3/4 October Ardent opened on the night of 3 October with two groups of eight
Avro Lincoln bombers each simulating mine-dropping raids on the
Firth of Forth and the shipping channel in
Great Yarmouth. These raids were countered by Meteor NF.11s. This was followed by a larger group of about 70 bombers, both Lincolns and
Boeing Washingtons, simulating simultaneous radar-guided
night bombing raids on
Glasgow,
Grangemouth and
Edinburgh. Night fighters were hampered by poor weather at their bases, leaving the bombers largely unmolested. Still flying by dawn of the 4th, the bombers continued on to attack
Liverpool. This was aided by two Mosquitos carrying jammers that approached from the south in order to draw off the fighters. This attempt did not work, instead it simply alerted the radar operators that something was about to happen, and they noticed the main force of bombers immediately as it entered range. This allowed a total of 120 interceptions to be carried out. During the day, a separate force of nine
English Electric Canberras attacked
Birmingham. According to Bomber Command records, two of these were successfully intercepted, while Fighter Command only records one interception made by a pair of the brand-new
de Havilland Venoms from the test group at the
Central Fighter Establishment at
RAF West Raynham. In the morning, a group of USAF
Boeing B-50s attacked
London while RAF fighters flying from European airfields simulating
fighter-bombers attacked Fighter Command airfields in the easternmost parts of England.
4/5 October The second day of Ardent included a mass raid by 70 aircraft simulating an attack on Glasgow and then continuing on to drop live ammunition on the
Redesdale tank range southwest of
Berwick-upon-Tweed. During the second half of the attack, Lincolns and Mosquitos dropped
target markers while the two Mosquito jammer aircraft operated nearby. This time a "highly confused situation" developed in the plotting rooms, and a number of fighters were sent after a non-existent raid, so only 40 interceptions were carried out against the main force. The bombers went on to make a mock raid on York while most of the fighters had to return to their bases to refuel after being sent off on the
wild goose chase. During the day on the 5th, a group of USAF
Republic F-84 Thunderjets and RAF Vampires attacked airfields while B-50s attacked Glasgow, Liverpool and London. The raid on London resulted in "all the Meteors from Biggin Hill took part in the defence — quite in the best Battle of Britain style." Meanwhile, 100
paratroopers were dropped by
Handley Page Hastings aircraft from
Transport Command simulating an attack on
RAF Patrington while
Royal Netherlands Air Force F-84s made a low-level attack on Fighter Command headquarters at
RAF Bentley Priory. The later raid was met by Meteors and Canadian Sabres. Sortie rates during this initial phase of Ardent included an average of 450 attacks during the day and another 200 at night, rates that were comparable to those during the
Battle of Britain.
9 October The second major phase of Ardent opened on the night of 9 October, consisting of seven large bomber formations attacking various cities. The raids were timed so that many of them would arrive in the
Sheffield area at the same time so they would overwhelm the controllers on the ground. Mosquitos and Lincolns with
very high frequency jammers attacked the radio systems used to guide the fighters. On top of this, Canberras made a high-speed attack on Bristol while
Belgian Air Force Mosquito NF.30 night fighters performed
intruder missions over RAF night fighter airfields.
11/12 October The final missions of Ardent started on 11 October, with Canberras flying high-level day attacks on Glasgow, Carlisle, Liverpool and Cardiff. At night, the Lincolns and Washingtons flew simulated
atomic bomb attacks against Bristol, Birmingham and London, approaching across a wide front while the Canberras performed a high-level raid on London. The next day, 120 of the Lincolns and Washingtons, with jammers aiding, performed attacks on the fighter airfields at West Raynham and Coltishall in the east, and West Malling and Tangmere in the south. While the defending fighters were tied up with these raids, a single Washington performed a low-level attack on the
Tilbury Docks and a single Canberra attacked the
Ford plant in
Dagenham. Other Canberras flew high-level day strikes against Liverpool and Bristol. To top it off, another paratroop landing was performed against
RAF Neatishead joined by USAF B-50s, F-84s of the Belgian, Dutch, French and US air forces, and
Fleet Air Arm attacks against
Royal Navy ships. ==Outcomes==