RAF Hawker Fury Mk.1

February 22, 2022 · in Aviation · · 9 · 1.5K

This article is intended to supplement and expand on Rick Kent's excellent Hawker Fury markings article on this website.

Hawker Fury

The Hawker was the first 200 mph aircraft to serve with the Royal Air Force. It's been reasonably well served by model companies but there are some points to note when building them. The RAF practice at the time was to order a pre-production series of aircraft and iron out the bugs. So most standard histories list the three main squadrons using the Fury as Nos. 1, 25 and 43. This is correct but No. 43 Squadron received their Furies well before the other 2 (8 months before in fact). These aircraft were delivered with 4 individual cabane struts (the struts which connect the wing to the fuselage) which were cross braced with RAF wire. Later aircraft had 'N' struts and these were retrofitted to the earlier series as well. All Furies carried BOTH Aldiss sights and ring and bead sights which was standard RAF practice up until the Gauntlet. The final noticeable change was the footstep added to K2--- series Furies which was very visible and even interfered with the the Squadron markings (see Pictures 3 & 4 below).


Unfortunately, almost every manufacturer gets No. 43 Squadron's Fury markings wrong (rather like No. 74 Squadron's Gauntlets). Up until the Furies No. 43 Squadron had a scheme of black and white check markings. With the Furies the white squares were omitted and the markings were just black squares with black lining for the blank spaces. The photographs above and below show this clearly. The only company in 1/72 who have the correct markings are a Czech company (APC Decals) who do repops of old Matchbox decals.


Nos 1 and 25 Squadrons received second contract batch Furies with 'N' cabane struts. No. 1 Squadron used parallel red bands which initially were quite thin and painted the rear decking of Flight commanders aircraft in Flight colours (red for A flight, yellow for B flight and blue for C flight). The bands were later moved closer together and thickened. The normal practice was to paint the fin in flight colours for flight leaders and the propeller boss and wheel discs only for line aircraft. No. 25 squadron had parallel black bars which weren't joined like No. 1's. Incidentally some sources refer to a Hawker Horsley crash at Hawkinge which burnt out several on No. 25 Squadron Furies. Whilst the crash did happen the aircraft were actually stored Blackburn Darts not Furies.



Three other squadrons also received Furies, Nos 41, 73 and 87. The latter two only had their Furies for a few months but No. 41 had them for two years. No. 41 Squadron's marking was a broad red bar along the fuselage and along the upper mainplane but the Furies didn't carry this. Only the fin was painted red.

Other changes to the Mk. 1 Furies were a rudder balance weight (there's a nice photo on the Tangmere Museum website) and some were fitted with a tailwheel (see above). Initially Furies didn't carry radios, navigation lights or landing flares. They were pure day interceptors. Later radios were added but the lack of the latter two continued.

Kits

The best 1/72 Fury is the Amodel kit which is far superior to any other. It's a bit fiddly but with a bit of care produces a superb result. It can also be built as a Mk. 2. For 1/48 the Airfix kit is the one and in 1/32 the Alley Cat kit if it's still available is the choice. After market decals are readily available and even include some of the FTS Furies.

A note on Fury finishes. The colour scheme before Munich was aluminium dope and polished metal panels. These aircraft were very well maintained and kept almost spotless. The only weathering visible would occasionally be exhaust plumes otherwise nothing. For authentic appearing polished metal panels the best material is Bare Metal Foil - 'ultra bright chrome'. It may sound a bit over the top but actually isn't. The metal panels on the Fury were polished to mirror level finish as the photos above show.

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9 responses

  1. Thanks a lot for sharing this information, Christopher @christopher
    Very helpful for a potential build of the Fury.

  2. Yet another amazing article, Christopher!
    Great info, raising the motivation to build a Fury!

  3. I really want a modern kit of the Fury Mk.1. The AMG kit of the Hart looks beautiful, so hopefully they'll do the Fury as well. It's one of those between-the-wars fighters that I need for my collection.

    • The Amodel kit of the Fury is a very nice kit in 1/72 (the decals are extremely fragile though). The AMG kit of the Hart appears to have a detail mistake in it. It includes the two fuel tank upper mainplane which was fitted to the Hind. Harts, Demons and Audaxes all had one fuel tank only.

  4. @christopher, Thanks for the great information Christopher! Much appreciated; many years ago I built the ex-Impact Lindberg Fury. And then about five or 6 years ago, a heavy model box fell from two feet above the model and dislodged every single piece of rigging, along with a broken wing strut. I collected all the pieces but haven't had the courage (nerve?) to try and put her right again. Your neat article might be the inspiration I needed to get to it!

    Here she is in happier times:

    And, without her flying wires!

  5. Thanks for the comments. Your Fury did look very nice and it shouldn't be too much of an effort to repair. I did this with a Bulldog which had been damaged in transit by the delivery company and if you take your time it should come out looking just as good as before.

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