The Spectre was a
bipropellant engine burning
kerosene and
hydrogen peroxide. The power could be controlled from 10–100% delivering 8,000
lbf (35.7 kN) of thrust at full power. In the
SR.53 it used the same fuel tanks as the turbojet engine and if run at full power was expected to consume the full load in about seven minutes. In 1952 static testing commenced with the Spectre DSpe.l. The aircraft industry had no precedent for an engine which would gain in thrust with altitude and the required maximum thrust was estimated at between and thrust. The design was based on a variable thrust which could be throttled from to . Design philosophy was matched to the mixed power concept of an aircraft having both a turbojet and rocket engine for maximum operational flexibility. Primary innovation was as the first to incorporate its turbo pump turbine upstream of its combustion chamber. Described then as low loss. Technological innovation embraced the
Barske high-speed open-impeller
centrifugal pumps, as formerly researched in the
Walter organisation,
regenerative cooling with pump stages both upstream and downstream, gauze catalyst packs, low-loss internal-flow turbine and the use of straight kerosene fuel. The aircraft tanks were to be pressurised to suppress pump
cavitation problems. It went through rig tests commencing in 1953, bench tests from mid-1954, and testing in two
Canberras. From flight approval in Autumn 1956, flight experience again posed altitude starvation problems. Clearance was given for flight in the SR.53 prototype from May 1957. In October 1957 a contract was announced for a more advanced version of the aircraft as the
SR.177 to utilise a revised design Spectre DSpe.5 engine together with a reheated supersonic capability thrust
de Havilland Gyron Junior turbojet engine, thus meeting a full mixed-power aircraft concept. In conjunction with the new engine, development had been undertaken with two major ancillaries, a peroxide starter for the gas turbine and a peroxide
auxiliary power unit. Virtually on the heels of the announcement of the contract came the notorious
1957 Defence White Paper declaring that all future combat would be undertaken by computer-controlled missiles, and that crewed interceptors were now considered obsolete. Development flying of the SR.53 continued through 39 flights operating to Mach 1.33, and to altitudes at , as research and construction proceeded on the SR.177, until its cancellation in 1958. After merging of interests in 1959, it was manufactured by
Bristol Siddeley. The Spectre project was cancelled in October 1960, at a reported total cost of £5.75 million. ==Variants==