Hawker-Siddeley Harrier
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The Harrier family was started with the Hawker P.1127. Design began in 1957 by Sir Sidney Camm, Ralph Hooper of Hawker Aviation and Stanley Hooker of the Bristol Engine Company. Rather than using rotors or a direct jet thrust the P.1127 had an innovative vectored thrust turbofan engine and the first vertical take-off was on October 21, 1960. Six prototypes were built in total, one of which was lost at an air display.
An order for 60 aircraft was received from the RAF in 1966, and the first pre-production Harriers were flying by mid-1967.
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The Harrier has two control elements that a fixed wing aircraft does not normally have. These are the thrust vector and reaction control. The thrust vector is the angle of the four engine nozzles and can be set between zero degrees (horizontal, pointing straight back) and 98 degrees (pointing slightly forwards). The 90 degree position is generally used for VTOL manouvring. Thrust vector is adjusted by a control similar to and beside the thrust lever. The reaction control is achieved by manipulating the control stick and is similar in action to the cyclic control of a helicopter. While irrelevant during forward flight mode, these controls are critical during VTOL and STOL, and are used together during these manouvres. Wind direction and the orientation of the aircraft to this is also critically-important during VTOL manouvres (in this sense operation is limited compared with a helicopter, which can take off and land in side winds). The Harrier's landing gear configuration also complicates normal landing; it is necessary to ensure that the wing-mounted stabiliser struts contact the runway simultaneously; bounce or skew to one side can result if this is not achieved.
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The Harrier GR.3, operated by the RAF, also saw combat during the Falklands War. They operated from Hermes and provided close support to the ground forces and attacked Argentine positions but were unable to destroy the Port Stanley runway.
The Sea Harrier, modified to FRS2, saw combat during the Bosnia conflict, with one aircraft being shot down by Serbian defences in 1994. During the Kosovo War, combat patrols were flown, but no weapons were fired. The Sea Harrier patrolled over Iraq during the 12 years of enforcing no-fly zones.
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In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Harrier II versions saw extensive usage by both the USMC and RAF. USMC Harriers were based on two USMC amphibious assault ships, USS Bataan (LHD-5) and USS Bonhomme Richard (LHD-6). Each carried 24 Harriers, about four times their normal complement of fixed-wing aircraft, and tried out the long dormant secondary purpose of the LHDs and LHAs, that of a small aircraft carrier, or sea control ship. RAF Harriers were shore-based in Kuwait.
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Operators :
India, Italy, Spain, Thailand, United Kingdom (Royal Air Force, Royal Navy), United States (Marine Corps).
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General characteristics
Crew: One
Length: 45 ft 7 in (13.90 m)
Wingspan: 25 ft 3 in (7.70 m)
Height: 11 ft 4 in (3.45 m)
Empty weight: 12,190 lb (5,530 kg)
Loaded weight: 17,260 lb (7,830 kg)
Maximum gross takeoff weight: 25,350 lb (11,500 kg)
Powerplant:
1× Rolls-Royce Pegasus 101 turbofan with four swivelling nozzles and four 'puffer jets' in the nose, the wing tips, and one (steerable) on the tail.
Performance:
Maximum speed: 735 mph (1,185 km/h)
Service ceiling: 49,200 ft (15,000 m)
Thrust/weight: 1.10:1
Armament:
2x 30 mm Aden cannon pods under the fuselage
A variety of bombs, reconnaissance pods, AS-37 Martel or AIM-9D guided missiles on five hardpoints.
Links:
RAF
http://www.harrier.org.uk/welcome/index.htm
AV-8B Harrier
Video: Harrier
(Adapted from http://www.wikipedia.org/)
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