Hart ;Hart I :Two-seat light bomber aircraft for the RAF. 525 hp Kestrel IB engine. ;Hart SEDB :Two-seat single-engined light bomber aircraft for the RAF, powered by a 525 hp Rolls-Royce Kestrel IB, or a 510 hp Kestrel X (DR) piston engine. ;Hart (India) :Tropicalised version for the RAF, used by RAF in the
North West Frontier of India, with larger radiator and extra equipment. ;Hart (C) :Two-seat unarmed communications aircraft for the RAF, a small number were used by No. 24 Squadron RAF; eight built. ;Hart Trainer (Interim) :Hart light bombers converted into training aircraft. Two built. ;Hart Trainer :Two-seat dual-control trainer aircraft, with reduced sweepback on top wings to compensate for movement in center of gravity caused by removal of military equipment. ;Hart Fighter :Two-seat fighter version for the RAF used by No. 23 Squadron RAF, with Kestrel IIS. Later redesignated as the
Demon; six built. ;Hart (Special) :Tropicalised version for the RAF, used by the RAF in the Middle East. Based on Audax airframe with desert equipment, and de-rated Kestrel X engine. ;Hart (Testbeds) :Several Harts were used as engine testbeds, including
G-ABMR and
G-ABTN which were used to test several variants of Kestrel engines.
K2434 was used by Napier to test the Napier Dagger I, II and III.
K3036 was used by Rolls-Royce to test the
Merlin C and E, complete with a ventral radiator. ;Estonian Hart :Export version for Estonia, equipped with an interchangeable wheel or float undercarriage; eight built. radial engine, in Finnish Air Force markings (1976)
Hawker Hartbees :Hawker-built pattern aircraft; 4 built and exported to South Africa.
Hartbees Mk.I :Two-seat general-purpose, ground support aircraft for the
South African Air Force, powered by a 608 hp (453 kW) Rolls-Royce Kestrel VFP piston engine; 4 aircraft built by Hawker Aircraft in the UK, 65 aircraft built under licence by SAAF Roberts Heights Depot, Pretoria, in South Africa. ;Swedish Hart :Light bomber for Swedish Air Force. Four Hawker-built pattern aircraft, powered by a Bristol Pegasus IM2 radial piston engine were delivered in 1934. Following successful evaluation, 42 were built under licence in Sweden by AB Götaverken of Göteborg, powered by a Swedish-built
NOHAB Pegasus IU2. It was armed with a single
Scarff ring-mounted .303 in (7.7 mm)
Lewis gun and a fixed forward-firing .303 in (7.7 mm)
Vickers machine gun Other air forces which also used the Audax included the
Royal Canadian Air Force, the
Royal Indian Air Force, the
South African Air Force, the
Royal Egyptian Air Force, the
Royal Iraqi Air Force, the
Imperial Iranian Air Force, the
Straits Settlements and the
Southern Rhodesian Air Force. During the Second World War the Audax saw limited service in Africa on the
Kenya–
Abyssinia border during the
Second Italo-Ethiopian War. The aircraft saw action in East Africa during clashes against Italy who occupied Abyssinia. A.V. Roe built 287 Audaxes as part of the RAF expansion scheme during 1935–1937. These did not warrant an Avro type number but between 1937 and 1938, Avro built 24 modernised Audaxes for the Egyptian government, powered by
Armstrong Siddeley Panther VIA radials. Acknowledging the amount of redesign work done, these were designated the
Avro Type 674.
Audax I :Two-seat army cooperation aircraft for the RAF, powered by a 530 hp (395 kW) Rolls-Royce Kestrel IB, or 580 hp Kestrel X piston engine.
Audax (India) :Tropicalised version for the RAF, used by the RAF in India.
Audax (Singapore) :Tropicalised version for the RAF, powered by a Rolls-Royce Kestrel V piston engine, used by the RAF in Singapore and
British Malaya.
Canadian Audax :Modified version of the Audax I for the
RCAF; one built for Canada.
Egyptian Audax :Six aircraft fitted with the 750 hp
Armstrong Siddeley Panther radial piston engine, plus 18 aircraft fitted with the Panther X radial piston engine; 34 built for Egypt.
Iraqi Audax (Nisr) :24 aircraft fitted with the
Bristol Pegasus IIM2 radial piston engine, plus ten aircraft fitted with the Pegasus VIP8 radial piston engine; 34 built for Iraq.
Persian Audax :30 aircraft fitted with the
Pratt & Whitney Hornet S2B radial piston engine, plus 26 aircraft fitted with the Bristol Pegasus IIM or IIM2 radial piston engine; 56 built for Persia.
Demon The Hawker Demon was a fighter variant of the Hart light bomber. During air defence exercises the RAF's
Siskins and
Bulldogs were often unable to intercept the new Hart bombers, which were sometimes instructed to restrict their height and speed in order to give the fighters a chance, which prompted the development of a fighter variant of the Hart. While the
Hawker Fury offered better performance, lower production volumes made it more expensive and therefore it remained available only in small numbers, so when a fighter version of the Hart was suggested, the Air Ministry selected the type as an interim fighter until higher-performance fighters could be bought in larger numbers. The new fighter variant added a second Vickers machine gun, while the coaming of the rear cockpit was angled to give a better field of fire, and a
supercharged Kestrel IS engine was fitted. Evaluation of an initial batch of six aircraft, known as Hart Fighters by one flight of
23 Squadron during 1931 was successful, and larger orders followed for the fighter Hart, now known as the Hawker Demon. The production Demon's first flight was on 10 February 1933. 305 Hawker Demons were built, including 232 for the RAF. The Demon was powered by versions of the Kestrel engine. It had an armament of a single rear .303 in (7.7 mm)
Lewis Gun with two fixed .303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers machine guns in the nose. Many were fitted with a hydraulically-powered turret in the rear gunner's position, which had been tested on the Hawker Hart. Demons were also sold to the
Royal Australian Air Force. It saw only second-line operations during the Second World War. Production of the Demon was undertaken by Hawker and by
Boulton Paul Aircraft at their Wolverhampton factory, where their last example of 106 to be completed was delivered to the RAF in December 1937. ;Hart two-seat fighter :Two-seat fighter version of the Hart for the RAF. Later redesignated as the
Hart Fighter. ;Demon I :Two-seat fighter aircraft for the
RAF. ;Australian Demon I :Two-seat fighter aircraft for the
RAAF, similar to RAF version but fitted with a 600 hp (447 kW)
Rolls-Royce Kestrel V engine; 54 built (the first 18 delivered as general-purpose fighters in 1935 and an additional 36 for army co-operation duties delivered in 1936). ;Australian Demon II :Two-seat training version for the RAAF, standard Demon fitted with dual controls and provision for target towing, 10 built ;Turret Demon :Two-seat fighter version, informally known as the
Turret Demon, fitted with a
Frazer-Nash windshield/
fairing to protect the rear gunner.
Hardy The
Hawker Hardy was a general-purpose variant of the
Hawker Hart tropicalised to meet
Air Ministry Specification G.23/33 as a Wapiti replacement in Iraq. The prototype was a production Hart which was modified with a modified radiator, a message pick-up hook, water containers and a desert survival kit. The prototype first flew on 7 September 1934, and the first production aircraft were delivered to
30 Squadron in January 1935. The
Hardy saw some service during the Second World War, in Africa and the Middle East; the
Hardys performing a number of operations against Italian-occupied Abyssinia as well as other areas of Africa. The
Hardy also saw
service with Southern Rhodesia. The last operational sortie by a Hardy was on 9 May 1941 and most of the survivors were scrapped, although some continued in service as communications aircraft. On 14 May 1941, the Belgian Colonial authorities obtained a Hawker Hardy from the South African Air Force. Painted in Belgian colours, the machine was used for observation missions, but unfortunately overturned while landing at Gambela airfield on 26 May 1941, effectively writing off the aircraft. ;Hardy I :Two-seat general-purpose aircraft for the RAF, 47 built excluding one prototype modified from a Hart
Hind The
Hawker Hind was a derivative of the Hart and was intended to replace it. The
Hawker Hector was a variant of the Hind and was used in the army co-operation role. It saw only limited service during the Second World War with the Royal Air Force. Hectors were also sold to Ireland.
Osprey The
Hawker Osprey was the navalised carrier-borne version of the Hart, performing in the fighter and reconnaissance roles. The Osprey had a single Rolls-Royce Kestrel II engine, and had a max speed of 168 mph (270 km/h). Its armament consisted of a single forward .303 in (7.7 mm) Vickers machine gun and one .303 in (7.7 mm) Lewis gun. The Osprey joined the
Fleet Air Arm (FAA) in 1932, with 103 being built, and ended its career in 1944 after serving as a trainer for FAA pilots during the Second World War. By December 1936, Ospreys were being deployed by 701 Squadron based at
RAF Kalafrana in the anti-submarine and anti-piracy role. The Osprey was also sold to the
Swedish Air Force being used on the
seaplane cruiser , which carried six Ospreys. Ospreys were also sold to the
Portuguese Naval Aviation and the
Spanish Republican Air Force. ;Osprey I :Two-seat fleet spotter and reconnaissance aircraft, powered by a 630 hp (470 kW) Rolls-Royce Kestrel IIMS inline piston engine; 37 built. ;Osprey II :Two-seat fleet spotter and reconnaissance aircraft, powered by a 630 hp (470 kW) Rolls-Royce Kestrel IIMS piston engine, equipped with redesigned floats; 14 built. ;Osprey III :Two-seat fleet spotter and reconnaissance aircraft, powered by a 630 hp (470 kW) Rolls-Royce Kestrel IIMS piston engine, equipped with a dinghy stowed away in the starboard upper wing; 26 built. ;Osprey IV :Two-seat fleet spotter and reconnaissance aircraft, powered by a 640 hp Rolls-Royce Kestrel V. Twenty-six built in 1935. ;Portuguese Osprey :Two aircraft equivalent to Osprey III built for Portugal and powered by Kestrel IIMS piston engine. Delivered in 1935. Six aircraft more in 1939. ==Operators==