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Javelin, The Flying Flat Iron Interceptor And Its Successor, The English Electric Lightning 

DroneScapes
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The Gloster Javelin is a twin-engined all-weather interceptor aircraft that served with Britain's Royal Air Force from the mid-1950s until the late 1960s. It was a T-tailed delta-wing aircraft designed for night and all-weather operations and was the last aircraft design to bear the Gloster name. Introduced in 1956 after a lengthy development period, the aircraft received several upgrades during production to its engines, radar, and weapons, including support for the De Havilland Firestreak air-to-air missile.
The Javelin was succeeded in the interceptor role by the English Electric Lightning, a supersonic aircraft capable of flying at more than double the Javelin's top speed, which was introduced into the RAF only a few years later. The Javelin served for much of its life alongside the Lightning; the last Javelins were withdrawn from operational service in 1968 following the introduction of successively more capable versions of the Lightning.
Gloster Aircraft developed and produced the only British jet aircraft operational during the war, the Gloster Meteor. Through the post-war period, they made a series of updated versions of the Meteor, including some with delta wing layouts for all or the outer portion of the wings. These were further developed by moving the engines to the fuselage and using a complete delta wing layout, leading to a second series of designs that continued in parallel.
P.228, drawn up in 1946, was essentially a two-seat Meteor with slightly swept wings. A similar design was also offered to the Royal Navy as the P.231. The later-issued P.234 and P.238 of early 1947 had adopted many of the features that would be distinctive of the Javelin, including the large delta wing and tailplane, and were based on the Rolls-Royce AJ65 engine (better known as Avon). The two differed primarily in role; P.234 was a single-seat day fighter with a V-tail, while P.238 was a two-seat night fighter with a mid-mounted delta tailplane.
Development of both concepts continued. P.240 of April 1947 was Meteor-like in form but moved the engines from the wings to the fuselage and added a slight sweep to the wing's leading edge, producing a somewhat delta wing shape. P.240 also replaced the Rolls-Royce Derwent engines with the Metrovick F.9, which would later move companies and become the Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire. The all-delta layout of P.238 was also updated as P.241, which used an all-delta horizontal stabilizer in a T-tail arrangement. P.241 bears a strong resemblance to the final Javelin design.
The Air Ministry released more detailed specifications on 17 Jun 1949, as F.4/48. Gloster responded with two further updated designs, P.300, a quick update to the Meteor with two seats and newer Derwent engines, and the P.316/P.317, another update to the delta layout mounting the Sapphire engines. The P.316 and 317 differed primarily in role; 316 was a single-seat design lacking radar and mounting up to four 1,000 pounds (450 kg) bombs in containers under the fuselage, while 317 was a two-seat design with radar and some form of heavy armament to be determined.
The RAF requirements were subject to some changes, mainly in regards to radar equipment and armaments; Gloster also initiated some changes as further research was conducted into the aerodynamic properties of the new swept and delta wings, as well as use of the new Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire turbojet engine.
Gloster Javelin General characteristics
Crew: 2
Length: 56 ft 9 in (17.30 m)
Wingspan: 52 ft (16 m)
Height: 16 ft (4.9 m)
Wing area: 927 sq ft (86.1 m2)
Airfoil: root: RAE 101 (10%); tip: RAE 101 (8.9%)[59]
Empty weight: 24,000 lb (10,886 kg)
Gross weight: 31,580 lb (14,324 kg)
Max takeoff weight: 43,165 lb (19,579 kg)
Powerplant: 2 × Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire 7R afterburning turbojet engines, 11,000 lbf (49 kN) thrust each dry, 12,300 lbf (55 kN) with afterburner
Performance
Maximum speed: 710 mph (1,140 km/h, 620 kn) at 40,000 ft (12,000 m)
Maximum speed: Mach 0.93
Range: 954 mi (1,535 km, 829 nmi)
Service ceiling: 52,800 ft (16,100 m)
Rate of climb: 5,400 ft/min (27 m/s)
Wing loading: 34 lb/sq ft (170 kg/m2)
Thrust/weight: 0.79
Armament
Guns: 4 × 30 mm ADEN cannon
Missiles: Up to four de Havilland Firestreak air-to-air missiles
Avionics
Westinghouse AN/APQ-43 radar
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#aircraft #aviation #interceptor

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6 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 30   
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 2 месяца назад
Watch more aircraft, heroes, and their stories and missions ➤ www.youtube.com/@Dronescapes To support/join the channel ➤ www.youtube.com/@Dronescapes/join IG ➤ instagram.com/dronescapesvideos FB ➤ facebook.com/Dronescapesvideos ➤ X/Twitter ➤ dronescapes.video/2p89vedj ➤ THREADS: www.threads.net/@dronescapesvideos
@ianbeedles1329
@ianbeedles1329 2 месяца назад
I have personal memories of both these aircraft. As a 14 year old ATC cadet, my first Summer Camp (Aug '79) was to RAF Manston and the camp photo had the Javelin in the background. Later that year I attended my first 'Hertfordshire Wing Parade, ATC' at RAF Henlow. On the parade ground, to one side of the march pass dias, was the English Electric P.1. Later on, after I had joined the RAF, in '86, I was sat outside the control tower at RAF Binbrook when I watched 5 Sqn's display bird (Lightning F.6) shot down the runway, point its nose straight up, and disappear into the cloud base in less than a minute! Four years later, Aug '90, I was deployed on 'Op Granby' (first Gulf War) to RSAFAB Dhahran, with Tornado F.3's, and served alongside Sqn Ldr Ian Black (the son of Euan Black), who had been the last display pilot of the Lightning F.6.
@badgers1975
@badgers1975 Месяц назад
Winkle brown, a legend amongst legends
@VTDMilitaryHistory
@VTDMilitaryHistory 2 месяца назад
What a wonderful documentary, I am very passionate about aircraft research, thank you for providing valuable footage, I have watched almost all of your videos.
@norwichnorfolk1584
@norwichnorfolk1584 19 дней назад
As a boy my grandparents lived near Coltishall and when they had a air shows I would always go and the Lightnings were great to watch
@mizake01
@mizake01 2 месяца назад
Fantastic remaster of classic documentaries. THANK YOU for doing this, DroneScapes. Growing up in the 80s, this aircraft and others where like magical machines to me. Now, they are just as interesting because I see that it was people, just people dealing with circumstances that make things like the Lightning. Our human potential is Awesome.
@user-ok5tb3jq1j
@user-ok5tb3jq1j 9 дней назад
Back by the Commonwealth forces of Britain, Australia and New Zealand these Gloster Javelin fighter jets flew across my village in Sarawak Borneo intercepting Indonesian Hercules at the border during the Confrantation War between Indonesian and Malaysia in the 1960s. The villagers were shocked by the thunderous sound of these fighter jets. It's their first time seeing these aircrafts.
@wrexxjohnson8009
@wrexxjohnson8009 2 месяца назад
I have a 95 year old friend here in NZ who as a child watched the Meteor do the world speed record with his own eyes .... Also remembers watching V1 flying bomb go over his head outside of his family Henderson shelter and explode a ways down his street ....
@markdrummond7
@markdrummond7 Месяц назад
I think you mean an Anderson Shelter.
@erikhesjedal3569
@erikhesjedal3569 Месяц назад
This covers way more than just the interceptors. The title is misleading, should rather be called British early cold war aerial tactics, history and context
@alvinhang8721
@alvinhang8721 6 дней назад
The British aerospace industry were developing amazing fighters and bombers during the cold war.
@alankucar8025
@alankucar8025 2 месяца назад
Around the 45 minute mark it is said that the MiG-21 was the first soviet supersonic fighter. That is not true, the first Soviet supersonic fighter was the preceding MiG-19.
@raymondyee2008
@raymondyee2008 2 месяца назад
Ah yes the Javelins were in Singapore at the time when the British FEAF guarded our small island during the 60s.
@hohoho13
@hohoho13 2 месяца назад
If I remember correctly, an example was kept for static display on Sentosa until 1988, when it was sold for scrap along with several other aircraft that were displayed alongside.
@mikem.s.1183
@mikem.s.1183 2 месяца назад
Excellent documentary. As always. Thank you. 🙏
@manuwilson4695
@manuwilson4695 Месяц назад
I often wonder what else could have been done to extend the Lightings range to a decent figure...longer fuselage, with larger tailplanes? 🤔...A real pity they didn't properly address this issue.
@Horsefingerandthetaintwrights
@Horsefingerandthetaintwrights 2 месяца назад
A limey named Tex? What a stud.
@trevormoat6919
@trevormoat6919 Месяц назад
Lovingly called "The Frightening"
@anthonyeaton5153
@anthonyeaton5153 Месяц назад
We called the Javelin The Flying Trowel.
@ibluap
@ibluap 2 месяца назад
Sorry, but the "Sea Vixens" you show at about 11:15 are not Sea Vixens at all... The footage is about a yearly competition of armour crews from aboard Royal Navy carriers. The Squadron to set up the "Vixens" first was to win the contest... however, those Vixens look pretty much as Sea Vixens in all respects... except the size. They are much smaller than the real Sea Vixen. Because they are Sea Vampires airframes extensely rebuilt to look like Sea Vixens; even with two escape nozzles and all the rest! The maintenance crew at some RN Squadron did the job cutting metal and using spare parts. Obviously none of those "Vixies" was able to fly; at least, they were able to taxi around, but they fulfilled their purpose as part of this yearly competition. I bite the bait the first time I saw the same footage and held it to see close features of the Sea Vixen to build up a plastic model later. But there was something wrong about the size, and something did not fit. So, after a thorough Internet review of the origins of the footage I found the truth about these little Vixen copies. The same team later specialized in using old jet airframes to create new bizarre aircraft models that never flew but that made the thrill running down the runways as if they were to fly in later airshows.
@OoVECTORMANoO
@OoVECTORMANoO Месяц назад
So the Brirish mosquito had an American radar system and the p61 black widow had a British radar system....it was the whole reason the p61 was made, to accommodate at the time the new british interceptor radar system and became America's first purpose built night fighter.
@74wrighty
@74wrighty 2 месяца назад
Britain was pressured possibly bullied into abandoning projects and buying American jets. They still act this way. I think the actual American people would be shocked by their actions.
@user-hq2wy1mt3k
@user-hq2wy1mt3k 24 дня назад
The same thing happened,(is happening), with Canada.
@willc1294
@willc1294 Месяц назад
Fortunately, that maniac Ghandi wasn't in charge of India by the time it acquired nukes. All gamers know the danger of Ghandi + Nukes ... 😉
@chandrachurniyogi8394
@chandrachurniyogi8394 2 месяца назад
the Panavia Tornado IDS GR4 multi role interdictor strike fighter is the best thing NATO had after the legendary Spitfire air defence fighter aircraft . . .
@user-qq2vq4fv8b
@user-qq2vq4fv8b Месяц назад
Sorry to burst your bubble, but the Tornado was a bit of a donkey . Did you know that the air refuelling tankers, ex VC 10s , 707s etc , had to descend from their cruise altitude to refuel them , because in order for them to get to 30 ,000 feet , they had to be on full after burner . Where refuelling them was pointless, since the fuel going in , was equal to the fuel being burnt . Thank Christ we never had to use the Tornado against a near peer opponent. It would have been massacred .
@KillerKiller655
@KillerKiller655 2 месяца назад
Full of incorrections like first aircraft equipped with radar etc....
@j.heilig7239
@j.heilig7239 Месяц назад
When you “improve” old footage to the point that you can’t even tell what kind of airplane it is, what’s the point? It looks ridiculous.
@manuwilson4695
@manuwilson4695 Месяц назад
F35..."Lightning 2"...💩
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