Air Weapons

Torpedo Bomber (1938)

Fokker

T.VIII

Like many Dutch aircraft, the Fokker T.VIII floatplane had been designed for service in the Dutch East Indies but ended up being used by the Netherlands Naval Air Force (MLD) at home. Built as a torpedo bomber with construction made out of both wood and metal parts, all existing T.VIII units were used for coastal patrol after the German invasion. A number escaped to France and later Britain where they flew alongside Avro Ansons in RAF Coastal Command's No. 320 Squadron performing convoy patrols over the Western Approaches until replaced by Hudsons after exhausting their limited supply of available parts. Ironically, the Luftwaffe would end up becoming the major operator of this aircraft, completing all unfinished examples from the production line after the invasion and using them for anti-shipping, coastal patrol, and convoy escort duties in the North Sea and Mediterranean.

First flight of the prototype took place sometime in 1938 and the production run was composed of three variants. First was the T.VIII-W/G built partly of wood with fabric covering, next was the similar T.VIII-W/M with an all-metal rear fuselage, and finally the larger, faster, and heavier T.VIII-W/C with much more powerful Mercury engines.

Preceded by:

None

Succeeded by:

None

Datafile

DesignT.VIII-W/GT.VIII-W/C
TypeTorpedo BomberTorpedo Bomber
Year19381939
Crew33
Dimensions
Length13 m15 m
Height5 m5 m
Wing Span18 m20 m
Wing Arean/an/a
Weight
Empty2,150 kg4,400 kg
Maximum5,000 kg6,600 kg
Wing Loading113.6 kg/m²?
Performance
Speed285 km/h360 km/h
Ceiling6,800 m5,800 m
Range2,100 km1,700 km
Powerplant
Engine2 x R-975-E3
Wright
336 kW
2 x Mercury XI
Bristol
664 kW
Thrust/Weight0.380.37
Armament
Guns2 x 7.9-mm
2 x 7.9-mm
Payload600 kg600 kg
Production
Built195
Total36