(SEPECAT) Jaguar @·AIRCRAFTUBE

  • SEPECAT Jaguar A
SEPECAT Jaguar A
    SEPECAT Jaguar A
  • Jaguar SO1 - IL-38 - 1987
Jaguar SO1 - IL-38 - 1987
    Jaguar SO1 - IL-38 - 1987
  • SEPECAT Jaguar B
SEPECAT Jaguar B
    SEPECAT Jaguar B
  • SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A
SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A
    SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A
  • Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001
Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001
    Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001
  • SEPECAT Jaguar EB
SEPECAT Jaguar EB
    SEPECAT Jaguar EB
  • Jaguar EB Equador - 1986
Jaguar EB Equador - 1986
    Jaguar EB Equador - 1986
  • Jaguar GR.3A
Jaguar GR.3A
    Jaguar GR.3A
  • Jaguar - KC-135
Jaguar - KC-135
    Jaguar - KC-135
  • Jaguar - 33 ardennes
Jaguar - 33 ardennes
    Jaguar - 33 ardennes
  • Jaguar GR1 - 41Sqn Gulf - 1991
Jaguar GR1 - 41Sqn Gulf - 1991
    Jaguar GR1 - 41Sqn Gulf - 1991
  • Jaguar GR1 - 41Sqn - Gulf - 1991
Jaguar GR1 - 41Sqn - Gulf - 1991
    Jaguar GR1 - 41Sqn - Gulf - 1991
  • Jaguar GR1 - RAF
Jaguar GR1 - RAF
    Jaguar GR1 - RAF
  • SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A
SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A
    SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A
  • SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A 54 Sqn - RAF - 2002
SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A 54 Sqn - RAF - 2002
    SEPECAT Jaguar GR1A 54 Sqn - RAF - 2002
  • Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001
Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001
    Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001
  • Jaguar GR3
Jaguar GR3
    Jaguar GR3
  • Jaguar GR3A - 41 Sqn RAF
Jaguar GR3A - 41 Sqn RAF
    Jaguar GR3A - 41 Sqn RAF
  • Jaguar IAF
Jaguar IAF
    Jaguar IAF
  • Rolls-Royce-Turbomeca Adour Mk.102 turbofan
Rolls-Royce-Turbomeca Adour Mk.102 turbofan
    Rolls-Royce-Turbomeca Adour Mk.102 turbofan
  • Jaguar T4 - RAF - 1981
Jaguar T4 - RAF - 1981
    Jaguar T4 - RAF - 1981
  • Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001 Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001
    Jaguar GR3 - Florennes 2001

SEPECAT Jaguar

The SEPECAT Jaguar is an Anglo-French ground attack aircraft that was still in service with several export customers by the end of the 20st century, notably the Indian Air Force and the Royal Air Force of Oman. It was among the first major Anglo-French military aircraft programs. The aircraft served as one of the French Air Force's main attack aircraft until July 1, 2005 (when it was replaced by Dassault Rafale) and with the Royal Air Force until the end of April 2007.

The Jaguar program began in the early 1960s, in response to a British requirement for an advanced supersonic jet trainer, and a French need for a cheap, subsonic dual role trainer and attack aircraft with good short field performance. From these apparently disparate aims would come a single and entirely different aircraft : relatively high-tech, supersonic, and optimised for ground attack in a high-threat environment. It was planned as a replacement for the RAF Hawker Hunter and the Armée de l'Air F-100 Super Sabre.

Cross-channel negotiations led to the formation of SEPECAT (Société Européenne de Production de l'Avion d'école de Combat et d'Appui Tactique - the European company for the production of a combat trainer and tactical support aircraft) in 1966 as a joint venture between Bréguet - now Dassault Aviation - and the British Aircraft Corporation to produce the airframe, and a separate teaming of Rolls-Royce and Turboméca to develop the Adour afterburning turbofan engine. Though based in part on the Bréguet 121, using the same basic configuration and an innovative French designed landing gear, the Jaguar as built also incorporated major elements designed by BAC - notably the wing and high lift devices.

The first of 8 prototypes flew on September 8, 1968. It was an orthodox single-seat, swept-wing, twin-engine design but with tall landing gear. It had a maximum take-off weight in the 15 tonne class and could manage a combat radius on internal fuel alone of 850 km. Maximum speed was Mach 1.6 (and Mach 1.1 at sea level) and hardpoints were fitted for an external weapons load of up to 10,000 lb (or 4,500 kg).

Replacement

The aircraft has been updated several times and remains in front-line service with India and Oman. It is to be replaced by the Eurofighter Typhoon in the RAF and the Rafale in the Armée de l'Air. India plans to replace its Jaguar fleet with the Medium Combat Aircraft.

Demands by the UK Treasury to cut the defence budget led to reports that the Jaguar was a possible candidate for early retirement. Announcing plans for the future of the British military on July 21, 2004, Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon detailed plans to withdraw the Jaguar by 2007.

Critics say the aircraft was near the end of its service life and did not have all the capabilities required of a front line jet. Proponents argued that the aircraft was recently updated and was the most cost effective of all the RAF's fast jet force.

India on the other hand is modernizing its current Jaguar fleet and also placed an order for 29 additional upgraded Jaguar IM aircraft from Hindustan Aeronautics in 2005. The India Air Force, which operates two different types of Rolls Royce - Turbomeca engines, Mk.804E and Mk.811 (produced under license by HAL) will possibly be upgrading their Mk.811 engines to the Mk.821 which will combine a number of thrust and reliability improvements gained from the RAF Jaguar experience in the last 5 years. This will allow the Indian Air Force to have a more capable aircraft at medium and high level sortie profiles where most of the flying is carried out. The engines may also share similar components to the Adour Mk.871 which has been fitted to the Indian Air Force Hawk supplied by BAES.

Design

Overwing pylons

The Jaguar International (in common with the Lightning) has provision for overwing pylons. Mounted on the Jaguar they are used for short-range air-to-air missiles, such as the Matra R550 Magic or the AIM-9 Sidewinder. This option frees up the under-wing pylons for other weapons and stores. RAF Jaguars gained overwing pylons in the build up to Operation GRANBY in 1990, but French Jaguars were not modified. The RAF's Jaguar 97s were wired for the carriage of ASRAAM on the overwing launchers, but clearance of this weapon was never completed due to funding cuts.

Operational service

The Armée de l'Air took delivery of the first production Jaguar in 1973, one of an eventual 160 single-seat Jaguar As. For type conversion training, France also took 40 of the two-seat Jaguar E. After Bréguet was purchased by Dassault, the proposed Jaguar M variant, a carrier version for the French Aeronavale, was cancelled in favor of the Dassault Super étendard.

The RAF accepted delivery of the first of 165 single-seat Jaguar GR.1s (or Jaguar S) with 54(F) squadron in 1974. These were supplemented by 35 two-seat trainers, the Jaguar T2 (or Jaguar B according to the manufacturer's designation). The Jaguar S and B had a more comprehensive nav/attack system than the A and E models used by the Armée de l'Air, and used 30 mm Aden cannon instead of 30 mm DEFA 553s. Some RAF Jaguars were used for rapid deployment and regional reinforcement, operating with the Coltishall wing, and others flew in the nuclear strike role from RAF Bruggen. The latter aircraft were the RAF's only single-seat strike platforms, and were soon replaced by Tornados.

In December 1983, 75 RAF Jaguars were updated to the GR.1A and T.2A standard with FIN1064 navigation and attack systems replacing the original NAVWASS. At about the same time, most were also re-engined with Adour 104 engines. In 1994, ten GR.1As and two T.2As were upgraded with the capability to carry the TIALD laser designator pod and redesignated GR.1B or T.2B respectively.

The upgraded GR.3A (also known as Jaguar 97) introduced fleet-wide TIALD LDP compatibility, provision for the EO GP1 (JRP) digital reconnaissance pod, a helmet mounted sight, a glass cockpit with a large AMLCD display and a new HUD, a new hand controller and stick top, GPS, TERPROM Terrain Referenced Navigation, an Improved Data Modem datalink, and improved Night vision goggles compatibility. The interim GR.3 (Jaguar 96) was delivered in three standards, for recce, attack and TIALD, but all were converted to Jaguar 97 - GR.3A standards. All GR.3As were subsequently re-engined with the new Adour 106 turbofan. A number of T.2 trainers were also upgraded to Jaguar 96 standard and redesignated T.4.

Jaguars were also sold to a number of overseas countries. The largest single customer was the Republic of India which purchased about 40 of these aircraft and also acquired the license to manufacture 100 of them indigenously. Hindustan Aeronautics Limited, India's leading aerospace agency, manufactured 100 Jaguars under the name Shamsher. The Jaguar International was an export version which was sold to Ecuador, Nigeria and Oman. Oman's Jaguars have been brought to full GR3A standards and serve with No.s 8 and 20 Squadrons.

The Jaguar saw combat during the first Gulf War of 1991, with the Armée de l'Air and RAF, the Balkan wars with the RAF, the Kosovo War with the Armée de l'Air and the Kargil War with the Indian Air Force. However, during the 1991 Gulf War, the RAF Jaguars were "paired" with Buccaneers, which had already been upgraded with TIALD.

One Jaguar was converted into the Jaguar Active Control Technology (ACT) with fly-by-wire controls and aerodynamic alterations to the airframe. The aerodynamic instability improved maneuverability and test data was used for the Eurofighter development.

The RAF aircraft flew their last operational sorties on April 30, 2007 when it ceased to be a deployable force element and when No.6 Squadron "down-declared", though flying continued. At least two aircraft continued to fly with QinetiQ at Boscombe Down after No.6 Squadron's withdrawal. On 20 December 2007, a Jaguar undertook the last ever British military Jaguar flight.

Variants

A total of 543 aircraft were built :

  • Jaguar A : Single-seat all-weather tactical strike, ground-attack fighter version for the French Air Force, two prototypes and 160 production aircraft built.
  • Jaguar B or Jaguar T.Mk.2 : Two-seat training version for the RAF, one prototype and 38 production aircraft built.
  • Jaguar T.Mk.2A : Jaguar T.Mk.2 upgrade similar to GR.Mk.1A (see below), 14 conversions from T2.
  • Jaguar T.Mk.2B : two Jaguar T.Mk.2A aircraft given TIALD capability.
  • Jaguar T.Mk.4 : Jaguar T.Mk.2A upgraded to Jaguar 96 standard.
  • Jaguar E : Two-seat training version for the French Air Force, two prototypes and 40 production aircraft built.
  • Jaguar S or Jaguar GR.Mk.1 : Single-seat all-weather tactical strike, ground-attack fighter version for the RAF, 165 built.
  • Jaguar GR.Mk.1A : Jaguar GR.Mk.1 with navigation, chaff/flare, ECM and Sidewinder capability upgrades, 75 conversions from GR1.
  • Jaguar GR.Mk.1B : Ten GR.Mk.1 aircraft modified to carry TIALD pods.
  • Jaguar GR.Mk.3 : Jaguar 96 avionics upgrade to GR.Mk.1A/B.
  • Jaguar GR.Mk.3A : Jaguar 97 avionics upgrade to GR.Mk.3.
  • Jaguar M : Single-seat naval strike prototype for the French Navy, one built.
  • Jaguar Active Control Technology : One Jaguar converted into a research aircraft.
  • Jaguar International : Export versions based on either the Jaguar S or Jaguar B :
  • Jaguar ES : Export version of the Jaguar S for the Ecuadorian Air Force, ten built.
  • Jaguar EB : Export version of the Jaguar B for the Ecuadorian Air Force, two built.
  • Jaguar OS : Export version of the Jaguar S for the Royal Air Force of Oman, 20 built.
  • Jaguar OB : Export version of the Jaguar B for the Royal Air Force of Oman, 4 built
  • Jaguar IS : Single-seat all-weather tactical strike, ground-attack fighter for the Indian Air Force, 35 built by BAe and 60 built by HAL.
  • Jaguar IT : Two-seat training version for the Indian Air Force, five built by BAe and 10 built by HAL.
  • Jaguar IM : Single-seat maritime anti-shipping aircraft for the Indian Air Force. Fitted with Agave radar and capable of carrying Sea Eagle anti-ship missile, 12 built.
  • Jaguar SN : Export version of the Jaguar S for the Nigerian Air Force, 13 built
  • Jaguar BN : Export version of the Jaguar B for the Nigerian Air Force, five built.

Operators

  • Ecuadorian Air Force.
  • French Armée de l'Air (all withdrawn).
  • Indian Air Force.
  • Nigerian Air Force (13 Jaguar SN & 5 Jaguar BN).
  • Royal Air Force of Oman (20 Jaguar OS & 4 Jaguar OB).
  • United Kingdom (Royal Air Force).

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This text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Source : Article SEPECAT Jaguar of Wikipedia ( authors )

SEPECAT Jaguar

  • Role : Attack aircraft.
  • National origin : France/United Kingdom.
  • Manufacturer : SEPECAT (Breguet/BAC).
  • First flight : 8 September 1968.
  • Introduction : 1973.
  • Retired : 2005 (France) / 2007 (UK) / 2014 (Oman).
  • Primary users :
    • Indian Air Force (current in 2020).
    • Royal Air Force of Oman (historical).
    • French Air Force (historical).
    • Royal Air Force (historical).
  • Produced : 1968–1981.
  • Number built : 543.
  • Unit cost : US$8 million (2008).

Specifications (Jaguar A)

  • Crew : One.
  • Length : 16.83 m (or 55 ft 3 in).
  • Height : 4.92 m (or 16 ft 1 in).
  • Wing area : 24 m² (or 258 ft²).
  • Wingspan : 8.69 m (or 28 ft 6 in).
  • Empty weight : 7,000 kg (or 15,400 lbs).
  • Loaded weight : 11,000 kg (or 24,250 lbs).
  • Max takeoff weight : 15,700 kg (or 34,600 lbs).
  • Max. speed : 1,593 km/h or 1055 miles/h (Mach 1.6).
  • Range : 535 km combat, 3,525 km ferry (or 335 mi - 2,190 mi).
  • Service ceiling 14,000 m (or 46,000 ft).
  • Powerplant : Two Rolls-Royce - Turbomeca Adour Mk.102 turbofans.
  • Thrust : 32.5 kN or 7,300 lbf each.
  • Thrust/weight : 0.6.
  • Armament : Two 30 mm ADEN cannons or DEFA cannons with 150 rounds per gun plus five underwing hardpoints for 4,500 kg (or 10,000 lb) of disposable stores. Option of two Matra R550 Magic or AIM-9 Sidewinders on overwing pylons (Jaguar International and RAF Jaguars only). LAU-5003B/A CRV-7 rocket launchers. Joint Reconnaissance Pod.

— — — = = — — —

This text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Source : Article SEPECAT Jaguar of Wikipedia ( authors )
SEPECAT Jaguar : Your comments on this subject
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