Tiger Moth start and taxi

  Рет қаралды 9,340

Mark from HARS Aviation Museum

Mark from HARS Aviation Museum

Күн бұрын

Check out some of the other videos on my channel:
/ @markfromharsaviationm... .
Today we’re going to start the engine on our Tiger Moth. We’ll do some checks on it and then take the aeroplane for a taxi run.
CORRECTION: When pulling the prop through with switches off I said that the throttle should be open. This is incorrect, the throttle should be closed when priming the engine. Also, this is not intended to be an instructional video.
The Tiger Moth is a two-seat, single-engine biplane developed from a series of aircraft that started general aviation in Great Britain after the First World War. Designed by Geoffrey de Havilland the Tiger Moth was developed to meet a British Air Ministry specification for an ab-initio training aircraft and first flew on 26 October 1931. It quickly became a commercial success being exported to more than 25 countries and manufactured in seven countries, including Australia.
The fuselage is a steel tube frame covered in plywood and fabric and the wings are of wooden construction also covered in fabric. The Tiger Moth is powered by a 130 horsepower Gipsy Major engine which is started by hand swinging the wooden propeller.
When it started to become clear in the late 1930s that war in Europe was inevitable the British government, realising that they would be short of trained pilots, set up the Empire Air Training Scheme - a plan to train pilots remotely in the dominions. Training bases were established in Australia, Bermuda, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa and Southern Rhodesia. The Tiger Moth was used as the primary training aircraft in all of these countries and the scheme trained over 37,000 aircrew in Australia alone.
By the time the Second World War broke out Tiger Moths were being used by most Commonwealth air forces as the primary, basic trainer. Between 1940 and 1945 de Havilland Australia built 1,085 Tiger Moths at its plants in Mascot and later Bankstown, the engines being built by General Motors in Victoria.
Some civilian-owned Tiger Moths were pressed into service by the Royal Australian Air Force at the start of the war but the majority of the RAAF Tiger Moths were specifically built for them by de Havilland in Australia.
In all 861 Tiger Moths were used by the RAAF, the remainder of the de Havilland Australia production run being delivered to the other Commonwealth countries participating in the EATS. It was the basic trainer for thousands of Australian pilots during the war and continued to be used for training in the RAAF until 1957. After the war Tiger Moths were disposed of by the hundreds and many of them made their way into private ownership, the type forming the basis of the post-war civil flying movement. Many of these aircraft are still active today, including the HARS Tiger Moth, VH-DHV.
Built in 1941, the HARS aircraft saw service with the RAAF in No. 5 Service Flying Training School based at Uranquinty, NSW.
Thank you for watching. If you enjoyed this video hit the like button and please consider subscribing.
Music: • 🎵 Athena - JVNA 🎧 No C...
HARS Aviation Museum is open every day (except Christmas Day) and can be found at Shellharbour airport, 54 Airport Road, Albion Park Rail NSW 2527.
This video is for entertainment purposes only and is not meant to be instructional or representative of appropriate flight procedures as editing removes the context of the events depicted.

Пікірлер: 16
@justincase1575
@justincase1575 2 жыл бұрын
I owned a Tiger late 70’s. Had to Chas get oil in rocker covers every 25 hours! Love that airplane. Awesome takeoff with the slats on top wings.
@nigelsnell9770
@nigelsnell9770 4 жыл бұрын
Now this takes me back in time.
@MegaPeedee
@MegaPeedee Жыл бұрын
Great video. Now subscribed. I love the magpies! Nothing more Australian than that.
@brykalaero
@brykalaero Жыл бұрын
We have just purchased A17-284
@stephensmith4480
@stephensmith4480 3 жыл бұрын
Superb. If only that old girl could tell us her story`s 👍
@brianvandragt1439
@brianvandragt1439 4 жыл бұрын
Great vid Mark..as usual...
@markfromharsaviationmuseum4
@markfromharsaviationmuseum4 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Brian!
@johnbaty1975
@johnbaty1975 Жыл бұрын
What colour is she painted, is it the same colour as Contessa...thanks
@miksal26
@miksal26 3 жыл бұрын
Do you have a tail wheel on this aircraft ? I notice an abundance of sealed tarmac🤔
@markfromharsaviationmuseum4
@markfromharsaviationmuseum4 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, we do have a tail wheel rather than a skid. We also have brakes. It's a bit difficult to find open grass fields to land on around here so our operations are restricted to times when the weather suits our sealed runways.
@miksal26
@miksal26 3 жыл бұрын
@@markfromharsaviationmuseum4 Hi Mark, I flew ab initio in DHC 1 Chippies in the early 60,s and the Tiger Moths were just out of my reach timewise. I I had them in my bucket list for 50 years and was only able to have a flight or two . They certainly reminded me of how much I missed by not having much time in them. There is something in todays training aircraft that deprive trainees of the joy of stick and rudder and the blast of air smacking the back of their heads. Wouldn’t it be great if somebody did a Waco job and built them from new again? Your Tiger looks great. Cheers from Downunder 🇦🇺🇨🇦👍😷😷
@jasons44
@jasons44 2 жыл бұрын
Cute
@justincase1575
@justincase1575 2 жыл бұрын
Change oil in rockers.
@barryplant2895
@barryplant2895 2 жыл бұрын
Hi are you UK ?
@markfromharsaviationmuseum4
@markfromharsaviationmuseum4 2 жыл бұрын
No, we are in Australia. HARS Aviation Museum, Shellharbour airport.
@ferce889
@ferce889 3 жыл бұрын
i want to hear the engine sound...not your choice of errie music
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