Avro Vulcan

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Transcript of Avro Vulcan

Page 1: Avro Vulcan

Avro Vulcan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Page 2: Avro Vulcan

Avro Vulcan

A Royal Air Force Vulcan B.2 in flight.

Type Strategic bomber

Manufacturer Avro

Designed by Roy Chadwick

Maiden flight 1952-08-31

Introduced 1956

Retired March 1984

Status 21 on display in museums

Primary user Royal Air Force

Produced 1956-1965

Number built 134

The Avro Vulcan was a British delta-wing subsonic bomber, operated by the Royal AirForce from 1953 until 1984. The Vulcan was part of the RAF's V bomber force, whichfulfilled the role of nuclear deterrence against the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

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Design and prototypes

Design work began at A. V. Roe in 1947 under Roy Chadwick. The Ministry of Defence specificationrequired a bomber with a top speed of 500 knots (930 km/h), an operating ceiling of 50,000 ft (15,000m), a range of 3,000 nautical miles (5500 km) and a bomb load of 10,000 lb (4500 kg). Design workalso began at Vickers and Handley Page, and all three designs were approved — the Valiant, the Victor,and the Vulcan.

Avro began scale prototype testing in 1948 with the single-seater Type 707, and despite the crash of thefirst prototype on 30 September 1949 work continued. The first full-scale prototype aircraft, the Type698, made its maiden flight (after its designer had died) on 31 August 1952. The Vulcan name was notchosen until 1953.

Operational aircraft

In September 1956 the RAF received its first Vulcan B.1, XA897, which immediately went on a fly-the-flag mission to New Zealand. On 1 October, while approaching London Airport to complete the tour,XA897 crashed short of the runway in bad weather conditions. The second Vulcan was not delivereduntil 1957, and the delivery rate picked up from then. The B.2 variant was first tested in 1957 andentered service in 1960. It had a larger wing and better performance than the B.1 and had a distinctivekink in its delta wing to reduce turbulence. In all 134 Vulcans were produced (45 B.1 and 89 B.2), thelast being delivered to the RAF in January 1965. The last military-operational Vulcan squadron wasdisbanded in March 1984.

On 14 October 1975 Vulcan B.2 XM645 of No.9 Squadron RAF Waddington lost its right undercarriagewhen it attempted to land at Luqa airport in Malta. The pilot decided to do a circuit to crash land onrunway 24 after it was covered with fire prevention foam. As the aircraft was turning inbound for thelanding, it broke up in mid-air over the village of Zabbar, killing 5 of its 7 crew members. Large piecesof the aircraft fell on the village, but with very low casualties — one woman (Vincenza Zammit, 48),who was shopping in a street was hit by an electric cable and was killed instantly, and some 20 otherswere injured slightly. Only the pilot and co-pilot escaped, using their ejector seats.[1]

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Nuclear deterrent

Royal Air Force Avro 698 Vulcan B.1

As part of Britain's independent nuclear deterrent the Vulcan initially carried Britain's first nuclearweapon, the Blue Danube gravity bomb. Blue Danube was a low-kiloton yield fission bomb designedbefore the United States detonated the first hydrogen bomb. The British then embarked on their ownhydrogen bomb programme, and to bridge the gap until these were ready the V-bombers were equippedwith an Interim Megaton Weapon based on the Blue Danube casing and Green Grass, a large pure-fission warhead of 400 kT yield. This bomb was known as Violet Club. Only five were deployed beforea better weapon was introduced as Yellow Sun Mk.1. A later model, Yellow Sun Mk.2 was fitted withRed Snow, a British-built variant of the U.S. Mk-28 warhead, and Yellow Sun Mk.2 was the first Britishthermonuclear weapon to be deployed, on both the Vulcan and Victor. All three V-bombers also carriedU.S. thermonuclear bombs assigned to NATO under the dual-key arrangements. Red Beard (a smaller,lighter low-kiloton yield) bomb was pre-positioned in Cyprus and Singapore for use by Vulcan andVictor bombers, and from 1962 26 Vulcan B.2As and the Victor bombers were armed with the BlueSteel missile, a rocket-powered stand-off bomb, which was also armed with the 1.1 megaton yield RedSnow warhead. When the Skybolt ALBM was cancelled and Blue Steel retired, the Vulcan bombersadopted a high-low-high mission profile using a rapidly introduced parachute-retarded laydown bomb,WE.177B. This weapon WE.177 extended the life of the Vulcan in a strategic role until the BritishPolaris submarines were operational. WE.177B continued in use on the Vulcan in a low-level tacticalstrike role in support of European NATO ground forces, and outlived the Vulcan bombers, being usedalso on Tornado and other low-level strike aircraft until retirement in 1998.

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Conventional role

Avro Vulcan from Operation Black Buck at East Fortune, 2002, showing mission markings.

Although the primary weapon for the Vulcan was nuclear, Vulcans could carry up to 21 x 1000 lb (454kg) bombs in a secondary role. The only combat missions involving the Vulcan took place in the 1982Falklands War with Argentina, when a number of Vulcans flew the 3,380 nautical miles (6300 km) fromAscension Island to Stanley to bomb the occupied airfield there with conventional bombs in OperationBlack Buck. By this date the number of Victor aircraft available for air-to-air refueling was extremelylimited, so some Vulcan aircraft were adapted in 50 days to fulfil that role. Five Vulcans were selectedfor the operation: their bomb bays were modified, the fuel systems replaced and the electronics updated.The first bombing mission was on April 30–May 1, 1982 and there were five further bombing missions.At the time these missions held the record for the world's longest distance raids. While only one 1000 lbbomb hit Stanley's runway, the raid demonstrated the willingness and ability of the British to attack theArgentine defences.

Aerial refuelling role

After the end of the Falklands War, the Vulcan was due to be withdrawn from RAF service. However,the disbandment of 57 Squadron and delays in the operational availability of the Tristar left a gap in theRAF's air to air refuelling capability. As an interim measure six Vulcan B.2s were converted into AARtankers and commissioned into service with 50 Squadron from 1982 to 1984.

Restoration to flight

A team of volunteers and specialists called the "Vulcan 558 Club" (Formally "Vulcan To The SkyClub") are working to return Vulcan XH558 to flight; they are hoping to have the plane ready for a testflight in early 2007. Though the website carried an announcement on 1 August 2006 that the project wasin imminent danger of being abandoned due to lack of finance [2], the target of raising the remaining£1.2m was achieved on 31 August, thanks to a high-profile publicity campaign. Time had almost run outfor XH558 when Sir Jack Hayward, a British philanthropist, donated £500,000. It is now hoped that theaircraft will be ready in time for the 25th anniversary of the Falklands conflict in 2007. [3]

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Trivia

The Vulcan was the first jet-powered bomber to use delta wings. Wing Commander Roly Falk demonstrated the aircraft's high performance in the

second production Vulcan, XA890, by performing a barrel-roll immediately aftertakeoff at the 1955 Farnborough Air Show.

A Vulcan was used as a test-bed for the Concorde engine, the Rolls-Royce/Snecma Olympus and the Rolls-Royce Conway turbofan.

Although the Vulcan had a crew of up to seven, only the pilot and co-pilot wereprovided with ejector seats. This feature of the Vulcan has been the basis ofsignificant criticism; there were instances of the pilot and co-pilot ejecting in anemergency leaving their colleagues to face death. The navigator and electronicsoperator could only escape by tilting their seats and climbing out of the cockpitafter the pilots had ejected. Their parachutes were opened automatically (by staticline). This method of escape was practised regularly, and successfully put intoaction on more than one occasion, with all crew members surviving, but relied onthe absence of g-forces which in other cases made it impossible.

The wing tip of a Vulcan made contact with the runway during a New Zealandairshow. It landed safely, but with severe damage to one main undercarriage.There was a long delay while it was decided whether to scrap it, ship it back bysea, or repair it in situ. In the end,the aircraft was repaired by the RNZAF - whohopefully applied kiwi roundels. A display at the Ohakea branch of the RoyalNew Zealand Air Force Museum includes honeycombed skin from the damagedaircraft.

Testing the brakes of the Vulcan included strapping the company photographerPaul Culerne to the front landing gear with the aircraft moving at full landingspeed and photographing the brakes in operation. [4]

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Specifications (Vulcan B.2)

Ventral view of Avro Vulcan B.2 (XH558)

General characteristics

Crew: 5: Pilot, Co-Pilot, Navigator Plotter, Navigator Radar and Air Electronics Officer (twoextra seats could be fitted for Crew Chiefs if required, for a total of 7 crew)

Length: 99 ft 11 in (30.45 m) Wingspan: 111 ft 0 in (33.83 m) Height: 27 ft 2 in (8.28 m) Wing area: 3,965 ft² (368.4 m²) Empty weight: 80,000 lb (36 000 kg) Loaded weight: 199,585 lb (90 530 kg) Useful load: 21,000 lb (9550 kg) Max takeoff weight: 204,000 lb (92 500 kg) Powerplant: 4× Bristol-Siddeley Olympus 301 turbojets, 20,000 lbf (89 kN) each

Performance

Maximum speed: 560 knots (645 mph, 1040 km/h) Cruise speed: 540 knots (625 mph, 1005 km/h) Range: 2,000 nm (2,300 mi, 3700 km) Service ceiling: 62,300 ft (19 000 m) Wing loading: 50 lb/ft² (246 kg/m²) Thrust/weight: 0.88

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Armament

Missiles:

o 1× Blue Steel stand-off missile armed with a thermonuclear warheado 2× AGM-45 Shrike anti-radiation missiles

Bombs:

o 1× Yellow Sun Mk.2 nuclear bomb armed with a thermonuclear warheador

o 21× 1,000 lb (450 kg) bombs

In popular culture

The Vulcan bomber was featured in the 1965 James Bond movie Thunderball.Agents of SPECTRE hijacked a Vulcan bomber in order to use its two nuclearbombs for a ransom plot against the US and Britain.

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