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Hawker Siddeley Nimrod

The Hawker Siddeley Nimrod is a retired maritime patrol aircraft developed and operated by the United Kingdom. It was an extensive modification of the de Havilland Comet, the world's first operational jet airliner. It was originally designed by de Havilland's successor firm, Hawker Siddeley; further development and maintenance work was undertaken by Hawker Siddeley's own successor companies, British Aerospace and, later, BAE Systems.

Nimrod
Hawker Siddeley Nimrod MR.2
Role Maritime patrol aircraft
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Hawker Siddeley
BAE Systems
First flight 23 May 1967
Introduction 2 October 1969
Retired 28 June 2011[1]
Primary user Royal Air Force
Number built 49 (+2 prototypes)
Developed from de Havilland Comet
Variants Nimrod R.1
Nimrod AEW.3
Nimrod MRA.4

Designed in response to a requirement issued by the Royal Air Force (RAF) to replace its fleet of ageing Avro Shackletons, the Nimrod MR1/MR2s were primarily fixed-wing aerial platforms for anti-submarine warfare (ASW) operations; secondary roles included maritime surveillance and anti-surface warfare. It served from the early 1970s until March 2010.[2] The intended replacement was to be extensively rebuilt Nimrod MR2s, designated Nimrod MRA4. Due to considerable delays, repeated cost overruns, and financial cutbacks, the development of the MRA4 was abandoned in 2010.[3]

The RAF also operated a small number of the Nimrod R1, an electronic intelligence gathering (ELINT) variant. A dedicated airborne early warning platform, the Nimrod AEW3, was in development from late 1970s to the mid-1980s; however, much like the MRA4, considerable problems were encountered in development and thus the project was cancelled in 1986 in favour of an off-the-shelf solution in the Boeing E-3 Sentry. All Nimrod variants had been retired by mid-2011.

Development Edit

 
Nimrod MR1 XV262 landing at RAF St Mawgan in July 1981

MR1 Edit

External image
  Circa 1967, Nimrod XV242 taxiing at RAF Changi during the type's test and evaluation phase in the Far East

On 4 June 1964, the British Government issued Air Staff Requirement 381, which sought a replacement for the aging Avro Shackleton maritime patrol aircraft of the Royal Air Force (RAF).[4] Such a replacement had been necessitated by the rapidly-approaching fatigue life limitations accumulated across the Shackleton fleet.[5] A great deal of interest in the requirement was received from both British and foreign manufacturers, who offered aircraft including the Lockheed P-3 Orion, the Breguet Atlantic and derivatives of the Hawker Siddeley Trident, BAC One-Eleven, Vickers VC10 and de Havilland Comet.[6][7] On 2 February 1965, Prime Minister Harold Wilson announced the intention to order Hawker Siddeley's maritime patrol version of the Comet, the HS.801 as a replacement for Shackleton Mk 2.[8][9][N 1]

The Nimrod design was based on the Comet 4 civil airliner which had reached the end of its commercial life (the first two prototype Nimrods, XV148 and XV147, were built from two final unfinished Comet 4C airframes). The Comet's turbojet engines were replaced by Rolls-Royce Spey turbofans for better fuel efficiency, particularly at the low altitudes required for maritime patrol. Major fuselage changes were made, including an internal weapons bay, an extended nose for radar, a new tail with electronic warfare (ESM) sensors mounted in a bulky fairing, and a MAD (magnetic anomaly detector) boom. After the first flight in May 1967, the RAF ordered 46 Nimrod MR1s.[10] The first example (XV230) entered service in October 1969.[11] A total of five squadrons using the type were established; four were permanently based in the UK and a fifth was initially based in Malta.[11]

R1 Edit

 
Nimrod R1 XW665 landing during Waddington International Airshow in Lincolnshire in 2009

Three Nimrod aircraft were adapted for the signals intelligence role, replacing the Comet C2s and Canberras of No. 51 Squadron in May 1974.[12][13] The R1 was visually distinguished from the MR2 by the lack of a MAD boom.[14] It was fitted with an array of rotating dish aerials in the aircraft's bomb bay, with further dish aerials in the tailcone and at the front of the wing-mounted fuel tanks. It had a flight crew of four (two pilots, a flight engineer and one navigator) and up to 25 crew operating the SIGINT equipment.[15]

Only since the end of the Cold War has the role of the aircraft been officially acknowledged; they were once described as "radar calibration aircraft". The R1s have not suffered the same rate of fatigue and corrosion as the MR2s. One R1 was lost in a flying accident since the type's introduction; this occurred in May 1995 during a flight test after major servicing, at RAF Kinloss. To replace this aircraft an MR2 was selected for conversion to R1 standard, and entered service in December 1996.[16]

The Nimrod R1 was based initially at RAF Wyton, Cambridgeshire, and later at RAF Waddington, Lincolnshire, and flown by 51 Sqn. The two remaining Nimrod R1s were originally planned to be retired at the end of March 2011, but operational requirements forced the RAF to deploy one to RAF Akrotiri, Cyprus on 16 March in support of Operation Ellamy. The last flight of the type was on 28 June 2011 from RAF Waddington, in the presence of the Chief of the Air Staff, ACM Sir Stephen Dalton.[1][17] XV 249, the former MR2, is now on display at the RAF Museum Cosford, West Midlands. The R1 was replaced by three Boeing RC-135W Rivet Joint aircraft, acquired under the Airseeker project; the first aircraft was delivered in late 2013.[18]

MR2 Edit

 
Nimrod MR2 XV254 at a steep bank while displaying at the Royal International Air Tattoo, 2006

Starting in 1975, 35 aircraft were upgraded to MR2 standard, being re-delivered from August 1979.[19] The upgrade included extensive modernisation of the aircraft's electronic suite. Changes included the replacement of the 1950s ASV Mk 21 radar used by the Shackleton and Nimrod MR1 with the new EMI Searchwater radar,[N 2] a new acoustic processor (GEC-Marconi AQS-901) capable of handling more modern sonobuoys, a new mission data recorder (Hanbush) and a new Electronic Support Measures (Yellow Gate) which included new pods on the wingtips.[19][21]

Provision for in-flight refuelling was introduced during the Falklands War (as the MR2P), as well as hardpoints to allow the Nimrod to carry the AIM-9 Sidewinder missile to counter enemy Argentine Air Force maritime surveillance aircraft.[22] In preparation for operations in the Gulf War theatre, several MR2s were fitted with new communications and ECM equipment[clarification needed] to deal with anticipated threats; at the time these modified aircraft were given the designation MR2P(GM) (Gulf Mod).[23]

The Nimrod MR2 carried out three main roles: Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW), Anti-Surface Unit Warfare (ASUW) and Search and Rescue (SAR). Its extended range enabled the crew to monitor maritime areas far to the north of Iceland and up to 2,200 nautical miles (4,000 km) out into the Western Atlantic. With Air-to-Air Refuelling (AAR), range and endurance was greatly extended. The crew consisted of two pilots and one flight engineer, two navigators (one tactical navigator and a routine navigator), one Air Electronics Officer (AEO), the sonobuoy sensor team of two Weapon System Operators (WSOp ACO) and four Weapon System Operators (WSOp EW) to manage passive and active electronic warfare systems.

Until 1992, the Nimrod MR2 was based at RAF Kinloss in Scotland (120, 201 and 206 Squadrons), and RAF St Mawgan in Cornwall (42 and 38(R) Squadrons). Following Options for Change, 42 Squadron was disbanded and its number reassigned to 38(R) Squadron. The Nimrod MR2 aircraft was withdrawn on 31 March 2010, a year earlier than planned, for financial reasons.[24][25] The last official flight of a Nimrod MR2 took place on 26 May 2010, with XV229 flying from RAF Kinloss to Kent International Airport to be used as an evacuation training airframe at the nearby MOD Defence Fire Training and Development Centre.[26]

AEW3 Edit

 
Nimrod AEW3 XZ286 at the 1980 Farnborough Air Show

In the mid-1970s a modified Nimrod was proposed for the Airborne Early Warning (AEW) mission – again as a replacement for the Lancaster-derived, piston-engined Shackleton AEW.2. Eleven existing Nimrod airframes were to be converted by British Aerospace to house the GEC Marconi radars in a bulbous nose and tail. The Nimrod AEW3 project was plagued by cost over-runs and problems with the GEC 4080M computer used.[27] Eventually, the MoD recognised that the cost of developing the radar system to achieve the required level of performance was prohibitive and the probability of success very uncertain, and in December 1986 the project was cancelled. The RAF eventually received seven Boeing E-3 Sentry aircraft instead.[27]

MRA4 Edit

 
Nimrod MRA4 during a test flight

The Nimrod MRA4 was intended to replace the capability provided by the MR2. It was essentially a new aircraft, with current-generation Rolls-Royce BR710 turbofan engines, a new larger wing, and fully refurbished fuselage. The project was subject to delays, cost over-runs, and contract re-negotiations. The type had been originally intended to enter service in 2003 but was cancelled in 2010 as a result of the Strategic Defence and Security Review, at which point it was £789 million over-budget;[3] the development airframes were also scrapped.[28] Some functions were allocated to other assets, with Hercules transport aircraft and Sentry Airborne Early Warning aircraft given some tasks, but the cancellation of the MRA4 resulted in a significant gap in long-range maritime patrol and search-and rescue capability.[29][30]

In July 2016, the Ministry of Defence announced the purchase of nine Boeing P-8A Poseidon aircraft for the RAF. The RAF declared the P-8 had reached initial operating capability (IOC) on 1 April 2020, by which time two of the planes had been delivered.[31] The nine aircraft will be based at RAF Lossiemouth.[32]

Design Edit

Overview Edit

The Nimrod was the first jet-powered maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) to enter service, being powered by the Rolls-Royce Spey turbofan engine.[10][33] Aircraft in this role had been commonly propelled by piston or turboprop powerplants instead to maximise fuel economy and enable maximum patrol time on station. Advantages of the Nimrod's turbofan engines included greater speed and altitude capabilities, and it was more capable of evading detection by submarines, as propeller-driven aircraft are more detectable underwater by standard acoustic sensors.[34] The Nimrods had a flight endurance of ten hours without aerial refuelling. The MR2s were later fitted to receive mid-air refuelling in response to demands of the Falklands War.[35]

 
Pair of Nimrod R1s flying in formation, August 2004

At the start of a patrol mission all four engines would normally be running; as the aircraft's weight was reduced by fuel consumption, up to two engines could be shut down, allowing the remaining engines to be operated more efficiently.[10] Instead of relying on ram air to restart an inactive engine, compressor air could be crossfed from a live engine to a starter turbine. The crossfeed duct was later discovered to be a potential fire hazard.[36][37] Similarly, the two hydraulic systems on board were designed to be powered by the two inner engines that would always be running.[37] Electrical generation was designed to far exceed the consumption of existing equipment to accommodate additional systems installed over the Nimrod's service life.[37]

The standard Nimrod fleet carried out three basic operational roles during their RAF service: Anti-Submarine Warfare duties typically involved surveillance over an allocated area of the North Atlantic to detect the presence of Soviet submarines in that area and to track their movements. In the event of war, reconnaissance information gathered during these patrols would be shared with other allied aircraft to enable coordinated strikes at both submarines and surface targets.[34] Search and rescue (SAR) missions were another important duty of the RAF's Nimrod fleet, operating under the Air Rescue Coordination Centre at RAF Kinloss, and were a common sight in both military and civil maritime incidents. Throughout the Nimrod's operational life, a minimum of one aircraft was held in a state of readiness to respond to SAR demands at all times.[34]

Avionics Edit

 
Nimrod MR2 performing a low pass at Alconbury, August 1990

The Nimrod featured a crew of up to 25 personnel, although a typical crew numbered roughly 12,[10] most of whom operated the various onboard sensor suites and specialist detection equipment.[35] A significant proportion of the onboard sensor equipment was housed outside the pressure shell inside the Nimrod's distinctive pannier lower fuselage.[33] Sensor systems included radar, sonar, and the magnetic anomaly detector; a 'sniffer' could detect exhaust fumes from diesel submarines as well.[38] The Nimrod and its detection capabilities were an important component of Britain's military defence during the height of the Cold War.[39]

The Nimrod's navigational functions were computerised, and were managed from a central tactical compartment housed in the forward cabin. Various functions such as weapons control and information from sensors such as the large forward doppler radar were displayed and controlled at the tactical station.[40] The flight systems and autopilot could be directly controlled by navigator's stations in the tactical compartment, giving the navigator nearly complete aircraft control.[41] The navigational systems comprised digital, analogue, and electro-mechanical elements. The computers were integrated with most of the Nimrod's guidance systems such as the air data computer, astrocompass, inertial guidance and doppler radar. Navigation information could also be manually input by the operators.[42]

Upon entry into service, the Nimrod was hailed as possessing advanced electronic equipment such as onboard digital computers. The increased capability of these electronic systems allowed the RAF's fleet of 46 Nimrod aircraft to provide equal coverage to that of the larger fleet of retiring Avro Shackletons.[10] The design philosophy of these computerised systems was that of a 'man-machine partnership'; while onboard computers performed much of the data sift and analysis processes, decisions and actions on the basis of that data remained in the operator's hands.[11] To support the Nimrod's anticipated long lifespan, onboard computers were designed to be capable of integrating with various new components, systems, and sensors that could be added in future upgrades.[43] After a mission, gathered information could be extracted for review purposes and for further analysis.[41]

Armaments and equipment Edit

The Nimrod featured a sizeable bomb bay in which, in addition to armaments such as torpedoes and missiles, could be housed a wide variety of specialist equipment for many purposes, such as up to 150 sonobuoys for ASW purposes or multiple air-deployed dinghies and droppable survival packs such as Lindholme Gear for SAR missions; additional fuel tanks and cargo could also be carried in the bomb bay during ferrying flights.[33] Other armaments equippable in the bomb bay include mines, bombs, and nuclear depth charges; later munitions included the Sting Ray torpedo and Harpoon missile for increased capability.[13]

 
The open bomb bay of a Nimrod

The Nimrod could also be fitted with two detachable pylons mounted underneath the wings to be used with missiles such as the Martel;[33] two specialised pylons were later added to enable the equipping of Sidewinder missiles, used for self-defence purposes against hostile aircraft.[35] A powerful remote-controlled searchlight was installed underneath the starboard wing for SAR operations.[33] For reconnaissance missions, the aircraft was also equipped with a pair of downward-facing cameras suited to low and high-altitude photography.[33] In later years a newer electro-optical camera system was installed for greater imaging quality.[44]

Various new ECMs and electronic support systems were retrofitted onto the Nimrod fleet in response to new challenges and to increase the type's defensive capabilities; additional equipment also provided more effective means of identification and communication.[45][46] A number of modifications were introduced during the 1991 Gulf War; a small number of MR2s were fitted with improved Link 11 datalinks, new defensive ECM equipment including the first operational use of a towed radar decoy, and a forward looking infrared turret under the starboard wing.[23]

Operational history Edit

Introduction to service Edit

The Nimrod first entered squadron service with the RAF at RAF St Mawgan in Cornwall in October 1969. These initial aircraft, designated as Nimrod MR1, were intended as a stop-gap measure, and thus were initially equipped with many of the same sensors and equipment as the Shackletons they were supplementing.[47] While some improvements were implemented on the MR1 fleet to enhance their detection capabilities, the improved Nimrod MR2 variant entered service in August 1979 following a lengthy development process.[48] The majority of the Nimrod fleet operated from RAF Kinloss in Scotland.[49]

 
Nimrod MR1 inflight, 1978

Operationally, each active Nimrod would form a single piece of a complex submarine detection and monitoring mission. An emphasis on real-time intelligence sharing was paramount to these operations; upon detecting a submarine, Nimrod aircrews would inform Royal Navy frigates and other NATO-aligned vessels to pursuit in an effort to continuously monitor Soviet submarines.[50] The safeguarding of the Royal Navy's Resolution-class ballistic missile submarines, which were the launch platform for Britain's nuclear deterrent, was viewed as being of the utmost priority.[51]

Falklands War Edit

Nimrods were first deployed to Wideawake airfield on Ascension Island on 5 April 1982,[52] the type at first being used to fly local patrols around Ascension to guard against potential Argentine attacks, and to escort the British Task Force as it sailed south towards the Falklands, with Nimrods also being used to provide search and rescue as well as communications relay support of the Operation Black Buck bombing raids by Avro Vulcans.[53] As the Task Force neared what would become the combat theatre and the threat from Argentine submarines rose, the more capable Nimrod MR2s took on operations initially performed by older Nimrod MR1s.[54] Aviation author Chris Chant has claimed that the Nimrod R1 also conducted electronic intelligence missions operating from Punta Arenas in neutral Chile.[55] The Chilean government allowed an RAF Nimrod R1 to fly signals reconnaissance sorties from the Desventuradas Islands, gathering information on Argentine Air Force movements.[56][57][58]

The addition of air-to-air refuelling probes allowed operations to be carried out in the vicinity of the Falklands, while the aircraft's armament was supplemented by the addition of 1,000 pounds (450 kg) general-purpose bombs, BL755 cluster bombs and AIM-9 Sidewinder air-to-air missiles.[59] The use of air-to-air refuelling allowed extremely long reconnaissance missions to be mounted, one example being a 19-hour 5-minute patrol conducted on 15 May 1982 (XV232 Airborne: 0803, Landing: 0308),[60] which passed within 60 miles (97 km) of the Argentine coast to confirm that Argentine surface vessels were not at sea. Another long-range flight was carried out by an MR2 on the night of 20/21 May, covering a total of 8,453 miles (13,604 km), the longest distance flight carried out during the Falklands War.[61] In all, Nimrods flew 111 missions from Ascension in support of British operations during the Falklands War.[62]

Gulf War Edit

A detachment of three Nimrod MR2s was deployed to Seeb in Oman in August 1990 as a result of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, carrying out patrols over the Gulf of Oman and Persian Gulf. Due to the level of threats present in the Gulf theatre, operational Nimrods were quickly retrofitted with a Marconi towed active decoy.[63] Once hostilities commenced, the Nimrod detachment, by now increased to five aircraft, concentrated on night patrols, with daylight patrols carried out by US Navy Lockheed P-3 Orions. Nimrods were used to guide Westland Lynx helicopters and Grumman A-6 Intruder attack aircraft against Iraqi patrol vessels, being credited with assisting in sinking or damaging 16 Iraqi vessels.[23]

 
Nimrods were often deployed to the Middle East

After the ground offensive against Iraqi forces had ended, Britain elected to maintain an RAF presence in the region through assets such as the Nimrod and other aircraft.[64] Nimrod R1s operated from August 1990 to March 1991 from Cyprus, providing almost continuous flying operations from the start of the ground offensive. Each R1 was retrofitted with the same Marconi towed active decoy as well as under wing chaff/flare dispensers, reportedly sourced from the Tornado fleet.[citation needed]

Afghanistan and Iraq War Edit

Nimrods were again deployed to the Middle East as part of the British contribution to the US-led invasion of Afghanistan; missions in this theatre involved the Nimrods performing lengthy overland flights for intelligence-gathering purposes.[65] On 2 September 2006, 14 UK military personnel were killed when a Nimrod MR2 was destroyed in a midair explosion following an onboard fire over Afghanistan. It was the single greatest loss of British military lives since the Falklands War.[66][67] The outbreak of the Iraq War in March 2003 saw the RAF's Nimrods being used for operations over Iraq, using the aircraft's sensors to detect hostile forces and to direct attacks by friendly coalition forces.[68]

Search and rescue Edit

While the Nimrod MR1/MR2 was in service, one aircraft from each of the squadrons on rotation was available for search and rescue operations at one-hour standby. The standby aircraft carried two sets of Lindholme Gear in the weapons bay. Usually one other Nimrod airborne on a training mission would also carry a set of Lindholme Gear. As well as using the aircraft sensors to find aircraft or ships in distress, it was used to find survivors in the water, with a capability to search areas of up to 20,000 square miles (52,000 km2). The main role would normally be to act as on-scene rescue coordinator to control ships, fixed-wing aircraft, and helicopters in the search area.[69][70]

The Nimrod was most often featured in the media in relation to its search-and-rescue role, such as in the reporting of major rescue incidents.[47] In August 1979, several Nimrods were involved in locating yachting competitors during the disaster-stricken 1979 Fastnet race and coordinated with helicopters in searches for survivors from lost vessels.[71] In March 1980, the Alexander L. Kielland, a Norwegian semi-submersible drilling rig, capsized whilst working in the Ekofisk oil field killing 123 people; six different Nimrods searched for survivors and took turns to provide rescue co-ordination, involving the control of 80 surface ships and 20 British and Norwegian helicopters.[69][72] In an example of its search capabilities, in September 1977 when an attempted crossing of the North Atlantic in a Zodiac inflatable dinghy went wrong, a Nimrod found the collapsed dinghy and directed a ship to it.[69]

Operation Tapestry Edit

 
Nimrods at RAF Kinloss, 1999

The Nimrods were often used to enforce Operation Tapestry. Tapestry is a codeword for the activities by ships and aircraft that protect the United Kingdom's Sovereign Sea Areas, including the protection of fishing rights and oil and gas extraction. Following the establishment of a 200 nautical miles (370 km) Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) at the beginning of 1977 the Nimrod fleet was given the task of patrolling the 270,000 square miles (700,000 km2) area. The aircraft would locate, identify, and photograph vessels operating in the EEZ.[73] The whole area was routinely patrolled. In addition to surveillance, the aircraft would communicate with all oil and gas platforms. During the Icelandic Cod Wars of 1972 and 1975–1976, the Nimrod fleet closely cooperated with Royal Navy surface vessels to protect British civilian fishing ships.[69][74]

Variants Edit

Type Role Number Built Notes
HS.801 Prototype 2 Built using redundant Comet 4 airframes
MR.1 Anti-submarine Warfare 46
R.1 Signals Intelligence 4 One converted from MR.2
MR.2 Anti-submarine warfare 35 Modernised MR.1 aircraft
AEW.3 Airborne early warning 11 Converted from redundant MR.1 aircraft; project cancelled
MRA.4 Anti-submarine warfare 5 Converted from MR.2; 21 planned; project cancelled

Operators Edit

  United Kingdom
  • Royal Air Force
    • 38 (R) Squadron – 1970–1992, "shadow" squadron identity assigned to 236 OCU, formed from the Maritime Operational Training Unit at RAF St Mawgan, England in 1970 with the MR.1, training role transferred to 42 (Reserve) Squadron in 1992.
    • 42 Squadron – 1971–2010, converted to the MR.1 from the Shackleton MR.3 at RAF St Mawgan, England in 1971, converted to the MR.2 1983–84, withdrawn as an operational squadron in 1992 it became the Operational Conversion Unit for the Nimrod at RAF Kinloss. The squadron MR.2 aircraft were withdrawn in 2010 and the squadron prepared to train crews for the MRA.4, following the decision to scrap the MRA.4 the squadron disbanded in 2011.
    • 51 Squadron – 1971–2011, R.1s added to fleet in 1971 at RAF Wyton, England to supplement the Comet C.2(R) which were withdrawn in 1975. Moved to RAF Waddington in 1995, the R.1s were the last flying Nimrods when they were withdrawn in 2011.
    • 120 Squadron – 1970–2010, converted to MR.1 from the Shackleton MR.3 at RAF Kinloss, Scotland in 1970, converted to the MR.2 1981–82, disbanded in 2010 following the withdrawal of the MR.2 from service.
    • 201 Squadron – 1970–2010, converted to MR.1 from the Shackleton MR.3 at RAF Kinloss, Scotland in 1970, converted to the MR.2 1982–83, disbanded in 2010 following the withdrawal of the MR.2 from service.
    • 203 Squadron – 1971–1977, converted to MR.1 from the Shackleton MR.3 at RAF Luqa, Malta in 1971, disbanded in 1977 following the decision to withdraw British forces from Malta.
    • 206 Squadron – 1971–2005, converted to MR.1 from the Shackleton MR.3 at RAF Kinloss, Scotland in 1970, converted to MR.2 1980–81, disbanded in 2005.
    • Nimrod AEW Joint Trials Unit – 1984–1987, trials unit for the AEW.3 based at RAF Waddington.

Aircraft on display Edit

External video
  Nimrod arriving at Manchester Airport aviation viewing park
  Nimrod conducts flyover prior to landing at Coventry Airport
  Nimrod MR2 take-off from RAF Kinloss
MR2
R1

Accidents and incidents Edit

Five Nimrods were lost in accidents during the type's service with the RAF:[83][84]

  • On 17 November 1980, a Nimrod MR2 XV256 crashed near RAF Kinloss after three engines failed following multiple birdstrikes. Both pilots were killed but the remaining crew survived.[85]
  • On 3 June 1984, a Nimrod MR2 XV257 stationed at RAF St Mawgan suffered extensive damage when a reconnaissance flare ignited in the bomb bay during flight. The aircraft successfully returned to base but was subsequently written-off due to fire damage. There were no casualties.[86]
  • On 16 May 1995, a Nimrod R1 XW666 ditched in the Moray Firth 4.5 miles (7.2 km) from Lossiemouth after an engine caught fire during a post-servicing test flight from RAF Kinloss. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) inquiry identified a number of technical issues as the cause. There were no casualties.[87]
  • On 2 September 1995, a Nimrod MR2 XV239 crashed into Lake Ontario while participating in the Canadian International Air Show, killing the seven crew members.[88][89]
  • On 2 September 2006, a Nimrod MR2 XV230 crashed near Kandahar in Afghanistan, killing all 14 servicemen on board – the largest loss of UK military personnel in a single event since the Falklands War.[90] This was the first Nimrod to enter service, originally as an MR1 but upgraded to MR2 standard in the 1980s.[91] On 23 February 2007, the Ministry of Defence grounded all Nimrod MR2s while fuel pumps were inspected, but stressed that the inspection was not necessarily related to this crash.[92]
  • On 5 November 2007, XV235 was involved in a midair incident over Afghanistan when the crew noticed a fuel leak during air-to-air refuelling.[93] After transmitting a mayday call, the crew landed the aircraft successfully. The incident came only a month before the issue of the report of a Board of Enquiry into 2 September 2006 fatal accident to XV230 in (likely) similar circumstances. The RAF subsequently suspended air-to-air refuelling operations for this type.

Specifications (MR.2) Edit

 
Wooden Nimrod model used for aerodynamic wind tunnel testing
 
Flight deck of a Nimrod, May 2006
External image
  retouched by Flight Global in 2006

Data from Wilson[94]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 13
  • Capacity: 13,500 lb (6,123 kg)
  • Length: 126 ft 9 in (38.63 m)
  • Wingspan: 114 ft 10 in (35.00 m)
  • Height: 31 ft (9.4 m)
  • Wing area: 197.05 sq ft (18.307 m2)
  • Empty weight: 86,000 lb (39,009 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 192,000 lb (87,090 kg)
  • Fuel capacity: 85,840 lb (38,936 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Rolls-Royce Spey turbofan engines, 12,160 lbf (54.1 kN) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 500 kn (580 mph, 930 km/h)
  • Cruise speed: 426 kn (490 mph, 789 km/h)
  • Range: 4,501–5,001 nmi (5,180–5,755 mi, 8,336–9,262 km)
  • Service ceiling: 43,999 ft (13,411 m)

Armament

See also Edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Following evaluation testing by the RAF, the Vickers VC10 had been identified as highly suitable for the task; however, an initial version of Comet-based Nimrod could be in service within five years, a more capable Nimrod equipped with the envisioned avionics would follow.[7]
  2. ^ Equipped with the Searchwater radar, a Nimrod could offer an "AWACS-like" capability in the maritime environment.[20]

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b "Nimrod R1 makes final flight" 25 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Defence Management Journal, 28 June 2011. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
  2. ^ Cook, James. "Final air miles for 'spy in the sky' crews." BBC, 26 March 2010. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
  3. ^ a b Blitz, James (16 November 2011). "MoD makes progress on cost overruns". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  4. ^ Haddon-Cave 2009, pp. 16–17.
  5. ^ Jefford et al. 2005, p. 87.
  6. ^ Chartres 1986, p. 12.
  7. ^ a b Jefford et al. 2005, p. 131.
  8. ^ . Flight International. Vol. 87, no. 2918. 11 February 1965. p. 224. Archived from the original on 31 July 2013.
  9. ^ . Flight International. Vol. 87, no. 2924. 25 March 1965. pp. 465–466. Archived from the original on 31 July 2013.
  10. ^ a b c d e Fricker 1972, p. 593.
  11. ^ a b c Neal 1970, p. 119.
  12. ^ Lake Air International July 2001, p. 31.
  13. ^ a b Fricker 1972, p. 594.
  14. ^ Haddon-Cave 2009, p. 17.
  15. ^ Lake Air International July 2001, pp. 30–31.
  16. ^ Lake Air International July 2001, p. 34.
  17. ^ "Nimrod R1 aircraft in final flight for RAF." BBC, 28 June 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2011.
  18. ^ "PICTURES: First RAF Rivet Joint aircraft arrives in UK."Flight Global. Retrieved: 18 December 2013
  19. ^ a b Donald 1996, p. 95.
  20. ^ Jefford et al. 2005, p. 134.
  21. ^ Air International July 1981, pp. 9–10, 12–14.
  22. ^ Brown 1987, p. 110.
  23. ^ a b c Lake 2005, pp. 53–54.
  24. ^ "Last flight of the Nimrod MR2." Ministry of Defence, 31 March 2010.
  25. ^ "Planning Round 10 is Going to be a Tough One." 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine RAF Families Federation, 6 January 2010.
  26. ^ Wilson, Tom. "Historic plane ends its career at Manston." 2 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine This is Kent, 8 June 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2011.
  27. ^ a b "BAe Nimrod AEW 3." 2 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Spyflight. Retrieved: 20 October 2010.
  28. ^ "Scrapping RAF Nimrods 'perverse' say military chiefs." BBC News, 27 January 2011.
  29. ^ Hoyle, Craig. "IN FOCUS: UK left exposed by Nimrod cancellation, report says". Flightglobal, 27 September 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  30. ^ "Future Maritime Surveillance" (PDF). House of Commons Defence Select Committee. 19 September 2012. Retrieved 28 May 2020..
  31. ^ "RAF Declare Poseidon an Initial Operating Capability". raf.mod. 3 April 2020. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 9 February 2017.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Neal 1970, p. 120.
  34. ^ a b c Rininger 2006, p. 69.
  35. ^ a b c Rininger 2006, p. 125.
  36. ^ Haddon-Cave 2009, p. 20.
  37. ^ a b c Neal 1970, p. 121.
  38. ^ Neal 1970, pp. 127–128.
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Bibliography Edit

  • Brown, David. The Royal Navy and the Falklands War. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1987. ISBN 978-0-87021-572-8.
  • Burden, Rodney A., Michael A. Draper, Douglas A. Rough, Colin A. Smith and David Wilton. Falklands: The Air War. Twickenham, UK: British Air Review Group, 1996. ISBN 0-906339-05-7.
  • Chant, Chris. Air War in the Falklands 1982. Osprey Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1-8417-6293-8.
  • Chartres, John. BAe Nimrod (Modern Combat Aircraft 24). Shepperton, Surrey, UK: Ian Allan, 1986. ISBN 0-7110-1575-9.
  • Donald, David and Jon Lake. Encyclopedia of World Military Aircraft. London: Aerospace Publishing, Single Volume Edition, 1996. ISBN 1-874023-95-6.
  • "A Face-Lift For The Nimrod". Air International, Volume 21, No 1, July 1981, pp. 7–16. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Fricker, John. MR2 "Nimrod: ASW Specialist." Flight International, 27 April 1972. pp. 593–594.
  • Friedman, Norman. World Naval Weapons Systems, 1997–98. Naval Institute Press, 1997. ISBN 1-5575-0268-4.
  • Future Maritime Surveillance: Fifth Report of Session 2012–13: Volume I, Report together with formal minutes, oral and written evidence. House of Commons Defence Committee. London: HMSO, 5 September 2012.
  • Haddon-Cave, Charles. The Nimrod Review: An Independent Review into the Broader Issues Surrounding the Loss of the RAF Nimrod MR2 Aircraft XV230 in Afghanistan in 2006. London: The Stationery Office, 2009. ISBN 0-10-296265-0.
  • Jefford, C.G. (ed.). "Seminar – Maritime Operations." Royal Air Force Historical Society, 2005. ISSN 1361-4231.
  • Lake, Jon. "Nimrod R.1: The RAF's SIGINT Platform Extraordinaire". Air International, Vol. 61, No. 1, July 2001, pp. 29–35. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Lake, Jon. "New Roles for the Mighty Hunter". Air International, Vol. 69, No. 3, September 2005, pp. 52–56. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Neal, Molly. "Nimrod: Systematic Sub Hunter". Flight International, Vol. 97, No. 3176, 22 January 1970, pp. 119–128.
  • Rininger, Tyson V. Red Flag: Air Combat for the 21st Century. Zenith Imprint, 2006. ISBN 0-760325-30-8.
  • Wilson, Stewart. Combat Aircraft since 1945. London: Aerospace Publications, 2000. ISBN 1-875671-50-1.

External links Edit

  • Nimrod Was Actually a Fine Hunter: Britain's MRA4 Program – Defense Industry Daily

hawker, siddeley, nimrod, this, article, about, engine, maritime, patrol, aircraft, 1930s, biplane, fighter, aircraft, hawker, nimrod, retired, maritime, patrol, aircraft, developed, operated, united, kingdom, extensive, modification, havilland, comet, world, . This article is about a jet engine maritime patrol aircraft For the 1930s biplane fighter aircraft see Hawker Nimrod The Hawker Siddeley Nimrod is a retired maritime patrol aircraft developed and operated by the United Kingdom It was an extensive modification of the de Havilland Comet the world s first operational jet airliner It was originally designed by de Havilland s successor firm Hawker Siddeley further development and maintenance work was undertaken by Hawker Siddeley s own successor companies British Aerospace and later BAE Systems NimrodHawker Siddeley Nimrod MR 2Role Maritime patrol aircraftNational origin United KingdomManufacturer Hawker SiddeleyBAE SystemsFirst flight 23 May 1967Introduction 2 October 1969Retired 28 June 2011 1 Primary user Royal Air ForceNumber built 49 2 prototypes Developed from de Havilland CometVariants Nimrod R 1Nimrod AEW 3 Nimrod MRA 4Designed in response to a requirement issued by the Royal Air Force RAF to replace its fleet of ageing Avro Shackletons the Nimrod MR1 MR2s were primarily fixed wing aerial platforms for anti submarine warfare ASW operations secondary roles included maritime surveillance and anti surface warfare It served from the early 1970s until March 2010 2 The intended replacement was to be extensively rebuilt Nimrod MR2s designated Nimrod MRA4 Due to considerable delays repeated cost overruns and financial cutbacks the development of the MRA4 was abandoned in 2010 3 The RAF also operated a small number of the Nimrod R1 an electronic intelligence gathering ELINT variant A dedicated airborne early warning platform the Nimrod AEW3 was in development from late 1970s to the mid 1980s however much like the MRA4 considerable problems were encountered in development and thus the project was cancelled in 1986 in favour of an off the shelf solution in the Boeing E 3 Sentry All Nimrod variants had been retired by mid 2011 Contents 1 Development 1 1 MR1 1 2 R1 1 3 MR2 1 4 AEW3 1 5 MRA4 2 Design 2 1 Overview 2 2 Avionics 2 3 Armaments and equipment 3 Operational history 3 1 Introduction to service 3 2 Falklands War 3 3 Gulf War 3 4 Afghanistan and Iraq War 3 5 Search and rescue 3 6 Operation Tapestry 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Aircraft on display 7 Accidents and incidents 8 Specifications MR 2 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 10 3 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment Edit Nimrod MR1 XV262 landing at RAF St Mawgan in July 1981MR1 Edit External image Circa 1967 Nimrod XV242 taxiing at RAF Changi during the type s test and evaluation phase in the Far EastOn 4 June 1964 the British Government issued Air Staff Requirement 381 which sought a replacement for the aging Avro Shackleton maritime patrol aircraft of the Royal Air Force RAF 4 Such a replacement had been necessitated by the rapidly approaching fatigue life limitations accumulated across the Shackleton fleet 5 A great deal of interest in the requirement was received from both British and foreign manufacturers who offered aircraft including the Lockheed P 3 Orion the Breguet Atlantic and derivatives of the Hawker Siddeley Trident BAC One Eleven Vickers VC10 and de Havilland Comet 6 7 On 2 February 1965 Prime Minister Harold Wilson announced the intention to order Hawker Siddeley s maritime patrol version of the Comet the HS 801 as a replacement for Shackleton Mk 2 8 9 N 1 The Nimrod design was based on the Comet 4 civil airliner which had reached the end of its commercial life the first two prototype Nimrods XV148 and XV147 were built from two final unfinished Comet 4C airframes The Comet s turbojet engines were replaced by Rolls Royce Spey turbofans for better fuel efficiency particularly at the low altitudes required for maritime patrol Major fuselage changes were made including an internal weapons bay an extended nose for radar a new tail with electronic warfare ESM sensors mounted in a bulky fairing and a MAD magnetic anomaly detector boom After the first flight in May 1967 the RAF ordered 46 Nimrod MR1s 10 The first example XV230 entered service in October 1969 11 A total of five squadrons using the type were established four were permanently based in the UK and a fifth was initially based in Malta 11 R1 Edit Main article Hawker Siddeley Nimrod R1 Nimrod R1 XW665 landing during Waddington International Airshow in Lincolnshire in 2009Three Nimrod aircraft were adapted for the signals intelligence role replacing the Comet C2s and Canberras of No 51 Squadron in May 1974 12 13 The R1 was visually distinguished from the MR2 by the lack of a MAD boom 14 It was fitted with an array of rotating dish aerials in the aircraft s bomb bay with further dish aerials in the tailcone and at the front of the wing mounted fuel tanks It had a flight crew of four two pilots a flight engineer and one navigator and up to 25 crew operating the SIGINT equipment 15 Only since the end of the Cold War has the role of the aircraft been officially acknowledged they were once described as radar calibration aircraft The R1s have not suffered the same rate of fatigue and corrosion as the MR2s One R1 was lost in a flying accident since the type s introduction this occurred in May 1995 during a flight test after major servicing at RAF Kinloss To replace this aircraft an MR2 was selected for conversion to R1 standard and entered service in December 1996 16 The Nimrod R1 was based initially at RAF Wyton Cambridgeshire and later at RAF Waddington Lincolnshire and flown by 51 Sqn The two remaining Nimrod R1s were originally planned to be retired at the end of March 2011 but operational requirements forced the RAF to deploy one to RAF Akrotiri Cyprus on 16 March in support of Operation Ellamy The last flight of the type was on 28 June 2011 from RAF Waddington in the presence of the Chief of the Air Staff ACM Sir Stephen Dalton 1 17 XV 249 the former MR2 is now on display at the RAF Museum Cosford West Midlands The R1 was replaced by three Boeing RC 135W Rivet Joint aircraft acquired under the Airseeker project the first aircraft was delivered in late 2013 18 MR2 Edit Nimrod MR2 XV254 at a steep bank while displaying at the Royal International Air Tattoo 2006Starting in 1975 35 aircraft were upgraded to MR2 standard being re delivered from August 1979 19 The upgrade included extensive modernisation of the aircraft s electronic suite Changes included the replacement of the 1950s ASV Mk 21 radar used by the Shackleton and Nimrod MR1 with the new EMI Searchwater radar N 2 a new acoustic processor GEC Marconi AQS 901 capable of handling more modern sonobuoys a new mission data recorder Hanbush and a new Electronic Support Measures Yellow Gate which included new pods on the wingtips 19 21 Provision for in flight refuelling was introduced during the Falklands War as the MR2P as well as hardpoints to allow the Nimrod to carry the AIM 9 Sidewinder missile to counter enemy Argentine Air Force maritime surveillance aircraft 22 In preparation for operations in the Gulf War theatre several MR2s were fitted with new communications and ECM equipment clarification needed to deal with anticipated threats at the time these modified aircraft were given the designation MR2P GM Gulf Mod 23 The Nimrod MR2 carried out three main roles Anti Submarine Warfare ASW Anti Surface Unit Warfare ASUW and Search and Rescue SAR Its extended range enabled the crew to monitor maritime areas far to the north of Iceland and up to 2 200 nautical miles 4 000 km out into the Western Atlantic With Air to Air Refuelling AAR range and endurance was greatly extended The crew consisted of two pilots and one flight engineer two navigators one tactical navigator and a routine navigator one Air Electronics Officer AEO the sonobuoy sensor team of two Weapon System Operators WSOp ACO and four Weapon System Operators WSOp EW to manage passive and active electronic warfare systems Until 1992 the Nimrod MR2 was based at RAF Kinloss in Scotland 120 201 and 206 Squadrons and RAF St Mawgan in Cornwall 42 and 38 R Squadrons Following Options for Change 42 Squadron was disbanded and its number reassigned to 38 R Squadron The Nimrod MR2 aircraft was withdrawn on 31 March 2010 a year earlier than planned for financial reasons 24 25 The last official flight of a Nimrod MR2 took place on 26 May 2010 with XV229 flying from RAF Kinloss to Kent International Airport to be used as an evacuation training airframe at the nearby MOD Defence Fire Training and Development Centre 26 AEW3 Edit Nimrod AEW3 XZ286 at the 1980 Farnborough Air ShowMain article British Aerospace Nimrod AEW3 In the mid 1970s a modified Nimrod was proposed for the Airborne Early Warning AEW mission again as a replacement for the Lancaster derived piston engined Shackleton AEW 2 Eleven existing Nimrod airframes were to be converted by British Aerospace to house the GEC Marconi radars in a bulbous nose and tail The Nimrod AEW3 project was plagued by cost over runs and problems with the GEC 4080M computer used 27 Eventually the MoD recognised that the cost of developing the radar system to achieve the required level of performance was prohibitive and the probability of success very uncertain and in December 1986 the project was cancelled The RAF eventually received seven Boeing E 3 Sentry aircraft instead 27 MRA4 Edit Main article BAE Systems Nimrod MRA4 Nimrod MRA4 during a test flightThe Nimrod MRA4 was intended to replace the capability provided by the MR2 It was essentially a new aircraft with current generation Rolls Royce BR710 turbofan engines a new larger wing and fully refurbished fuselage The project was subject to delays cost over runs and contract re negotiations The type had been originally intended to enter service in 2003 but was cancelled in 2010 as a result of the Strategic Defence and Security Review at which point it was 789 million over budget 3 the development airframes were also scrapped 28 Some functions were allocated to other assets with Hercules transport aircraft and Sentry Airborne Early Warning aircraft given some tasks but the cancellation of the MRA4 resulted in a significant gap in long range maritime patrol and search and rescue capability 29 30 In July 2016 the Ministry of Defence announced the purchase of nine Boeing P 8A Poseidon aircraft for the RAF The RAF declared the P 8 had reached initial operating capability IOC on 1 April 2020 by which time two of the planes had been delivered 31 The nine aircraft will be based at RAF Lossiemouth 32 Design EditOverview Edit The Nimrod was the first jet powered maritime patrol aircraft MPA to enter service being powered by the Rolls Royce Spey turbofan engine 10 33 Aircraft in this role had been commonly propelled by piston or turboprop powerplants instead to maximise fuel economy and enable maximum patrol time on station Advantages of the Nimrod s turbofan engines included greater speed and altitude capabilities and it was more capable of evading detection by submarines as propeller driven aircraft are more detectable underwater by standard acoustic sensors 34 The Nimrods had a flight endurance of ten hours without aerial refuelling The MR2s were later fitted to receive mid air refuelling in response to demands of the Falklands War 35 Pair of Nimrod R1s flying in formation August 2004At the start of a patrol mission all four engines would normally be running as the aircraft s weight was reduced by fuel consumption up to two engines could be shut down allowing the remaining engines to be operated more efficiently 10 Instead of relying on ram air to restart an inactive engine compressor air could be crossfed from a live engine to a starter turbine The crossfeed duct was later discovered to be a potential fire hazard 36 37 Similarly the two hydraulic systems on board were designed to be powered by the two inner engines that would always be running 37 Electrical generation was designed to far exceed the consumption of existing equipment to accommodate additional systems installed over the Nimrod s service life 37 The standard Nimrod fleet carried out three basic operational roles during their RAF service Anti Submarine Warfare duties typically involved surveillance over an allocated area of the North Atlantic to detect the presence of Soviet submarines in that area and to track their movements In the event of war reconnaissance information gathered during these patrols would be shared with other allied aircraft to enable coordinated strikes at both submarines and surface targets 34 Search and rescue SAR missions were another important duty of the RAF s Nimrod fleet operating under the Air Rescue Coordination Centre at RAF Kinloss and were a common sight in both military and civil maritime incidents Throughout the Nimrod s operational life a minimum of one aircraft was held in a state of readiness to respond to SAR demands at all times 34 Avionics Edit Nimrod MR2 performing a low pass at Alconbury August 1990The Nimrod featured a crew of up to 25 personnel although a typical crew numbered roughly 12 10 most of whom operated the various onboard sensor suites and specialist detection equipment 35 A significant proportion of the onboard sensor equipment was housed outside the pressure shell inside the Nimrod s distinctive pannier lower fuselage 33 Sensor systems included radar sonar and the magnetic anomaly detector a sniffer could detect exhaust fumes from diesel submarines as well 38 The Nimrod and its detection capabilities were an important component of Britain s military defence during the height of the Cold War 39 The Nimrod s navigational functions were computerised and were managed from a central tactical compartment housed in the forward cabin Various functions such as weapons control and information from sensors such as the large forward doppler radar were displayed and controlled at the tactical station 40 The flight systems and autopilot could be directly controlled by navigator s stations in the tactical compartment giving the navigator nearly complete aircraft control 41 The navigational systems comprised digital analogue and electro mechanical elements The computers were integrated with most of the Nimrod s guidance systems such as the air data computer astrocompass inertial guidance and doppler radar Navigation information could also be manually input by the operators 42 Upon entry into service the Nimrod was hailed as possessing advanced electronic equipment such as onboard digital computers The increased capability of these electronic systems allowed the RAF s fleet of 46 Nimrod aircraft to provide equal coverage to that of the larger fleet of retiring Avro Shackletons 10 The design philosophy of these computerised systems was that of a man machine partnership while onboard computers performed much of the data sift and analysis processes decisions and actions on the basis of that data remained in the operator s hands 11 To support the Nimrod s anticipated long lifespan onboard computers were designed to be capable of integrating with various new components systems and sensors that could be added in future upgrades 43 After a mission gathered information could be extracted for review purposes and for further analysis 41 Armaments and equipment Edit The Nimrod featured a sizeable bomb bay in which in addition to armaments such as torpedoes and missiles could be housed a wide variety of specialist equipment for many purposes such as up to 150 sonobuoys for ASW purposes or multiple air deployed dinghies and droppable survival packs such as Lindholme Gear for SAR missions additional fuel tanks and cargo could also be carried in the bomb bay during ferrying flights 33 Other armaments equippable in the bomb bay include mines bombs and nuclear depth charges later munitions included the Sting Ray torpedo and Harpoon missile for increased capability 13 The open bomb bay of a NimrodThe Nimrod could also be fitted with two detachable pylons mounted underneath the wings to be used with missiles such as the Martel 33 two specialised pylons were later added to enable the equipping of Sidewinder missiles used for self defence purposes against hostile aircraft 35 A powerful remote controlled searchlight was installed underneath the starboard wing for SAR operations 33 For reconnaissance missions the aircraft was also equipped with a pair of downward facing cameras suited to low and high altitude photography 33 In later years a newer electro optical camera system was installed for greater imaging quality 44 Various new ECMs and electronic support systems were retrofitted onto the Nimrod fleet in response to new challenges and to increase the type s defensive capabilities additional equipment also provided more effective means of identification and communication 45 46 A number of modifications were introduced during the 1991 Gulf War a small number of MR2s were fitted with improved Link 11 datalinks new defensive ECM equipment including the first operational use of a towed radar decoy and a forward looking infrared turret under the starboard wing 23 Operational history EditIntroduction to service Edit The Nimrod first entered squadron service with the RAF at RAF St Mawgan in Cornwall in October 1969 These initial aircraft designated as Nimrod MR1 were intended as a stop gap measure and thus were initially equipped with many of the same sensors and equipment as the Shackletons they were supplementing 47 While some improvements were implemented on the MR1 fleet to enhance their detection capabilities the improved Nimrod MR2 variant entered service in August 1979 following a lengthy development process 48 The majority of the Nimrod fleet operated from RAF Kinloss in Scotland 49 Nimrod MR1 inflight 1978Operationally each active Nimrod would form a single piece of a complex submarine detection and monitoring mission An emphasis on real time intelligence sharing was paramount to these operations upon detecting a submarine Nimrod aircrews would inform Royal Navy frigates and other NATO aligned vessels to pursuit in an effort to continuously monitor Soviet submarines 50 The safeguarding of the Royal Navy s Resolution class ballistic missile submarines which were the launch platform for Britain s nuclear deterrent was viewed as being of the utmost priority 51 Falklands War Edit Nimrods were first deployed to Wideawake airfield on Ascension Island on 5 April 1982 52 the type at first being used to fly local patrols around Ascension to guard against potential Argentine attacks and to escort the British Task Force as it sailed south towards the Falklands with Nimrods also being used to provide search and rescue as well as communications relay support of the Operation Black Buck bombing raids by Avro Vulcans 53 As the Task Force neared what would become the combat theatre and the threat from Argentine submarines rose the more capable Nimrod MR2s took on operations initially performed by older Nimrod MR1s 54 Aviation author Chris Chant has claimed that the Nimrod R1 also conducted electronic intelligence missions operating from Punta Arenas in neutral Chile 55 The Chilean government allowed an RAF Nimrod R1 to fly signals reconnaissance sorties from the Desventuradas Islands gathering information on Argentine Air Force movements 56 57 58 The addition of air to air refuelling probes allowed operations to be carried out in the vicinity of the Falklands while the aircraft s armament was supplemented by the addition of 1 000 pounds 450 kg general purpose bombs BL755 cluster bombs and AIM 9 Sidewinder air to air missiles 59 The use of air to air refuelling allowed extremely long reconnaissance missions to be mounted one example being a 19 hour 5 minute patrol conducted on 15 May 1982 XV232 Airborne 0803 Landing 0308 60 which passed within 60 miles 97 km of the Argentine coast to confirm that Argentine surface vessels were not at sea Another long range flight was carried out by an MR2 on the night of 20 21 May covering a total of 8 453 miles 13 604 km the longest distance flight carried out during the Falklands War 61 In all Nimrods flew 111 missions from Ascension in support of British operations during the Falklands War 62 Gulf War Edit A detachment of three Nimrod MR2s was deployed to Seeb in Oman in August 1990 as a result of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait carrying out patrols over the Gulf of Oman and Persian Gulf Due to the level of threats present in the Gulf theatre operational Nimrods were quickly retrofitted with a Marconi towed active decoy 63 Once hostilities commenced the Nimrod detachment by now increased to five aircraft concentrated on night patrols with daylight patrols carried out by US Navy Lockheed P 3 Orions Nimrods were used to guide Westland Lynx helicopters and Grumman A 6 Intruder attack aircraft against Iraqi patrol vessels being credited with assisting in sinking or damaging 16 Iraqi vessels 23 Nimrods were often deployed to the Middle EastAfter the ground offensive against Iraqi forces had ended Britain elected to maintain an RAF presence in the region through assets such as the Nimrod and other aircraft 64 Nimrod R1s operated from August 1990 to March 1991 from Cyprus providing almost continuous flying operations from the start of the ground offensive Each R1 was retrofitted with the same Marconi towed active decoy as well as under wing chaff flare dispensers reportedly sourced from the Tornado fleet citation needed Afghanistan and Iraq War Edit Nimrods were again deployed to the Middle East as part of the British contribution to the US led invasion of Afghanistan missions in this theatre involved the Nimrods performing lengthy overland flights for intelligence gathering purposes 65 On 2 September 2006 14 UK military personnel were killed when a Nimrod MR2 was destroyed in a midair explosion following an onboard fire over Afghanistan It was the single greatest loss of British military lives since the Falklands War 66 67 The outbreak of the Iraq War in March 2003 saw the RAF s Nimrods being used for operations over Iraq using the aircraft s sensors to detect hostile forces and to direct attacks by friendly coalition forces 68 Search and rescue Edit While the Nimrod MR1 MR2 was in service one aircraft from each of the squadrons on rotation was available for search and rescue operations at one hour standby The standby aircraft carried two sets of Lindholme Gear in the weapons bay Usually one other Nimrod airborne on a training mission would also carry a set of Lindholme Gear As well as using the aircraft sensors to find aircraft or ships in distress it was used to find survivors in the water with a capability to search areas of up to 20 000 square miles 52 000 km2 The main role would normally be to act as on scene rescue coordinator to control ships fixed wing aircraft and helicopters in the search area 69 70 The Nimrod was most often featured in the media in relation to its search and rescue role such as in the reporting of major rescue incidents 47 In August 1979 several Nimrods were involved in locating yachting competitors during the disaster stricken 1979 Fastnet race and coordinated with helicopters in searches for survivors from lost vessels 71 In March 1980 the Alexander L Kielland a Norwegian semi submersible drilling rig capsized whilst working in the Ekofisk oil field killing 123 people six different Nimrods searched for survivors and took turns to provide rescue co ordination involving the control of 80 surface ships and 20 British and Norwegian helicopters 69 72 In an example of its search capabilities in September 1977 when an attempted crossing of the North Atlantic in a Zodiac inflatable dinghy went wrong a Nimrod found the collapsed dinghy and directed a ship to it 69 Operation Tapestry Edit Nimrods at RAF Kinloss 1999The Nimrods were often used to enforce Operation Tapestry Tapestry is a codeword for the activities by ships and aircraft that protect the United Kingdom s Sovereign Sea Areas including the protection of fishing rights and oil and gas extraction Following the establishment of a 200 nautical miles 370 km Exclusive Economic Zone EEZ at the beginning of 1977 the Nimrod fleet was given the task of patrolling the 270 000 square miles 700 000 km2 area The aircraft would locate identify and photograph vessels operating in the EEZ 73 The whole area was routinely patrolled In addition to surveillance the aircraft would communicate with all oil and gas platforms During the Icelandic Cod Wars of 1972 and 1975 1976 the Nimrod fleet closely cooperated with Royal Navy surface vessels to protect British civilian fishing ships 69 74 Variants EditType Role Number Built NotesHS 801 Prototype 2 Built using redundant Comet 4 airframesMR 1 Anti submarine Warfare 46R 1 Signals Intelligence 4 One converted from MR 2MR 2 Anti submarine warfare 35 Modernised MR 1 aircraftAEW 3 Airborne early warning 11 Converted from redundant MR 1 aircraft project cancelledMRA 4 Anti submarine warfare 5 Converted from MR 2 21 planned project cancelledOperators Edit United KingdomRoyal Air Force 38 R Squadron 1970 1992 shadow squadron identity assigned to 236 OCU formed from the Maritime Operational Training Unit at RAF St Mawgan England in 1970 with the MR 1 training role transferred to 42 Reserve Squadron in 1992 42 Squadron 1971 2010 converted to the MR 1 from the Shackleton MR 3 at RAF St Mawgan England in 1971 converted to the MR 2 1983 84 withdrawn as an operational squadron in 1992 it became the Operational Conversion Unit for the Nimrod at RAF Kinloss The squadron MR 2 aircraft were withdrawn in 2010 and the squadron prepared to train crews for the MRA 4 following the decision to scrap the MRA 4 the squadron disbanded in 2011 51 Squadron 1971 2011 R 1s added to fleet in 1971 at RAF Wyton England to supplement the Comet C 2 R which were withdrawn in 1975 Moved to RAF Waddington in 1995 the R 1s were the last flying Nimrods when they were withdrawn in 2011 120 Squadron 1970 2010 converted to MR 1 from the Shackleton MR 3 at RAF Kinloss Scotland in 1970 converted to the MR 2 1981 82 disbanded in 2010 following the withdrawal of the MR 2 from service 201 Squadron 1970 2010 converted to MR 1 from the Shackleton MR 3 at RAF Kinloss Scotland in 1970 converted to the MR 2 1982 83 disbanded in 2010 following the withdrawal of the MR 2 from service 203 Squadron 1971 1977 converted to MR 1 from the Shackleton MR 3 at RAF Luqa Malta in 1971 disbanded in 1977 following the decision to withdraw British forces from Malta 206 Squadron 1971 2005 converted to MR 1 from the Shackleton MR 3 at RAF Kinloss Scotland in 1970 converted to MR 2 1980 81 disbanded in 2005 Nimrod AEW Joint Trials Unit 1984 1987 trials unit for the AEW 3 based at RAF Waddington Aircraft on display EditExternal video Nimrod arriving at Manchester Airport aviation viewing park Nimrod conducts flyover prior to landing at Coventry Airport Nimrod MR2 take off from RAF KinlossMR2XV226 Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome 75 XV231 Manchester Airport aviation viewing park 76 XV232 Coventry airport 77 XV244 Morayvia 78 XV250 Yorkshire Air Museum 79 XV255 City of Norwich Aviation Museum 80 R1XV249 RAF Museum Cosford 81 XW664 East Midlands Aeropark 82 Accidents and incidents EditFive Nimrods were lost in accidents during the type s service with the RAF 83 84 On 17 November 1980 a Nimrod MR2 XV256 crashed near RAF Kinloss after three engines failed following multiple birdstrikes Both pilots were killed but the remaining crew survived 85 On 3 June 1984 a Nimrod MR2 XV257 stationed at RAF St Mawgan suffered extensive damage when a reconnaissance flare ignited in the bomb bay during flight The aircraft successfully returned to base but was subsequently written off due to fire damage There were no casualties 86 On 16 May 1995 a Nimrod R1 XW666 ditched in the Moray Firth 4 5 miles 7 2 km from Lossiemouth after an engine caught fire during a post servicing test flight from RAF Kinloss The Ministry of Defence MoD inquiry identified a number of technical issues as the cause There were no casualties 87 On 2 September 1995 a Nimrod MR2 XV239 crashed into Lake Ontario while participating in the Canadian International Air Show killing the seven crew members 88 89 On 2 September 2006 a Nimrod MR2 XV230 crashed near Kandahar in Afghanistan killing all 14 servicemen on board the largest loss of UK military personnel in a single event since the Falklands War 90 This was the first Nimrod to enter service originally as an MR1 but upgraded to MR2 standard in the 1980s 91 On 23 February 2007 the Ministry of Defence grounded all Nimrod MR2s while fuel pumps were inspected but stressed that the inspection was not necessarily related to this crash 92 On 5 November 2007 XV235 was involved in a midair incident over Afghanistan when the crew noticed a fuel leak during air to air refuelling 93 After transmitting a mayday call the crew landed the aircraft successfully The incident came only a month before the issue of the report of a Board of Enquiry into 2 September 2006 fatal accident to XV230 in likely similar circumstances The RAF subsequently suspended air to air refuelling operations for this type Specifications MR 2 Edit Wooden Nimrod model used for aerodynamic wind tunnel testing Flight deck of a Nimrod May 2006External image Cutaway of Nimrod MR1 XV230 retouched by Flight Global in 2006Data from Wilson 94 General characteristicsCrew 13 Capacity 13 500 lb 6 123 kg Length 126 ft 9 in 38 63 m Wingspan 114 ft 10 in 35 00 m Height 31 ft 9 4 m Wing area 197 05 sq ft 18 307 m2 Empty weight 86 000 lb 39 009 kg Max takeoff weight 192 000 lb 87 090 kg Fuel capacity 85 840 lb 38 936 kg Powerplant 4 Rolls Royce Spey turbofan engines 12 160 lbf 54 1 kN thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 500 kn 580 mph 930 km h Cruise speed 426 kn 490 mph 789 km h Range 4 501 5 001 nmi 5 180 5 755 mi 8 336 9 262 km Service ceiling 43 999 ft 13 411 m Armament Hardpoints 2 under wing pylon stations and an internal bomb bay with a capacity of 20 000 lb 9 100 kg with provisions to carry combinations of Missiles Air to air missile 2 AIM 9 Sidewinder non standard in RAF service only mounted on the MR2 during the Falklands War Air to surface missile Nord AS 12 Martel missile AGM 65 Maverick AGM 84 Harpoon Bombs Depth charges 2x US owned B57 nuclear depth bombs until 1992 95 WE 177A nuclear depth charges 10kt Other Air dropped Mk 46 torpedoes Sting Ray torpedoes Naval mines SonobuoysSee also EditRelated development de Havilland Comet Hawker Siddeley Nimrod R1 British Aerospace Nimrod AEW3 BAE Systems Nimrod MRA4Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Breguet Atlantic Ilyushin Il 38 Lockheed P 3 Orion Lockheed CP 140 Aurora Tupolev Tu 142References EditNotes Edit Following evaluation testing by the RAF the Vickers VC10 had been identified as highly suitable for the task however an initial version of Comet based Nimrod could be in service within five years a more capable Nimrod equipped with the envisioned avionics would follow 7 Equipped with the Searchwater radar a Nimrod could offer an AWACS like capability in the maritime environment 20 Citations Edit a b Nimrod R1 makes final flight Archived 25 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Defence Management Journal 28 June 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Cook James Final air miles for spy in the sky crews BBC 26 March 2010 Retrieved 20 October 2010 a b Blitz James 16 November 2011 MoD makes progress on cost overruns Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Haddon Cave 2009 pp 16 17 Jefford et al 2005 p 87 Chartres 1986 p 12 a b Jefford et al 2005 p 131 Aircraft Decisions Mr Wilson s Statement Flight International Vol 87 no 2918 11 February 1965 p 224 Archived from the original on 31 July 2013 The Maritime Comet Flight International Vol 87 no 2924 25 March 1965 pp 465 466 Archived from the original on 31 July 2013 a b c d e Fricker 1972 p 593 a b c Neal 1970 p 119 Lake Air International July 2001 p 31 a b Fricker 1972 p 594 Haddon Cave 2009 p 17 Lake Air International July 2001 pp 30 31 Lake Air International July 2001 p 34 Nimrod R1 aircraft in final flight for RAF BBC 28 June 2011 Retrieved 13 July 2011 PICTURES First RAF Rivet Joint aircraft arrives in UK Flight Global Retrieved 18 December 2013 a b Donald 1996 p 95 Jefford et al 2005 p 134 Air International July 1981 pp 9 10 12 14 Brown 1987 p 110 a b c Lake 2005 pp 53 54 Last flight of the Nimrod MR2 Ministry of Defence 31 March 2010 Planning Round 10 is Going to be a Tough One Archived 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine RAF Families Federation 6 January 2010 Wilson Tom Historic plane ends its career at Manston Archived 2 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine This is Kent 8 June 2010 Retrieved 13 July 2011 a b BAe Nimrod AEW 3 Archived 2 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Spyflight Retrieved 20 October 2010 Scrapping RAF Nimrods perverse say military chiefs BBC News 27 January 2011 Hoyle Craig IN FOCUS UK left exposed by Nimrod cancellation report says Flightglobal 27 September 2012 Retrieved 21 May 2016 Future Maritime Surveillance PDF House of Commons Defence Select Committee 19 September 2012 Retrieved 28 May 2020 RAF Declare Poseidon an Initial Operating Capability raf mod 3 April 2020 Retrieved 24 May 2020 MOD seals the deal on nine new Maritime Patrol Aircraft to keep UK safe Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2017 a b c d e f Neal 1970 p 120 a b c Rininger 2006 p 69 a b c Rininger 2006 p 125 Haddon Cave 2009 p 20 a b c Neal 1970 p 121 Neal 1970 pp 127 128 Armfield Hugh Air Force Takes Over as Britain s Watchdog The Age 26 October 1971 p 8 Neal 1970 p 122 a b Neal 1970 p 128 Neal 1970 pp 122 126 Neal 1970 p 123 Haddon Cave 2009 p 18 Neal 1970 p 127 Friedman 1997 pp 522 567 a b Jefford et al 2005 p 89 Jefford et al 2005 pp 89 90 Jefford et al 2005 p 94 Jefford et al 2005 pp 65 66 Jefford et al 2005 pp 100 101 Burden et al 1986 p 401 Burden et al 1986 pp 402 403 Chant 2001 p 34 Chant 2001 p 33 Chile Archived from the original on 30 April 2012 Retrieved 26 August 2008 Alexander Harriet 7 July 2014 Without Chile s help we would have lost the Falklands The Telegraph Retrieved 8 July 2014 21 things I discovered while writing Harrier 809 Chant 2001 p 82 Operation Corporate Falklands Conflict Long range Nimrod sortie Flight Lieutenant J Chant 2001 p 61 Burden et al 1986 p 403 Friedman 1997 p 522 Haddon Cave 2009 p 23 Haddon Cave 2009 p 16 Afghan air crash victims named The Guardian 3 September 2006 Stringer Robert U K Says Fuel Caused Afghanistan Plane Explosion Bloomberg 3 December 2007 Lake 2005 pp 55 56 a b c d Chartres 1986 pp 71 83 Jefford et al 2005 pp 95 96 Death Toll at 17 Last Yacht Seen in Ill Fated Race The Bulletin 16 August 1979 Crighton Ryan UK survivor relives horror of North Sea rig disaster Press and Journal 20 March 2010 Jefford et al 2005 p 96 UK Navy Protecting Trawlers The Calgary Herald 22 May 1973 RAF Nimrod Archived 23 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome Retrieved 11 December 2012 In pics Nimrod takes its place at Manchester Airport BBC News 26 May 2010 Hoyle Craig PICTURE Record breaking Nimrod flown to Coventry air museum Flight International 13 May 2010 The real saviours of Nimrod XV244 Forres Gazette 14 June 2011 Hawker Siddeley Nimrod MR2 XV250 Yorkshire Air Museum Retrieved 11 December 2012 Aircraft Archived 14 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine City of Norwich Aviation Museum Retrieved 11 December 2012 Nimrod R 1 unveiled at Museum Royal Air Force Museum Cosford 28 September 2012 Retrieved 13 October 2012 Aeropark Exhibits Archived 12 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine East Midlands Aeropark Retrieved 19 January 2017 ASN Aviation Safety Database results Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 October 2010 Baldock Michael Aviation Photos XV257 airliners net 23 June 1990 Retrieved 20 October 2010 Accident description Nimrod MR2 17 November 1980 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 October 2010 Accident description Nimrod MR2 3 June 1984 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 October 2010 Accident description Nimrod R1 16 May 1995 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 October 2010 Timeline Air show crashes BBC News 3 June 2001 Retrieved 20 October 2010 Accident description Nimrod MR2 2 September 1995 Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 20 October 2010 Haddon Cave 2009 p 25 Inquiry into Afghan crash begins BBC News 3 September 2006 Report on the grounding of MR2 aircraft BBC News 23 February 2007 Adams Paul New safety fears for RAF Nimrods BBC News 10 November 2007 Wilson 2000 p 22 B57 nuclear bomb United States Offensive weapons Jane s Strategic Weapon Systems 27 October 2011 Bibliography Edit Brown David The Royal Navy and the Falklands War Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1987 ISBN 978 0 87021 572 8 Burden Rodney A Michael A Draper Douglas A Rough Colin A Smith and David Wilton Falklands The Air War Twickenham UK British Air Review Group 1996 ISBN 0 906339 05 7 Chant Chris Air War in the Falklands 1982 Osprey Publishing 2001 ISBN 1 8417 6293 8 Chartres John BAe Nimrod Modern Combat Aircraft 24 Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan 1986 ISBN 0 7110 1575 9 Donald David and Jon Lake Encyclopedia of World Military Aircraft London Aerospace Publishing Single Volume Edition 1996 ISBN 1 874023 95 6 A Face Lift For The Nimrod Air International Volume 21 No 1 July 1981 pp 7 16 ISSN 0306 5634 Fricker John MR2 Nimrod ASW Specialist Flight International 27 April 1972 pp 593 594 Friedman Norman World Naval Weapons Systems 1997 98 Naval Institute Press 1997 ISBN 1 5575 0268 4 Future Maritime Surveillance Fifth Report of Session 2012 13 Volume I Report together with formal minutes oral and written evidence House of Commons Defence Committee London HMSO 5 September 2012 Haddon Cave Charles The Nimrod Review An Independent Review into the Broader Issues Surrounding the Loss of the RAF Nimrod MR2 Aircraft XV230 in Afghanistan in 2006 London The Stationery Office 2009 ISBN 0 10 296265 0 Jefford C G ed Seminar Maritime Operations Royal Air Force Historical Society 2005 ISSN 1361 4231 Lake Jon Nimrod R 1 The RAF s SIGINT Platform Extraordinaire Air International Vol 61 No 1 July 2001 pp 29 35 ISSN 0306 5634 Lake Jon New Roles for the Mighty Hunter Air International Vol 69 No 3 September 2005 pp 52 56 ISSN 0306 5634 Neal Molly Nimrod Systematic Sub Hunter Flight International Vol 97 No 3176 22 January 1970 pp 119 128 Rininger Tyson V Red Flag Air Combat for the 21st Century Zenith Imprint 2006 ISBN 0 760325 30 8 Wilson Stewart Combat Aircraft since 1945 London Aerospace Publications 2000 ISBN 1 875671 50 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to BAE Nimrod Royal Air Force Nimrod MR2 Nimrod Was Actually a Fine Hunter Britain s MRA4 Program Defense Industry Daily Nimrod production and conversion list Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hawker Siddeley Nimrod amp oldid 1167223625, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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