{"id":4770,"date":"2017-08-04T18:40:39","date_gmt":"2017-08-04T18:40:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.thejetboy.com\/?p=4770"},"modified":"2017-09-01T07:36:52","modified_gmt":"2017-09-01T07:36:52","slug":"the-plywood-bomber","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thejetboy.com\/the-plywood-bomber\/","title":{"rendered":"The Plywood Bomber…"},"content":{"rendered":"
“Necessity is the mother of all inventions”<\/strong><\/p>\n No other saying could more fittingly describe the circumstances that lead to the creation of this magnificent aircraft – De Havilland Mosquito also affectionately known as “Timber Terror” or “Wooden Wonder”. An aircraft made up of spruce, birch plywood and Ecuadorean balsa that could be easily manufactured by any furniture factory, cabinet maker, luxury-auto coachbuilder or even a piano makers. It came out at a time when the British were facing acute shortage of strategic materials and in many ways helped change the tide of World War-II. Using wood not only reduced Britains dependence on strategic resources but when covered with a thin layer of doped fabric wood made a remarkably smooth, drag-cheating surface free of rivets and seams. And any battle damage on this aircraft could be repaired relatively easily in the field. Mosquito was an agile, aerodynamic and unarmed twin-seater bomber in an era when bombers were more like flying fortresses with guns and turrets poking out of their fuselage, relying on its speed and agility to out pace and in some cases out manoeuvre enemy fighters. In fact for a whopping 2\u00bd years after its first flight, the Mosquito was the fastest operational aircraft in the world.<\/p>\n