Hawker s.1127

Hawker Siddeley s.1127

LandStorbritannia
TypeEksperimentelle V/STOL-fly
Første flytur19. november 1960 (s.1127) – 7. mars 1964 (tårnfalk)
Bygget6 S.1127s – 9 tårnfalker

Den Hawker s.1127 og Hawker Siddeley Kestrel FGA.1 er eksperimentelle og utviklingsfly som førte til Hawker Siddeley Harrier, det første vertikale og/eller korte start- og landingsflyet (V/STOL) jetjagerbomber. Utviklingen av P.1127 begynte i 1957, og utnyttet Bristol Engine Companys valg om å investere i etableringen av Pegasus-motoren med vektortrykk. Testingen begynte i juli 1960, og ved slutten av året hadde flyet oppnådd både vertikal start og horisontal flyging.

Kilde: Hawker Siddeley P.1127 på Wiki

Hawker XV-6A tårnfalk går rundt
FotografVladimir Yakubov
LokaliseringVirginia Air & Space Center, Hampton, VA
Bilder106
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Hawker Siddeley P.1127 Harrier Walk Around
FotografBurhand Donke
LokaliseringUnknow
Bilder21

Les også:

Andre verdenskrig: Den definitive visuelle historien fra Blitzkrieg til atombomben (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon verdenskrig kart etter kart (DK historie kart etter kart) - Amazon

Hawker P.1127 Walk Around
FotografMeindert de Vreeze
LokaliseringUnknow
Bilder41

Development and the Tripartite Evaluation

The Hawker Siddeley Kestrel was an experimental V/STOL (Vertical/Short Take-Off and Landing) aircraft developed in the early 1960s as a follow-up to the P.1127. It served as a critical technology demonstrator for the “vectored thrust” concept. In 1964, a unique “Tripartite Evaluation Squadron” was formed, consisting of pilots and ground crews from the UK, the United States, and West Germany. This joint team spent a year proving that a jet fighter could operate from unprepared fields, forest clearings, and small ship decks, effectively laying the operational groundwork for the future Harrier.

Attribute Standard Specification (Kestrel FGA.1 / XV-6A)
Rolle V/STOL Evaluation Aircraft
Mannskapet 1 (Pilot)
Kraftverk 1 x Bristol Siddeley Pegasus 5 (15,200 lbf thrust)
Maximum Speed 1,142 km/h (710 mph) / Mach 0.92 at sea level
Lengde 12.95 meters (42 ft 6 in)
Vingespenn 6.99 meters (22 ft 11 in)
Maximum Weight 7,030 kg (15,500 lb)
First Flight March 7, 1964

The Pegasus Engine and Vectored Thrust

  • Single-Engine Solution: Unlike other VTOL designs that used multiple “lift engines,” the Kestrel used one Pegasus turbofan with four rotating nozzles to direct all thrust for both hover and forward flight.
  • Reaction Control System: Because aerodynamic surfaces (flaps/rudders) don’t work in a hover, the Kestrel used “puffer” jets at the nose, tail, and wingtips, fed by engine bleed air, to maintain balance.
  • Landing Gear: It featured a unique “zero-track” bicycle landing gear—two main wheels in tandem under the fuselage and small outrigger wheels on the wingtips for stability.
  • VIFF Capability: During testing, pilots discovered they could “Vector In Forward Flight” (VIFF), rotating the nozzles during air combat to decelerate rapidly or turn tighter than conventional aircraft.

Transition to the United States

  • The XV-6A Designation: After the tripartite trials ended in 1965, six of the aircraft were shipped to the US for further testing by the Army, Navy, and Air Force, receiving the American designation XV-6A.
  • Marine Corps Interest: While the US Air Force and Army eventually passed on the design, the US Marine Corps was so impressed by the XV-6A trials that they pushed for the acquisition of its successor, the AV-8A Harrier.
  • Preservation: Several Kestrels survive today, most notably at the National Museum of the US Air Force in Dayton, Ohio, and the Pima Air & Space Museum in Arizona.


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