The B-54, or Y.A.5, was designed to meet
Specification "G.R.17/45" for an advanced carrier-borne anti-submarine aircraft by
Blackburn Aircraft. Rivals
Fairey designed their Fairey 17 to the same specification, which would eventually evolve into the winning design, the
Fairey Gannet. The original Y.A.5 was designed to take the new
Napier Coupled Naiad turboprop engine, consisting of two single Naiads driving contra-rotating propellers through a common gearbox. This engine was ultimately cancelled, so the Y.A.5 flew as the
Y.A.7 with a
Rolls-Royce Griffon 56 piston engine driving contra-rotating propellers. This aircraft made its maiden flight on 20 September 1949 ahead of the competing Fairey design. In 1950, the
Admiralty added the requirement for a radar and radar operator to the specification. The Y.A.7 was further refined into the
Y.A.8, first flying on 3 May 1950, with aerodynamic refinements to improve handling, and the third crew position. The Y.A.8 design was used as the basis for the B-88
Y.B.1 which first flew on 19 July 1950. The B-88 had an
Armstrong Siddeley Double Mamba engine similar in design to the original Naiad that was to be fitted to the Y.A.5. Development of this design was protracted and the FAA lost interest in favour of the promising Fairey Gannet, which had already flown with the Double Mamba and carried out landing trials, and which was to enter operational service fulfilling the original specification. ==Design==