Super secret Canberra upgrade on the beeb

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Chris558
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Post by Chris558 »

Whilst we're on 'Canberra Queries', why was it named as such? (presumably after the Australian capital, but why?) and why weren't the engines closer to the fuselage, like the Bucc?
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TobyV
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Post by TobyV »

To me I have always thought that the arrangement was very like a scaled up Meteor, but consider you are building the first ever jet bomber. Where would you put the engines? I would probably put them where people had been putting piston engines on multi engined aircraft!

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Garry Russell
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Post by Garry Russell »

That is pretty conventional layout for the time

The Buccaneer was much later

I would thing that the Canberra arrangement made it cheap and easier to build compared to wing root jet engines which was a common alternate then.

Maintenance was probably easier as well

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Post by steve p »

TobyV wrote:To me I have always thought that the arrangement was very like a scaled up Meteor, but consider you are building the first ever jet bomber. Where would you put the engines? I would probably put them where people had been putting piston engines on multi engined aircraft!
While working on the Westland Welkin design in about 1943, Teddy Petter was also planning a jet design with one engine above the other. Wonder what that turned into?

Wouldn't sticking the engines on the wings make engine upgrades easier ala the Meatbox?

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Garry Russell
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Post by Garry Russell »

Good point Steve

There was a major re design in types like the Victor and Vulcan when upgrading to new more powerful engines to fit within the blended engine areas.

Same recently with the new Nimrod

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TobyV
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Post by TobyV »

steve p wrote:While working on the Westland Welkin design in about 1943, Teddy Petter was also planning a jet design with one engine above the other. Wonder what that turned into?
I know what you're thinking of, but didnt the Shorts Sperrin get that config into the air first? :smile:

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Chris Trott
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Post by Chris Trott »

TobyV wrote:...but consider you are building the first ever jet bomber. Where would you put the engines?
When did they start design on the Canberra anyway? I can't find any information other than the first flight in 1949 available on the 'net.

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Post by Garry Russell »

Chris

Click on background and it says about it

http://www.bywat.co.uk/canframes.html

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Chris Trott
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Post by Chris Trott »

Okay, that answers several questions actually.

The design almost exactly parallels the North American B-45 Tornado development (almost to the month of several milestones and specification issuances) except that NAA managed to get theirs in the air about 2 years prior to the Canberra. Both have very similar performance however the Tornado required 4 engines to do its work compared to the Canberra's 2 which is probably a big reason to why it's stayed around so much longer.

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Post by nazca_steve »

Chris558 wrote:Whilst we're on 'Canberra Queries', why was it named as such? (presumably after the Australian capital, but why?) and why weren't the engines closer to the fuselage, like the Bucc?
I believe the Australian prime minister was on a visit to the UK shortly after the RAF unveiled the aircraft and he was given the honour of naming it, which he chose to do after the Aussie capital.
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