Classic British Aircraft the de Havilland Chipmunk.

Published 2021-02-24
Platform Udemy
Rating 5.00
Number of Reviews 3
Number of Students 139
Price $24.99
Instructors
Graham "The Baron" Hesketh
Subjects

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Teaches you all the basics flying lessons.

This aircraft is incredible good fun to fly. Learning to fly should be fun. Learning to fly in VR is as inexpensive as it gets and the realism is amazing. I am a real pilot and I love flying in VR and doing all the daft stunts I would never do in real life. VR is a brilliant environment to learn to fly as it will teach you what you need to know before you pay to fly a real aircraft. Which means you will fly through your pilots licence a lot quicker than the rest.

The de Havilland Canada DHC-1 Chipmunk is a tandem, two-seat, single-engine primary trainer aircraft designed and developed by Canadian aircraft manufacturer de Havilland Canada. It was developed shortly after the Second World War and sold in large numbers during the immediate post-war years, being typically employed as a replacement for the de Havilland Tiger Moth biplane.

The Chipmunk was the first post-war aviation project conducted by de Havilland Canada. It performed its maiden flight on 22 May 1946 and was introduced to operational service that same year. During the late 1940s and 1950s, the Chipmunk was procured in large numbers by military air services such as the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), Royal Air Force (RAF), and several other nations' air forces, where it was often utilised as their standard primary trainer aircraft. The type produced under licence by de Havilland in the United Kingdom, who would produce the vast majority of Chipmunks, as well as by OGMA (Oficinas Gerais de Material Aeronáutico) in Portugal.

A DHC-1 Chipmunk

The type was slowly phased out of service beginning in the late 1950s, although in the ab initio elementary training role, this did not happen in the Royal Air Force until 1996, when it was replaced by the Scottish Aviation Bulldog.

Many Chipmunks that had been in military use were sold to civilians, either to private owners or to companies, where they were typically used for a variety of purposes, often involving the type's excellent flying characteristics and its capability for aerobatic manoeuvres. More than 70 years after the type having first entered service, hundreds of Chipmunks remain airworthy and are in operation around the world. The Portuguese Air Force still operates six Chipmunks, which serve with Esquadra 802, as of 2018.

The aircraft is named after the Chipmunk, a small rodent.

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