The Commonwealth 
         Aircraft corporation Pty Ltd was formed in 1936 as the result of an 
         Australian government scheme to establish an aircraft industry and make 
         the country independent of outside suppliers. A number of wealthy 
         industrial firms contributed to the financing of the company and, 
         following a visit by an Air Board Technical Commission to the USA in 
         1936, negotiations were concluded for licence manufacture of the North 
         American NA-26 two-seat general purpose monoplane and its Pratt & 
         Whitney Wasp engine. The NA-26 being an improved version of North 
         Americans NA-16, with retractable tailwheel landing gear, the 600 hp 
         (447 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1340 radial engine and equipment 
         representative of contemporary operational aircraft. Tugan Aircraft Ltd 
         was taken over by Commonwealth and its chief designer, Wing Commander 
         Lawrence Wackett, became general manager of the new company. An initial 
         order was placed by the RAAF for 40 NA-33s (North Americans new 
         designation), as the licence-built version was designated. The 
         manufacturer's designation was Commonwealth Aircraft CA-1, being the 
         first Commonwealth aircraft, and the name Wirraway was chosen, which 
         means "challenge" in the language of the aboriginals. 
         
           
         A Commonwealth Aircraft CA-5 Wirraway of No. 4 Squadron, Royal 
         Australian Air Force based in New Guinea during December 1942 
         The first Australian 
         built aircraft flew at Melbourne on 27 March 1939, and within four 
         months the RAAF had accepted the first three aircraft. The outbreak of 
         war in Europe led to increased orders for Wirraways. and the British 
         government also financed the purchase of aircraft for the Empire Air 
         Training Scheme in Australia. By June 1942 Commonwealth had built 620, 
         and the type continued in limited production until the 755th and last 
         aircraft was delivered in 1946. They replaced the Hawker Demon 
         two-seater biplanes that were in service at the time. There were a 
         number of Commonwealth designations for the Wirraway; these, together 
         with the number built, were as follows: CA-1 (40), CA-3 (60), CA-5 
         (32), CA-7 (100), CA-8 (200), CA-9 (188) and CA-16 (135). The CA-10 was 
         to have been a bomber version and the CA-10A a dive-bomber, but both 
         were cancelled. The designation CA-20 was allocated to Wirraways 
         converted for use by the Royal Australian Navy in the post-war training 
         role. The top and bottom of the fuselage had light alloy metal panels, 
         the sides had fabric. The basic construction of the fuselage was made 
         of steel-tube with stringers and light alloy frames. 
         Wirraways saw service 
         on convoy patrol work from Darwin, in Malaya, New Britain and New 
         Guinea before being replaced by more warlike equipment, and by mid-1943 
         most front line Wirraway squadrons had re-equipped with CAC Boomerangs. 
         As they were withdrawn from service almost 400 Wirraways were put into 
         long-term storage. Eventually a number of these were used as the basis 
         for the CA-28 Ceres agricultural aircraft.  
         Specifications 
         (Commonwealth Aircraft CA-1 Wirraway) 
         Type: Two Seat 
         Trainer & Light Bomber  
         Design: Wing 
         Commander Lawrence J. Wackett as Chief Designer on this licence built 
         version of the North American NA-16  
         Manufacturer: 
         Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation Pty Ltd at Fisherman's Bend, 
         Australia  
         Powerplant: One 
         CAC built 600 hp (447 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1340-S1H1-G Wasp radial 
         engine. 
         Performance: 
         Maximum speed 220 mph (354 km/h) at 5,000 ft (1525 m); maximum cruising 
         speed 182 mph (293 km/h) at 5,000 ft (1525m); service ceiling 23,000 ft 
         (7010 m): initial climb rate of 1,950 ft (594 m) per minute. 
         Range: 720 miles 
         (1159 km) with maximum fuel. 
         Weight: Empty 
         equipped 3,992 lbs (1811 kg) with a maximum take-off weight of 6,595 
         lbs (2991 kg). 
         Dimensions: Span 
         43 ft 0 in (13.11 m); length 27 ft 10 in (8.48 m); height 8 ft 8 3/4 in 
         (2.66 m); wing area 255.7 sq ft (23.76 sq m). 
         Armament: Two 
         fixed forward firing 7.7 mm (0.303 in) Vickers Mk V machine-guns and a 
         similar weapon in the rear cockpit plus up to 1,000 lbs (454 kg) of 
         bombs (usually 4 x 250 lbs bombs). 
         Variants: CA-1 
         Wirraway, CA-3, CA-5, CA-7, CA-8, CA-9, CA-10 (bomber version but never 
         built), CA-10A (dive bomber version but never built), CA-16, CA-20 
         (Navy aircraft). 
         Avionics: None. 
         History: First 
         flight (prototype) 27 March 1939; first deliveries June 1939; final 
         production 1946. 
         Operators: 
         Australia.  |