Type |
Type numbers |
Role |
Introduced (First Flight) |
Number built |
Retired |
Surviving aircraft |
Notes/last known whereabouts (W)
|
AttackerB |
392 397-8 500 513-6 519 527 538 542 |
Fighter |
1950 (1946/07) |
182 / 3 prototypes |
1964 (claimed) |
1 |
WA473 transferred to the Fleet Air Arm Museum (FAAM) in 1961
|
Baby |
- |
Fighter |
1918 |
1 prototype , 1 other aircraft |
1918 (1918 (between February and the autumn of that year) |
0 |
Maiden flight before November 1918.
|
Nighthawk (P.B.31E) |
- |
Fighter |
1917 |
1 prototype |
? |
0 |
Modified from the P.B.29. Scrapped (July 1917).[1] 2 propellers (Solent Sky (SS))
|
ScimitarS |
505 508 522-3 529 537 539 543 544 555—6 558 560-7 572 574-6 660–667 |
Fighter |
1957 (1956/01) |
76 |
1969 |
3 |
XD220 (Empire State Aerosciences Museum); XD317 (FAAM); XD332 (SS)[2]
|
SeafangC |
382 396 |
Fighter |
1946 |
18 |
? |
0[2] |
VB895 flown May 1947, during deck landing trials
|
SeafireC |
338 340 355 357-8 377 384 386 388 395 506 |
Fighter |
1942 (1942/01) |
2,646 |
1954 |
8 |
SW800 (Adelaide); PR376 (Myanmar); PP972 (UK, privately owned (PO)); SX336 (UK, PO); SX137 (FAAM); PR503 (US, PO); VP441 (US, PO); PR451 (Military Museums, Canada)
|
Sea King |
- |
Fighter |
1920 (1920/?) |
2 |
1921 |
0 |
The second aircraft (the Sea King II) was converted to become the Sea Lion II in 1922.[3]
|
Spiteful |
371 383 393 |
Fighter |
1944 (1944/06) |
19 / 3 prototypes |
scrapped from 1948 onwards |
0 |
NN664 first flew in January 1945
|
Spitfire |
300 305 311-2 323 329-32 335-7 341-6 348-56 359-70 372-6 378-9 385 387 389 390 394 501-2 509 518 |
Fighter |
1938 (1936/03) |
20,351 |
1961 |
201 (see Notes) |
Condition |
Number
|
Airworthy |
75
|
Static display |
63
|
Restoration / stored |
63
|
Total |
201
|
|
SwiftS |
510 517 520 528 531-2 535 541 546-52 557 |
Fighter |
1954 (1948/12) |
197 |
? |
6 |
G-SWIF (SS);[4] VV106 (FAAM); WK198 (Brooklands Museum, Surrey, UK, fuselage); WK275 (Jet Art Aviation?); WK277 (Newark Air Museum); WK281 (Tangmere Military Aviation Museum, Sussex, UK);
|
Type 224S |
224 |
Fighter |
1934 (1934/02) |
1 prototype |
1937 |
0 |
Used as a target and destroyed in 1937.
|
Type 324, 325S |
324 325 |
Fighter |
1938 |
0 |
- |
- |
Design proposals (1938)
|
Type 525C |
525 526 |
Fighter |
1954 (1954/04) |
1 prototype |
1955 |
0 |
Crashed 1955
|
Type 545C |
545 554 |
Fighter |
1952 (built but never flew) |
1 |
1952 |
0 |
Scrapped (1967)
|
Channel |
- |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1919 |
10 |
? |
0 |
One aircraft was retired from service with the Royal Norwegian Navy Air Service in 1928.[6]
|
Nanok; SolentC |
- |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1927 (1927/06) |
1 |
1934 |
0 |
Renamed as the Supermarine Solent in 1928 (scrapped in 1934)
|
ScapaS |
221 226 229 235 303 |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1935 (1932/?) |
15 |
1939 |
? |
Retired in 1939. See also "As of 3 September 1939 the RAF strength return reported... 4 Scapa under Training/Communication heading. Down to 2 Scapa on 1 May 1940 and 0 on 3 September 1940."[3]
|
Scarabno article |
- |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
? |
12 |
? |
? |
Delivered by sea to the Spanish Royal Naval Air Service (summer 1924)[4]
|
Scyllas |
- |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
? |
? |
? |
? |
Taxi trials (assumed to have occurred late Feb/early March 1924)Andrews & Morgan, p.88
|
Seal II |
- |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1921 |
1 |
? |
? |
One of a number of aircraft sold to the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service (November 1921)
|
Seagull (1921)B |
223 228 |
Reconnaissance and patrol; surveying |
1921 (1921/05) |
34 |
? (UK); 1936 (Australia) |
1 (nose cone at SS) |
A9-1 – A9-9 (Australia)
|
Seagull (1948)S |
347 381 504 530 |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1948 (1948/07) |
3 |
1952 |
0 |
All three aircraft scrapped in 1952
|
Seamew |
- |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1928 (1928/01) |
2 |
1930 |
0 |
Both aircraft scrapped in 1930 after an incident in April that year
|
Sea OtterC |
309 399 503 |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1944 (1938/09) |
292 |
? |
0 |
The Fleet Air Arm Museum (Australia) has the nose section of JN200
|
SheldrakeC |
- |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1927 (1927/?) |
1 |
? |
? |
Present at the MAEE (Felixstowe, UK) in January 1928[5]
|
SouthamptonC |
171 184-5 188-90 233-4 |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1925 (1925/03) |
83 |
? |
1[6] |
Fuselage at Hendon
|
Stranraer |
230 237 304 |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1937 (1934/07) |
57 |
1958? |
1 |
920/CF-BXO (Hendon); parts of a second aircraft (Nova Scotia, Canada)
|
Walrus/Seagull V |
236 307 315 320 326 507 |
Reconnaissance and patrol |
1935 (1933/06) |
740 |
? |
4 |
A2-4 (Hendon); HD874 (RAAF Museum); L2301 (FAAM); W2718 (PO, Duxford?)
|
Air Yacht |
- |
Civil |
1930 (1930/02) |
1 |
1933 |
0 |
Crashed in January 1933, sold for scrap the following year.
|
Commercial Amphibian |
- |
Civil |
1920 (1920/09) |
1 |
1920 |
0 |
Destroyed in an accident in October 1920
|
GiantS |
179 |
Civil |
- |
0 |
- |
- |
-
|
Sea EagleS |
- |
Civil |
1923 (1923/06) |
3 |
1928 |
0 |
The wooden hull of the last surviving aircraft was burnt in 1954
|
Sparrow |
- |
Civil |
1924 (1924/09) |
1 |
1930 |
0 |
The Sparrow was rebuilt in 1926 as a monoplane and re-designated Sparrow II, the aircraft was scrapped in 1933
|
Swan |
- |
Civil |
1926 |
1 |
1927 |
0 |
Scrapped (autumn 1928)
|
S.4 |
- |
Racer |
1925 (1925/08) |
1 |
1925 |
0 |
Crashed at sea (October 1925)
|
S.5C |
- |
Racer |
1927 (1927/06) |
3 |
1929 |
? |
An S.5 took part in the 1929 Schneider Trophy contest
|
S.6 (S.6A) |
186 |
Racer |
1929 (1929/?) |
2 |
1931 |
1 |
N248 (SS)
|
S.6BB |
187 |
Racer |
1931 (1931/?) |
2 |
1931 |
1 |
S1595 (the Schneider trophy 1931 winning aircraft, Science Museum (London))
|
Sea Lion I |
- |
Racer |
1919 |
1 |
1919 |
0 |
Scrapped in 1928.[8]
|
Sea Lion IIC |
- |
Racer |
1922 |
1 |
- |
0 |
Re-engined and renamed as the Sea Lion III in 1923.
|
Sea Lion IIIS |
- |
Racer |
1923 |
1 |
1923 |
0 |
Participated in the Schneider Trophy context September 1923 (position—3rd)[7] Transferred to the Royal Air Force in 1923.
|
Sea Urchins |
- |
Racer |
- |
0 |
- |
- |
Unbuilt.[10]
|
Type B.12/36S |
316 317 318 321 |
Bomber |
- |
0 |
- |
0 |
2 aircraft were being built when they were destroyed by enemy action (September 1940).[11]
|
Supermarine Type 322B |
322 380 |
Naval torpedo, dive bomber and reconnaissance aircraft |
1943 (1943/02) |
2 |
? |
? |
Used in 1946 for chase in the low-speed handling trials
|
Supermarine Type 553S |
553 |
Experimental aircraft |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Proposed Mach 2 research aircraft project
|