Fairey Firefly [INS-112]

One of the star displays of the NAM is a
second world war vintage fighter aircraft. The Fairey Firefly is a well known naval
fighter used by the Royal Navy which was designed was designed to carry a pilot and an
observer - and operate from an aircraft carrier if required.
After acquiring the Sealand, It was clear
for the Indian Navy that the it was not able to offer services like Drogue Towing on which
Naval Gunners could practice gunnery. Soon the Navy procured the Fairey Firefly for target towing
purposes. The first two Firefly TT Mk1's INS-111 and INS-113
arrived on 14 Feb 55. These two were followed by three more Mk1s numbered 112,
114 and 115 in May 55.
Three years later a second batch of five
Firefly TT Mk.4s were procured. INS-116 and INS-117 were
flown in on 11 Sept 58. The other three Mk.4s arrived before the end of Dec 58. The Mk.4s
were equipped with 20mm cannon and could also carry bombs and rockets if required - Thus
they became the first Indian Naval Aircraft that were offensive capable.
Of the ten Fireflies procured, one has been
lost in an accident and the all but one of the remaining are believed to have been
scrapped. The sole surviving Firefly remained as a fuselage in the warehouses of Cochin
for over three and a half decades, before it was bought out for a hasty restoration job
and subsequent display at the NAM.
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Firefly TT Mk.1 INS-112
on display. Note the foothold recesses just below the observers position on either side of
the roundel. |
| The 'Glass House' at the
Observers position in the rear does not seem to be an original and was probably
scratchbuilt. The quality of the Pilot's Canopy and the observer's glass house is quite
good. |
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The aircraft was probably built up from the
remains of a Firefly fuselage which was extant from the firewall just ahead of the
cockpit and upto the tail. The team constructed an engine cowling, spinner, propeller,
cooling vents, Oil cooler air intakes on both sides of the engine cowling, a complete
undercarraige and tail empennage.
While a reasonable job has been done on the
main fuselage, the engine cowlings came out the worst - looking like something grafted out
of a DHC-1 Chipmunk, the cowlings along with the Spinner and Propeller look out of place
and completely distracts from the Firefly look. Many a visitor has emailed us asking if it
was a 'Replica' and were flabbergasted when we told them it was an original aircraft!
| The engine cowlings
which seem to resemble that of the DHC1 Chipmunk are most 'Un-Firefly' like and is the
most distracting feature of the restoration. |
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The Starboard view of
the Firefly shows the garish Tail-wheel which seems to be borrowed from a Wheelbarrow. The
'Indian Navy' lettering on the rear fuselage leaves much to be desired. |
The Undercarraige of the aircraft is
another distracting feature. Though we have no clue as to from which parts it was
fabricated, the main undercarraige looks like it is a strutted unit from Biplanes of yore.
The tail wheel is too big for the aircraft and looks like it is a wheel barrow spare.
It would probably have been better if the Navy had displayed the aircraft on jacks
and completely removed all traces of the current u/c set up.
Others have commented that a Harvard's tail
might have been used to construct the tail empennage. Whether correct or not, the team had
done good work in this area. Similar good work has been done in the pilot and observer
canopy areas.
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Close up of the
Unidentified Undercarriage unit fixed to the Firefly. This is certainly not an original.
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| A closer look at the
propeller hub and prop blades reveal that two (or one) of the propeller blades are fixed
the wrong way! The aircraft is covered by the special covers to protect against the
monsoons. |
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The good quality of restoration done on the
fuselage is again marred by the paint job. Big Bold letters proclaim 'INDIAN NAVY' - a
style that has not been seen on the firefly in the numerous historical photographs
displayed inside the museum.
Overall while the restoration effort is
appreciated, its a case of 'what could have been'. The aircraft can still be made to good
look. Remove the current undercarraige - change the forward engine cowlings and the
propeller blades, fabricate an original 'glass house' for the observer, change the paint
scheme that includes the Yellow and Black underside typical of Target Towing aircraft, we
will have a winner - and a warbird that makes the trip worth visiting.

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