Thede Havilland DH.87 Hornet Moth is a single-engined cabinbiplane designed by thede Havilland Aircraft Company in 1934 as a potential replacement for its highly successfulde Havilland Tiger Moth trainer. Although its side-by-side two-seat cabin made it closer in configuration to the modern aircraft that military trainee pilots would later fly, there was no interest from theRAF and the aircraft was put into production for private buyers.
DH.87A Hornet Moth retaining the original tapered wing design. Wetaskiwin, Alberta, June 1996
The prototype first flew atHatfield on 9 May 1934 and, with two other pre-production aircraft, embarked on an extensive test program that resulted in the first production aircraft (designated DH.87A) completed in August 1935 having wings of greater outboard taper. These were found to cause problems, especially when landing in three-point attitude: there was a tendency for the tips to stall, causing embarrassment to the pilot and often damage to the aeroplane. From early 1936, de Havilland offered owners of the DH.87A replacement wings of the new squarer shape at a reduced price in exchange for the original wings. Designated DH.87B, new aircraft from about manufacture Number 68 were built with the new square wings. This wing reduced the overall span by 8 inches (20 cm). The alterations slightly increased overall weight at some penalty to performance.
A total of 164 aircraft were produced, of which 84 were placed on the British Register. Many were impressed for military service duringWorld War II, mostly being used by theRAF as liaison aircraft.
Small numbers survived the war and with time became highly prized by vintage aircraft enthusiasts. A small number are still flying, over eighty years after production ceased.
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Jackson, A.J.De Havilland Aircraft since 1909. London: Putnam, Third edition, 1987.ISBN0-85177-802-X.
Sturtivant, Ray; Burrow, Mick (1995).Fleet Air Arm Aircraft 1939 to 1945. Tunbridge Wells, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd.ISBN0-85130-232-7.
Follett, K. "Hornet flight", (translated in Italian "Il volo del calabrone", Mondadori Editore S.p.A., Milano, 2003ISBN88-04-54428-7) It's a fictitious novel, first printed in 2002, in which a hornet moth plays a key role in the story.