The Supermarine Spitfire is a British single-seat
fighter aircraft
Fighter aircraft (early on also ''pursuit aircraft'') are military aircraft designed primarily for air-to-air combat. In military conflict, the role of fighter aircraft is to establish air supremacy, air superiority of the battlespace. Domina ...
that was used by the
Royal Air Force
The Royal Air Force (RAF) is the Air force, air and space force of the United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies. It was formed towards the end of the World War I, First World War on 1 April 1918, on the merger of t ...
and other
Allied countries before, during, and after
World War II
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
. It was the only British fighter produced continuously throughout the war. The Spitfire remains popular among enthusiasts. Around
70 remain airworthy, and many more are static exhibits in aviation museums throughout the world.
The Spitfire was a short-range, high-performance
interceptor aircraft designed by
R. J. Mitchell, chief designer at
Supermarine Aviation Works, which operated as a subsidiary of
Vickers-Armstrong from 1928. Mitchell modified the Spitfire's distinctive
elliptical wing (designed by
Beverley Shenstone) with innovative sunken rivets to have the thinnest possible cross-section, achieving a potential top speed greater than that of several contemporary fighter aircraft, including the
Hawker Hurricane. Mitchell continued to refine the design until his death in 1937, whereupon his colleague
Joseph Smith took over as chief designer.
Smith oversaw the Spitfire's development through
many variants, from the Mk 1 to the Rolls-Royce Griffon-engined Mk 24, using several wing configurations and guns. The original
airframe was designed to be powered by a
Rolls-Royce Merlin engine producing 1,030
hp (768 kW). It was strong enough and adaptable enough to use increasingly powerful Merlins, and in later marks,
Rolls-Royce Griffon engines producing up to 2,340 hp (1,745 kW). As a result, the Spitfire's performance and capabilities improved over the course of its service life.
During the
Battle of Britain
The Battle of Britain () was a military campaign of the Second World War, in which the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the Fleet Air Arm (FAA) of the Royal Navy defended the United Kingdom (UK) against large-scale attacks by Nazi Germany's air force ...
(July–October 1940), the more numerous Hurricane flew more sorties resisting the
Luftwaffe
The Luftwaffe () was the aerial warfare, aerial-warfare branch of the before and during World War II. German Empire, Germany's military air arms during World War I, the of the Imperial German Army, Imperial Army and the of the Imperial Ge ...
, but the Spitfire captured the public's imagination, in part because the Spitfire was generally a better fighter aircraft than the Hurricane. Spitfire units had a lower attrition rate and a higher victory-to-loss ratio than Hurricanes, most likely due to the Spitfire's higher performance. During the battle, Spitfires generally engaged Luftwaffe fighters—mainly
Messerschmitt Bf 109E–series aircraft, which were a close match for them.
After the Battle of Britain, the Spitfire superseded the Hurricane as the principal aircraft of
RAF Fighter Command, and it was used in the
European,
Mediterranean
The Mediterranean Sea ( ) is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the east by the Levant in West Asia, on the north by Anatolia in West Asia and Southern ...
,
Pacific
The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest of Earth's five oceanic divisions. It extends from the Arctic Ocean in the north to the Southern Ocean, or, depending on the definition, to Antarctica in the south, and is bounded by the cont ...
, and
South-East Asian theatres.
Much loved by its pilots, the Spitfire operated in several roles, including interceptor, photo-reconnaissance, fighter-bomber, and trainer, and it continued to do so until the 1950s. The
Seafire was an aircraft carrier–based adaptation of the Spitfire, used in the
Fleet Air Arm
The Fleet Air Arm (FAA) is the naval aviation component of the United Kingdom's Royal Navy (RN). The FAA is one of five :Fighting Arms of the Royal Navy, RN fighting arms. it is a primarily helicopter force, though also operating the Lockhee ...
from 1942 until the mid-1950s.
Development and production
Origins

In 1931, the Air Ministry released
specification F7/30, calling for a modern fighter capable of a flying speed of to replace the
Gloster Gauntlet biplane. R. J. Mitchell designed the
Supermarine Type 224 to fill this role in competition with the
Blackburn F.3 and
Westland F.7/30 and privately funded designs from Gloster. The 224 was an open-cockpit monoplane with bulky gull wings and a large, fixed, spatted
undercarriage powered by the ,
evaporatively cooled Rolls-Royce Goshawk engine. It made its first flight in February 1934.
[Andrews and Morgan 1987, p. 206.] Of the seven designs tendered to F7/30, the
Gloster Gladiator biplane was accepted for service.
[Price 1977, p. 16.]
The Type 224 was a big disappointment to Mitchell and his design team, who immediately embarked on a series of "cleaned-up" designs, using their experience with the
Schneider Trophy seaplanes as a starting point.
This led to the Type 300, with retractable undercarriage and a wingspan reduced by . This design was submitted to the Air Ministry in July 1934, but was not accepted. It then went through a series of changes, including the incorporation of an enclosed cockpit, oxygen-breathing apparatus, smaller and thinner wings, and the newly developed, more powerful Rolls-Royce
PV XII V-12 engine, which was later named the "Merlin". In November 1934, Mitchell, with the backing of Supermarine's owner
Vickers-Armstrong, started detailed design work on this refined version of the Type 300.
On 1 December 1934, the Air Ministry issued contract AM 361140/34, providing £10,000 for the construction of Mitchell's improved Type 300 design.
[Price 1977, p. 20.] In April 1935 Ralph Sorley spoke to Mitchell about the new specification F10/35 which called for armament of at least six and preferably eight guns while at the same time removing bomb carry requirement and reducing fuel capacity. Mitchell foresaw no problem adding the guns and welcomed the reduction which would reduce weight. A specification for an eight-gun fighter, F5/34 had come from a recommendation by Squadron Leader
Ralph Sorley of the Operational Requirements section at the Air Ministry.
[Glancey 2006, pp. 37–38.] In the redesign the change was made from
Vickers machine guns to
.303 in (7.7 mm)
Brownings),
[Price 2003, p. 21.] and the fuel tankage dropped to 75 gallons from 94.

On 5 March 1936,
[For many years, considerable debate occurred over the date of the first flight being 5 or 6 March. Many of Supermarine's records from this era were destroyed during a bombing raid in 1940, and none of the surviving documents seemed to pin this down. This matter was almost conclusively answered in 1985 by aviation author Alfred Price, who received an account sheet with a handwritten note updating a line from "Not yet flown" to "Flew 5 Mar 36". See ''Spitfire: A Complete Fighting History'', 1991, pp. 165–166.] the prototype (''K5054''), fitted with a fine-pitch propeller to give more power for takeoff, took off on its first flight from
Eastleigh Aerodrome. At the controls was
Captain Joseph "Mutt" Summers, chief test pilot for Vickers, who is quoted as saying, "don't touch anything" on landing. This eight-minute flight
came four months after the maiden flight of the contemporary Hurricane.
''K5054'' was fitted with a new propeller, and Summers flew the aircraft on 10 March 1936; during this flight, the undercarriage was retracted for the first time. After the fourth flight, a new engine was fitted, and Summers left the test flying to his assistants,
Jeffrey Quill and George Pickering. They soon discovered that the Spitfire
[McKinstry 2007, p. 55.] was a very capable aircraft, but not perfect. The rudder was oversensitive, and the top speed was just 330 mph (528 km/h), little faster than
Sydney Camm's new Merlin-powered Hurricane. A new and better-shaped, two-bladed, wooden propeller allowed the Spitfire to reach 348 mph (557 km/h) in level flight in mid-May, when Summers flew ''K5054'' to
RAF Martlesham Heath and handed the aircraft over to Squadron Leader Anderson of the
Aeroplane & Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE). Here, Flight Lieutenant Humphrey Edwardes-Jones took over the prototype for the RAF. He had been given orders to fly the aircraft and then to make his report to the Air Ministry on landing. Edwardes-Jones' report was positive; his only request was that the Spitfire be equipped with an undercarriage position indicator. A week later, on 3 June 1936, the Air Ministry placed an order for 310 Spitfires, at a cost of
£1,395,000.
[Price 1982, p. 61.] before the A&AEE had issued any formal report. Interim reports were later issued on a piecemeal basis.
[Price 1977, pp. 25, 27.]
Initial production
The British public first saw the Spitfire at the
RAF Hendon air display on Saturday 27 June 1936. Although full-scale production was supposed to begin immediately, numerous problems could not be overcome for some time, and the first production Spitfire, ''K9787'', did not roll off the
Woolston, Southampton assembly line until mid-1938.
[Ethel 1997, p. 12.]
In February 1936, the director of Vickers-Armstrongs, Sir Robert MacLean guaranteed production of five aircraft a week, beginning 15 months after an order was placed. On 3 June 1936, the Air Ministry placed an order for 310 aircraft.
Full-scale production of the Spitfire began at Supermarine's facility in Woolston, but the order clearly could not be completed in the 15 months promised. Supermarine was a small company, already busy building
Walrus and
Stranraer
Stranraer ( , in Scotland also ; ), also known as The Toon or The Cleyhole, is a town in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, on Loch Ryan and the northern side of the isthmus joining the Rhins of Galloway to the mainland. Stranraer is Dumfries ...
flying boats, and Vickers was busy building
Wellington
Wellington is the capital city of New Zealand. It is located at the south-western tip of the North Island, between Cook Strait and the Remutaka Range. Wellington is the third-largest city in New Zealand (second largest in the North Island ...
bombers. The initial solution was to subcontract the work.
Although outside contractors were supposed to be involved in manufacturing many important Spitfire components, especially the wings, Vickers-Armstrongs (the parent company) was reluctant to see the Spitfire being manufactured by outside concerns, and was slow to release the necessary blueprints and subcomponents.
[Morgan and Shacklady 2000, p. 45.]
As a result of the delays in getting the Spitfire into full production, the Air Ministry put forward a plan that its production be stopped after the initial order for 310, after which Supermarine would build
Bristol Beaufighters. The managements of Supermarine and Vickers were able to convince the Air Ministry that production problems could be overcome, and a further order was placed for 200 Spitfires on 24 March 1938. The two orders covered the K, L, and N prefix serial numbers.
The first production Spitfire came off the assembly line in mid-1938
and was flown by Jeffrey Quill on 15 May 1938, almost 24 months after the initial order. The final cost of the first 310 aircraft, after delays and increased programme costs, came to £1,870,242 or £1,533 more per aircraft than originally estimated.
[Price 1982, p. 67.] A production aircraft cost about £9,500. The most expensive components were the hand-fabricated and finished fuselage at roughly £2,500, then the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine at £2,000, followed by the wings at £1,800 a pair, guns and undercarriage, both at £800 each, and the propeller at £350.
[Glancey 2006, p. 61.]
Manufacturing at Castle Bromwich, Birmingham

In 1935, the Air Ministry approached
Morris Motors
Morris Motors Limited was a British privately owned motor vehicle manufacturing company formed in 1919 to take over the assets of William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield, William Morris's WRM Motors Limited and continue production of the same ve ...
Limited to ask how quickly their
Cowley plant could be turned to aircraft production. In 1936, this informal request for major manufacturing facilities was replaced by a formal scheme, known as the
shadow factory plan, to boost British aircraft production capacity under the leadership of
Herbert Austin. He was given the task of building nine new factories, and to supplement the British car-manufacturing industry by either adding to overall capacity or increasing the potential for reorganisation to produce aircraft and their engines.
In 1938, construction began on the
Castle Bromwich Aircraft Factory (CBAF), next to the
aerodrome
An aerodrome, airfield, or airstrip is a location from which aircraft flight operations take place, regardless of whether they involve air cargo, passengers, or neither, and regardless of whether it is for public or private use. Aerodromes inc ...
, and the installation of the most modern
machine tool
A machine tool is a machine for handling or machining metal or other rigid materials, usually by cutting, Boring (manufacturing), boring, grinding (abrasive cutting), grinding, shearing, or other forms of deformations. Machine tools employ some s ...
s then available began two months after work started on the site.
Although Morris Motors, under
Lord Nuffield, who was an expert in mass motor-vehicle construction, managed and equipped the factory, it was funded by the government. By the beginning of 1939, the factory's original estimated cost of £2,000,000 had more than doubled,
[McKinstry 2007, p. 145.] and even as the first Spitfires were being built in June 1940, the factory was still incomplete, and suffering from personnel problems. The Spitfire's stressed-skin construction required precision engineering skills and techniques that were beyond the capabilities of the local labour force, and some time was required to retrain them. Difficulties arose with management, who ignored Supermarine's tooling and drawings in favour of their own, and the workforce continually threatened strikes or "slow downs" until their demands for higher wages were met.
In spite of promises that the factory would be producing 60 per week starting in April, by May 1940, Castle Bromwich had not yet built its first Spitfire.
On 17 May, Minister of Aircraft Production
Lord Beaverbrook telephoned Lord Nuffield and manoeuvred him into handing over control of the Castle Bromwich plant to his ministry. Beaverbrook immediately sent in experienced management staff and workers from Supermarine, and gave control of the factory to Vickers-Armstrongs. Although resolving the problems took time, in June 1940, 10
Mk IIs were built; 23 rolled out in July, 37 in August, and 56 in September. By the time production ended at Castle Bromwich in June 1945, a total of 12,129 Spitfires, comprising 921 Mk IIs,
[''Air International'' 1985, p. 187.] 4,489 Mk Vs, 5,665 Mk IXs, and 1,054 Mk XVIs had been built.
Production dispersal
During the Battle of Britain, the Luftwaffe made concerted efforts to destroy the main manufacturing plants at Woolston and
Itchen, near Southampton. The first bombing raid, which missed the factories, came on 23 August 1940. Over the next month, other raids were mounted, until, on 26 September 1940, both factories were destroyed,
[Price 1982, p. 115.] with 92 people killed and a large number injured. Most of the casualties were experienced aircraft-production workers.
[Smallwood 1996, pp. 8–15.]
Fortunately for the future of the Spitfire, many of the production jigs and machine tools had already been relocated by 20 September, and steps were being taken to disperse production to small facilities throughout the Southampton area.
To this end, the British government requisitioned the likes of Vincent's Garage in Station Square,
Reading, which later specialised in manufacturing Spitfire fuselages, and Anna Valley Motors,
Salisbury
Salisbury ( , ) is a city status in the United Kingdom, cathedral city and civil parish in Wiltshire, England with a population of 41,820, at the confluence of the rivers River Avon, Hampshire, Avon, River Nadder, Nadder and River Bourne, Wi ...
, which was to become the sole producer of the wing leading-edge fuel tanks for photo-reconnaissance Spitfires.
[Andrews and Morgan 1987, pp. 341–342.]
A purpose-built works, specialising in manufacturing fuselages and installing engines, was built at Star Road,
Caversham in Reading.
The drawing office in which all Spitfire designs were drafted was moved to
Hursley Park, near
Winchester
Winchester (, ) is a City status in the United Kingdom, cathedral city in Hampshire, England. The city lies at the heart of the wider City of Winchester, a local government Districts of England, district, at the western end of the South Downs N ...
.
[Andrews and Morgan 1987, p. 10.]
Four towns and their satellite airfields were chosen to be the focal points for these workshops:
Southampton's Eastleigh Airport; Salisbury and the
High Post and Chattis Hill aerodromes;
Trowbridge and
RAF Keevil; and Reading's
Henley and
Aldermaston aerodromes. Completed Spitfires were delivered to the airfields on
Commer "
Queen Mary" low-loader trailers, there to be fully assembled, tested, then passed on to the RAF.
Flight testing
All production aircraft were flight tested before delivery. During the Second World War, Jeffrey Quill was Vickers Supermarine's chief test pilot, in charge of flight testing all aircraft types built by Vickers Supermarine. He oversaw a group of 10 to 12 pilots responsible for testing all developmental and production Spitfires built by the company in the Southampton area. Quill devised the standard testing procedures, which with variations for specific aircraft designs operated from 1938.
[Spitfire Testing]
. Retrieved 9 September 2008. Alex Henshaw, chief test pilot at Castle Bromwich from 1940, was placed in charge of testing all Spitfires built at that factory. He co-ordinated a team of 25 pilots and assessed all Spitfire developments. Between 1940 and 1946, Henshaw flew a total of 2,360 Spitfires and Seafires, more than 10% of total production. Henshaw wrote that he would climb at full throttle at 2,850 rpm to the rated altitude, then dive at full power and 3,000 rpm, and trim the plane to fly by itself at . A production test usually consisted of an initial circuit of under 10 minutes, and a main flight of 20 to 30 minutes. He commented that the more powerful later versions were heavier and did not handle as well as the earlier ones, for example in a flick-roll.
When the last Spitfire rolled out in February 1948, a total of 20,351 examples of all variants had been built, including two-seat
trainers, with some Spitfires remaining in service well into the 1950s.
[Ethell 1997, p. 117.] The Spitfire was the only British fighter aircraft to be in continuous production before, during, and after the Second World War.
[McKinstry 2007, p. 6]
Design
Airframe

In the mid-1930s, aviation design teams worldwide began developing a new generation of fighter aircraft. The French
Dewoitine D.520 and the German
Messerschmitt Bf 109
The Messerschmitt Bf 109 is a monoplane fighter aircraft that was designed and initially produced by the Nazi Germany, German aircraft manufacturer Messerschmitt#History, Bayerische Flugzeugwerke (BFW). Together with the Focke-Wulf Fw 190, the ...
, for example, were designed to take advantage of new techniques of
monocoque construction, and the availability of new, high-powered, liquid-cooled, in-line aero engines. They also had refinements such as retractable undercarriages, fully enclosed cockpits, and low-drag, all-metal wings. These advances had been introduced on civil airliners years before, but were slow to be adopted by the military, who favoured the biplane's simplicity and manoeuvrability.
Mitchell's design aims were to create a well-balanced, high-performance fighter aircraft capable of fully exploiting the power of the Merlin engine, while being relatively easy to fly.
[Price 2002, p. 20.] At the time, with
France as an ally, and Germany thought to be the most likely future opponent, no enemy fighters were expected to appear over Great Britain. German bombers would have to fly to the UK over the
North Sea
The North Sea lies between Great Britain, Denmark, Norway, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and France. A sea on the European continental shelf, it connects to the Atlantic Ocean through the English Channel in the south and the Norwegian Se ...
, and Germany did not have any single-engine fighters with the range to accompany them. To carry out the mission of home defence, the design was intended to allow the Spitfire to climb quickly to intercept enemy bombers.
[Bodie 1991, p. 20.]
The Spitfire's airframe was complex. The streamlined,
semi-monocoque
The term semi-monocoque or semimonocoque refers to a stressed shell structure that is similar to a true monocoque, but which derives at least some of its strength from conventional reinforcement. Semi-monocoque construction is used for, among o ...
,
duralumin-skinned fuselage had a number of compound curves built up over a skeleton of 19
formers, also known as frames. These started from frame number one, immediately behind the propeller unit, to the tail unit attachment frame. The first four frames supported the glycol header tank and engine cowlings. Frame five, to which the engine bearers were secured, supported the weight of the engine and its accessories. This was a strengthened double frame which also incorporated the fireproof bulkhead, and in later versions of the Spitfire, the oil tank. This frame also tied the four main fuselage
longerons to the rest of the airframe. Behind the bulkhead were five U-shaped half-frames which accommodated the fuel tanks and cockpit. The rear fuselage started at the 11th frame, to which the pilot's seat and (later) armour plating were attached, and ended at the 19th, which was mounted at a slight forward angle just forward of the fin. Each of these nine frames was oval, reducing in size towards the tail, and incorporated several
lightening holes to reduce their weight as much as possible without weakening them. The U-shaped frame 20 was the last frame of the fuselage proper and the frame to which the tail unit was attached. Frames 21, 22 and 23 formed the fin; frame 22 incorporated the tailwheel opening and frame 23 was the
rudder
A rudder is a primary control surface used to steer a ship, boat, submarine, hovercraft, airship, or other vehicle that moves through a fluid medium (usually air or water). On an airplane, the rudder is used primarily to counter adverse yaw ...
post. Before being attached to the main fuselage, the tail unit frames were held in a jig and the eight horizontal tail formers were riveted to them.
A combination of 14 longitudinal stringers and four main longerons attached to the frames helped form a light but rigid structure to which sheets of
alclad stressed skinning were attached. The fuselage plating was 24, 20, and 18
gauge, decreasing in order of thickness towards the tail, while the fin structure was completed using short longerons from frames 20 to 23, before being covered in 22 gauge plating.
The skin of the fuselage, wings, and
tailplane
A tailplane, also known as a horizontal stabilizer, is a small lift (force), lifting surface located on the tail (empennage) behind the main lifting surfaces of a fixed-wing aircraft as well as other non-fixed-wing aircraft such as helicopters ...
was secured by dome-headed rivets, and in critical areas such as the wing forward of the
main spar where an uninterrupted airflow was required, with flush rivets. From February 1943 flush riveting was used on the fuselage, affecting all Spitfire variants. In some areas, such as at the rear of the wing and the lower tailplane skins, the top was riveted and the bottom fixed by brass screws which tapped into strips of
spruce
A spruce is a tree of the genus ''Picea'' ( ), a genus of about 40 species of coniferous evergreen trees in the family Pinaceae, found in the northern temperate and boreal ecosystem, boreal (taiga) regions of the Northern hemisphere. ''Picea'' ...
bolted to the lower ribs. The removable wing tips were made up of duralumin-skinned spruce formers.
At first, the ailerons, elevators, and rudder were fabric-covered, but once combat experience showed that fabric-covered ailerons were impossible to use at high speeds a light alloy replaced the fabric, enhancing control throughout the speed range.
Elliptical wing design
In 1934, Mitchell and the design staff decided to use a semi-elliptical wing shape to solve two conflicting requirements; the wing needed to be thin to avoid creating too much
drag, but it had to be thick enough to house the retractable undercarriage, armament, and ammunition. An elliptical planform is the most efficient aerodynamic shape for an untwisted wing, leading to the lowest amount of
induced drag
Lift-induced drag, induced drag, vortex drag, or sometimes drag due to lift, in aerodynamics, is an aerodynamic drag force that occurs whenever a moving object redirects the airflow coming at it. This drag force occurs in airplanes due to wings or ...
. The ellipse was skewed so that the centre of pressure, which occurs at the quarter-
chord position, aligned with the main spar, preventing the wings from twisting. Mitchell has sometimes been accused of copying the wing shape of the
Günter brothers-designed
Heinkel He 70, which first flew in 1932, but as
Beverley Shenstone, the
aerodynamicist on Mitchell's team, explained: "Our wing was much thinner and had quite a different section to that of the Heinkel. In any case, it would have been simply asking for trouble to have copied a wing shape from an aircraft designed for an entirely different purpose."
[Price 1977, pp. 33–34.]
The wing section used was from the
NACA 2200 series, which had been adapted to create a
thickness-to-chord ratio of 13% at the root, reducing to 9.4% at the tip.
[Lednicer, David]
"The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage."
''UIUC Applied Aerodynamics Group,'' 15 September 2010. Retrieved 26 June 2011. A
dihedral of 6° was adopted to give increased lateral stability.
A wing feature that contributed greatly to its success was an innovative spar boom design, made up of five square tubes that fitted into each other. As the wing thinned out along its span, the tubes were progressively cut away in a similar fashion to a
leaf spring; two of these booms were linked together by an alloy web, creating a lightweight and very strong main spar.
[Price 2002, p. 19.] The undercarriage legs were attached to pivot points built into the inner, rear section of the main spar, and retracted outwards and slightly backwards into wells in the non-load-carrying wing structure. The resultant narrow undercarriage track was considered an acceptable compromise as this reduced the bending loads on the main-spar during landing.
Ahead of the spar, the thick-skinned leading edge of the wing formed a strong and rigid, D-shaped box, which took most of the wing loads. At the time the wing was designed, this D-shaped leading edge was intended to house steam condensers for the evaporative cooling system intended for the PV-XII. Constant problems with the evaporative system in the Goshawk led to the adoption of a cooling system which used 100%
glycol. The radiators were housed in a new radiator-duct designed by
Fredrick Meredith of the
Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) at
Farnborough, Hampshire. This used the
cooling air to generate thrust, greatly reducing the net drag produced by the radiators.
[Price 1977, p. 24.] In turn, the leading-edge structure lost its function as a condenser, but it was later adapted to house integral fuel tanks of various sizes— a feature patented by Vickers-Supermarine in 1938.
The airflow through the main radiator was controlled by
pneumatic exit flaps. In early marks of the Spitfire (Mk I to Mk VI), the single flap was operated manually using a lever to the left of the pilot's seat. When the two-stage Merlin was introduced in the
Spitfire Mk IX, the radiators were split to make room for an intercooler radiator; the radiator under the starboard wing was halved in size and the intercooler radiator housed alongside. Under the port wing, a new radiator fairing housed a square oil cooler alongside of the other half-radiator unit. The two radiator flaps were now operated automatically by a
thermostat.
Another wing feature was its
washout. The trailing edge of the wing twisted slightly upward along its span, the
angle of incidence decreasing from +2° at its root to -½° at its tip.
[Andrews and Morgan 1987, p. 216.] This caused the wing roots to
stall before the tips, reducing tip-stall that could otherwise have resulted in a wing drop, often leading to a spin. As the wing roots started to stall, the separating air stream started to buffet (vibrate) the aircraft, warning the pilot, allowing even relatively inexperienced pilots to fly it to the limits of its performance. This washout was first featured in the wing of the Type 224, and became a consistent feature in subsequent designs leading to the Spitfire. The complex wing design, especially the precision required to manufacture the vital spar and leading-edge structures, caused some major delays in the production of the Spitfire at first. The problems increased when the work was put out to subcontractors, most of whom had never dealt with metal-structured, high-speed aircraft. By June 1939, most of these problems had been resolved, and production was no longer held up by a lack of wings.
All the main flight controls were originally metal structures with fabric covering. Designers and pilots felt that having ailerons which required a degree of effort to move at high speed would avoid unintended aileron reversal, throwing the aircraft around and potentially pulling the wings off. Air combat was also felt to take place at relatively low speeds and high-speed manoeuvring would be physically impossible. Flight tests showed the fabric covering of the ailerons "ballooned" at high speeds, adversely affecting the aerodynamics. Replacing the fabric covering with light alloy dramatically improved the ailerons at high speed. During the Battle of Britain, pilots found the Spitfire's ailerons were far too heavy at high speeds, severely restricting lateral manoeuvres such as rolls and high-speed turns, which were still a feature of air-to-air combat.

The Spitfire had detachable wing tips which were secured by two mounting points at the end of each main wing assembly. When the Spitfire took on a role as a high-altitude fighter (Marks VI and VII and some early Mk VIIIs), the standard wing tips were replaced by extended, "pointed" tips which increased the wingspan from to . The other wing-tip variation, used by several Spitfire variants, was the "clipped" wing; the standard wing tips were replaced by wooden fairings which reduced the span by . The wing tips used spruce formers for most of the internal structure with a light alloy skin attached using brass screws.
The light alloy
split flaps at the trailing edge of the wing were also pneumatically operated via a finger lever on the instrument panel. Only two positions were available; fully up or fully down (85°). Flaps were normally lowered only during the final approach and for landing, and the pilot was to retract them before taxiing.
The ellipse also served as the design basis for the Spitfire's fin and tailplane assembly, once again exploiting the shape's favourable aerodynamic characteristics. Both the elevators and rudder were shaped so that their centre of mass was shifted forward, reducing control-surface flutter. The longer noses and greater propeller-wash resulting from larger engines in later models necessitated increasingly larger vertical, and later, horizontal tail surfaces to compensate for the altered aerodynamics, culminating in those of the Mk 22/24 series, which were 25% larger in area than those of the Mk I.
Improved late wing designs
As the Spitfire gained more power and was able to manoeuvre at higher speeds, the possibility that pilots would encounter
aileron reversal increased, and the Supermarine design team set about redesigning the wings to counter this. The original wing design had a ''theoretical'' aileron reversal speed of ,
[Quill 1983, p. 272.] which was somewhat lower than that of some contemporary fighters. The Royal Aircraft Establishment noted that, at
indicated airspeed, roughly 65% of aileron effectiveness was lost due to wing twist.
The new wing of the Spitfire F Mk 21 and its successors was designed to help alleviate this problem. Its stiffness was increased by 47%, and a new aileron design using
piano hinges and geared
trim tabs meant the theoretical aileron reversal speed was increased to .
Alongside the redesigned wing, Supermarine also experimented with the original wing, raising the leading edge by 1 inch (25 mm), with the hope of improving pilot view and reducing drag. This wing was tested on a modified F Mk 21, also called the F Mk 23, (sometimes referred to as "Valiant" rather than "Spitfire"). The increase in performance was minimal and this experiment was abandoned.
[Price ''Wings of Fame'' 1999, p. 57.]
Supermarine developed a new
laminar-flow wing based on new aerofoil profiles developed by the
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics
The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) was a United States federal agency that was founded on March 3, 1915, to undertake, promote, and institutionalize aeronautical research. On October 1, 1958, the agency was dissolved and its ...
in the United States, with the objective of reducing drag and improving performance. These laminar-flow airfoils were the Supermarine 371-I used at the root and the 371-II used at the tip.
Supermarine estimated that the new wing could give an increase in speed of over the Spitfire Mk 21.
[Andrews and Morgan 1987, p. 264.] The new wing was initially fitted to a Spitfire Mk XIV. Later, a new fuselage was designed, with the new fighter becoming the
Supermarine Spiteful.
[Andrews and Morgan 1987, pp. 264–267.]
Carburation versus fuel injection
The Rolls Royce engine's designers deliberately chose a carburettor for the Merlin engine: Sir
Stanley Hooker explained in his autobiography that "the Germans paid a large penalty for their fuel injection. When the fuel is fed before the supercharger, as on the Merlin, it evaporates and cools the air by 25°C. This cooling enhances the performance of the supercharger, and increases the power of the engine, with a corresponding increase in aircraft speed, particularly at high altitude." However, the early Merlin engine's lack of
fuel injection meant that Spitfires and Hurricanes, unlike the Bf 109E, were unable to simply nose down into a steep dive. This meant a Luftwaffe fighter could simply "bunt" into a high-power dive to escape an attack, leaving the Spitfire behind, as its fuel was forced out of the
carburettor by
negative "g". RAF fighter pilots soon learned to "half-roll" their aircraft before diving to pursue their opponents.
In March 1941, a metal disc with a hole was fitted in the fuel line, restricting fuel flow to the maximum the engine could consume. While it did not cure the problem of the initial
fuel starvation in a dive, it did reduce the more serious problem of the carburettor being flooded with fuel by the fuel pumps under negative "g". Invented by
Beatrice "Tilly" Shilling, it became known as "
Miss Shilling's orifice". Further improvements were introduced throughout the Merlin series, with
Bendix-manufactured
pressure carburettors, designed to allow fuel to flow during all flight attitudes, introduced in 1942.
[McKinstry 2007, p. 206.]
Armament
Due to a shortage of Brownings, which had been selected as the new standard rifle calibre machine gun for the RAF in 1934, early Spitfires were fitted with only four guns, with the other four fitted later.
[Williams and Gustin 2003, p. 93.] Early tests showed that, while the guns worked perfectly on the ground and at low altitudes, they tended to freeze at high altitude, especially the outer wing guns, because the RAF's Brownings had been modified to fire from an open bolt. While this prevented
overheating of the
cordite used in British ammunition, it allowed cold air to flow through the barrel unhindered.
[Williams and Gustin 2003, pp. 16, 93–94.] Supermarine did not fix the problem until October 1938, when they added hot air ducts from the rear of the wing-mounted radiators to the guns, and bulkheads around the gunbays to trap the hot air in the wing. Red fabric patches were
doped over the gun ports to protect the guns from cold, dirt, and moisture until they were fired.
[Williams and Gustin 2003, pp. 93–94.]
The decision on the arming of the Spitfire (and the Hurricane) is told in Captain C. H. Keith's book ''I Hold my Aim''. Keith held various appointments with the RAF dealing with designing, development and technical policy of armament equipment. He organised a conference, with Air Commodore Tedder in the chair, on 19 July 1934. He says "I think it can be reasonably contended that the deliberations of that conference made possible, if not certain, of the winning of the Battle of Britain, almost exactly six years later". At that meeting, scientific officer
Captain F. W. "Gunner" Hill presented charts based on his calculations showing that future fighters must carry no fewer than eight machine-guns, each of which must be capable of firing 1,000 shots a minute. Hill's assistant in making his calculations had been his
teenage daughter.
[Keith 1946, p. 128.]
Even if the eight Brownings worked perfectly, pilots soon discovered that they were not sufficient to destroy larger aircraft. Combat reports showed that an average of 4,500 rounds were needed to shoot down an enemy aircraft.
The main cause of this was the way the guns were mounted in the wing, allowing a dispersion of 1.1 metres at only 100 metres range. Perfectly aimed fire just missed the target because of this.
In November 1938, tests against armoured and unarmoured targets had already indicated that the introduction of a weapon with a calibre of at least 20 mm was urgently needed.
[Williams and Gustin 2003, p. 95.] A variant on the Spitfire design with four 20 mm
Oerlikon cannon had been tendered to specification F37/35, but the order for prototypes had gone to the
Westland Whirlwind in January 1939.
In June 1939, a Spitfire was fitted with a drum-fed
Hispano in each wing, an installation that required large blisters on the wing to cover the 60-round drum, reducing speed by . The cannon suffered frequent stoppages, mostly because the guns were mounted on their sides to fit as much of the magazine as possible within the wing. In January 1940, P/O George Proudman flew this prototype in combat, but the starboard gun stopped after firing a single round, while the port gun fired 30 rounds before seizing.
Nevertheless, 30 more cannon-armed Spitfires were ordered for operational trials, and they were soon known as the Mk IB, to distinguish them from the Browning-armed Mk IA; they were delivered to No. 19 Squadron beginning in June 1940. The Hispanos were found to be so unreliable that the squadron requested an exchange of its aircraft with the older Browning-armed aircraft of an operational training unit. By August, Supermarine had perfected a more reliable installation with an improved feed mechanism and four .303s in the outer wing panels. The modified fighters were then delivered to 19 Squadron.
Operational history
Service operations

The operational history of the Spitfire with the RAF began with the first Mk Is ''K9789'', which entered service with
19 Squadron at
RAF Duxford on 4 August 1938.
The Spitfire achieved legendary status during the Battle of Britain, a reputation aided by the "Spitfire Fund" organised and run by Lord Beaverbrook, the
Minister of Aircraft Production. In fact, the Hurricane outnumbered the Spitfire throughout the battle, and shouldered the burden of the defence against the Luftwaffe; however, because of its higher performance, the overall attrition rate of the Spitfire squadrons was lower than that of the Hurricane units, and the Spitfire units had a higher victory-to-loss ratio. The key aim of Fighter Command was to stop the Luftwaffe's bombers; in practice, whenever possible, the tactic was to use Spitfires to counter German escort fighters, by then based in northern France, particularly the Bf 109s, while the Hurricane squadrons attacked the bombers.

Well-known Spitfire pilots included
"Johnnie" Johnson—34 enemy aircraft (e/a) shot down—who flew the Spitfire right through his operational career from late 1940 to 1945.
Douglas Bader (20 e/a) and
"Bob" Tuck (27 e/a) flew Spitfires and Hurricanes during the major air battles of 1940. Both were shot down and became
prisoners of war, while flying Spitfires over France in 1941 and 1942.
"Paddy" Finucane (28–32 e/a) scored all his successes in the fighter before disappearing over the
English Channel
The English Channel, also known as the Channel, is an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that separates Southern England from northern France. It links to the southern part of the North Sea by the Strait of Dover at its northeastern end. It is the busi ...
in July 1942. Some notable
Commonwealth pilots were
George Beurling (31 e/a) from Canada,
"Sailor" Malan (27 e/a) from South Africa, New Zealanders
Alan Deere (17 e/a) and
C F Gray (27 e/a) and the Australian
Hugo Armstrong (12 e/a).
The Spitfire continued to play increasingly diverse roles throughout the Second World War and beyond, often in air forces other than the RAF. For example, the Spitfire became the first high-speed
photo-reconnaissance aircraft to be operated by the RAF. Sometimes unarmed, they flew at high, medium, and low altitudes, often ranging far into enemy territory to closely observe the
Axis powers
The Axis powers, originally called the Rome–Berlin Axis and also Rome–Berlin–Tokyo Axis, was the military coalition which initiated World War II and fought against the Allies of World War II, Allies. Its principal members were Nazi Ge ...
and provide an almost continual flow of valuable intelligence information throughout the war. In 1941 and 1942, PRU Spitfires provided the first photographs of the ''
Freya'' and
''Würzburg'' radar systems, and in 1943, helped confirm that the Germans were building the
V1 and
V2 ''
Vergeltungswaffen'' ("vengeance weapons") rockets by photographing
Peenemünde
Peenemünde (, ) is a municipality on the Baltic Sea island of Usedom in the Vorpommern-Greifswald district in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in north-eastern Germany. It is part of the ''Amt (country subdivision), Amt'' (collective municipality) of Used ...
, on the
Baltic Sea
The Baltic Sea is an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that is enclosed by the countries of Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Sweden, and the North European Plain, North and Central European Plain regions. It is the ...
coast of Germany.
In the Mediterranean, the Spitfire blunted the
heavy attacks on Malta by the
Regia Aeronautica and Luftwaffe, and from early 1943, helped pave the way for the Allied invasions of
Sicily
Sicily (Italian language, Italian and ), officially the Sicilian Region (), is an island in the central Mediterranean Sea, south of the Italian Peninsula in continental Europe and is one of the 20 regions of Italy, regions of Italy. With 4. ...
and Italy. On 7 March 1942, 15 Mk Vs carrying fuel tanks under their bellies took off from off the coast of Algeria on a flight to Malta. Those Spitfire Vs were the first to see service outside Britain. The Spitfire served on the
Eastern Front with the
Soviet Air Force (VVS). The first deliveries of the Spitfire Mk VB variant took place at the start of 1943, with the first batch of 35 aircraft delivered via sea to the city of
Basra
Basra () is a port city in Iraq, southern Iraq. It is the capital of the eponymous Basra Governorate, as well as the List of largest cities of Iraq, third largest city in Iraq overall, behind Baghdad and Mosul. Located near the Iran–Iraq bor ...
, Iraq. A total of 143 aircraft and 50 furnished hulls (to be used for spare parts) followed by March of the same year. Though some aircraft were used for front line duty in 1943, most of them saw service with the
Protivo-Vozdushnaya Oborona (English: "Anti-air Defence Branch").
The Spitfire served in the Pacific Theatre, meeting the Japanese
Mitsubishi A6M Zero.
Lt. Gen. Claire Chennault said: "The RAF pilots were trained in methods that were excellent against German and Italian equipment, but suicide against the acrobatic Japs." Although not as fast as the Spitfire, the Zero could out-turn the Spitfire, could sustain a climb at a very steep angle, and could stay in the air for three times as long.
[Spick 1997, p. 165.] To counter the Zero, Spitfire pilots adopted a "slash and run" policy and used their faster speed and diving superiority to fight, while avoiding turning
dogfights. The Allies achieved air superiority when the Mk VIII version was introduced to the theatre, replacing the earlier Mk V.

That Southeast Asia was a lower-priority area also did not help, and it was allocated few Spitfires and other modern fighters compared to Europe, which allowed the Japanese to easily achieve air superiority by 1942.
[Young 2013, p. 36.] Over the
Northern Territory
The Northern Territory (abbreviated as NT; known formally as the Northern Territory of Australia and informally as the Territory) is an states and territories of Australia, Australian internal territory in the central and central-northern regi ...
of Australia,
Royal Australian Air Force
The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) is the principal Air force, aerial warfare force of Australia, a part of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) along with the Royal Australian Navy and the Australian Army. Constitutionally the Governor-Gener ...
and RAF Spitfires assigned to
No. 1 Wing RAAF helped defend the port town of
Darwin against air attack by the
Japanese Naval Air Force,
[Glancey 2006, pp. 122–123.] suffering heavy losses largely due to the type's limited fuel capacity. Spitfire MKVIIIs took part in the last battle of World War II involving the Western allies in Burma, in the ground attack role, helping defeat a
Japanese break-out attempt.
During the Second World War, Spitfires were used by the
United States Army Air Forces
The United States Army Air Forces (USAAF or AAF) was the major land-based aerial warfare service component of the United States Army and ''de facto'' aerial warfare service branch of the United States during and immediately after World War II ...
(USAAF) in the
4th Fighter Group until they were replaced by
Republic P-47 Thunderbolts in March 1943. The 4th Fighter Group comprised the former RAF
Eagle Squadrons, which transferred into American service in September 1942, the volunteer pilots bringing their Mark Vb Spitfires with them. The USAAF
14th Photographic Squadron of the
8th Air Force also operated Spitfire Mark XIs from November 1943 to April 1945, flying long-range reconnaissance over Europe.
Several Spitfires were captured by the Germans and flown by units that tested, evaluated, and sometimes clandestinely operated enemy aircraft.
Speed and altitude records

Beginning in late 1943, high-speed diving trials were undertaken at Farnborough to investigate the handling characteristics of aircraft travelling at speeds near the
sound barrier (i.e., the onset of compressibility effects). Because it had the highest
limiting Mach number of any aircraft at that time, a Spitfire XI was chosen to take part in these trials. Due to the high altitudes necessary for these dives, a fully feathering
Rotol propeller was fitted to prevent
overspeeding. During these trials, ''EN409'', flown by Squadron Leader J. R. Tobin, reached (Mach 0.891) in a 45° dive. In April 1944, the same aircraft suffered engine failure in another dive while being flown by Squadron Leader Anthony F. Martindale,
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, when the propeller and reduction gear broke off. The dive put the aircraft to Mach 0.92, the fastest ever recorded in a piston-engined aircraft, but when the propeller came off, the Spitfire, now tail-heavy, zoom-climbed back to altitude. Martindale blacked out under the 11 g loading, but when he resumed consciousness, he found the aircraft at about 40,000 feet with its (originally straight) wings now slightly swept back. Martindale successfully glided the Spitfire back to the airfield and landed safely.
Martindale was awarded the
Air Force Cross for his exploits.
RAE Bedford (RAE) modified a Spitfire for high-speed testing of the
stabilator (then known as the "flying tail") of the
Miles M.52 supersonic research aircraft. RAE test pilot
Eric Brown stated that he tested this successfully during October and November 1944, attaining Mach 0.86 in a dive.
["UK Space Conference 2008: Test Pilot Discussion."](_blank)
''space.co.uk''. Retrieved 12 October 2009.
On 5 February 1952, a Spitfire 19 of
81 Squadron based at
Kai Tak in Hong Kong reached probably the highest altitude ever achieved by a Spitfire. The pilot,
Flight Lieutenant Edward "Ted" Powles, was on a routine flight to survey outside air temperature and report on other
meteorological conditions at various altitudes in preparation for a proposed new air service through the area. He climbed to indicated altitude, with a true altitude of . The cabin pressure fell below a safe level, and in trying to reduce altitude, he entered an uncontrollable dive which shook the aircraft violently. He eventually regained control somewhere below and landed safely with no discernible damage to his aircraft. Evaluation of the recorded flight data suggested he achieved a speed of , (Mach 0.96) in the dive, which would have been the highest speed ever reached by a propeller-driven aircraft if the instruments had been considered more reliable.
[Aircraft performance and design (pdf file) pp. 5–6.](_blank)
. Retrieved 14 July 2008.
The critical Mach number of the Spitfire's original elliptical wing was higher than the subsequently used laminar-flow section, straight-tapering-planform wing of the follow-on Supermarine Spiteful,
Seafang, and
Attacker, illustrating that Reginald Mitchell's practical engineering approach to the problems of high-speed flight had paid off.
Variants
Overview
Although R. J. Mitchell is justifiably known as the engineer who designed the Spitfire, his premature death in 1937 meant that all development after that date was undertaken by a team led by his chief draughtsman, Joe Smith, who became Supermarine's chief designer on Mitchell's death. As Jeffrey Quill noted: "If Mitchell was born to design the Spitfire, Joe Smith was born to defend and develop it."

There were 24 marks of Spitfire and many sub-variants. These covered the Spitfire in development from the Merlin to
Griffon engines, the high-speed photo-reconnaissance variants and the different wing configurations. More Spitfire Mk Vs were built than any other type, with 6,487 built, followed by the 5,656 Mk IXs.
Different wings, featuring a variety of weapons, were fitted to most marks; the A wing used eight .303 in (7.7 mm) machine guns, the B wing had four .303 in (7.7 mm) machine guns and two 20 mm (.79 in)
Hispano cannons, and the C, or universal, wing could mount either four 20 mm (.79 in) cannons or two 20 mm (.79 in) and four .303 in (7.7 mm) machine guns. As the war progressed, the C wing became more common.
[Flintham 1990, pp. 254–263.] Another armament variation was the E wing which housed two 20 mm (.79 in) cannons and two .50 in (12.7 mm)
Browning machine guns.
[Bowyer 1984, p. 84.] Although the Spitfire continued to improve in speed and armament, its limited fuel capacity restricted range and endurance: it remained "short-legged" throughout its life except in the dedicated photo-reconnaissance role, when its guns were replaced by extra fuel tanks.
Supermarine developed a two-seat variant, known as the T Mk VIII, to be used for
training
Training is teaching, or developing in oneself or others, any skills and knowledge or fitness that relate to specific useful competencies. Training has specific goals of improving one's capability, capacity, productivity and performance. I ...
, but none were ordered, and only one example was ever constructed (identified as N32/''G-AIDN'' by Supermarine).
[Price 2002, p. 224.] In the absence of an official two-seater variant, a number of airframes were crudely converted in the field. These included a
4 Squadron SAAF Mk VB in North Africa, where a second seat was fitted instead of the upper fuel tank in front of the cockpit, although it was not a dual-control aircraft, and is thought to have been used as the squadron "run-about".
[Price 2002, p. 223.] The only unofficial two-seat conversions that were fitted with dual-controls were a few Russian lend/lease Mk IX aircraft. These were referred to as Mk IX UTI and differed from the Supermarine proposals by using an inline "greenhouse" style double canopy rather than the raised "bubble" type of the T Mk VIII.
In the postwar era, the idea was revived by Supermarine and a number of two-seat Spitfires were built by converting old Mk IX airframes with a second "raised" cockpit featuring a
bubble canopy. Ten of these TR9 variants were then sold to the
Indian Air Force along with six to the
Irish Air Corps, three to the
Royal Netherlands Air Force and one for the
Royal Egyptian Air Force
The Egyptian Air Force (EAF) () is the Air force, aviation branch of the Egyptian Armed Forces that is responsible for all airborne defence missions and operates all military aircraft, including those used in support of the Egyptian Army, Egypti ...
.
Currently several of the trainers are known to exist, including both the T Mk VIII, a T Mk IX based in the US, and the "Grace Spitfire" ''ML407'', a veteran flown operationally by
485(NZ) Squadron in 1944.
["Grace Spitfire ML407."](_blank)
''Grace Spitfire'', UK. Retrieved 27 September 2009.
Seafire

The Seafire, a name derived from ''sea'', and ''Spitfire'', was a
naval version of the Spitfire specially adapted for operation from
aircraft carrier
An aircraft carrier is a warship that serves as a seagoing airbase, equipped with a full-length flight deck and hangar facilities for supporting, arming, deploying and recovering carrier-based aircraft, shipborne aircraft. Typically it is the ...
s. Although the Spitfire was not designed for the rough-and-tumble of carrier-deck operations, it was considered the best available fighter at the time. The basic Spitfire design did impose some limitations on the use of the aircraft as a carrier-based fighter; poor visibility over the nose, for example, meant that pilots had to be trained to land with their heads out of the cockpit and looking along the port cowling of their Seafire. Like the Spitfire, the Seafire also had a relatively narrow undercarriage track, which meant that it was not ideally suited to deck operations.
[Glancey 2006, p. 108.] Early Seafire marks had relatively few modifications to the standard Spitfire airframe; however cumulative front line experience meant that most of the later versions of the Seafire had strengthened airframes, folding wings, arrestor hooks and other modifications, culminating in the purpose-built Seafire F/FR Mk 47.
The Seafire II was able to outperform the
A6M5 Zero at low altitudes when the two types were tested against each other during wartime mock combat exercises.
[Price ''Wings of Fame'' 1999, p. 40.] However, contemporary Allied carrier fighters such as the
F6F Hellcat and
F4U Corsair were considerably more robust and so more practical for carrier operations.
[Price ''Wings of Fame'' 1999, p. 36.] Performance was greatly increased when later versions of the Seafire were fitted with the Griffon engines. These were too late to see service in World War II.
[Andrews and Morgan 1987, pp. 255–256.]
Griffon-engined variants
The first Rolls-Royce
Griffon-engined Mk XII flew in August 1942, and first flew operationally with 41 Squadron in April 1943. This mark could nudge in level flight and climb to an altitude of in under nine minutes.
As American fighters took over the long-range escorting of USAAF daylight bombing raids, the Griffon-engined Spitfires progressively took up the tactical air superiority role, and played a major role in intercepting V-1 flying bombs, while the Merlin-engined variants (mainly the Mk IX and the Packard-engined Mk XVI) were adapted to the fighter-bomber role. Although the later Griffon-engined marks lost some of the favourable handling characteristics of their Merlin-powered predecessors, they could still outmanoeuvre their main German foes and other, later, American and British-designed fighters.
[Bowyer 1980, p. 47.]
The final version of the Spitfire, the Mk 24, first flew at South Marston on 13 April 1946. On 20 February 1948, almost twelve years from the prototype's first flight, the last production Spitfire, ''VN496'', left the production line. Spitfire Mk 24s were used by only one regular RAF unit, with
80 Squadron replacing their
Hawker Tempests with F Mk 24s in 1947. With these aircraft, 80 Squadron continued its patrol and reconnaissance duties from
Wunstorf in Germany as part of the occupation forces, until it relocated to
Kai Tak Airport, Hong Kong, in July 1949. During the
Chinese Civil War
The Chinese Civil War was fought between the Kuomintang-led Nationalist government, government of the Republic of China (1912–1949), Republic of China and the forces of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Armed conflict continued intermitt ...
, 80 Squadron's main duty was to defend Hong Kong from perceived Communist threats.

Operation Firedog during the
Malayan Emergency saw the Spitfire fly over 1,800 operational sorties against the Malayan Communists.
[Whitehead, Christopher]
"The Supermarine Spitfire, an operational history."
''DeltaWeb International'', 1996. Retrieved 30 August 2009. The last operational sortie of an RAF Spitfire was flown on 1 April 1954, by PS888 a PR Mk 19 Spitfire of 81 Squadron. It was flying from
RAF Seletar, in Singapore to photograph an area of jungle in Johore, Malaysia, thought to contain Communist guerrillas. To mark the special occasion, ground crewmen had painted 'The Last' on the aircraft's nose.
["Notable Planes."](_blank)
''81 squadron'', 2009. Retrieved 30 August 2009.
The last non-operational flight of a Spitfire in RAF service, which took place on 9 June 1957, was by a PR Mk 19, ''PS583'', from
RAF Woodvale of the Temperature and Humidity Flight. This was also the last known flight of a piston-engined fighter in the RAF. The last nation in the Middle East to operate Spitfires was Syria, which kept its F Mk 22s until 1953.
In late 1962, Air Marshal Sir
John Nicholls instigated a trial when he flew Spitfire ''PM631'', a PR Mk 19 in the custody of the
Battle of Britain Memorial Flight, against an
English Electric Lightning F 3 (a
supersonic jet-engined interceptor) in mock combat at
RAF Binbrook. At the time, British Commonwealth forces were involved in possible
action against Indonesia over Malaya and Nicholls decided to develop tactics to fight the Indonesian Air Force P-51 Mustang, a fighter that had a similar performance to the PR Mk 19.
[Green 2007, p. 91.] The first airframe (PM631) developed mechanical issues which removed it from the trial. Another PR Mk 19, ''PS853'', which is now owned by Rolls-Royce, was on gate-guard duties at Binbrook, having been retired from the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) one year before. It had been maintained in running condition by ground crews at Binbrook, and after a short time was participating in the trials. At the end of the trials, RAF pilots found that
Firestreak infra-red guided missiles had trouble acquiring the Spitfire due to a low exhaust temperature, and decided that the twin ADEN cannons were the only weapons suited to the task, which was complicated by the tight turning circle of the Spitfire, and the Lightning's proclivity for over-running the Spitfire. It was concluded that the most effective and safest way for a modern jet-engined fighter to attack a piston-engined fighter was to engage full afterburner at an altitude lower than the Spitfire, and circle behind it to perform a hit-and-run attack, contrary to all established fighter-on-fighter doctrine at that time.
[Price 1991, p. 158.]
Operators
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Surviving aircraft

Owing to its wide usage in World War II and iconic status, a large number of Spitfires have survived into preservation. 240 Spitfires are preserved as of 2023; this includes around 60 which are airworthy. Many air museums have Spitfires on static display, for example, Chicago's
Museum of Science and Industry has paired a static Spitfire with a static Ju 87 R-2/Trop.
Stuka dive bomber.
The oldest surviving Spitfire is a Mark 1, serial number ''K9942''; it is preserved at the
Royal Air Force Museum Cosford in
Shropshire
Shropshire (; abbreviated SalopAlso used officially as the name of the county from 1974–1980. The demonym for inhabitants of the county "Salopian" derives from this name.) is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county in the West M ...
. This aircraft was the 155th built and first flew in April 1939. It flew operationally with
No. 72 Squadron RAF until June 1940, when it was damaged in a wheels-up landing. After repair, it was used for training until August 1944, when it became one of several
Battle of Britain
The Battle of Britain () was a military campaign of the Second World War, in which the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the Fleet Air Arm (FAA) of the Royal Navy defended the United Kingdom (UK) against large-scale attacks by Nazi Germany's air force ...
aircraft veterans that were allocated to the Air Historical Branch for future museum preservation.

A restored Spitfire is maintained at
Fantasy of Flight in
Polk City, Florida. Over a six-year period in the 1990s, this aircraft was restored by Personal Plane Services in England using almost 90% of its original aircraft skins. The owner
Kermit Weeks insisted that the aircraft be restored as closely as possible to its original condition. Machine guns, cannon, gun sight and original working radios are all installed.
["Spitfire."](_blank)
''Fantasy of Flight.''. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
Two MK 1 Supermarine Spitfires, originally restored by the
Aircraft Restoration Company, remain in flying condition at the
Imperial War Museum Duxford
Imperial War Museum Duxford, also known as IWM Duxford or simply Duxford, is a branch of the Imperial War Museum near Duxford in Cambridgeshire, England. Duxford, Britain's largest aviation museum, houses exhibits, including nearly 200 aircraf ...
, in
Cambridgeshire
Cambridgeshire (abbreviated Cambs.) is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county in the East of England and East Anglia. It is bordered by Lincolnshire to the north, Norfolk to the north-east, Suffolk to the east, Essex and Hertfor ...
, England. Both restored by American billionaire
Thomas Kaplan, one has been donated to the Imperial War Museum and the second was auctioned in July 2015 at
Christie's, London. It is one of only four flying MK 1 Spitfires in the world. The aircraft fetched a record £3.1 million at auction on 9 July, beating the previous record for a Spitfire of £1.7 million set in 2009. In 2021, Duxford hosted an exhibition of the Spitfire's evolution with twelve of the aircraft on display. This was reportedly the largest number "under one roof" during the 21st century.
A Spitfire model ''ML407'' was purchased by
Carolyn Grace and her husband Nick in 1979. Carolyn Grace subsequently flew the Spitfire in several displays, including one commemorating the 60th anniversary of D-Day in 2004.
Search for reported surviving Spitfires in Burma
After hostilities ceased in Asia in 1945, a number of Spitfire Mk.XIVs were rumoured to be buried in crates in
Burma
Myanmar, officially the Republic of the Union of Myanmar; and also referred to as Burma (the official English name until 1989), is a country in northwest Southeast Asia. It is the largest country by area in Mainland Southeast Asia and ha ...
. Excavations carried out at
Yangon International Airport (formerly RAF Mingaladon) in early 2013 failed to locate any of the rumoured aircraft, and the team reported that they found no evidence that Spitfires were shipped there in crates or buried. Pat Woodward, who was an RAF pilot operating from Burma at the end of the war, reported that no such burying took place. In 2016 it was reported that the hunt was continuing.
Memorials
* A fibreglass replica of the Mk.1 Spitfire Mk1 YT-J (R6675), flown by Supermarine test pilot Jeffrey Quill during his brief period of active service with 65 Squadron, is on display at the
Kent Battle of Britain Museum at
Hawkinge near Folkestone.
* ''
Sentinel'' is a sculpture by
Tim Tolkien depicting three Spitfires in flight at the roundabout junction (popularly known as Spitfire Island) of the A47 and A452 in
Castle Bromwich, Birmingham, England, commemorating the main Spitfire factory. The island sits at the adjoining southern corners of the former Castle Bromwich Aircraft Factory and Aerodrome (now Castle Vale housing estate). There is also a Spitfire and a Hurricane in the nearby
Thinktank Science Museum.
* Jeffrey Quill, the former Supermarine test pilot, initiated a project to build an exact replica of K5054, the prototype Spitfire to be put on permanent public display as a memorial to R.J. Mitchell. A team of original Supermarine designers worked with Aerofab Restorations of Andover for 10 years to create the facsimile. It was unveiled to the public in April 1993 by Quill at the RAF Museum, Hendon, and is currently on loan to the Tangmere Military Aviation Museum.
[Glancey 2006, p. 206.]
* One of the few remaining Supermarine Spitfires with a wartime record is on display (alongside a Hawker Hurricane) at the
RAF Manston Spitfire and Hurricane Memorial Museum, near
Kent International Airport.
* Lodge Hill Garage,
Abingdon, Oxfordshire has a full-size replica Spitfire as a rooftop monument. Owner Peter Jewson bought the replica in a campaign to build the first ever national memorial to honour the 166 women from the
Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA) who flew Spitfires and other aircraft from factories to their operational airbases; 14 died during these ferry flights.
* A fibreglass replica of a Spitfire Mk IX is mounted to the roof of the speciality shop, Spitfire Emporium, in
Kitchener, Ontario.
* There is a replica of a Spitfire (and of a Hurricane) at the entrance to the
Eden Camp Modern History Museum as a memorial to pilots who served in the Battle of Britain.
* A full-size pole-mounted replica was erected in 2021 on the site of a Salisbury factory.
* In 2009, the Spitfire was selected by the
Royal Mail for their
"British Design Classics" commemorative postage stamp issue.
Restorations and replicas

British organisation, the
Aircraft Restoration Company (Formally Historic Flying Limited), has either restored, overhauled or built from scratch a significant proportion of the Spitfires that are now airworthy. Several other manufacturers have produced replica Spitfires, either as complete aircraft or as kits for self-building. These range in scale from 60% scale to full-size, and most use wooden construction rather than the original all-metal monocoque design. These include the
Jurca Spit
The Jurca MJ-10 Spitfire is a sport aircraft designed by Marcel Jurca in France as a replica of the Supermarine Spitfire and marketed for homebuilding. Plans for two versions were produced, the MJ-10, at 3/4 scale, and the MJ-100, at full-scale. ...
from France, and those manufactured by Tally Ho Enterprises in Canada.
Supermarine Aircraft – originally from
Brisbane
Brisbane ( ; ) is the List of Australian capital cities, capital and largest city of the States and territories of Australia, state of Queensland and the list of cities in Australia by population, third-most populous city in Australia, with a ...
, Australia, and now based in
Cisco, Texas – manufacture the 80% scale Spitfire Mk26 and the 90% scale Mk26B replicas. Their
Supermarine Aircraft Spitfire is supplied in kit form and is the only all-aluminium reproduction Spitfire in production.
The
Isaacs Spitfire (1975) and the
Time Warp Spitfire Mk V (1996) are homebuilt 60% scale replicas, and Bob DeFord of Prescott, Arizona built and flies a 100% scale replica.
In media
During and after the Battle of Britain, the Spitfire became a symbol of British resistance. Numerous films and documentaries featuring the Spitfire have been produced, including:
* ''
The First of the Few'' (also known as ''Spitfire'' in the US and Canada) (1942) is a British film produced and directed by
Leslie Howard, with Howard in the starring role of R. J. Mitchell, and David Niven playing a
composite character based on the Schneider Trophy pilots of 1927, 1929 and 1931, and the Supermarine test pilot Jeffrey Quill. Some of the footage includes film shot in 1941 of operational Spitfires and pilots of
501 Squadron (code letters SD). Howard spent a long time researching the history of the Spitfire's development for the film; Mrs. Mitchell and her son Gordon were on the set during much of the production.
* ''
Malta Story'' (1953), starring
Alec Guinness
Sir Alec Guinness (born Alec Guinness de Cuffe; 2 April 1914 – 5 August 2000) was an English actor. In the BFI, British Film Institute listing of 1999 of BFI Top 100 British films, the 100 most important British films of the 20th century ...
,
Jack Hawkins,
Anthony Steel and
Muriel Pavlow, is a
black and white
Black-and-white (B&W or B/W) images combine black and white to produce a range of achromatic brightnesses of grey. It is also known as greyscale in technical settings.
Media
The history of various visual media began with black and white, ...
war film telling the story of the defence of
Malta
Malta, officially the Republic of Malta, is an island country in Southern Europe located in the Mediterranean Sea, between Sicily and North Africa. It consists of an archipelago south of Italy, east of Tunisia, and north of Libya. The two ...
in 1942 when Spitfires were the island's main defence from air attacks.
* ''
Reach for the Sky'' (1956) starring
Kenneth More tells the story of Douglas Bader, using contemporary Spitfire aircraft in the production.
* ''
Battle of Britain
The Battle of Britain () was a military campaign of the Second World War, in which the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the Fleet Air Arm (FAA) of the Royal Navy defended the United Kingdom (UK) against large-scale attacks by Nazi Germany's air force ...
'' (1969) directed by
Guy Hamilton and starring
Laurence Olivier,
Michael Caine,
Christopher Plummer,
Ralph Richardson,
Michael Redgrave and
Susannah York, is set in 1940. Features several sequences involving a total of 12 flying Spitfires (mostly Mk IX versions because not many Mk.Is were available at the time).
* ''
Piece of Cake'' (1987) starring
Tom Burlinson, aired on the ITV network in 1987. Based on the novel by
Derek Robinson, the six-part miniseries covers the prewar era to "Battle of Britain Day", 15 September 1940. It depicts air combat over the skies of France and Britain during the early stages of the Second World War, though using five flying examples of late model Spitfires in place of the novel's early model Hurricanes.
* ''
Dark Blue World'' (2001), starring
Ondřej Vetchý, is a tale of two Czech pilots who escape Nazi-occupied Europe to fly Spitfires during the Battle of Britain.
Jan Svěrák filmed some new aerial scenes and reused aerial footage from Hamilton's film.
[Glancey 2006, p. 201.]
* ''Guy Martin's Spitfire'' (2014) is a
Channel 4
Channel 4 is a British free-to-air public broadcast television channel owned and operated by Channel Four Television Corporation. It is state-owned enterprise, publicly owned but, unlike the BBC, it receives no public funding and is funded en ...
documentary covering the two-year restoration of a Mark 1 Spitfire, N3200, coded 'QV', that had been buried beneath the sand for 46 years after crash landing during the Dunkirk evacuation in 1940.
Guy Martin tells the ''Boy's Own''-style story of its pilot,
Squadron Leader Geoffrey Stephenson and helps in the restoration of the aircraft at the
Aircraft Restoration Company facilities at Duxford.
* ''
Dunkirk
Dunkirk ( ; ; ; Picard language, Picard: ''Dunkèke''; ; or ) is a major port city in the Departments of France, department of Nord (French department), Nord in northern France. It lies from the Belgium, Belgian border. It has the third-larg ...
'' (2017), directed by
Christopher Nolan, features three Spitfires defending the evacuation of British and French troops from Dunkirk against attacks by the German Luftwaffe.
* ''Spitfire: The People's Plane'' (2020) is a
BBC World Service ten-part podcast on the efforts of the people who built the aircraft.
* The current badge for the British
football club
In association football, a football club (or association football club, alternatively soccer club) is a sports club that acts as an entity through which association football teams organise their sporting activities. The club can exist either as ...
Eastleigh F.C., introduced in 2020, prominently features the Supermarine Spitfire.
Specifications (Spitfire Mk Vb)

The Spitfire's performance improved greatly as WWII progressed; for more information, see
Supermarine Spitfire variants: specifications, performance and armament.
See also
Notes
Citations
Bibliography
* Ackroyd, John
"The Aerodynamics of the Spitfire" ''Journal of Aeronautical History'' (2016) 20#1:59–86
* Air Ministry. ''A.P 1565B Spitfire IIA and IIB Aeroplanes: Merlin XII Engine, Pilot's Notes''. London: Air Data Publications, 1972. .
* Air Ministry. ''Pilot's Notes for Spitfire, IX XI & XVI. Merlin 61, 63, 66, 70 or 266 Engine''. London: Air Data Publications, 1946.
* Andrews, C.F. and E.B. Morgan. ''Supermarine Aircraft since 1914''. London: Putnam, 1987. .
* Bader, Douglas. ''Fight for the Sky: The Story of the Spitfire and Hurricane''. London: Cassell Military Books, 2004. .
* Bodie, Warren M. ''The Lockheed P-38 Lightning: The Definitive Story of Lockheed's P-38 Fighter''. Hayesville, North Carolina: Widewing Publications, 2001, first edition 1991. .
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* Bungay, Stephen. ''The Most Dangerous Enemy: A History of the Battle of Britain''. London: Aurum, 2001. .
* Buttler, Tony. ''British Secret Projects: Fighters and Bombers 1935–1950''. Hersham, UK: Midland, 2004. .
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* Green, William. ''Famous Fighters of the Second World War, 3rd ed.'' New York: Doubleday, 1975. .
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* Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. ''The Great Book of Fighters''. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing, 2001. .
* Gueli, Marco. "Spitfire con Coccarde Italiane (Spitfire in Italian service)." (in Italian) ''Storia Militare n. 62'', November 1998.
* Gunston, Bill et al. "Supermarine unveils its high-performance monoplane today (5 March)." ''The Chronicle of Aviation''. Liberty, Missouri: JL International Publishing, 1992. .
* Henshaw, Alex. ''Sigh for a Merlin: Testing the Spitfire: 2nd Revised edition ''. London: Crecy Publishing, 1999. .
* Henshaw, Alex. "Spitfire: A Test Pilot's Defence." ''Aeroplane Monthly'', Vol. 9, Issue No. 269, September 1995.
* Holland, James. ''Fortress Malta: An Island Under Siege, 1940–1943''. New York: Miramax Books, 2003. .
* Holmes, Tony. ''Spitfire vs Bf 109: Battle of Britain''. London: Osprey Aerospace, 2007.
* Jackson, Robert. ''Aircraft of World War II: Development, Weaponry, Specifications''. Edison, New Jersey: Chartwell Books, 2003. .
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* Jane, Fred T. ''Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II'' (repr). New York: Crescent Books, 1998. .
* Keith, C.H. ''I Hold My Aim''. George, Allen and Unwin Ltd, London, 1946.
*
* Lednicer, David A. "Technical Note: A CFD Evaluation of Three Prominent World War II Fighter Aircraft." ''Aeronautical Journal'', Royal Aeronautical Society, June/July 1995.
* Lednicer, David A. "World War II Fighter Aerodynamics." ''EAA Sport Aviation'', January 1999.
*
* McKinstry, Leo. ''Spitfire: Portrait of a Legend''. London: John Murray, 2007. .
* Morgan, Eric B. and Edward Shacklady. ''Spitfire: The History (4th rev. edn.)''. London: Key Publishing, 1993. .
* Morgan, Eric B. and Edward Shacklady. ''Spitfire: The History (5th rev. edn.)''. London: Key Publishing, 2000. .
* Morison, Samuel Eliot. ''Breaking the Bismarcks Barrier''. ''
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* Moss, Graham and Barry McKee. ''Spitfires and Polished Metal: Restoring the Classic Fighter''. Marlborough, Wiltshire, UK: Airlife, 1999. .
* Price, Alfred. "The Birth of a Thoroughbred." ''Aeroplane,'' Volume 34, Number 3, No. 395, March 2006.
* Price, Alfred. ''Late Marque Spitfire Aces 1942–1945''. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 1995. .
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* Price, Alfred. ''Spitfire a Complete Fighting History.'' Enderby, Leicester, UK: The Promotional Reprint Company Limited, 1991. .
* Price, Alfred. ''The Spitfire Story''. London: Jane's Publishing Company Ltd., 1982. .
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* Price, Alfred. ''Spitfire: Fighter Supreme''. London: Arms and Armour Press, 1991. .
* Price, Alfred. "Supermarine Spitfire (Merlin-engined variants)". ''Wings of Fame'', Volume 9, 1997, pp. 30–93. London: Aerospace. .
* Price, Alfred. "Supermarine Spitfire (Griffon-engined variants and Seafire)" ''Wings of Fame'', Volume 16, 1999, pp. 30–85. London: Aerospace. .
* Price, Alfred. ''The Spitfire Story: New edited edition''. London: Weidenfeld Military, 1999. .
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* Quill, Jeffrey. ''Birth of a Legend: The Spitfire''. London: Quiller Press, 1986. .
* Quill, Jeffrey. ''Spitfire: A Test Pilot's Story''. London: John Murray, 1983, New edition: Crecy Publishing 1996, reprinted 1998, 2001, 2005, 2008.
* Rearden, Jim.
Koga's Zero: The Fighter That Changed World War II'. , second edition, Missoula, Montana: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company, 1995. Originally published as ''Cracking the Zero Mystery: How the US Learned to Beat Japan's Vaunted WWII Fighter Plane'' .
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* Smallwood, Hugh. ''Spitfire in Blue''. London: Osprey Aerospace, 1996. .
* Spick, Mike. ''Supermarine Spitfire''. New York: Gallery Books, 1990. .
* "Spitfire: Simply Superb, Part three." ''Air International,'' Volume 28, Number 4, April 1985.
* Stokes, Doug.'' Paddy Finucane, Fighter Ace: A Biography of Wing Commander Brendan E. Finucane, D.S.O., D.F.C. and Two Bars''. London: William Kimber & Co. Ltd., 1983. .
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* Vader, John. ''Spitfire'' (Ballantine's Illustrated History of World War II). London: Ballantine's Books, 1969.
*
* Williams, Anthony G. and Dr. Emmanuel Gustin. ''Flying Guns: World War II''. Shrewsbury, UK: Airlife Publishing, 2003. .
External links
The Spitfire Site – resource library about the Supermarine Spitfire
Spitfire SocietySpitfire Society – Eastern WingSpitfire/Seafire Serial Numbers, production contracts and aircraft historiesK5054 – Supermarine Type 300 prototype Spitfire & production aircraft historySupermarine Spitfire – History of a legend (RAF Museum)Spitfire Pilots, articles about Spitfires and its pilotsRAF Museum Spitfire Mk VB walk-around photos
Pacific Spitfires – The Supermarine Spitfire in RAAF Service
Pilot's notes : the Spitfire I aeroplane : Merlin II or III engine�
The Museum of Flight Digital Collections
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