madcat Wrote:If you remove the cockpit canopy and the 2 MG's in the wings you get the Gloster Gauntlet.
Don't think the RAF was using them at the out break of war but Finland might of?
Commonwealth countries like Australia and RAF overseas squadrons (Burma/Singapore, Middle East) still had them in service until late 1940. Things like the Hurricane were big news in those places, even though it was quickly obsolete in Europe.
The Gauntlet also used an older Mercury of course, the VI series in the Mark II rated for 640hp (840hp in the IX series for the Gladiator). Wingspan was a little greater than the Gladiator and the undercarriage suspension was an older type. The two machine guns were Lewis models and had less performance than the later Brownings (early Gladiators actually featured two Lewis guns installed at the wings along with the two Brownings in the fuselage, but this was quickly changed with availability). All in all the Gauntlet was more than 35km/h slower than the Gladiator, with lesser sustained climb but it did manage to squeeze a couple of hundred kilometres more range from the fuel tank.
The Gauntlet was, along with the Bristol Bulldog and Hawker Fury the real interwar fighter of the thirties which carried the RAF banner up to and into WW2. The Gladiator was introduced around the same time as the Hurricane, both only just ahead of the Spitfire and these were all new types which really just appeared on the eve of war, not in enough numbers and not everywhere at once (the bigger issue with the Spitfire was also introducing new construction techniques).
It's easy to forget as Hitler's armies marched most air forces were all Avia, Fiat, Morane-Saulnier, PZL, Polikarpov, Bristol and Gloster. And it was all biplanes or parasols, fabric and wood. What we read is the best new developments in England were the Spitfire, in America the P-35/36, France the D.520 but neither the funding or foresight was really available to have hordes of them equipped, their pilots trained and ready for service. England for example had enough trouble in Parliament just trying to get Gladiators and Hurricanes filling most fighter squadrons, it was only the realities of attrition faced after the onset of general hostilities which put military aviation industry rightly in order.