Pilot Sqn. Ldr. Andy Blythe & Wg. Cdr. Paul Shakespeare
pose before making the last flight in Jaguar TMk2A (XX833)12/20/07
Photo: QinetiQ |
12/20/2007 - Thursday 20th December was a historic day for
aviation enthusiasts as XX833, which for the past six months
was the only flying UK military registered Jaguar left in service,
took its last flight, marking the end of an era for Jaguar flying
in the UK – the last of the RAF’s Jaguars were themselves
all retired this Summer.
The QinetiQ owned Jaguar T Mk 2A, (XX833), which is operated
in conjunction with the MOD as part of the Aircraft Test and
Evaluation Centre (ATEC)* operation, was undertaking trials
flights after which the airframe went out of hours. It was piloted
by Sqn Ldr Andy Blythe, and accompanied by Wg Cdr Paul Shakespeare,
both from the Fast Jet Test Squadron (FJTS), based at MOD Boscombe
Down.
At around 11:30 the aircraft took off from its home base for
a medium level flight, routed via RAF Coltishall, RAF Coningsby
and BAE Systems Warton locations each with a long Jaguar heritage,
(doing a slow and fast fly past at each) plus it overflew RAF
Marham where a number of the engineers that worked on the Jaguar
are now based, before returning to MOD Boscombe Down. Then at
around 15:00, XX833 took to the air for the final time with
a low level flight around Wales prior to an overflight of St
Athan, eventually returning to MOD Boscombe Down for a final
flypast before landing at around 15:45. The Jaguar was also
accompanied by one of QinetiQ’s Alpha Jets on these flights
to obtain air-to-air photographs.
The last UK military registered Jaguar (XX833) gets its
last flight under QinetiQ at Boscombe Down 12/20/07
Photo: QinetiQ |
Jaguar T Mk 2A, XX833, was manufactured by BAe at Warton as
a two-seat operational advanced trainer and delivered to the
MOD in February 1975. It was transferred to RAE Farnborough
in February 1989, transferring to MOD Boscombe Down in April
1994 and finally became a QinetiQ asset in July 2001.
On retirement, XX833 will have flown around 4700 sorties, clocked
up over 5,335 flying hours with more than 7690 landings. In
the 12 years of service at MOD Boscombe Down, the aircraft has
flown 1070 hours, suffered five bird-strikes, one lightning
strike, consumed nine engines (with an average life of 122.33
hours each), and carried out over 864 sorties.
XX833 was powered by two Rolls-Royce Turbomeca Adour Mk 104
engines with afterburning, producing a max speed (at straight
and level) of Mach 1.1 (729kt, 1,350km/h) and a service ceiling
height of 14,023m (46,000ft). Its internal fuel capacity of
4,200 litres (924 Imp gallons) plus the fitment of additional
external fuel tanks gave an approximate operational radius of
1408km (760nmiles).
Since built, it had a comprehensive instrumentation, recording
and telemetry system fitted; this required the removal of the
Aden Gun facility and modification of the ammunition tanks to
accommodate its experimental fits. The aircraft was used as
a development test vehicle for the Jaguar 96/97 updates and
had a number of systems broadly comparable with those fitted
to T Mk 4 aircraft.
A Head Tracker System (HTS) was provided to give steering and
target information to the Head Tracker System and NAVWASS (Navigation
and Weapon Aiming Sub-System). The HTS was used in conjunction
with HMD (Helmet Mounted Display), Display NVG (Night Vision
Goggles), or Integrated Panoramic NVG (IPNVG) to provide a Helmet
Mounted Sight (HMS) facility.
Technical Data