Fleet Air Arm Museum Barracuda Project

The Barracuda Project

Fundraising for Fleet Air Arm Museum
£8,116
raised of £60,000 target
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Barracuda Project, 9 July 2013
Fleet Air Arm Museum

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Story

Help save the Fairey Barracuda from extinction.

Fairey Barracuda DP872

Restoration of the World’s only WW2 Fairey Barracuda torpedo bomber.

Over 2500 Barracuda aircraft were delivered to the Fleet Air Arm, more than any other type ordered by the Royal Navy to date. Unlike other more iconic aircraft of its era none were retained for posterity and no complete examples exist today.

Since the early 1970s the Fleet Air Arm Museum has been collecting Barracuda components from a wide variety of sources throughout the British Isles, with the long term aim of rebuilding a Barracuda.

Nose, centre section and wing components from Barracuda DP872 were the first to be collected and have since formed the basis of the rebuild.

Says Dave Morris Curator of Aircraft “some restoration work on the nose section was started in the 1990s, however, the enormity of the task coupled with lack of funds meant no further significant progress was made until now”

Full Steam Ahead for Barracuda DP872

On the 6th February 2015, the extensively re-built tail section of Barracuda DP872 was brought back from the dedicated volunteers based in Newcastle.

The Project will now continue at the Fleet Air Arm Museum and work has begun already with the Barracuda occupying quite a large portion of the museum’s in-house restoration facility!

The project will aim to use a high percentage of re-claimed original parts and material where it is practical and possible. However, this will be balanced with newly manufactured components where structural integrity is required or where an original part simply does not exist. 

The centre section has been completely dismantled and Frame 6 (the start point of all Barracuda fuselage builds) has been set in a jig for alignment.

A lot of people have asked if the FAAM Engineering Team will have the skills required to make or restore all of the parts needed for the rebuild, or if we can achieve a rebuild. We hope that these new images will demonstrate that the Engineering Department is very well equipped in both skills and tooling and will make great progress towards creating an example of this unique aircraft.

PLEASE HELP US IN THIS IMPORTANT RESTORATION PROJECT.

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About the charity

Fleet Air Arm Museum

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The Fleet Air Arm Museum is dedicated to preserving the history of Royal Naval aviation for the benefit of today's and future generations. Europe's largest naval aviation collection including over 90 rare and classic aircraft, the first British Concorde, over 2,000,000 records and 30,000 artefacts.

Donation summary

Total raised
£8,115.20
+ £1,449.75 Gift Aid
Online donations
£8,115.20
Offline donations
£0.00

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