Fairey Fireflash
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| Fireflash | |
|---|---|
Fireflash missile |
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| Type | air-to-air missile |
| Place of origin | United Kingdom |
| Service history | |
| In service | 1955 - 1958 |
| Used by | United Kingdom |
| Wars | n/a |
| Production history | |
| Designed | 1949 |
| Manufacturer | Fairey Aviation |
| Produced | ? |
| Number built | c. 300 |
| Variants | ? |
| Specifications | |
| Weight | 150 kg (330 lb) |
| Length | 2.83 m (9 ft 4 in) |
| Diameter | ? |
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|
| Warhead | ? |
| Detonation mechanism |
? |
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|
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| Engine | 2 solid fuel booster motors |
| Wingspan | ? |
| Operational range |
1.9 miles (3.1 km) |
| Flight ceiling | ? |
| Speed | Mach 2 (max) |
| Guidance system |
beam rider |
| Steering system |
control surfaces |
| Launch platform |
aircraft |
The Fairey Fireflash was the first British air-to-air missile. Generally unsuccessful, it served only in small numbers.
Contents |
[edit] Development
Produced in response to a Ministry of Supply requirement for a guided air-to-air missile. The project began in 1949 under the name Blue Sky. It was initially developed under the designation Pine Hawk. Blue Sky itself was a derated version of the Red Hawk missile.
About 300 missiles were produced by 1955, but the Royal Air Force (RAF) soon decided it was untenable. The missiles were used for testing purposes by 6 JSTU at RAF Valley and Woomera, South Australia from 1955-1957 using Meteor NF11 trials aircraft and subsequently by the Supermarine Swift fighters of No. 1 Guided Weapons Development Squadron at RAF Valley. The RAF chose to field the later de Havilland Firestreak instead.
[edit] Description
Fireflash was a beam-riding missile, relying on radar command guidance from the launch aircraft. It had a very unusual configuration: the missile was propelled by a pair of solid rocket boosters on the forward fuselage, which were jettisoned 1.5 seconds after launch, leaving the missile to coast into its target. This configuration was developed for fear that ionised particles from a rocket motor would interfere with the guidance radar signals, but it inevitably limited both range and flight duration.
[edit] Operators
[edit] notes and references
[edit] See also
- Sea Slug missile - a contemporary naval beam-riding missile with wrap-around boosters
- Rainbow Codes
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