DE HAVILLAND DRAGON


The 'de Havilland DH.84 Dragon' was a successful small commercial aircraft designed and built by the de Havilland company.
Following the commercial success of its single-engined De Havilland Fox Moth that had first flown in March 1932, that aircraft's original commercial operator Hillman's Airways requested that a larger twin-engined version be built. It was a simple, light design with a plywood box fuselage using the same type of engine and similar outer wing sections of the earlier single-engined aircraft. It was originally designated the DH.84 "Dragon Moth" but marked as the "Dragon." The prototype became the first production example and entered commercial service in April 1933. It could carry 6 passengers each with 45 pounds of luggage on the London-Paris route on a fuel consumption of just 13 gallons per hour.
The inaugural service of the Irish Airline Aer Lingus was provided by a DH Dragon, EI-ABI "Iolar", which means "Eagle" in the Irish Language. For the 50th anniversary of the airline in 1986, a replica Dragon was acquired and restored as the "Iolar".
The "Dragon" proved very attractive as a short-haul low capacity airliner and was soon in service world-wide. From the 63rd aircraft late in 1933 the "Dragon 2" with improvements including individually framed windows and faired undercarriage struts was produced. Even though these changes were largely cosmetic the streamlining improved the aircraft's speed by about 5 m.p.h., allowed 250lb more payload to be carried and added 85 miles of range.
British production of the DH.84 ended at the 115th aircraft, when it was replaced on the assembly line by the more powerful and elegant 'De Havilland Dragon Rapide'. However, during World War II the DH.84 was put back into production at Bankstown, Australia as a navigational trainer for the RAAF, being preferred to the Rapide because its smaller engines were then being manufactured locally for De Havilland Tiger Moth production. A further 87 were built.
Following the end of the War, surviving DH.84s were released into commercial service and a number are still flying today.

Contents
Variants
Military Operators
Specifications (DH.84)
References
Related content

Variants



★ 'Dragon 1' : Twin-engined medium transport biplane.

★ 'Dragon 2' : Improved version. Fitted with framed cabin windows and two faired main undercarriage legs.

★ 'DH.84M Dragon' : Military transport version. The DH.84M was armed with two machine guns, and it could carry up to sixteen 20-lb (9.1-kg) bombs. Exported to Denmark, Iraq and Portugal.

Military Operators



Australia

Austria

Denmark - Two DH.84 Dragons

Iraq - Eight DH.84M Dragons

Ireland

Portugal - Three DH.84 Dragons

South Africa

Turkey

Specifications (DH.84)


{{aircraft specifications
|plane or copter?= plane
|jet or prop?= prop
|ref={name of first source}
|crew= one, pilot
|capacity= 6-10 passengers
|length main= 34 ft 6 in
|length alt= 10.5 m
|span main= 47 ft 4 in
|span alt= 14.4 m
|height main= 10 ft 1 in
|height alt= 3.1 m
|area main= 376 ft²
|area alt= 34.9 m²
|airfoil=
|empty weight main= 2,300 lb
|empty weight alt= 1,040 kg
|loaded weight main= 4,200 lb
|loaded weight alt= 1,900 kg
|useful load main=
|useful load alt=
|max takeoff weight main=
|max takeoff weight alt=
|more general=
|engine (prop)= de Havilland Gipsy Major
|type of prop=
|number of props=2
|power main= 130 hp
|power alt= 97 kW
|power original=
|max speed main= 95 knots
|max speed alt= 109 mph, 167 km/h
|cruise speed main=
|cruise speed alt=
|never exceed speed main=
|never exceed speed alt=
|stall speed main=
|stall speed alt=
|range main= 450 nm
|range alt= 545 miles, 833 km
|ceiling main= 12,500 ft
|ceiling alt= 3,800 m
|climb rate main= 612 ft/min
|climb rate alt= 187 m/min
|loading main=
|loading alt=
|thrust/weight=
|power/mass main=
|power/mass alt=
|more performance=
|armament=
|avionics=
}}

References



British Civil Aircraft 1919-1972: Volume II, A. J. Jackson, , , Putnam (Conway Maritime Press), ,

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