British Aerospace/BAE Systems
British Aerospace PLC
BAE Systems
Contents
History
A graphical presentation of the road to British Aerospace/BAE Systems can be found on this site at British Aviation - A Timeline.
Despite the rationalization of the Britain's aerospace industry into BAC and Hawker Siddeley, by 1965 it was again unable to compete with foreign competitors. Lord Plowden headed a special Parliamentary committee that recommended a second major restructuring of the aircraft industry. The Plowden Report proposed that Rolls-Royce and Bristol-Siddeley merge to form a single company that manufactured aircraft engines. This merger, which included the sale of Hawker Siddeley's 50 percent interest in Bristol Siddeley to Rolls-Royce, was carried out in 1966. The second proposal, a merger of BAC and Hawker Siddeley, was abandoned.
By the early 1970’s poor economic conditions and intense competition from the Americans had eroded the already tenuous position of the British aerospace industry. In 1975 the Plowden merger proposal for BAC and Hawker Siddeley had been resurrected in the form of an Aircraft and Shipping Industries Bill. The following year the two companies were nationalized, less in an attempt to protect their finances than to force a merger upon them. In 1977, after once being rejected in the House of Lords and defeated in the Commons, the Industries Bill was successfully ushered through Parliament.
The Aircraft and Shipping Industries Bill merged the Aircraft and Dynamics divisions of Hawker Siddeley with those of the British Aircraft Corporation and Scottish Aviation Ltd. The new company, called British Aerospace (BAe), was formed on 29 April 1977, with its Corporate head office at the ex-BAC facility at Weybridge, and continued to be operated by the British government as a state-owned corporation. On 1 January 1978 it was announced that the company would be divided into two Groups: British Aerospace Aircraft Group, based at the ex-Hawker Siddeley facility in Kingston, and British Aerospace Dynamics Group, headquartered at the ex-BAC Guided Weapons plant in Stevenage (outside the scope of this website). The Aircraft Group was further divided into six divisions: Hatfield/Chester, Kingston/Brough, Manchester, Warton, Scottish and Weybridge/Bristol. These divisions employed some 50,000 people over eighteen sites – Bitteswell, Brough, Chadderton, Chester, Christchurch, Dunsfold, Filton, Hamble, Hatfield, Holme-on-Spalding Moor, Hurn, Kingston, Preston, Prestwick, Salmsbury, Warton, Weybridge and Woodford.
Hawker Siddeley had been part of the first Airbus project, the Airbus A300 and, although the British government withdrew support in April 1969, Hawker Siddeley, and later BAe, continued to design and supply the wing box for the A300. However, even in its new form, British Aerospace lacked the resources to develop a new commercial jetliner on its own any larger than the HS.146 (now renamed BAe.146) by itself and foreign collaboration would be essential. A new programme was set up in June 1977, the Joint European Transport (JET), under the leadership of Derek Brown (b. May 10, 1925, d. November 7, 2010), with BAe being partnered by MBB, Fokker-VFW and Aérospatiale, based at the former Vickers site in Weybridge, Surrey, UK. On January 1, 1979 British Aerospace purchased a 20 percent share of Airbus, pledging $500 million through 1983 for incurred costs and development of a new aircraft designated the A310, designing and supplying the wing box as for the A300. The JET programme was now transferred to Airbus, leading up to the creation of the Single-Aisle (SA) studies in 1980 and eventually the Airbus A320 series.
Just as foreign collaboration would be essential in the civil sector, it was even more so in defence. In December 1979, BAe and MBB presented the European Collaborative Fighter (ECF) project to their respective governments. However, the political desire to include France into the partnership led to Dassault-Breguet joining BAe and MBB, the result being the European Combat Aircraft (ECA). Work on this continued until March 1981, before the various Ministries declared the programme unaffordable.
Meanwhile, in accordance with the provisions of the British Aerospace Act 1980 the statutory corporation was changed to a public limited company under the name British Aerospace PLC, on 1 January 1981. On 4 February 1981 the government sold 51.57% of its shares, selling its remaining shares in 1985 but maintaining a £1 golden share allowing it veto foreign control of the board or company. The man chosen to lead the new company was the chairman of Esso Petroleum, Austin Pearce, now faced with the dual task of guiding British Aerospace through the privatization while ensuring that the company's orders were being filled.
A memorandum of Understanding had been in place between Hawker Siddeley and Mcdonnell Douglas of St Louis since the early 1970’s to allow McD to participate in AV-8A Harrier production, although in the end this was not actually undertaken. However, this had led Mcdonnell Douglas to study advanced Harrier variants during the 1970’s and by 1981, when the Ministry of Defence had finally decided to participate in the Harrier II program, a second MoU was negotiated between Mcdonnell Douglas and British Aerospace, resulting in 60/40 split in manufacture of all Harrier II (Harrier GR.5 in RAF service) for both the USMC and the RAF. The fact that this MoU worked well for several years bode well for the joint McDonnell Douglas/BAe submission for the US Navy VTXTS competition, won by the T-45 Goshawk variant of the Hawk trainer in 1984.
The inevitable rationalisation of the industry following the formation of BAe was announced in March 1982. Bitteswell, which BAe had continued to use for refurbishing Avro Shackletons and Vulcans, along with other work for the Ministry of Defence, was to close by April 1983, with the loss of 1,000 jobs. In July 1983, BAe announced that, with the end of BAC.111 production, the Hurn factory would close by July 1984, with the loss of 2,000 jobs. Another 1550 redundancies were made across other sites. Holme-on-Spalding Moor had continued support for Phantoms and Buccaneers but following the last Buccaneer flight in December 1983 that too was closed. In February 1984, four of BAe's six divisions disappeared in a major reorganisation. A new civil division was formed centred at Hatfield, combining Bristol and Scottish (Prestwick) as well as existing partner Chester, rationalising 146, Airbus, Jetstream, and 125 commercial transport manufacture. On the military side, the Weybridge/Bristol, Kingston/ Brough and Manchester divisions were brought together in a new Weybridge division, bringing Harrier, Hawk, and Nimrod together. The Warton division, with Tornado, Jaguar and Strikemaster, remained unchanged.
Following the cancellation of the ACA, BAe continued company funded studies, resulting in the P.110. The British government made it clear that funding would not be forthcoming without international collaboration, so in April 1982, BAe, MBB and Aeritalia revived their Tornado partnership with the Agile Combat Aircraft (ACA), closely resembling the P.110 but with side intakes replaced by a chin intake favoured by MBB for better handling at high angles of attack. To develop and test the new technologies being proposed for the ACA, the partners produced the Experimental Aircraft Program (EAP), first disclosed in May 1983, though by December that year MBB dropped out of that project. This all eventually led, in 1986, to the European Fighter Aircraft (EFA) programme. Once again it was attempted to include France in the programme, but the relative requirements were to disparate. To manage the design and development, Eurofighter Jagdfluzeug GmBH was formed on 2 June 1986 with offices in Munich, and comprising BAe, MBB/Dornier, Aeritalia and CASA. Finally the years of defence collaborative effort paid off; the Eurofighter Typhoon made its first flight on 27 March, 1994.
The March 1984 decision by the British Government to provide a £250 million deferred-interest loan to fund British Aerospace's development work on the Airbus A320 finally gave the green light to the European project. Until now the centre of British Aerospace work on Airbus had been at Hatfield, but in 1985 this was moved to Filton to allow Hatfield concentrate on its expanding 146 and 125 work. On the A320, BAe had been given an increased share of work; the company had been responsible for the basic wing box and fuel system of the earlier Airbus versions but on the A320 BAe took design and manufacturing responsibility for much of the rest of the wing as well, including final assembly. BAe Chester (now Airbus Broughton) still builds the wing box of each A320 wing, which is then transported Filton to receive slats, flaps, spoilers, ailerons and systems, for which a new £3. 5 million hangar was built in 1985. The resulting complete wing is then flown to Toulouse.
On May 15, 1984, the chairman of Thorn EMI announced his company's intention to merge with BAe. The announcement invited criticism from the managing director of Britain's General Electric Company (GEC), which was a principal owner of BAC before 1977, who stated it was fully prepared to exceed any bid submitted by Thorn EMI. In June 1984 British Aerospace rejected Thorn EMI's takeover proposal, and the following month did the same with GEC, citing a lack of any specific proposals. The government was satisfied with the takeover rejections because it ensured that British Aerospace would remain under British ownership and that it would continue to be a part of the Airbus group. By 1985, confident about the company's position, the British government sold its 48 percent of British Aerospace, retaining, however, a special £1 share to ensure that BAe would stay under U.K. control. The £550 million offer was tightly restricted to institutional investors. The company also was reorganized into eight functional divisions during the year, a move that was intended to economize utilization of engineering teams by having them specialize in the development of products in specific fields.
In 1982 the Future International Military Airlifter (FIMA) was proposed by a group comprising British Aerospace, Aérospatiale, MBB and Lockheed to develop a replacement for the Lockheed C-130 Hercules and Transall C-160 transport aircraft. Other companies joined in 1987, primarily Aeritalia (now Alenia Aermacchi) and CASA, and the project was retitled FLAEG (Future Large Aircraft Exploratory Group). However, progress was slow and in 1989 Lockheed left the consortium to develop the second-generation Hercules, the C-130J. Now a European concern, the project was again renamed, this time as EUROFLAG (European Future Large Aircraft Group) and was formally established as a limited liability company in Rome in 1991. In September 1994 it was absorbed by Airbus Industrie and the programme management passed to a dedicated Airbus Military core team in Toulouse in 1995. In January 1999 the Airbus Future Large Aircraft (FLA) was re-named A400M.
Probably the most significant closure of the 1980s was that of Weybridge, BAe announcing in July 1986 that all manufacturing work would go to other BAe factories, leaving Weybridge with just the corporate headquarters, military division HQ, along with some civil design and support responsibilities. Continued employment for 1,500 of the 4000 workforce was offered at Weybridge, Kingston, Dunsfold, and other company locations throughout the UK, but closure still lead to some 2,500 redundancies. BAE Systems still retain a logistics centre at Weybridge in 2018.
In April 1987 British Aerospace acquired Royal Ordnance plc, a state-owned maker of small arms ammunition, for £190 million. Shortly thereafter, Pearce stepped down as chairman, being replaced by Professor Roland Smith. Under Smith's leadership, there followed a period of considerable, if ill-advised acquisitions by BAe unconnected to the aerospace or defence industries. In August 1991, BAe formed a naval systems joint venture, BAeSEMA, with the Sema Group. By now, BAe was near collapse. A recession had severely impacted the automobile and real estate sectors, turning the acquisitions of Rover and Arlington sour. The economic downturn also wreaked havoc with the company's already troubled regional and corporate aircraft operations. Smith approached first Trafalgar House (a construction engineering and property group) and then GEC about a merger. When the BAe board found out about the talks with GEC, they ordered that the discussions be terminated. In September 1991 the company's dire straits forced Smith to attempt to raise £432 million through a stock offering. When current shareholders revolted, the board ousted Smith, replacing him temporarily with Graham Day, who had been chairman of Rover. During Day's brief six-month tenure, he succeeded in turning away yet another attempt by GEC to acquire BAe.
The severe financial problems BAe had found itself in led to the closure of more sites, including two of its most iconic. In December 1990, British Aerospace announced the closure of the historic Sopwith/Hawker site at Kingston, to be phased over a period between June 1991 and December 1992, and the old English Electric Preston Strand Road site in 1993. Kingston’s future project design offices had already been rationalised and centred on Warton and Brough earlier in 1988 and now its manufacturing moved to Dunsfold, but, with completion of Harrier production, this also closed in 2000. BAe later announced the cessation of aircraft production at the old de Havilland Hatfield site from 1993, with civil aircraft design being located at Prestwick and Woodford. BAe had used the former Folland/Hawker Siddeley facility at Hamble for component manufacture, setting up a separate subsidiary, Aerostructure Hamble Ltd in January 1989. BAe disposed of this facility in April 1992, it thereafter operating as an independent concern, eventually becoming part of the Dowty Group.
As part of the earlier expansion under Smith’s chairmanship, BAe’s Aerospace concerns had been reorganized into two subsidiary companies: British Aerospace (Civil Aircraft) Limited, incorporated on 21 July 1988, and British Aerospace (Military Aircraft) Limited, incorporated five days later. Grahame Day continued these restructuring operations, placing defence operations under a single umbrella subsidiary called British Aerospace Defence Limited in January 1992, and dividing the civil division into two parts: British Aerospace Corporate Jets Limited (just Corporate Jets from May 1992), to continue development of the 125 line and any new corporate jet developments, and British Aerospace Regional Aircraft Limited, centred at Hatfield, both incorporated on 28 January 1992. On 1 February 1992, British Aerospace (Airbus) Limited was formed as a separate company at Filton. Regional Aircraft was further broken down when Jetstream Aircraft Limited (incorporated 9 July 1992) was formed to consolidate Jetstream (including the ATP, now re-branded Jetstream 61) production at Prestwick, and Avro International Aerospace Limited (incorporated on 9 November 1992) to consolidate production of the BAe.146 at Woodford. It was intended that Avro International was to be set up as a 50/50 joint venture with the Taiwan Aerospace Corporation, which was to inject £120 million into the new company, with the intention of setting up a second production line in Taiwan, but in the end the finance was not available and the deal collapsed. British Aerospace decided to continue without outside investment due to the cost savings realised with the closure of the BAe.146 production line at Hatfield Aerodrome and the consolidation of production at Woodford. Arguably, the BAe.125 was the UK's most successful turbine-powered civil aircraft programme, with deliveries having averaged about two a month since it began life in 1962 as the D.H.125. But this programme was a victim of BAe's strategy to dispose of "non-core activities", when it sold its Corporate Jets division to Raytheon (later Hawker Beechcraft) in 1993, though all major subassembly work remained in the UK at the BAe (later Airbus) UK Broughton plant. Production ended in 2013 due to Hawker Beechcraft’s bankruptcy.
Starting in the mid-1990’s, Aérospatiale, BAe and Germany’s DASA teamed up to create what would be Concorde’s replacement. This project was simply known as “Alliance,” while the aircraft was known as the "ESCT" (European Supersonic Commercial Transport), or "AST" (Advanced Supersonic Transport). Outside of the main three countries involved with the tri-national venture, Italy, Russia, Japan, and the United States had some minor involvement. Wholly, the development of the European design would require $15-20 billion annually. Project Alliance’s concept was an ambitious step forward from Concorde, the project’s intended advancements consisting primarily of increased range, speed, passengers, and versatility. To sustain the costs that would ensue from the operation of such a complex aircraft, the passenger capacity was set to 250-300 passengers. Increasing the passenger capacity would reduce the airfare of the SST, and make filling seats a less laborious task. Aside from the expanded number of passengers, the SST would fly at an increased speed of Mach 2.2. Additionally, the aircraft would have an improved range of 10,000km, thus adding to the amount of routes the aircraft could cover. This would open a window of opportunity that Concorde never had; completing transpacific and other lengthy routes without stopovers to refuel, therefore making the aircraft’s market more optimistic and versatile. Unfortunately, the ESCT concept of Project Alliance failed to move past the developmental stages. During the 1999 G7 summit in Seattle, discussions between the involved countries led to the subsequent closing of the project.
In 1995 an agreement was signed with the Franco-Italian Avions de Transport Regional (ATR) to create a multi-national consortium named Aero International (Regional) (AI(R)), to be based at Toulouse. As well as Avro it would also include Jetstream Aircraft of Prestwick. Avro would continue to build the regional jet family at Woodford but they would be marketed under the AI(R) branding. Although BAe aircraft were marketed for a time via AI(R), no new designs were forthcoming from the consortium and it was officially dissolved on 1 July 1998.
Defence consolidation became a major activity in late 1990's. BAeSEMA, Siemens Plessey and GEC-Marconi formed UKAMS Ltd in 1994 as part of the Principal Anti-Air Missile System (PAAMS) consortium. UKAMS would become a wholly owned subsidiary of BAe Dynamics in 1998. In 1995 Saab Military Aircraft and BAe signed an agreement for the joint development and marketing of the export version of the JAS 39 Gripen. In 1996 BAe and Matra Defense agreed to merge their missile businesses into a joint venture called Matra BAe Dynamics. In 1997 BAe joined the Lockheed Martin X-35 Joint Strike Fighter team. The company acquired the UK operations of Siemens Plessey Systems (SPS) in 1998 from Siemens AG, while DASA purchased SPS' German assets.
In 1998, numerous reports linked various European defence groups – mainly with each other but also with American defence contractors. It was widely anticipated that BAe would merge with Germany’s DASA to form a pan-European aerospace giant. A merger deal was negotiated between Richard Evans and DASA CEO Jürgen Schrempp. However, when it became clear that GEC was selling its defence electronics business Marconi Electronic Systems, Evans put the DASA merger on hold in favour of purchasing Marconi. Evans stated in 2004 that his fear was that an American defence contractor would acquire Marconi and challenge both BAe and DASA. Schrempp was angered by Evans' actions and chose instead to merge DASA with Aerospatiale to create the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS). This group was joined by Spain’s CASA following an agreement in December 1999.
The GEC merger to create a UK company compared to what would have been an Anglo-German firm, made the possibility of further penetration of the United States defence market more likely. The company, initially called "New British Aerospace", was officially formed on 30 November 1999 as BAE Systems. The dropping of the words “British” and “Aerospace” in the name indicated the direction the new company intended to take – a global organization with an emphasis on all aspects of defence, not just aerospace. BAE Systems had little ambition to be a serious player in the civil sector outside Airbus. BAE Systems' first annual report identified Airbus, support services to militaries and integrated systems for air, land and naval applications as key areas of growth. It also stated the company's desire to both expand in the US and participate in further consolidation in Europe. On the civil side, AI(R) had achieved little except to confirm the demise of the UK's remaining turboprop projects - the Jetstream 31, 41 and 61 (original the ATP). Under BAE Systems, the ongoing civil activities were renamed BAE Systems Airbus and BAE Systems, Regional Aircraft, but on 1 January 2001 BAE Systems, Regional Aircraft and BAE Systems Aviation Services were merged to form BAE Systems Aviation Services Group. In March, BAE Systems also merged its UK- and US-based civil aerostructures businesses to form a new division. The enlarged Aerostructures Group was based in Chadderton and included component manufacture at Prestwick and Samlesbury, along with with Precision Aerostructures of Wellington, Kansas.
The Avro RJ continued for a short while with a third-generation development, the RJX, which began flight testing, but the sudden downturn in the autumn of 2001 after the 9/11 terrorist attacks gave BAE the excuse it needed to finally extinguish any remaining aspirations to build airliners. But the same was not true of its involvement in Airbus. BAE still enjoyed the sizeable revenue and profits that their Airbus activity generated, and was fully behind the 1999-2000 revamp of the original consortium structure into an integrated company. In 2001 BAE transferred its UK Airbus facilities, including its Broughton site and design and manufacturing activities at the historic Filton site, to the newly formed Airbus UK in return for a 20% share of the new company. However, when Dick Olver was appointed chairman in July 2004 he ordered a review of the company's businesses which ruled out further European acquisitions or joint ventures and confirmed a "strategic bias" for expansion and investment in the US. The review also confirmed the attractiveness of the land systems sector and, with two acquisitions in 2004 and 2005, BAE moved from a limited land systems supplier to the second largest such company in the world. Between 2008 and early 2011 BAE acquired five cyber security companies in a shift in strategy to take account of reduced spending by governments on "traditional defence items such as warships and tanks”.
By October 2002, BAE Systems was "reviewing" its civil aerostructures business and considered it may put it up for sale as it focused on its core systems integration activities. In January 2006 BAE announced that it had sold its Aerostructures business unit to Spirit AeroSystems for £80 million. The remaining facilities at Prestwick reverted to BAE Systems Regional Aircraft as a supplier of managed solutions for aircraft support services and engineering. In addition, Prestwick is the Type Certificate holder for the Jetstream 31/32, Jetstream 41, ATP, HS.748 and BAe.146/Avro RJ families. With the sale in October 2006 of its stake in Airbus for £1.9 billion, BAE had pulled out of the civil sector completely. In 2008, Airbus sold most of the component manufacturing activities on the Filton site to GKN Aerospace and BAE Systems closed the airfield for business on 31 December 2012. The old Avro site at Woodford was also a victim of closure at this time, being sold by BAE Systems on 20 December 2011 with the other ex-Avro site at Chadderton following in March 2012.
FOAS, or the Future Offensive Air System, was the name given to a number of concept options being examined for the UK Ministry of Defence’s requirement to replace the capabilities provided by the Tornado GR4 aircraft, with the aircraft and airborne systems intended to become operational around 2018. The FOAS research program was ran in parallel to two major UK defence initiatives - the new future aircraft carrier (CVF) and on the Future Joint Combat Aircraft (FJCA), formerly known as the Future Carrier Borne Aircraft (FCBA), for which the STOVL variant of the F-35 Lightning II was chosen in September 2002. BAE Systems examined the best combined force mix, comprising manned aircraft, Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAVs) and Conventional Air Launched Cruise Missiles. Options evaluated for the manned aircraft included variants of developed aircraft such as the Eurofighter and the F-35 rather than dedicated new build aircraft. The decision to move FOAS into the assessment phase was not taken and the project was closed down in June 2005, being replaced by the Deep and Persistent Offensive Capability (DPOC) requirement, itself cancelled in the 2010 Strategic Defence Review.
In November 2010 it was announced that BAE Systems was in talks with France’s Dassault Aviation about collaborating on the development of a future Medium Altitude Long Endurance (MALE) Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) programme and a potential Unmanned Combat Aircraft System. In June 2011 this was officially revealed as Telemos, to be based, in particular, around the Mantis programme, which first flew in 2009. The Telemos programme was abandoned in July 2012, as the new French socialist government considered cooperating instead with other European partners on the EADS Talarion programme. In 2012 the FOAS/DPOC program was revived when France signed an MoU to join the RAF's latest programme, now the unmanned Future Combat Air System (FCAS), to build upon the BAE Systems Taranis and Dassault nEURON demonstrators. Under the terms of an Anglo-French £120 million contract announced in 2014, the two-year FCAS Feasibility Phase programme would involve six industry partners exploring concepts and options for the potential collaborative acquisition of a UCAS in the future. A 12-month £1.5 billion demonstrator stage of the FCAS effort was agreed by the French and UK governments in March 2016 ultimately leading to a full-scale demonstrator development programme starting at the end of 2017. However, by early 2018 “political and budgetary uncertainty” in London had left the launch of a demonstrator programme in doubt; in April 2018, Dassault Aviation and Airbus announced an agreement to cooperate on the development of a stealth fighter jet and in July the same year BAE unveiled Team Tempest, which includes the Ministry of Defence, BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce, Leonardo, and MBDA UK. £2 billion is planned to be spent by the British government on the initial phase of the project up to 2025. Both Italy and Sweden signed a Memorandum of Understanding in 2020 committing to explore collaboration on the new FCAS programme. Sweden left the program, but was followed by an announcement in December 2022 of the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP), a collaboration between Italy, Japan and the UK for a sixth-generation fighter aircraft.
Since the early 2000's, BAE had been developing expertise in fully autonomous unmanned airborne systems. Although none of these programs have directly led to a production order, these UAV platforms have enabled BAE to demonstrate the key technologies for the next generation of airborne systems which include specific programmes in autonomous systems and low observability.
Company References
- British Built Aircraft, Ron Smith (Tempus, Vol.1 2002, Vol.2 2003, Vol.3 2004, Vol.4 2004, Vol.5 2005)
- The Aircraft of British Aerospace and BAE SYSTEMS 1977 - 2017, Stephen Skinner (Key Publishing)
- http://www.company-histories.com/British-Aerospace-plc-Company-History.html
- Flight International 07 Jan 1978
- Flight International 23 Jul 1983
- Flight International 11 Feb 1984
- Flight International 10 Mar 1984
- Flight International 12 Jan 1985
- Flight International 13 Feb 1988
- Flight International 16 Jul 1988
- Flight International 25 Dec 1991
- Flight International 05 Feb 1992
- Flight International 26 Apr 1993
- Flight International 09 Jun 1993
- Flight International 16 Jun 1993
- Flight International 11 Aug 1993
- Flight International 27 Jan 1993
- Flight International 21 Jun 1995
- Flight International 20 Dec 1995
- Flight International 15 Jul 1998
- Flight International 20 Mar 2001
- Flight International 22 Oct 2002
- https://www.flightglobal.com/fixed-wing/dassault-confirms-end-of-anglo-french-ucav-work/131603.article
- https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/final-landing-a-history-of-the-uk-aircraft-industry-211152/
- https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/new-22-billion-anglo-french-fcas-phase-announced-422866/
- https://www.flightglobal.com/defence/italy-japan-and-uk-confirm-joint-gcap-fighter-development-pact/151283.article
- https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/02279211
- https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/02280710
- https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/02653776
- https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/02762965
- http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-95-952_en.htm
- https://www.uasvision.com/2011/03/17/bae-systems-and-dassault-join-forces-for-male-uas/
- http://www.airforce-technology.com/projects/foas/
Project Data Index
Legacy Aircraft
| Aircraft | Reference |
|---|---|
| BAe.125 | See de Havilland |
| BAe.146 | See Hawker Siddeley |
| BAe.748 | See Avro |
| Bulldog | See Beagle |
| Harrier | See Hawker |
| Hawk | See Hawker Siddeley |
| Jaguar | See BAC |
| Jetstream | See Handley Page |
| Nimrod | See Hawker Siddeley |
| Phoenix | See GEC Marconi |
| Sea Harrier | See Hawker |
| Strikemaster | See Percival Jet Provost |
| Tornado | See BAC |
| VC.10 | See Vickers |
BAe Brough; for Type Numbers before P.161, see Hawker Siddeley.
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P.161 | 1979 | Proj | 0 | Unstable canard vs conventional fighter studies. | 3, 20 | ||||
| P.162 | Proj | 0 | Variable cycle engine studies. | 20 | |||||
| P.163 | 1980 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E light combat aircraft. | 3, 20, 301 | ||||
| P.164 | 1980 | T.301 (AST.412) | Proj | 0 | 2S, 1E trainer studies. | 20, 23, 302, 327, 815, 424, 427 | |||
| Eaglet | 1980 | T.301 (AST.412) | Proj | 0 | 2S, 1E trainer. | 23 | |||
| P.165 | 1980 | Proj | 0 | Supersonic vectored thrust strike aircraft. | 2 | ||||
| P.166 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.167 | 1981 | Proj | 0 | VSTOL strike aircraft. | 2 | ||||
| P.168 | Proj | 0 | Active control technology studies. | 2 | |||||
| P.169 | Proj | 0 | Stealth penetration aircraft. | 2, 813 | |||||
| P.170 | 1982 | Proj | Light attack aircraft. | 2, 813 | |||||
| P.171 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | Technology demonstrator. | 3, 813 | ||||
| P.172 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.173 | Proj | 0 | Advanced stealth studies. | 3, 813 | |||||
| P.174 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.175 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.176 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.177 | Proj | 0 | F-4 Phantom developments. | 2 | |||||
| P.178 | Proj | 0 | Harrier developments. | 2 | |||||
| P.179 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.180 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.181 | 1987 | See BAe Kingston P.1230 | |||||||
After P.181, BAe Brough Type Numbers were integrated with the BAe Kingston numbering system.
BAe Kingston / Brough; for Type Numbers before P.1208, see Hawker Siddeley.
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P.1208 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E subsonic vectored thrust STOVL GA fighter. See table for variants. | 2, 3, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1209 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E vectored thrust STOVL demonstrator. | 2, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1210 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 2E (podded) air superiorty fighter. | 3, 25 | ||||
| P.1211 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E air superiorty fighter. | 3, 25 | ||||
| P.1212 | 1979 | (AST.410) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E ASTOVL vectored thrust three nozzle, twin tail boom fighter. | 3, 11, 25, 810, 820, 828 | |||
| P.1213 | 1979 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E ASTOVL vectored thrust four nozzle canard fighter. | 2, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1214 | 1979 | (AST.410) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E ASTOVL FSW vectored thrust three nozzle fighter. See table for variants. | 1, 3, 11, 25, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1215 | 1979 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E fighter, chin intake, swept wing with canards. | 3, 25 | ||||
| P.1216 | 1980 | See table | Proj | 0 | 1S ASTOVL twin tail boom fighter. See table for variants. | 3, 10, 11, 22, 25, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1217 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E ASTOVL fighter with RALS. | 3, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1218 | 1981 | Proj | 0 | 2S, 2E ASTOVL F-14/A-6 replacement project for USN; collaboration with Mcdonnel Douglas. | 2, 11, 25, 810, 820, 828 | ||||
| P.1219 | 1981 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E fighter: lightweight P.1216 with outer panels removed and folding tail booms. | 3, 11, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1220 | 1982 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E fighter: lightweight P.1216 with canard. | 3, 11, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1221 | 1982 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E fighter: reduced size P.1216 with side intakes. | 3, 11, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1222 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | V/STOL fighter with tandem fan powerplant. | 2, 3, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1223 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | Augmented thrust ASTOVL fighter. | 3, 25, 331, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1224 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | Ramp launched, tail-sitting-recovery, unmanned fighter. | 25, 802, 810, 820, 821 | ||||
| P.1225 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | Hawk 200 with ventral bomb pannier. | 25, 808 | ||||
| P.1226 | 1984 | (NST.6464) | Proj | 0 | 1E, 1S ASTOVL fighter. See table for variants. | 2, 3, 25, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1227 | 1984 | (NST.6464) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E Harrier II development with bigger wing. | 25, 810 | |||
| P.1228 | 1985 | (NST.6464) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E vectored thrust, supersonic canard naval V/STOL strike fighter. | 2, 3, 11, 25, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1229 | 1985 | (NST.6464) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E four-nozzle vectored thrust, supersonic naval strike fighter. | 2, 3, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1230 | 1985 | (NST.6464) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E four-nozzle vectored thrust, supersonic naval strike fighter. | 2, 3, 11, 25, 362, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1231 | 1985 | Proj | 0 | Supersonic VSTOL (AV-16-S4 revived). | 2, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1232 | 1985 | Proj | 0 | Harrier development: Sea Harrier FRS.2 fwd fuselage and wing, GR.Mk.5 rear fuselage. | 2, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1233 | 1986 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E Small Agile Battlefield a/c (SABA) studies. | 2, 25, 22, 24, 333, 465 | ||||
| P.1234 | 1986 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E Small Agile Battlefield a/c (SABA) studies. See table for variants. | 2, 24, 25 | ||||
| P.1235 | 1986 | Proj | 0 | Hawker Siddeley P.1201 for Spanish AX requirement. | 25, 810, 808 | ||||
| P.1236 | 1986 | Proj | 0 | Small Agile Battlefield a/c (SABA) studies. | 2, 25 | ||||
| P.1237 | 1986 | Proj | 0 | ASTOVL with RALS. | 2, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1238 | 1987 | Proj | 0 | Small Agile Battlefield a/c (SABA) studies. | 2, 22, 25 | ||||
| P.1239 | 1987 | Proj | 0 | Small Agile Battlefield a/c (SABA) studies. | 4, 22, 25, 821 | ||||
| P.1240 | 1987 | Proj | 0 | 1E stealth ASTOVL. Swept wing with tip fins. | 3, 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1241 | 1987 | Proj | 0 | 1E stealth ASTOVL with RALS, delta wing, dorsal intake. | 25, 810, 820 | ||||
| P.1242 | 1988 | Proj | 0 | Several studies of STOL aircraft. | 11, 25 | ||||
| P.1243 | 1988 | Proj | 0 | Ramp launched, tail-sitting-recovery, unmanned fighter. | 25, 802, 810, 820, 821 | ||||
| P.1244 | Harrier IIIA | 1988 | Proj | 0 | P.1227-3 development. | 25, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1245 | Harrier IIIB & C | 1988 | Proj | 0 | P.1231 without PCB. | 25, 810, 820 | |||
| P.1246 | 1988 | Proj | 0 | P.1245 with PCB. | 25, 810, 820 |
Kingston Future Projects office closes 1988; Kingston closes 1992.
BAe Filton
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AST | 1989 | Proj | 0 | SST studies | 14, 310, 806 |
From the early 1980s, BAe Filton was primarily responsible for wing design across all Airbus products. In 2001 BAE transferred its UK Airbus facilities, including Filton, to Airbus UK in return for a 20% share of the new company. In 2008, Airbus sold most of the component manufacturing activities on the Filton site to GKN Aerospace, retaining its wing design centre. BAE Systems retained the airfield itself but this was for business on 31 December 2012.
BAe Hatfield
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FJA | 1978 | See Hawker Siddeley HS.146 | |||||||
| 225 | 1979 | Internal project number for the original BAe.125-800 project. See de Havilland D.H.125 | |||||||
| SST Biz Jet | 1986 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 12 pax supersonic business jet | 14, 464 | ||||
| 1000 | 1989 | Marketing designation for BAe.125-1000. See de Havilland D.H.125 | |||||||
| 146NRA | 1990 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 130 pax development of HS.146 | 14, 309, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 466 | ||||
| NBJ | 1991 | Proj | 0 | 2E Business jet studies | 14, 335 | ||||
Design and manufacturing ceases at Hatfield in 1993.
BAe Prestwick
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jetstream 31 | 1980 | See Handley Page Jetstream | |||||||
| Jetstream 41 | 1991 | See Handley Page Jetstream | |||||||
| Jetstream 51 | 1993 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 52 passenger airliner, derived from BAe.846 ATP | 14, 16, 367, 368, 375, 901 | ||||
| Jetstream 61 | 1993 | Updated BAe.846 ATP | |||||||
| Jetstream 71 | 1993 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 78 passenger airliner, derived from ATP | 14, 16, 367, 368, 375, 901 | ||||
In March 2001 component manufacture at Prestwick bcame part of the Aerostructures Group, which was sold to Spirit AeroSystems in 2006. The remaining facilities at Prestwick reverted to BAE Systems Regional Aircraft as a supplier of managed solutions for aircraft support services and engineering.
BAe/BAE Systems Warton; for Type Numbers before P.98, see BAC.
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P.98 | 1977 | Proj | 0 | Delta wing aircraft. | 2 | ||||
| P.99 | Unknown | 3 | |||||||
| P.100 | Proj | 0 | Tilt wing aircraft. | 2 | |||||
| P.101 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | 2S, 1E gunship. | 2, 22 | ||||
| P.102 | 1980 | Proj | 0 | Tit wing vectored thrust aircraft. | 2 | ||||
| P.103 | 1978 | (AST.403) | Proj | 0 | Tilt wing/tilt engine fighter. | 3, 11, 20, 22, 829 | |||
| P.104 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | Delta canard fighter. | 3 | ||||
| P.105 | 1981 | Proj | 0 | Light combat aircraft for India. | 3 | ||||
| P.106A | LCA | 1980 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E fighter; swept wing, conventional tailplane. | 3, 7, 20, 301, 340 | |||
| P.106B | LCA | 1980 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E fighter; cranked delta wing with canards. | 3, 7, 20, 301, 340 | |||
| P.107 | 1981 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E FSW development of P.106. | 3 | ||||
| P.108 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.109 | 1980 | (AST.410) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E VTOL fighter; chin intake. | 3, 11, 22, 823 | |||
| P.110 | 1981 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 2E fighter. | 3, 20, 22, 458, 459, 460, 461 | ||||
| P.111 | 1981 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E CTOL variant of P.109. | 3 | ||||
| P.112 | 1981 | (AST.410) | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E STOVL canard delta with RALS. | 3, 11, 362, 823 | |||
| EAP | 1983 | Proto | 1 | 1S, 2E fighter technology demonstrator. | 3, 6, 17, 19, 20, 22, 304, 328, 332, 818, 428, 300, 462, 463 | ||||
| P.113 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.114 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E STOVL combat aircraft; 4 nozzle vectored thrust & canard foreplanes. | 3 | ||||
| P.115 | 1984 | Proj | 0 | 1S, tandem fan STOVL canard delta. | 3, 11, 362, 823, 824 | ||||
| P.116 | 1984 | Proj | 0 | STOVL combat aircraft with ejector augmentor. | 3, 11, 362 | ||||
| P.117 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.118 | 1984 | Proj | 0 | Tailed European Fighter Aircraft. | 3 | ||||
| P.119 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.120 | 1986 | (AST.414) | See Eurofighter Typhoon | ||||||
| P.121 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.122 | 1987 | Proj | 0 | ASTOVL Stealth. | 3 | ||||
| P.123 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.124 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.125 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 1E V/STOL fighter featuring synthetic vision and RULS | 22, 801, 813, 816 | |||||
| P.126 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.127 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.128 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.129 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.130 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.131 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.132 | Maritime ATP | 1991 | Proj | 0 | Anti submarine/shipping variant of ATP. | 8, 16, 308, 359, 363 | |||
| P.133 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.134 | 1991 | Proj | 0 | SIGINT variant of BAe.125. | 312 | ||||
| P.135 | 1991 | Proj | 0 | Military BAe.125 with under-belly radar. | 312 | ||||
| P.136 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.137 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.138 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.139 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.140 | Proj | 0 | Supersonic Harrier. | 3 | |||||
| P.141 | Unknown | ||||||||
| P.142 | Proj | 0 | Light combat aircraft. | 3 | |||||
| Supersonic Hawk | 1993 | Proj | 0 | Supersonic derivative of Hawker Siddeley Hawk. | 825 | ||||
| Kestrel | 2001 | Proto | 1 | 2E, jet-powered UAV. | 322, 388, 802 | ||||
| Raven | 2003 | Proto | 2 | 1E, fully autonomous, UCAV demonstrator. | 322, 384, 388 | ||||
| Corax | 2004 | Proto | 1 | 1E unmanned reconnaissance UAV demonstrator. | 321, 322, 381, 388, 802 | ||||
| Herti | 2004 | Prdn | 8 | 1E surveillance and reconnaissance UAV. | 322, 383, 384, 386, 387, 388, 391, 396, 802 | ||||
| Fury | 2006 | Proto | 2 | Armed recce and CAS variant of Herti. | 392, 802 | ||||
| Ampersand | 2008 | Proto | 1 | 1E rotary wing UAV technology demonstrator. | 800 | ||||
| Mantis | 2008 | Proto | 1 | 2E UAV technology demonstrator. | 324, 393, 394, 396, 399, 400, 404, 405, 802, 817 | ||||
| Taranis | 2008 | Proto | 1 | 1E, fully autonomous, UCAV demonstrator. | 332, 389, 391, 396, 401, 406, 407, 412, 414, 415, 421, 802, 804, 819 | ||||
| Magma | 2016 | Proto | 1 | UAV technology demonstrator. | 805, 814, 901 | ||||
| Tempest | FCAS, GCAP | 2018 | Proj | 0 | 1S/2E 6th Gen fighter. | 831, 834, 835, 836 | |||
| UAS 1 | Concept 1 | 2022 | Proj | 0 | 1E UAV technology demonstrator. | 839 | |||
| UAS 2 | Concept 2 | 2022 | Proj | 0 | 1E UAV technology demonstrator. | 839 | |||
| ACP | 2023 | Proj | 0 | 1E autonomous collaborative platform technology demonstrator. | 840 | ||||
BAe Woodford; for Type Numbers before BAe.836, see Hawker Siddeley.
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAe.836 | 1978 | (ASR.411) | Proj | 0 | 2E Multi-role support aircraft based on Airbus A300C4. | 12, 901 | |||
| BAe.837 | 1978 | Proj | 0 | Various VTOL military transport studies. | 13, 901 | ||||
| BAe.838 | 1979 | Proj | 0 | Provisional studies for NATO NIAG programme. | 901 | ||||
| BAe.839 | 1979 | Proj | 0 | 100 seat airliner. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.840 | 1982 | Proj | 0 | 2 turboprop, 64 pax Avro 748 replacement using HS.146 components and FEAT. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.841 | 1983 | See FIMA | |||||||
| BAe.842 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | Fleet protection AEW. | 901 | ||||
| BAe.843 | 1981 | (ASR.411) | Proj | 0 | Multi-role support aircraft based on Airbus A300B. | 901 | |||
| BAe.844 | 1981 | (ASR.411) | Proj | 0 | Multi-role support aircraft based on Airbus A310. | 12, 901 | |||
| BAe.845 | 1982 | Proj | 0 | AEW studies - variants of Avro 748. | 12, 901 | ||||
| BAe.846 | ATP | 1982 | Prdn | 66 | 2E, 64 pax development of Avro 748. | 8, 14, 16, 302, 303, 329, 342, 343, 344, 345, 347, 348, 350, 355, 356, 361, 364, 365, 366, 367, 371, 373, 376, 901 | |||
| BAe.847 | 1982 | (ASR.400) | Proj | 0 | 2E AEW aircraft based on Airbus A300C4. | 12, 901 | |||
| BAe.848 | 1983 | Proj | 0 | 80 passenger airliner. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.849 | NGMR | 1984 | Proj | 0 | 4E maritime reconnaissance aircraft studies. | 8, 827, 901 | |||
| BAe.850 | 1987 | Proj | 0 | 2 turboprop 20-36 seat business/commuter aircraft. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.851 | 1988 | Proj | 0 | High speed commuter aircraft using shortened ATP fuselage & HS.146 outer wing panels and pylons. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.852 | 1988 | Proj | 0 | Commuter aircraft. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.853 | 1989 | Proj | 0 | 2/3E, 75 seat airliner. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.854 | 1989 | Proj | 0 | 50 pax jet airliner. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.855 | 1989 | Proj | 0 | 600 to 1500 pax B.747 replacement. | 14, 901 | ||||
| BAe.856 | 1990 | Proj | 0 | Jetstream 41 replacement. | 14, 901 | ||||
| Avro RJ | 1992 | See Hawker Siddeley HS.146 | |||||||
| BAe.857 | Avro RJX | 1993 | See Avro International Aerospace/Taiwan Aerospace RJX | ||||||
| BAe.858 | 1994 | Various development studies of the Avro RJ designated RJ-Q/R/T & W. See Hawker Siddeley HS.146 | |||||||
| BAe.859 | 1995 | See AI(R).70 | |||||||
| BAe.860 | Not used to avoid confusion with HS.860 | ||||||||
| BAe.861 | 1997 | As supplier to Airbus, study for a joint project with China. See AE-100 | |||||||
| BAe.862 | RJX | 1999 | See Hawker Siddeley HS.146 | ||||||
Woodford closes 2011.
BAe/BAE Systems Collaborative Projects
| Project No | Type No | Name | Alternative Name(s) | Year | Spec (Requirement) | Status | Qty | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joint European Transport (British Aerospace/MBB/Fokker-VFW/Aerospatiale) | |||||||||
| JET 1 | 1977 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 136 pax airliner studies. | 14, 326, 456, 457 | ||||
| JET 2 | 1977 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 163 pax airliner studies. | 14, 326, 456, 457 | ||||
| European Collaborative Fighter (British Aerospace/MBB) | |||||||||
| ECF | 1979 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 2E fighter. | 3, 20 | ||||
| European Combat Aircraft (British Aerospace/Dassault/MBB) | |||||||||
| ECA | 1979 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 2E fighter. | 3, 20, 336, 337, 338, 339, 341 | ||||
| British Aerospace/McDonnell Douglas | |||||||||
| Harrier II | 1981 | See Hawker Harrier | |||||||
| T-45 Goshawk | 1984 | See Hawker Siddeley Hawk | |||||||
| HOTOL (British Aerospace/Rolls Royce) | |||||||||
| HOTOL | 1982 | Proj | 0 | Single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) spaceplane. | 5, 26, 330, 395, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439 | ||||
| HOTOL 2 | Interim HOTOL | 1990 | Proj | 0 | Simplified SSTO spaceplane. | 26, 440, 441, 442, 443 | |||
| Advanced Combat Aircraft (British Aerospace/MBB/Aeritalia) | |||||||||
| ACA | EFA | 1982 | Proj | 0 | 1S, 2E fighter derived from P.110. | 3, 20, 343, 425, 426, 429, 430 | |||
| Future International Medium Airlifter (British Aerospace/Aerospatiale/MBB/Lockheed, later adding Aeritalia and CASA ) | |||||||||
| FIMA | 1982 | Proj | 0 | Studies for an International Military Airlifter. | 8, 346, 347, 349, 351, 352, 353, 354, 357, 358, 901 | ||||
| Eurofighter (Originally British Aerospace/MBB/Aeritalia/CASA, later BAE Systems/Airbus/Leonardo) | |||||||||
| Typhoon | EFA | 1986 | (ASR.414) | Prod | 677 | 1/2S, 2E fighter/strike aircraft. | 3, 22, 305, 315, 319, 320, 323, 325, 380, 382, 384, 385, 390, 398, 402, 403, 408, 409, 410, 411, 413, 417, 418, 420, 423, 822, 812 | ||
| Euroflag (British Aerospace/Aerospatiale/MBB/Aeritalia/CASA ) | |||||||||
| FLA | 1989 | Proj | 0 | Studies for an International Military Airlifter. Eventually led to Airbus A400 Atlas. | 357, 358, 360, 363, 369, 370, 372, 374, 467 | ||||
| SCTICSG (Supersonic Commercial Transport International Co-Operation Study Group) (British Aerospace/Aerospatiale) | |||||||||
| SST | 1990 | Proj | 0 | 4E, 200 seat advanced supersonic airliner. | 21 | ||||
| Avro International Aerospace/Taiwan Aerospace | |||||||||
| RJX | RJ-X | 1993 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 90-120 seat airliner. | 14, 309, 367, 451, 452 | |||
| European Supersonic Commercial Transport (Aérospatiale/British Aerospace/DASA) | |||||||||
| Alliance | ESCT | 1994 | Proj | 0 | SST studies. | 316, 826, 809 | |||
| McDonnell Douglas / British Aerospace / Northrop Grumman | |||||||||
| JSF | JAST, ASTOVL | 1994 | Proj | 0 | 1S/1E strike fighter | 837, 838, 902, 903 | |||
| Aero International (Regional) (British Aerospace/ATR) | |||||||||
| AIA-220 | 1996 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 100 pax jetliner. | 14, 377 | ||||
| AirJet 58 | 1996 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 58 pax jetliner. | 14, 377, 378 | ||||
| AirJet 70 | AIR (70) | 1996 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 70 pax jetliner. | 14, 377, 378, 379 | |||
| Airbus Industrie Asia (AIA)/Aviation Industries of China (AVIC)/Singapore Technologies (ST) | |||||||||
| AE-100 | AE31X | 1997 | Proj | 0 | 2E, 90-140 pax jetliner. | 453, 454, 455 | |||
| BAE Systems/Dassault | |||||||||
| Telemos | 2010 | Proj | 0 | Anglo-French MALE UAV demonstrator. | 407 | ||||
| FCAS | 2012 | Proj | 0 | Studies for optionally manned air system. | 416, 419, 422, 803 | ||||
| BAE Systems/Prismatic | |||||||||
| PHASE-8 | 2017 | Proto | 1 | Quarter scale model of PHASA-35. | 830, 833 | ||||
| PHASA-35 | 2018 | Proto | 1 | Solar-powered HALE UAV. | 830, 832, 833 | ||||
Abbreviations
FEATFuel Efficient Aircraft Technology
GAGround Attack
NGMRNext Generation Maritime Reconnaisance
RALSRemote Augmentation Lift System
RULSRemote Unaugmentation Lift System
STOVLShort Take Off, Vertical Landing
V/STOVLVertical/Short Take Off and Landing
Project References
| Books & Booklets | |
| 1. | Hawker Aircraft since 1920, Francis K. Mason (Putnam, 1991) |
| 2. | British Secret Projects 2: Jet Bombers since 1949, Tony Buttler (1st Ed., Midland 2003; 2nd Ed., Crecy, 2018) |
| 3. | British Secret Projects 1: Jet Fighters since 1950, Tony Buttler (1st Ed., Midland 2000; 2nd Ed., Crecy, 2017) |
| 4. | British Secret Projects: Hypersonics Ramjets and Missiles, Chris Gibson and Tony Buttler (Midland, 2007) |
| 5. | Secret Projects: Military Space Technology, Bill Rose (Midland, 2008) |
| 6. | British Research and Development Aircraft, Ray Sturtivant (Haynes, 1990) |
| 7. | Project Cancelled, Derek Wood (Janes, 2nd Ed., 1986) |
| 8. | Nimrods Genesis, Chris Gibson (Hikoki Publications, 2015) |
| 9. | On Atlas' Shoulders, Chris Gibson (Hikoki Publications, 2016) |
| 10. | Project Tech Profile 02 - The Admiralty and AEW, Chris Gibson (Blue Envoy Press, 2011) |
| 11. | Project Tech Profile 03 - BAe P.1216, Michael Price (Blue Envoy Press, 2011) |
| 12. | Project Tech Profile 04 - The Air Staff and AEW, Chris Gibson (Blue Envoy Press, 2013) |
| 13. | Project Tech Profile 06 - The Air Staff and the Helicopter, Chris Gibson (Blue Envoy Press, 2017) |
| 14. | Stuck on the Drawing Board, Richard Payne (Tempus, 2004) |
| 15. | Sitting Ducks and Peeping Toms, Michael I. Draper (Air Britain (Historians), 2011) |
| 16. | The Avro 748, Richard J Church (Air-Britain Publications, 2017) |
| 17. | X-Planes and Prototypes - From Nazi Secret Weapons To The Warplanes Of The Future, Jim Winchester (Grange Books, 2005) |
| 18. | An Illustrated Guide to Spy Planes and Electronic Warfare Aircraft, Bill Gunston (Salamander, 1983) |
| 19. | Aeroguide Special - British Aerospace E.A.P., (Linewrights Ltd, UK) |
| 20. | From Spitfire to Eurofighter: 45 Years of Combat Aircraft Design, Roy Boot (Airlife, 1990) |
| 21. | Janes All The Worlds Aircraft 1991-92, Ed. Mark Lambert (Janes Publishing) |
| 22. | Typhoon to Typhoon - RAF Air Support Projects and Weapons Since 1945, Chris Gibson (Hikoki, 2019) |
| 23. | Teach for the Sky, James Jackson (Hikoki. 2021) |
| 24. | British Special Projects, Bill Rose (Fonthill Publishing, 2020) |
| 25. | Hawker's Secret Projects, Christopher Budgen (Air World, 2023) |
| 26. | French Secret Projects 3, J.C Carbonel (Crecy, 2021) |
| Magazines & Periodicals | |||
| 300. | Aeromilitaria, 2011/1 (Air-Britain Publications) | 400. | Flight International 06 Jul 2010 |
| 301. | Air International Jun 1981 | 401. | Flight International 20 Jul 2010 |
| 302. | Air International Nov 1982 | 402. | Flight International 15 Feb 2011 |
| 303. | Air International Jan 1986 | 403. | Flight International 01 Mar 2011 |
| 304. | Air International Jun 1986 | 404. | Flight International 14 Jun 2011 |
| 305. | Air International Sep 1988 | 405. | Flight International 28 Feb 2012 |
| 306. | Air International Apr 1989 | 406. | Flight International 26 Jun 2012 |
| 307. | Air International Aug 1989 | 407. | Flight International 03 Jul 2012 |
| 308. | Air International Nov 1990 | 408. | Flight International 08 Jan 2013 |
| 309. | Air International Jan 1991 | 409. | Flight International 07 May 2013 |
| 310. | Air International Feb 1991 | 410. | Flight International 05 Nov 2013 |
| 311. | Air International Aug 1991 | 411. | Flight International 10 Dec 2013 |
| 312. | Air International Sep 1991 | 412. | Flight International 11 Feb 2014 |
| 313. | Air International Oct 1991 | 413. | Flight International 11 Mar 2014 |
| 314. | Air International Feb 1992 | 414. | Flight International 29 Apr 2014 |
| 315. | Air International Jan 1993 | 415. | Flight International 22 Jul 2014 |
| 316. | Air International Jun 1995 | 416. | Flight International 11 Nov 2014 |
| 317. | Air International Sep 1995 | 417. | Flight International 20 Jan 2015 |
| 318. | Air International Mar 1998 | 418. | Flight International 22 Sep 2015 |
| 319. | Air International Mar 1999 | 419. | Flight International 15 Mar 2016 |
| 320. | Air International Jun 2002 | 420. | Flight International 12 Apr 2016 |
| 321. | Air International Feb 2006 | 421. | Flight International 24 May 2016 |
| 322. | Air International Jul 2006 | 422. | Flight International 10 Jan 2017 |
| 323. | Air International Oct 2009 | 423. | Flight International 26 Sep 2017 |
| 324. | Air International Jan 2010 | 424. | Flight International 02 Oct 1982 |
| 325. | Air International - 2006 special Jan 2006 | 425. | Flight International 06 Nov 1982 |
| 326. | Air Pictorial Jun 1978 | 426. | Flight International 13 Nov 1982 |
| 327. | Air Pictorial Mar 1984 | 427. | Flight International 23 Apr 1983 |
| 328. | Air Pictorial Jun 1986 | 428. | Flight International 14 May 1983 |
| 329. | Air Pictorial Oct 1986 | 429. | Flight International 21 May 1983 |
| 330. | Air Pictorial Oct 1987 | 430. | Flight International 04 Jun 1983 |
| 331. | Air Pictorial Jan 1988 | 431. | Flight International 08 Jun 1985 |
| 332. | Aviation News 15/25 | 432. | Flight International 29 Jun 1985 |
| 333. | Aviation News 16/16 | 433. | Flight International 19 Oct 1985 |
| 334. | Aviation News Oct 2010 | 434. | Flight International 15 Feb 1986 |
| 335. | Flying Magazine Jan 1991 | 435. | Flight International 01 Mar 1986 |
| 336. | Flight International 19 Apr 1980 | 436. | Flight International 13 Sep 1986 |
| 337. | Flight International 2 Jun 1980 | 437. | Flight International 20 Jun 1987 |
| 338. | Flight International 14 Jun 1980 | 438. | Flight International 05 Mar 1988 |
| 339. | Flight International 27 Sep 1980 | 439. | Flight International 06 Aug 1988 |
| 340. | Flight International 31 Jan 1981 | 440. | Flight International 10 Jul 1990 |
| 341. | Flight International 06 Jun 1981 | 441. | Flight International 19 Sep 1990 |
| 342. | Flight International 02 Jan 1982 | 442. | Flight International 07 Nov 1990 |
| 343. | Flight International 11 Sep 1982 | 443. | Flight International 18 Dec 1990 |
| 344. | Flight International 29 Jan 1983 | 444. | Flight International 02 Jan 1991 |
| 345. | Flight International 19 Mar 1983 | 445. | Flight International 20 Mar 1991 |
| 346. | Flight International 11 Jun 1983 | 446. | Flight International 01 May 1991 |
| 347. | Flight International 12 Nov 1983 | 447. | Flight International 12 Jun 1991 |
| 348. | Flight International 20 Apr 1985 | 448. | Flight International 03 Jul 1991 |
| 349. | Flight International 15 Jun 1985 | 449. | Flight International 04 Sep 1991 |
| 350. | Flight International 09 Aug 1986 | 450. | Flight International 04 Mar 1992 |
| 351. | Flight International 01 Aug 1987 | 451. | Flight International 09 Jun 1993 |
| 352. | Flight International 27 Dec 1987 | 452. | Flight International 11 Aug 1993 |
| 353. | Flight International 13 Aug 1988 | 453. | Flight International 11 Sep 1996 |
| 354. | Flight International 27 Aug 1988 | 454. | Flight International 05 Mar 1997 |
| 355. | Flight International 10 Sep 1988 | 455. | Flight International 08 Jul 1998 |
| 356. | Flight International 17 Sep 1988 | 456. | Flight International 08 Apr 1978 |
| 357. | Flight International 17 Jun 1989 | 457. | Flight International 29 Apr 1978 |
| 358. | Flight International 24 Jun 1989 | 458. | Flight International 27 Jun 1981 |
| 359. | Flight International 30 Sep 1989 | 459. | Flight International 04 Jul 1981 |
| 360. | Flight International 15 Aug 1990 | 460. | Flight International 10 Apr 1982 |
| 361. | Flight International 05 Sep 1990 | 461. | Flight International 27 Mar 1982 |
| 362. | Flight International 20 Feb 1991 | 462. | Flight International 31 Dec 1983 |
| 363. | Flight International 21 Aug 1991 | 463. | Flight International 09 Apr 1986 |
| 364. | Flight International 11 Dec 1991 | 464. | Flight International 06 Sep 1986 |
| 365. | Flight International 10 Jun 1992 | 465. | Flight International 05 Dec 1987 |
| 366. | Flight International 05 May 1993 | 466. | Flight International 12 Dec 1990 |
| 367. | Flight International 16 Jun 1993 | 467. | Flight International 24 Mar 1993 |
| 368. | Flight International 30 Jun 1993 | ||
| 369. | Flight International 06 Oct 1993 | ||
| 370. | Flight International 20 Oct 1993 | ||
| 371. | Flight International 18 May 1994 | ||
| 372. | Flight International 06 Jul 1994 | ||
| 373. | Flight International 10 Aug 1994 | ||
| 374. | Flight International 07 Sep 1994 | ||
| 375. | Flight International 10 May 1995 | ||
| 376. | Flight International 21 Jun 1995 | ||
| 377. | Flight International 29 May 1996 | ||
| 378. | Flight International 20 Nov 1996 | ||
| 379. | Flight International 16 Apr 1997 | ||
| 380. | Flight International 12 Apr 2005 | ||
| 381. | Flight International 20 Dec 2005 | ||
| 382. | Flight International 03 Jan 2006 | ||
| 383. | Flight International 21 Feb 2006 | ||
| 384. | Flight International 28 Feb 2006 | ||
| 385. | Flight International 14 Mar 2006 | ||
| 386. | Flight International 18 Jul 2006 | ||
| 387. | Flight International 25 Jul 2006 | ||
| 388. | Flight International 22 Aug 2006 | ||
| 389. | Flight International 12 Dec 2006 | ||
| 390. | Flight International 24 Apr 2007 | ||
| 391. | Flight International 07 Aug 2007 | ||
| 392. | Flight International 17 Jun 2008 | ||
| 393. | Flight International 22 Jul 2008 | ||
| 394. | Flight International 17 Feb 2009 | ||
| 395. | Flight International 03 Mar 2009 | ||
| 396. | Flight International 04 Aug 2009 | ||
| 397. | Flight International 06 Oct 2009 | ||
| 398. | Flight International 20 Oct 2009 | ||
| 399. | Flight International 24 Nov 2009 | ||
| Papers &d; Brochures | |
| 900. | Beyond the Harrier - Kingston V/Stol Projects 1957-1988, Michael J. Pryce and Michael J. Hirschberg (SAE Technical Paper 2003-01-3050, 2003) |
| 901. | avrolist2.pdf (originally sourced from http://www.avroheritage.com) |
| 902. | From JAST to JSF: The Evolution of the Joint Strike Fighter, Ian A. Maddock, Military Systems Analyst, Analytic Services, Inc. |
| 903. | The Road to JSF: Forty years of UK ASTOVL work and its impact today, Michael J. Pryce |
Production Summary
Select the
Note: In the Production Summary, conversions are only listed where they result in a change from one Type to another. Changes to sub-type or Mark Number are not shown in the summary.
For details of these, see the individual listings.
| Type No | Name | Qty (New) |
Qty (Conv) |
Canc'd | |
| EAP | 1 |
|
|||
| ATP | 66 | 12 |
|
||
| Typhoon | 677 | 9 |
|
||
| Kestrel | 1 |
|
|||
| Raven | 2 |
|
|||
| Corax | 1 |
|
|||
| Herti | 8 |
|
|||
| Fury | 2 |
|
|||
| Ampersand | 1 |
|
|||
| Mantis | 1 |
|
|||
| Taranis | 1 |
|
|||
| Magma | 1 |
|
|||
| PHASA-8 | 1 |
|
|||
| PHASA-35 | 1 |
|
| Total BAe/BAE Systems Production | 764 |
| Total BAe/BAE Systems Cancelled Orders | 21 |
Production References
- Production references TBD
Page Revision History
Revised at Version X.X.X- Add Change Description