The early 1960s was the zenith of carrier operation for the
Royal Navy, as it operated five aircraft carriers, all with air groups consisting of the most modern carrier aircraft available. Despite modernisation, the speed of aircraft development, which led to carrier based aircraft increasing in size, was such that the Royal Navy carrier fleet could not keep up. Owing to the relatively small size of Royal Navy aircraft carriers, with the largest at , it became necessary for the RN to consider a new generation of aircraft carriers - the
CVA-01 - capable of operating new modern aircraft in sufficient numbers to be viable as capable units. The
Fleet Air Arm planned the procurement of new aircraft to go with new aircraft carriers. The plan involved three separate areas: • Air Defence • Strike • Airborne Early Warning
Airborne Early Warning requirement In 1959, the FAA had begun to replace the obsolete
Douglas Skyraider AEW.1 with a version of the
Fairey Gannet antisubmarine aircraft that had been modified into an AEW aircraft as the
Fairey Gannet AEW.3. This was intended only as a stop-gap, as it saw the
AN/APS-20 S band radar and associated equipment transplanted from the Skyraider to the Gannet. By the time the Gannet was entering service, the AN/APS-20 had been in use for 15 years, having first been developed during the Second World War. By the start of the 1960s it had begun to be superseded by more advanced systems, with the
US Navy by then operating the
Grumman E-1 Tracer with the AN/APS-82 radar, a development of the APS-20 that was ground stabilised and through its moveable antenna, could determine target height. Even this though was seen as an interim solution, the
Grumman E-2 Hawkeye a new, purpose built aircraft with an advanced
Pulse-Doppler radar was already in development. As the Gannet was intended to have a similarly "interim" status to the E-1 Tracer, the
Fleet Air Arm entered into a procurement process for an "AEW (Replacement)" platform to eventually supersede the Gannet. The development of the E-2 Hawkeye was a spur to the Royal Navy to begin the development of an equivalent British system as capable as the Hawkeye was expected to be. British aerospace and electronics companies were ordered to begin work on a new British AEW aircraft in 1962. ==Design==