As the Great War entered its fifth decade, the Royal Air Force found itself stretched to counter the threat of German jet-powered zeppelin bombers. While the R.A.F. had fielded jets for a while, none then in service were capable of combat at the altitudes the new zeppelin bombers could reach. Something had to be done and fortunately, the venerable English Electric Co. stepped into the breech with a radical new jet biplane called the Lightningbolt.




Powered by two Rolls-Royce Rave-On turbojet engines and armed with two 20 m.m. underwing Bofors cannon, two .303 machine guns over the nose and two Osprey air-to-air missiles, the Lightningbolt seemed the ideal platform to stop the Hun.




The R.A.F. ordered the new plane into production immediately as there was no time to lose if British cities were to be saved from the bombing zeppelins. Before too long, the biplane Lightningbolt became a common sight over English skies.


The Lightningbolt became famous for being flown by HRH Prince Ernest, commander of the 34th Sqn. and was used in recruiting posters which would become iconic.

With the Lightningbolt so proudly displayed and the famous quote by HRH Prince Ernest "I call on you for the situation is grave and I am in deadly earnest!" the posters caused a ten-fold increase in new R.A.F. pilots. But could the new aircraft save England?




While the Lightningbolts claimed their share of the enemy, they did not stop the air raids. Fortunately for the British, the jet zeppelins suffered from poor quality control. The ligher-than-air bombers' engines would shed their fan blades after only a few missions and fall from the sky. This was very lucky indeed as the Lightningbolt was plagued with gremlins, not the least of which was ingestion of smoke and rounds from the nose guns by the large engine intake.

The English Electric Co. was never able to really work out all the problems, and the Lightningbolt was soon retired from service and replaced with more capable aircraft.


All that remains of the Lightningbolt today is this 1/100 scale Dinky toy and reprints of those once-iconic R.A.F. recruiting posters.

Brian da Basher