Aviation History - March 2016 USA

(Wang) #1
March 2016 AH 25

ILLUSTRATION: JOHN BATCHELOR; PHOTO: ROLLS-ROYCE

Seldom in aviation history have
airplane and engine been as
mutually dependent as the Harrier
and the Pegasus. Conceived by
French designer Michel Wibault
between 1952 and 1955, the
Pegasus turbojet was capable of
redirecting its thrust for vertical
takeoff and landing. Starting in
1957, Gordon Lewis and his
engineering team at Bristol Aero


Engines Ltd. simplified and
lightened Wibault’s design,
incorporating axial compressors
and pairs of rotatable nozzles.
The BE.53 turbojet, bench-tested
in 1959, went on to become the
Rolls-Royce Pegasus that first
raised the Hawker Siddeley P.1127
off the ground in 1960.

FERRANTI FIN-1075
INTERNAL NAVIGATION
SYSTEM

AIM-9
SIDEWINDER
MISSILE

HIGH
RECOVERY
INLET

LANDING LIGHTS

NOSE LANDING GEAR

300-GALLON AUXILIARY
FUEL TANK

POD-MOUNTED ROYAL ORDNANCE
ADEN 25MM GAS-OPERATED
REVOLVER CANNON

HEART OF THE HARRIER


(A) (B)

MARTIN-BAKER MK.12
EJECTION SEAT

BLOW-IN
INTAKE DOOR

LEADING EDGE ROOT
EXTENSION

ROLLS-ROYCE
PEGASUS 11 (MK.105)
TURBOFAN ENGINE

PITCH
CONTROL
REACTION
AIR VALVE
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