Sepecat Jaguar

bgcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3" align="center" style="border-bottom:3px solid"|SEPECAT Jaguar
olspan="3" align="center"|
SEPECAT Jaguar
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Description
ole colspan="2"|Strike aircraft
rew colspan="2"|1
irst Flight colspan="2"|September 8, 1968
ntered Service colspan="2"|1973
anufacturer colspan="2"|SEPECAT
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Dimensions
ength 16.83 m 55 ft 3 in
ingspan 8.69 m 28 ft 6 in
eight 4.92 m 16 ft 1 in
ing area 24 m² 258.34 ft²
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Weights
mpty 7,000 kg / 7,700 kg 15,432 /16,970 lb (Jaguar A / Jaguar S)
oaded 11,000 kg 24,149 lb
aximum takeoff 15,700 kg 34,172 lb
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Powerplant
ngines colspan="2"|2 × Rolls Royce/Turbomeca RT712 Adour turbofans
ry thrust lb kN
fterburner thrust 7,305 / 8,040 lbf 32.5 / 35.8 kN (Mk 102 / Mk 104)
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Performance
aximum speed 1,593 km/h 990 mph
ombat radius 537 km 334 miles
erry range 3,525 km 2,190 miles
ervice ceiling 14,020 m 46,000 ft
ate of climb m/min ft/min
ing loading kg/m² lb/ft²
hrust/Weight colspan="2"|
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Armament
uns colspan="2"|two 30 mm ADEN cannon or DEFA cannon with 150 rounds per gun (two-seat models have only one cannon)
ombs colspan="2"|five hardpoints for 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) of disposable stores
issiles colspan="2"|option of two AIM-9 Sidewinder on overwing pylons
ockets colspan="2"|LAU-5003B/A CRV-7 rocket launchers
ther colspan="2"|Joint Reconnaissance Pod
The SEPECAT Jaguar is an Anglo-French ground attack aircraft in service with the Arme de l'Air, the Royal Air Force and several export customers, notably India. It was the product of the world's first bi-national military aircraft program.

Background

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 Armee de l'Air F-100 Super Sabre. Cross-channel negotiations led to the formation of SEPECAT (the Socit Europenne de Production de l'Avion d'Ecole de Combat et d'Appui Tactique) in 1966 as a joint venture between Brguet (the design leader) and the British Aircraft Corporation to produce the airframe, and a separate teaming of Rolls-Royce and Turbomca to develop the Adour afterburning turbofan engine. The first of 8 prototypes flew on September 8 1968. It was an orthodox single-seat, swept-wing, twin-engine design with a maximum take-off weight in the 15 tonne class, Combat radius on internal fuel was 850 km, maximum speed Mach 1.6 (Mach 1.1 at sea level) and hardpoints were fitted for an external weapons load of up to 10 tonnes.

Into service

The Armee 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 B. The RAF accepted delivery of the first of 165 single-seat Jaguar GR.1s (or Jaguar S) in 1974. These were supplemented by 35 two-seat trainers, the Jaguar T2 (or Jaguar B according to the manufacturer's designation). After Breguet was purchased by Dassault, the proposed Jaguar M variant, a carrier version for the French Aeronavale, was cancelled in favor of the Dassault Super Etendard. Jaguars were also sold on the export with some success, the largest single customer being India, which built around 100 under license by HAL. Other Jaguar operators are Ecuador, Nigeria and Oman. The Jaguar saw combat during the Gulf War, with the Arme de l'Air and RAF and the Kosovo War with the Arme de l'Air.

Replacement

The aircraft has been updated several times and remains in front-line service with Britain and France. It is to be replaced by the Eurofighter Typhoon and the Rafale. Demands by the UK Treasury demanding cuts in the defence budget lead 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 is near the end of its service life and does not have all the capabilites required of a front line jet. Proponents argue that the aircraft has been recently updated and is the most cost effective of all the RAF's fast jet force.

Units using the Jaguar

Royal Air Force

Arme de l'Air

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
nassogne
rendeux
tenneville
gary nolan (radio host)
bertrix
bouillon
daverdisse
herbeumont
lglise
libin
libramont chevigny
neufchteau
paliseul
saint hubert
tellin
wellin
chiny
etalle
florenville
habay
meix devant virton
musson
rouvroy
saint lger, belgium
tintigny
virton
farrah
michael linton
claude servais mathias pouillet
neal boortz
riesling
peter lehmann
barossa valley
geoid
alguerese
shenandoah valley
gender specific job title
kenilworth, warwickshire
alniyat
rana
battle of atlanta
pnakotic manuscripts
robotic unicycle
fraserburgh