The
Hawker Woodcock was designed as a night fighter in 1922 to meet
specification 25/22. The prototype was rejected because of lack of manoeuvrability as well as suffering from serious wing flutter and ineffective rudder control, with spinning prohibited. Following the first flight
George Carter took over as chief designer and changed the design, reducing the wingspan by and making it a single-bay structure. The powerplant was changed to a
Bristol Jupiter IV engine. The modified design was called the
Woodcock Mk II and first flew in August 1923, and after further modifications, was accepted for service with initial orders placed late in 1924. The first order for the RAF was for ten Woodcock IIs, with the first six being completed without any night flying equipment. The service eventually ordered a total of 62 aircraft. One of the first batch of aircraft was given a civil registration to allow it to be demonstrated in Scandinavia. On return to the United Kingdom, the demonstrator was entered into the 1925
King's Cup Air Race but it crashed during the race in bad weather near Luton. ==Operational history==