Blue Vixen

Blue Vixen
Country of origin United Kingdom
Introduced 1990s
Type Airborne radar
Frequency I-band
PRF low, medium and high

Blue Vixen was a British airborne radar designed and built for the Royal Navy by Ferranti Defence Systems (later, GEC-Marconi), Edinburgh, Scotland.

Design and development

Blue Vixen was a lightweight (145 kg) multimode, coherent, pulse-Doppler I band airborne radar, developed from the previous Ferranti Blue Fox radar, and designed for use on the British Aerospace Sea Harrier FA2. It was a multimode radar for airborne interception and air-to-surface strike roles over water and land, with look-down/shoot-down and look-up modes. Designed from the start to have full AIM-120 AMRAAM compatibility, it was also compatible with Sea Eagle and AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles.

Development Aircraft Used

Blue Vixen trials aircraft ZF130 owned by Allaero at MOD St Athan 2002

Two British Aerospace 125 aircraft were used for the flight trial’s program. The first (XW930 serial number 25009) was a Series 1 aircraft which had previously been used by the CAFU (Civil Aviation Flying Unit) before it was absorbed into the Royal Aircraft Establishment. It was equipped with a modified nose and carried out the initial development work. This was joined by the dedicated trails aircraft (a series 600 serial number 256059 registered ZF130 pictured opposite) which fitted with a replica of the Sea Harrier cockpit at the co-pilot's station as well as a Sidewinder acquisition round on a pylon beneath the starboard wing.

Aircraft fitted to

British Aerospace Sea Harrier F(A).2

Operators

 United Kingdom

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.