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Handley Page H.P.42

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Uploaded by on Sep 28, 2007

This is some better quality film than I originally posted

The Handley Page H.P.42 and H.P.45 were British four-engined long-range biplane airliners designed to a 1928 Imperial Airways specification by Handley Page of Radlett in Hertfordshire.

The H.P.42/45 were the land-based airliners of Imperial Airways and along with the company's later flying boats are well remembered. Eight aircraft were built, four of each type; all were named, with names beginning with the letter "H". One was destroyed in an airship hangar fire in 1937 but the remainder survived to be impressed into Royal Air Force service at the outbreak of the Second World War. No lives were lost in civilian service (a record thought to be unique for contemporary aircraft) but by 1940 all had been destroyed.
The H.P.42 was designed for the long-range, Eastern routes and the similar H.P.45 was built for the European routes. In Imperial Airways service, the H.P.42 was designated the H.P.42E (E for "Eastern" routes - India and South Africa), while the H.P.45 was called the H.P.42W (W for "Western" i.e. European routes). The H.P.42 and H.P.45 designations were Handley Page's identifiers but this was not commonly known at the time. The H.P.42 was a large unequal-span biplane of all-metal construction except for the fabric coverings of the wings, tail surfaces and rear fuselage. The wings were braced by Warren girders. The tailplane was of biplane configuration with three fins. The H.P.42 was powered by four Bristol Jupiter XIFs of 490 hp (365 kW) each, while the H.P.45 used four Bristol Jupiter XFBM supercharged engines of 555 hp (414 kW), greater fuel consumption being traded for more power. In both cases, two engines mounted on the upper wing and one on each side of the fuselage on the lower wing.

The crew compartment was enclosed, which was a new development and there were two passenger cabins, one fore and one aft of the wings. The H.P.42 carried six (later twelve) in the forward compartment and twelve in the aft. There was substantial baggage room. The H.P.45 seated 18 forward and 20 aft, with reduced baggage capacity.
The first flight was on 14 November 1930, by G-AAGX later to be named Hannibal, with Squadron Leader Thomas Harold England at the controls. The certificate of airworthiness was granted in May 1931, permitting commercial service; the first flight with fare-paying passengers was to Paris on 11 June of that year.

When the H.P.42s were finally withdrawn from civil service on 1 September 1939 they had recorded almost a decade of service without causing any major accidents

General characteristics
Crew: 4
Capacity: 24 passengers
Length: 92 ft 2 in (28.09 m)
Wingspan: 130 ft (39.62 m)
Height: 27 ft (8.23 m)
Wing area: 2,989 sq ft (278 m²)
Airfoil: RAF 28
Empty weight: 17,740 lb (8,047 kg)
Loaded weight: 28,000 lb (12,700 kg)
Powerplant: 4× Bristol Jupiter XIF radial engine, 490 hp (365 kW) each
Performance
Maximum speed: 120 mph (195 km/h)
Cruise speed: 95-105 mph (150-170 km/h)
Range: 500 mi (805 km)
Rate of climb: 790 ft/min (4 m/s)

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  • only 6,000 odd viewing? If the plane had crashed it would have been 600,000.

  • Comments below re the crash of this plane, GAAGX, over the Gulf of Oman on 1st March 1940 are correct. My grandfather was the Captain - crew and passengers were never found and no cause could be determined. However, it wasnt a RAF flight. The plane was carrying civilians. Very sad for all involved.

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  • Are any of these aircraft preserved anywhere or were they all scrapped after retirement ?

  • Nice landing!

  • Awesome aircraft and footage..thanks for the upload mate!

  • Bloody good. Thanks!

  • Amazing how much runway it needed. I need more than that with my Citabria. Not much more, but......

  • That weird-looking engine configuration was a way to get four engines with fixed-pitch, nonfeathering propellers no more than one engine apart, so an engine-out situation would not be destabilizing.

  • Tha weird-looking engine configuration was a way to get four engines with fixed-pitch propellers no more then one engine apart, so an engine-out situation would not be destabilizing with non-feathering props.

  • I never saw an aircraft that could take off and land so smoothly and slowly like this.

  • That's the typical way how english men construct their airliners. No wonder, why the british empire is history :-)

  • thats such a weird design its like a bus with oversized wings attached.

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