with two Fireflash missiles (1956)
Red Hawk In January 1945 the
Air Ministry issued Operational Requirement OR.1056, given the
Ministry of Supply rainbow code "Red Hawk", for an air-to-air missile. The basic design was based on studies carried out at the
Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) on earlier weapons. Their experiments with the manually-guided
Air Spaniel concept had convinced them that automatic guidance of some sort was required. This led to
Artemis semi-active radar homing system, and the larger
Little Ben which used
beam riding. OR.1056 was overall similar to Little Ben, using beam riding along the
AI Mk. IX radar signal as the illumination source. In 1947, the various ongoing guided weapon projects in the UK were centralized at the RAE. In the immediately following period, a rationalized development program was laid out that called for the development of a
surface-to-air missile (SAM) for the
Royal Navy that became
Seaslug, a similar SAM design for the
British Army and
Royal Air Force known by the code name
"Red Heathen", the
Blue Boar anti-shipping bomb, and ongoing development of Red Hawk. The initial development contract for Red Hawk was released to
Gloster Aircraft in October 1947. They developed what was essentially a
drone aircraft resembling a small swept-wing fighter, which would be carried in a recessed bay under the aircraft and lowered into the airstream before launch. The RAE was unimpressed, and in late 1947 developed their own design. This called for a smaller weapon using four
RP-3 motors for boost which were then ejected, leaving the central projectile to coast onward to the target.
Pink Hawk and Blue Sky It was soon realized that the all-aspect capability of Red Hawk was beyond the
state of the art and a simpler weapon would be needed in the interim. In 1949, the RAE developed a watered-down specification they called "Pink Hawk" that called for a tail-chase attack and was intended to target piston-engined bombers. The Pink Hawk nickname was soon replaced with the official rainbow code, "Blue Sky". The Red Hawk project continued as well, but only briefly before its specifications were relaxed as well; in November 1951 the Air Staff issued OR.1117, given the code "Blue Jay", for an
infrared seeking design which became Firestreak. Fairey Aviation won the contract to develop Blue Sky, which they referred to internally as Project 5. Like the original Little Ben, Project 5 called for a beam riding missile able to be launched from the rear aspect within a 15° cone. Wartime German research suggested that the rocket exhaust would
ionize the air behind the missile and make it difficult to receive the radar signal, so Fairey based their design on the original Red Hawk layout using separate boosters that fell away during flight, leaving the signal clear while the unpowered "dart" continued on to the target. In place of the original four RP-3 rockets, two custom-designed "Stork" rockets were used. The two solid-fuel motors were connected to the dart about mid-way along the fuselage. The rocket nozzles were canted slightly to spin the missile assembly on launch, evening out any asymmetries in the thrust. When the boosters are empty, a small
cordite charge separates them, leaving the dart to carry on towards the target. Development of Blue Sky was aided by ongoing projects at Fairey in rocket propulsion that were being used to support the development of the
Fairey Delta 2 supersonic aircraft. This involved launching scale models of the proposed design using a locally designed
liquid-fuel rocket engine, Beta 2. This also required the development of a complex multi-channel telemetry system that proved invaluable during the development of Blue Sky.
Testing and service Fireflash was given its name by the RAF as development continued. It scored its first live-fire success in 1953, successfully destroying a
Fairey Firefly drone aircraft flying off
RAF Aberporth. In unarmed tests, Fireflash directly hit the drone aircraft, in one case severing its tailwheel. About 300 missiles had been produced by 1955, but the
Royal Air Force soon decided not to retain the type in its inventory as much more advanced designs were on their way. Many of the 300 missiles were expended in testing by
No. 6 Joint Services Trials Unit at
RAF Valley and
Woomera,
South Australia from 1955–
1957 using
Gloster Meteor NF11 (nightfighter) trials aircraft and subsequently by the
Supermarine Swift fighters of
No. 1 Guided Weapons Development Squadron at RAF Valley. Fireflash was deployed on a very limited scale by the RAF in August 1957, The RAF deployed the later and more effective
de Havilland Firestreak infra-red missile from August 1958. ==Description==