I think if they had been around there would have been no war fullstop. Phantoms and Bucc's with Gannets for AEW would have ended any threat to the islands from the air within the first 2 days. Sea Harrier did well, but it was very much in spite of their shortcomings.marktigger wrote:As regards to blackbuck I've always wondered if we had had 2 conventional carriers live CVA1, Gibraltar class (planned but never built) or Eagle & Ark (both servicible and updated) would the argies have tried? if so how much more useful would 26 Buccaneer and 26 Phantom FG1 have been in closing the runway and threatening argentine bases?
Avro Vulcan
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Re: Avro Vulcan
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Re: Avro Vulcan
I thought one of the lessons from the war was the unsuitability of 1,000lb GP bombs from low altitude for airfield work?bobp wrote:Just one Buccaneer 50ft off the deck with full load of bombs would have closed the runway.
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Re: Avro Vulcan
JP233 was only starting development. And proved so so effective and good for aircraft survivability in gulf 1Old RN wrote:If one had kept the Bucc would it have been fitted with JP233? One pass with two of those on the inner pylons would close the runway for a long time!
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Re: Avro Vulcan
Agree. the harriers did an excellent job. In "Reasons in Writing" there was talk of laying down an airfield with matting for Phantom FGR2 I wonder would the phanroms on that one have been reverted to Ground attack and recce as well as airdefenceTimmymagic wrote:I think if they had been around there would have been no war fullstop. Phantoms and Bucc's with Gannets for AEW would have ended any threat to the islands from the air within the first 2 days. Sea Harrier did well, but it was very much in spite of their shortcomings.marktigger wrote:As regards to blackbuck I've always wondered if we had had 2 conventional carriers live CVA1, Gibraltar class (planned but never built) or Eagle & Ark (both servicible and updated) would the argies have tried? if so how much more useful would 26 Buccaneer and 26 Phantom FG1 have been in closing the runway and threatening argentine bases?
Re: Avro Vulcan
Most of the U.K. matting was loaded on the Alantic convayor and ended up ln david johnes locker. with the tents desalinization plant and the mobile harrier hangers. Along with a lot of support equipment.marktigger wrote:there was talk of laying down an airfield with matting for Phantom FGR2
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Re: Avro Vulcan
No 17 maritime search radar ex 3 UDR, soyer cookers and everything else stormen claim was on her......I suspect if true she wouldn't have goten out of southhamton waterS M H wrote:Most of the U.K. matting was loaded on the Alantic convayor and ended up ln david johnes locker. with the tents desalinization plant and the mobile harrier hangers. Along with a lot of support equipment.marktigger wrote:there was talk of laying down an airfield with matting for Phantom FGR2
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Re: Avro Vulcan
That and the 2 fires at Donnington must have accounted for enough kit to equip a moderately sized army..marktigger wrote:No 17 maritime search radar ex 3 UDR, soyer cookers and everything else stormen claim was on her......I suspect if true she wouldn't have goten out of southhamton water
Re: Avro Vulcan
(Forces TV) 24th July 2018
A jet-powered heavy bomber crewed by five and notable for its delta-wing design, the Vulcan was the delivery mode for Britain’s nuclear deterrent for much of its service life.
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Re: Avro Vulcan
One of the benefits of being a RAF Brat was being able to crawl all over aircraft at the station you r Father was posted to. Being at Waddington in the late 1970s I got to know the Vulcan pretty well inside and out. Having an Uncle who was in charge of the ETPS at Boscombe Down also opened up opportunities.
Re: Avro Vulcan
Timmymagic wrote:I think if they had been around there would have been no war fullstop. Phantoms and Bucc's with Gannets for AEW would have ended any threat to the islands from the air within the first 2 days. Sea Harrier did well, but it was very much in spite of their shortcomings.marktigger wrote:As regards to blackbuck I've always wondered if we had had 2 conventional carriers live CVA1, Gibraltar class (planned but never built) or Eagle & Ark (both servicible and updated) would the argies have tried? if so how much more useful would 26 Buccaneer and 26 Phantom FG1 have been in closing the runway and threatening argentine bases?
The sea state would have negated the perceived advantages a conventional carrier, the sea harrier was able to launch in weather conditions that would have grounded other types.
Re: Avro Vulcan
If I'm remembering correctly (doesn't always happen!), a US admiral at the time said the same (maybe were you heard it?).Tinman wrote:The sea state would have negated the perceived advantages a conventional carrier, the sea harrier was able to launch in weather conditions that would have grounded other types.
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Everywhere? At once? At all times?Tinman wrote:The sea state would have negated the perceived advantages a conventional carrier, the sea harrier was able to launch in weather conditions that would have grounded other types.
That feels like a bit of an over-exaggeration of the statement. Often times things like "They could launch when a conventional one could not" come from examples that are niche or specific, and not a blanket status quo for the entire time frame of an entire theatre.
Re: Avro Vulcan
Have you been down there?! The weather is absolutely shocking!! As miserable as the death star is it is better than what was outside especially in the winter. We did the base Mineval as the opfor. My stick was spread over 2 miles despite dropping at 600ft!!!
Re: Avro Vulcan
As long as the political pressures on the Junta remain the same then the case for a conflict to distract from the economic crisis remains and the same choice between the invasion of Chilean Tierra del Fuego and invasion of the Falklands. The decision would likely rest on whether the Junta considered British retaliation likely. There was no doubt that Chile would retaliate in the event of invasion, but their military was inferior to Argentina's and they were politically isolated. The Junta could invade Chile with every expectation that they'd be left alone by the international community, but the absolute knowledge that Chile would fight back. On the other hand, even with CVA-01/Malta/Audacious available there'd be a question of whether the UK would respond to an invasion of the Falklands considering that the government had spent the best part of the last decade trying to negotiate a transfer of sovereignty to the Argentines and if the British Nationality Act 1981 and the effective withdrawal of the RN from the South Atlantic planned in the Nott Review remain then there'd be no reason for the Junta not to consider the chances of British intervention to be pretty low.Timmymagic wrote:I think if they had been around there would have been no war fullstop.
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Re: Avro Vulcan
If they had been around, there would also have been a difference in our Foreign Policy to match. Buenos Airies would have been in absolutely no doubt that retaliation would be likely, if they had attempted to invade.
Re: Avro Vulcan
Is there any evidence for this? The Nott Review proposed extensive cuts due to the severe global recession of the early 1980's, how would two aircraft carriers have altered the perceived financial need for cuts? I would have thought that if anything the costs of operating and maintaining conventional carriers and their air groups would have made the proposed cuts more extensive.Scimitar54 wrote:If they had been around, there would also have been a difference in our Foreign Policy to match. Buenos Airies would have been in absolutely no doubt that retaliation would be likely, if they had attempted to invade.
Also, how would having conventional carriers change the political motivation behind the 1981 British Nationality Act, denying the right of residency in the UK to Hong Kong-born ethnic Chinese in advance of the expiry of the lease on the New Territories?
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Re: Avro Vulcan
We're all a bit too far off topic folks. Feel free to create a Falklands War thread, if one doesn't already exist. 

Re: Avro Vulcan
Another excellent video detailing Operation Black Buck One.
(The Operations Room) 7th June 2019
(The Operations Room) 7th June 2019
Operation Black Buck One, 30th April—1st May 1982 - 2 Avro Vulcans and 11 Handley Page Victors take off from Ascension Island to complete, at the time, the longest bombing raid in history on Port Stanley Airfield on the Falkland Islands.
Re: Avro Vulcan
When Britain Nuked America.... Twice!*
(Mark Felton Productions) 18th September 2020
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_n ... ted_States
(Mark Felton Productions) 18th September 2020
*The UK actually detonated 24 nuclear explosions in the Nevada desert between 1961-1991!The story of how British Vulcan bombers successfully penetrated US air defences in the early 1960s to conduct mock nuclear attacks on American cities.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_n ... ted_States
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Re: Avro Vulcan
Didn't know about the exercise being repeated.
I wonder when the 57k ft approach was changed into low-level approach tactics? With the accompanying range penalty
- further, would that explain the basing in Cyprus, in addition to the UK
I wonder when the 57k ft approach was changed into low-level approach tactics? With the accompanying range penalty
- further, would that explain the basing in Cyprus, in addition to the UK
Ever-lasting truths: Multi-year budgets/ planning by necessity have to address the painful questions; more often than not the Either-Or prevails over Both-And.
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
If everyone is thinking the same, then someone is not thinking (attributed to Patton)
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Re: Avro Vulcan
Nice MoD film showing a Vulcan QRA Scramble. Such a lovely aircraft. Sound quality isn't the best as you cannot really hear the howl of the Olympus engines going full throttle during the take off that was one of the Vulcan's trademarks.