Hawker Siddeley Red Top

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Red Top

Red Top missile
Type air-to-air
Place of origin United Kingdom
Service history
In service 1964 - 1988
Used by United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait
Production history
Manufacturer Hawker Siddeley Dynamics
Variants  ?
Specifications
Weight 154 kg
Length 3.32 m
Diameter 0.23 m

Warhead 31 kg (68.3 lb) annular blast fragmentation
Detonation
mechanism
Green Garland infrared proximity

Engine Linnet solid fuel motor
Wingspan 0.91 m
Operational
range
7.5 miles (12 km)
Speed Mach 3.2
Guidance
system
infrared, limited all-aspect
Steering
system
control surfaces

The Hawker Siddeley (later British Aerospace) Red Top was the third indigenous British air-to-air missile to enter service, following the de Havilland Firestreak and limited-service Fairey Fireflash.

Contents

[edit] Development

Red Top was originally a rationalized, upgraded version of the earlier Firestreak air-to-air missile carried out by de Havilland Propellors and was known as Blue Jay Mark 4 (its development codename) and Firestreak Mk. IV. Such were the changes that it was effectively a new missile. It arranged its components in more logical fashion than the Firestreak (which had its warhead in the tail), with an improved "Violet Banner" seeker, "Green Garland" IR fuse, and a more powerful "Linnet" booster rocket. It also had a larger warhead, at 31 kg (68.3 lb) against 22.7 kg (50 lb).

The Red Top had greater range and maneuvrability than the Firestreak, and its more sensitive infrared seeker enabled a wider range of engagement angles. Being more sensitive it could home in on a target that had been warmed by air friction heating [1] although it was still not a true all-aspect missile like the later AIM-9L/M Sidewinder.

The Red Top entered service in 1964, arming the English Electric Lightning and de Havilland Sea Vixen. It remained in limited service until the final retirement of the Lightning in 1988.

A variant called Blue Dolphin or Blue Jay Mk. V, was proposed, using semi-active radar homing for capability similar to the AIM-7 Sparrow, but it was not adopted.

[edit] Operators

Hawker Siddeley Red Top missile mounted on an English Electric Lightning at the RAF Museum at Hendon, London.
Hawker Siddeley Red Top missile mounted on an English Electric Lightning at the RAF Museum at Hendon, London.

[edit] See also

[edit] External link

[edit] References

  1. ^ The English Electric (BAC) Lightning
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