq.m / 237.99 sq ft
Max. speed: 303 km/h / 188 mph

Westland Wizard

Westland Yeovil

The Yeovil day-bomber biplane design was commenced by Westland in 1923. The Yeovil was the first of the Westland post-war military designs, to an Air Ministry Specification, and was built specially to accommodate the biggest engine then available, the newly developed 650hp Rolls Royce Condor engine. Three machines in all were produced, numbered J.7508, J.7509 and J.7510, the first slightly differing from the others in undercarriage arrangement and the fairing of the wing tanks. The prototype was initially test-flown at Andover, in the summer of 1925, by Captain Frank Courtney, the development testing of the subsequent machines being in the hands of Major L. P. Openshaw.
Several other firms built prototypes to the same Specification and, although the Yeovil did not go into production the three examples built were used for research work.

Engine: 1 x 650hp Rolls Royce Condor
Max take-off weight: 3567 kg / 7864 lb
Empty weight: 2113 kg / 4658 lb
Wingspan: 18.13 m / 60 ft 6 in
Length: 11.22 m / 37 ft 10 in
Height: 4.34 m / 14 ft 3 in
Wing area: 74.13 sq.m / 797.93 sq ft
Max. speed: 193 km/h / 120 mph

Westland Yeovil

Westland Wessex

The first Westland commercial aeroplane, the 1919 Limousine four-seat cabin biplane, was an early effort to produce a light air-liner leading, in the following year, to the successful Six-seat Limousine, but it was nearly ten years before the Westland design team produced another passenger aircraft, this time a six-seat tri-motor high-wing monoplane, and again they led the field, being the first British firm to design and produce a low-powered three-engined commercial aircraft.
This machine, known at first as the Westland IV, when fitted with Cirrus engines, and later as the Wessex, with Genet engines, was designed, built and flown in a few months, being initially flight-tested by Flt./Lt. L. G. Paget, A.F.C., early in 1929. Originally fitted with three 90-h.p. A.D.C. Cirrus III engines, the prototype – G-EBXK – was later fitted with the five-cylinder Genet engine, but the production models had the seven-cylinder A.S. Genet-Major engines installed as a standard.
The Wessex rudder was identical with that of the Wapiti. In order to speed up construction of the prototype a standard Wapiti rudder was fitted “on spec,” but proved so successful that it was retained.
Customers for the Wessex were readily forthcoming and included Imperial Airways, Railway Air Services, the Belgian air line SABENA, Sir Alan Cobham’s Air Circus and the Portsmouth, Southsea and Isle of Wight Aviation Co., Ltd. The latter organisation had a specially re-designed Wessex, G-ABVB, for use on their Portsmouth-Ryde (I.o.W.) ferry route. This machine, which was flight-tested by Mr. H. J. Penrose, had a complete metal fuselage structure and increased seating capacity to carry eight passengers and a crew of two; the pilot’s cabin was also raised to give a view over the top of the wing.
In the spring of 1931 a chartered Wessex featured in what was probably the first aerial board meeting, the occasion being an air survey by the Directors of the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation Co. of their network of canals.
The Second World War found the Wessex still giving good service, several being equipped to train radio operators and navigators for the Royal Air Force.

Engine: 3 x 140hp Armstrong Siddeley Genet Major
Max take-off weight: 2857 kg / 6299 lb
Empty weight: 1728 kg / 3810 lb
Wingspan: 17.5 m / 57 ft 5 in
Length: 11.5 m / 38 ft 9 in
Height: 2.9 m / 10 ft 6 in
Wing area: 45.5 sq.m / 489.76 sq ft
Max. speed: 190 km/h / 118 mph

Westland Wessex

Westland Widgeon

The Widgeon was the first high-wing monoplane to be built by Westland. The design originated as the result of a discussion regarding the relative merits of a biplane or a monoplane, to be entered in the Air Ministry’s Light Aeroplane Competition of 1924, and as both types had promising points in their favour it was decided to build one of each.
Originally intended to be powered with a twin-cylinder Bristol Cherub engine, the Widgeon was eventually flight-tested with a three-cylinder Blackburne Thrush engine. At the Competition trials, held at Lympne in the autumn of 1924, the machine was flown by Captain Winstanley, but was unluckily wrecked by a down-current on its first circuit of the course.
Undismayed by this set-back the Westland design team, realising that the Widgeon was underpowered, had it rebuilt and fitted with the more powerful Armstrong Siddeley Genet engine, a five-cylinder radial of 70hp. The results of the competition proved that engines in the 30-40hp class were quite unsuitable for two-seat light aeroplanes.
With the new engine installation the machine became known as Mark II of the series, and was used by Westland for full-scale tests of various theories connected with monoplane design. In the late twenties the Widgeon Mark II took part in many sporting flying events, eventually becoming the property of Dr. Whitehead-Reid, of Canterbury.

1928 Widgeon III VH-UHU – false G-AUKA markings are from ‘Kookaburra’ lost in Tanami Desert NT, Australia while searching for Charles Kingsford Smith

Widgeon Mk II
Engine: 1 x 70hp Armstrong Siddeley Genet
Max take-off weight: 370 kg / 816 lb
Empty weight: 215 kg / 474 lb
Wingspan: 9.3 m / 31 ft 6 in
Length: 6.2 m / 20 ft 4 in
Height: 2.2 m / 7 ft 3 in
Wing area: 12.47 sq.m / 134.23 sq ft
Max. speed: 116 km/h / 72 mph

Westland Widgeon

Westland Woodpigeon

The Woodpigeon biplane was first conceived as the Westland entry in the Air Ministry’s Light Aeroplane Competition of 1924, but was finally produced with the main object of being tested side-by-side with another Westland competitor, the Widgeon high-wing monoplane, in order to weigh the relative merits of a biplane and a monoplane with almost identical wing areas and power loadings. In the Competition and in later trials at Westland it soon became obvious that the Widgeon monoplane was much superior although, on paper, each machine should have had identical performances. In their endeavour to make a fair assessment the Westland technicians insisted on cutting a runway, with a hand-mower, through the long grass of Yeovil aerodrome, in order to get the Woodpigeon airborne. In fact it was so difficult to keep the little aeroplane in the air that it was decided to decrease the wing loading, so a second Woodpigeon, G-EBJV, was built with a large span, and the wings of the original machine, G-EBIY, were also increased to suit. Further tests in this form, and with the more powerful Anzani engine, were carried out by Major L. P. Openshaw, and in the end the Woodpigeons were flying reasonably enough to attract the interest of two private owners.

original Competition machine
Engine: 1 x 32hp Bristol Cherub
Max take-off weight: 353 kg / 778 lb
Empty weight: 199 kg / 439 lb
Wingspan: 6.93 m / 23 ft 9 in
Length: 5.94 m / 20 ft 6 in
Height: 2.15 m / 7 ft 1 in
Wing area: 14.4 sq.m / 155.00 sq ft
Max. speed: 116 km/h / 72 mph

Westland Woodpigeon