De Saab 37 Viggen Thunderbolt is een voormalig Zweeds gevechtsvliegtuig met één zitplaats, één motor en korte middellange afstand. In 1952 werd in Saab begonnen met de ontwikkeling van het type en na de selectie van een radicale deltavleugelconfiguratie voerde het resulterende vliegtuig zijn eerste vlucht uit op 8 februari 1967 en kwam in dienst op 21 juni 1971. Viggen houdt het onderscheid van het zijn het eerste canardontwerp dat in hoeveelheid wordt geproduceerd. De Viggen was ook de meest geavanceerde straaljager in Europa tot de introductie van de Panavia Tornado in operationele dienst in 1981
De SAAB AJ 37 Viggen(Thunderbolt) was a revolutionary multi-role combat aircraft designed to fulfill Sweden’s unique “Bas 60” defense doctrine. In the event of a Soviet invasion, the Swedish Air Force planned to operate from dispersed road bases—standard highways converted into temporary runways. The Viggen was engineered forSTOL (Short Take-Off and Landing)performance, allowing it to land on a 500-meter stretch of road and be refueled and rearmed by conscripts in less than 20 minutes.
Canard Configuration:The Viggen was the first mass-produced fighter to utilize afixed canard wingwith flaps. This created extra lift at low speeds, allowing the aircraft to maintain a high angle of attack for short landings without stalling.
Thrust Reverser:To stop on short, icy Swedish roads, the Viggen was equipped with a massive thrust reverser (similar to commercial airliners). The pilot could engage it just before touchdown, allowing the jet to stop in roughly 500 meters. It could even “back up” on its own power.
Double Delta Wing:The main wing used a double-delta shape to provide stability at supersonic speeds while maintaining the lift needed for low-altitude attack missions.
The RM8 Engine:Volvo Flygmotor took a civilian airliner engine (from the DC-9/727) and added a massive, Swedish-designed afterburner, creating one of the most powerful fighter engines of its era.
The Electronic Frontier
CK37 Computer:The Viggen was the first aircraft in the world to use an integrated circuit-based central computer. This handled navigation, fire control, and fuel monitoring, allowing a single pilot to perform the work usually requiring two.
Head-Up Display (HUD):To help pilots land on narrow roads in bad weather, the Viggen featured a sophisticated HUD that projected a “virtual runway” or landing pole for the pilot to follow.
The “Splinter” Camouflage:Perhaps the most iconic paint scheme in aviation history, the four-color “M90” splinter pattern was designed to hide the aircraft against the Swedish forests when viewed from above by Soviet satellites or aircraft.
Varianten
While theAJ 37was the ground-attack version, the airframe evolved into theSF 37(Reconnaissance), theSK 37(Two-seat trainer), and the ultimate version, theJA 37 Jaktviggen(Interceptor), which featured a more powerful engine and a built-in 30mm Oerlikon KCA cannon.