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Agree buddy! She's one beautiful bird....
The Bristol 204 with the "Gothic" foreplane reminds me of a detail sander
General Operations Requirement 339 of 1957 called for a new tactical strike and reconnaissance aircraft as a supersonic replacement for the English Electric Canberra. The Fairey Aircraft Company, using data from the Delta projects submitted this canard design in early 1958. With two Rolls Royce RB142R or Olympus 15R engines as power-plants the design had proposed armament of 6 x 1000lb bombs, Red Beard rockets or rocket packs. The aircraft was never developed: the BAC TSR 2 being the eventual 'winner' of the requirement*.
Span: 10.6m (34' 8") Length: 30.7m (100' 9") Max. Speed: Mach 2.15 at 36,000ft
Other interesting G.O.R design by Fairey.
GOR339_thumbs
You are wrooong I say.....Batman, anyone can see that
English Electric's P.17A design looked the most promising but in the end (1 January 1959), the contract was awarded to EE and Vickers-Armstrong based on a 50/50 partnership which they argued long and hard against, even as to where it was to be built and what airfield the prototype would fly from
Supermarine canard proposal for the G.O.R. 339, really , really ugly aircraft.
This was not designed for OR339, which called for a bomber. This was designed to F.155T, an interceptor required to reach mach 2.5 and fly at 70,000ft. The favoured design for this was the Fairey Delta III.shown here.
Sweb, although there is a superficial physical similarity between the A-5 and TSR 2 the two aircraft were in reality very different and the A-5 coulde not have met the spec (or it would have been ordered in 1959).