de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide

de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide

de Havilland DH.89

 

Designed in the 1930s the de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide was one of many reasonably successful light commercial transports of the ear. But the outbreak of war was to see production soar to keep pace with demand for communications and navigation trainers. After the war, hundreds of ex-service aircraft came onto the market, and the faithful old biplane was to become an important part of the post war boom in commercial aviation, flying in a multitude of roles from scheduled airliner to fun flier.

 




de Havilland DH.89

de Havilland DH.89The de Havilland Aircraft Company was probably more closely associated with the expansion of British civil aviation in the 1930s than any other manufacturer in Britain, and throughout this period de Havilland produced a succession of exceptional light aircraft.

Perhaps the most famous was the D.H.82 Tiger Moth. A total of 8,300 of these small biplane trainers was built and the Royal Air Force used the Tiger Moth as a basic trainer for fifteen years; many are still being flown from small airfields all over the world as they are still a favorite with private owners. The D.H.60 Moth of 1925 was the forerunner of the Tiger Moth. More than 1,700 D.H.60s were built, of which some 1,100 used the Gipsy engine designed and built by the de Havilland company itself. The simplicity, resilience. safety and low cost of this engine were to make it one of the main lessons for the Tiger Moth's success. The Tiger Moth made its maiden flight on 26 October 1931, and large-scale production began almost immediately, mostly for the Royal Air Force. In 1947 the R.A.F. declared the Tiger Moth obsolete and thousands of these small biplanes suddenly came on to the civil market, where they were bought by private pilots and flying clubs and were given a second lease of life. de Havilland DH.89

After the success of several de Havilland single-engine types, the company turned once more to the construction of a larger aircraft. The D.H.84 Dragon prototype first flew in 1932 and was the first of a series of famous multi-engine aircraft. The D.H.84 was a twin-engine. six- passenger biplane which had been specially ordered from de Havilland for use as a commercial transport on the Paris route. The Dragon was an instant success and de Havilland manufactured a total of 115 which were bought by numerous sma1l air- lines. Much larger than the Dragon, the D.H.86 took to the air on 14 January 1934. The aircraft had been developed for the Australian sector of the England-Australia route and was to be operated by Qantas between Singapore and Brisbane. It was a four- engine development of the D.H.84, which proved very reliable, considerably faster and had increased capacity. The production run totaled 62 and included 20 D.H.86As and 10 D.H.86Bs built in 1936-37 which had modified fuselages and strengthened tail surfaces. The D.H.86 started its career on 20 August 1934, with Railway Air Services and was used for many years in Europe, Africa, the Middle and Far East. New Zealand and, of course, Australia, in the livery of various airlines.

The last of this series was the D.H.89 Dragon Rapide, the prototype of which first flew on 17 April 1934. This aircraft was, in essence, an updating of the twin-engine D.H.84 with more powerful engines and improved performance. More than 700 were built during the course of over ten years and they were even more successful immediately after World War II, when many aircraft of the military variant, the Dominie, built for the R.A.F., came on to the civil market. A few Dragon Rapides are still flying in various parts of the world.

de Havilland DH.89

De Havilland's last civil transport aircraft before the outbreak of war was the D.H.95 Flamingo, a modern all- metal twin-engine monoplane, the prototype of which first flew on 28 December 1938. The fact that it was of al1-meta1 construction represented a new departure from de Havilland's well-known tradition of specializing in wooden construction. Sixteen Flamingoes were manufactured, the prototype was operated by Jersey Airways in I 939, and others saw service during the war with BOAC in Africa and the Middle East, and with the Royal Navy.

de Havilland DH.89


Wood-Frame and Fabric-Skin Airliner

de Havilland DH.89

The DH.89 was a twin-engined development of the high-performance DH.86 Dragon. First flown in April 1934, its reliability and economy proved popular with small airlines. Officially called the Dragon Rapide, but known to most of its users simply as the Rapide, it was soon in worldwide use with operators from the tropics to high Arctic, and by the outbreak of war more than 200 had been built.

World War II increased demand for the aircraft, and 521 were completed and de Havilland Dominie navigation trainers. After the war, several hundred surplus machines were supplied to overseas air forces and, stripped of military equipment, to civil buyers.

After the war, Rapides could be found working for major government and commercial organizations, small charter airlines and air taxi companies. They shipped freight to the South American interior, flew business executives to important meetings around Europe, took tourists on pleasure trips over the Florida Everglades, and maintained island-hopping commercial services in areas as diverse as Scotland's outer isles and the volcanic chains of French Polynesia.

de Havilland Dragon

de Havilland DH.89

 


Specifications for the de Havilland Dragon-Rapide

3 View de Havilland DH.89

Crew: 1
Capacity: 8 passengers
Length: 34 ft 6 in
Wingspan: 48 ft
Height: 10 ft 3 in
Wing area: 340 ft²
Empty weight: 3,230 lb
Loaded weight: 5,500 lb
Powerplant: 2× de Havilland Gipsy Six
inline engine, 200 hp each


Performance
Maximum speed: 157 mph at 1,000 ft
Range: 573 mi
Service ceiling: 16,700 ft
Rate of climb: 867 ft/min
Wing loading: 16 lb/ft²
Power/mass: 0.036 hp/lb

 

de Havilland DH.89 Cockpit
The cockpit of the DH.89 had only the basic instruments.

 

de Havilland DH.89 Callout
A: Rapides were driven by two-blade fixed-pitch wooden propellers. B: The main structure of the Dragon Rapide was a spruce and birch framework with light alloy and fabric skin.

 

de Havilland DH.89 Callout
A: Cockpit configuration generally sat a single pilot, with basic instruments and controls. B: The cabin held up to eight passengers, seated in pairs. C: The Dragons and Rapides used Gipsy Six and Gipsy Major engines. D: The curved tail of the Rapide was a classic de Havilland feature.