Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

List of Bristol Blenheim operators

List of Bristol Blenheim operators
A Finnish Blenheim Mk IV

The following are units which operated the Bristol Blenheim:

Operators

Australia

Royal Australian Air Force

Canada

Royal Canadian Air Force

Independent State of Croatia

Zrakoplovstvo Nezavisne Države Hrvatske

Eight captured ex-Royal Yugoslav Air Force Mk I aircraft were acquired by the ZNDH from the Germans after the April invasion in 1941.[4] Several survived to the end of the War, with one retreating to Klagenfurt Austria upon the collapse of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) in May 1945.[5]

Finland

Bristol Blenheim of the Finnish Air Force. Photo taken in March, 1944.
Finnish Air Force

Finland was the first export order for the Blenheim and 18 Mark Is were delivered between 29 July 1937 and 27 July 1938. A licence to local produce the aircraft was granted in April 1938 but none of the 15 ordered from State Aircraft Factory were delivered before the Russian invasion. Twelve new Mark IVs were diverted from RAF production and these were followed by 12 former RAF Mark Is.

Free France

Free French Air Force

Nazi Germany

Luftwaffe

One damaged Blenheim Mk IV was captured during Battle of France in 1940. It was later repaired and used as special training aircraft from 1940 until 1942.[8]

Greece

Hellenic Air Force

The Hellenic Air Force in its campaigns against Italy and Germany in 1940 and 1941, operated 12 Mk IVs (delivered before WWII without sights, bomb racks, wireless radios and intercoms) and 6 Mk Is (delivered in February 1941).[9] In the Middle East, the Hellenic Air Force operated 19 Mk IVs (from January 1942 till January 1943) and 31 Mk Vs (from January 1943 till September 1943).

India

Royal Indian Air Force

Indonesia

Indonesian Air Force

One Blenheim Mk IV was captured during the Indonesian National Revolution from the IJAAF. It was re-engined with Nakajima Sakae engines.[10]

Italy

Regia Aeronautica

Blenheim Mk.IV N3589 of No. 40 Squadron RAF landed in error at Pantelleria on 13 September 1940 and was evaluated at Guidonia airfield near Rome.[11] One more was captured in Yugoslavia while two were seized in Italian East Africa but were recaptured when this territory fell into British hands.[12] N3589 might be the Mk.IV appearing in a non-flying role in the movie Un Pilota Ritorna (1942) directed by Roberto Rossellini.

Japan

Imperial Japanese Army Air Service

At least one Blenheim Mk I and two Blenheim Mk IV wrecks were discovered in Semarang, Java in August 1947. It was either captured during the Malayan campaign or the Dutch East Indies campaign.[13]

New Zealand

Royal New Zealand Air Force

Poland

Polish Air Forces in Great Britain

Portugal

Portuguese Air Force
Portuguese Naval Aviation

Romania

Romanian Air Force

Germany provided 6 captured ex-Royal Yugoslav Air Force Mk I aircraft to Romania in 1941,[14] where they joined 12 Mk Is previously purchased from Britain.

South Africa

South African Air Force

Turkey

Turkish Air Force

United Kingdom

Royal Air Force
Fleet Air Arm
Aeroplane & Armament Experimental Establishment
Royal Aircraft Establishment

Yugoslavia

Royal Yugoslav Air Force

The Royal Yugoslav Air Force acquired 24 Mk I aircraft from RAF stocks and subsequently undertook a licensed production run of some 36 aircraft. Tooling up for the production of the Mk IV was about to commence when interrupted by the Invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941. Some 20 partly completed airframes, as well as production tools and spare parts were subsequently sold by Germany to Finland.[14]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Kostenuk and Griffin, 1977, pp. 88-89
  2. ^ Kostenuk and Griffin, 1977, pp. 91-92
  3. ^ Kostenuk and Griffin, 1977, pp. 92-93
  4. ^ Neulen, 2000, p. 171
  5. ^ Likso and Canak 1998 p. 72.
  6. ^ a b Stenman Air Enthusiast Summer 1994, p. 35.
  7. ^ a b c d Stenman Air Enthusiast Summer 1994, p. 33.
  8. ^ Bączkowski, 1995, pp. 27
  9. ^ Shores, et al. 1987
  10. ^ "Indonesian aviation 1945-1950." Archived 14 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine adf-serials.com. Retrieved: 10 January 2021.
  11. ^ "Bristol Blenheim".
  12. ^ Garello, Giancarlo; Gueli Marco (2007). Ali straniere in Italia - War Prizes. Apostolo Editore.
  13. ^ "Japanese Blenheims at Semarang, Java". aviationofjapan.com. 20 June 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  14. ^ a b Savic and Ciglic 2002, p. 62.

Bibliography

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  • Boiten, T. Bristol Blenheim. London: The Crowood Press, 1998. ISBN 1-86126-115-2.
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