Hobby Master Archive

Air Power Propellers 1/48

Spitfire

Spitfire Mk. IX EN522, Sqn Ldr John Ratten, OC No. 453 Sqn., April 1943

HA8312

The Mk. IX replaced the Mk. V in June 1942 and on September 12, 1942 a Mk. IX brought down a Ju-86R flying at 43,000 feet. Another major achievement of the Mk. IX took place on October 5, 1944 when 401 Squadron became the first allied aircraft to shoot down an Me-262 jet. Even with the arrival of the Griffon powered Mk. XIV the Mk. IX continued in service until the end of WWII. There were 5,665 Mk. IX Spitfires and its variants produced.

Spitfire IXb EN522 first flew February 12, 1943. The No. 453 Squadron received the new Mk. IX the first week of April 1943. On April 8, 1943 Sqn., Ldr John Ratten flew EN522 “Tikkie” while leading the Hornchurch Wing on a sweep over Abbeville, France they encountered 14 Fw-190s and Sqn., Ldr John Ratten shared a damaged Fw-190. John Ratten’s air-to-air total was 5, awarded a DFC and he was the first Australian to command a Spitfire squadron. EN522 was lost in July 1944 while with the No. 611 Squadron.

Specifications for the Spitfire Mk. IX Number built - 5,665 all Mk. IX variants Crew - 1 X pilot Dimensions Length - 31 ft. 3.5 in. Wingspan: Standard (F) - 36 ft. 10 in. Clipped (LF) - 32 ft. 2 in. Height - 11 ft. 9 in. Wing Area - (F) 242 sq. ft. or (LF) 231 sq. ft. Weight Empty - 5,610 lbs. (2,545 kg) Maximum Takeoff - 7,500 lbs. (3,402 kg) Performance Engine 1 X V-12 Rolls-Royce Merlin 61 @ 1,515 hp or 1 X V-12 Rolls-Royce Merlin 63 @ 1,712 hp Maximum Speed - 408 mph (657 kph) @ 25,000 ft. Service Ceiling - 4,000 ft. Range w/o drop tank - 434 miles (698 km) Armament 2 X Hispano 20mm cannons plus either 4 X .303 machine guns or 2 X .50 machine guns 1,000 lbs of bombs (500 centerline, 250 each wing)

1/48 scale pre-finished. Die-cast metal with a minimum of plastic. Professionally painted. All markings pad applied for superb results. Canopy slides open. Comes with a pilot that can be removed. Comes with display stand. Landing gear is fully retractable and can be displayed up or down. Propeller is metal. Extremely sought after by collectors.

Hobby Master 1/48 Air Power Series HA8312 Spitfire Mk. IX EN522, Sqn Ldr John Ratten, OC No. 453 Sqn., April 1943

Added to archive2015-11-19
Last modified2015-11-19
LeafletSeptember 2015