de Havilland Moth Minor

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DH.94 Moth Minor
300px
An ex RAAF DH.94 Moth Minor at the Benalla Aviation Museum in June 2012.
Role Tourer/Trainer
Manufacturer de Havilland
Designer J.P. Smith
First flight 22 June 1937
Number built c.140
Unit cost
£575

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The de Havilland DH.94 Moth Minor was a 1930s British two-seat tourer/trainer aircraft built by de Havilland at Hatfield Aerodrome, England and by de Havilland Australia at Bankstown Aerodrome, Australia.

Design and development

File:DH.94 Moth Minor Coupe Portsmouth 1954.jpg
DH.94 Moth Minor Coupe at Portsmouth Airport in September 1954

The Moth Minor was designed as a low-wing monoplane to replace the biplane Moth series, intended to give similar performance on lower power, and not requiring rigging. Its predecessor was the DH.81 Swallow Moth monoplane of 1931, of which only one was built. The wooden prototype of the DH.94 was first flown by Geoffrey de Havilland on 22 June 1937 at Hatfield Aerodrome.[1] Production started and nearly 100 examples had been built by the outbreak of World War II. With a selling price of only £575[1] the Moth Minor was popular with flying clubs keen to acquire modern monoplanes. Nine aircraft were specially-built with hinged coupe tops instead of the normally open cockpit.

As the factory at Hatfield was needed for the war effort the drawings, jigs, components and unfinished aircraft were delivered to the de Havilland factory at Bankstown, Sydney. More than 40 aircraft were produced in Australia.[1]

Civil aircraft operated in the United Kingdom were impressed into wartime service with the Royal Air Force and Fleet Air Arm, one example was used by the United States Army Air Corps. A large number of civil aircraft from the UK were sent to Australia, where they and a handful of locally-built Australian civil aircraft were impressed into the Royal Australian Air Force.[2]

After World War II, several Moth Minors have continued to fly with private owners in the United Kingdom.

Variants

  • DH.94 Moth Minor : Two-seat touring and training aircraft.
  • Moth Minor Coupe : Two-seat touring and training aircraft, with a built-up rear fuselage and hinged cabin top.

Operators

Military operators

 Australia
 India
 New Zealand
 South Africa
 United Kingdom
 United States

Specifications

Data from British Civil Aircraft since 1919, Vol 2 [1]

General characteristics

Performance

Survivors

Australia

Airworthy
  • VH-AIB ex RAAF A21-38 C/N DHP17 is owned by Steve Jenkins and located at Goolwa SA.[3][4][5][6]
  • VH-CZB ex RAAF A21-42 C/N 94067 is owned by Mark Carr and located at the Benalla Aviation Museum, Vic.[3][7][8][9]

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Related lists

References

Notes

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Bibliography

External links

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. ADF Serials list of RAAF Moth Minors. Retrieved: 11 December 2008
  3. 3.0 3.1 ADF Serials list of RAAF Moth Minors. Retrieved: 16 June 2012
  4. Clyde North Aeronautical Preservation Group. Retrieved: 16 June 2012
  5. Airliners.net. Retrieved: 16 June 2012
  6. Ed Coates Aircraft Photographs. Retrieved: 16 June 2012
  7. Adventure Flights Benalla - List of Aircraft Retrieved: 16 June 2012
  8. Australian Warbirds. Retrieved: 16 June 2012
  9. Airliners.net. Retrieved: 16 June 2012