The Avro Vulcan was designed by Avro as a high-altitude strategic bomber powered by jet engines. It was in service with the Royal Air Force from 1956 to 1984. It first flew in August 1952, was introduced in September 1956, and was retired with RAF in 1984. The Vulcan was produced until 1965 with a total number of 136 aircraft built including prototypes.

Manufacturer:
Avro
Country:
United Kingdom
Manufactured:
1956 to: 1965
ICAO:
Price:
US$0.99 million (1956)
Avionics:
VHF transmitter/receivers, l HF transmitter-receiver, H2S Mk9 radar etc.
Engine:
4x Bristol Olympus Mk.101 / Mk.102 / Mk.104
Jet
Power:
11,000 pound-force
Max Cruise Speed:
561 knots
1,039 Km/h
Approach Speed (Vref):
170 knots
Travel range:
2,265 Nautical Miles
4,195 Kilometers
Fuel Economy:
Service Ceiling:
55,000 feet
Rate of Climb:
16000 feet / minute
81.28metre / second
Take Off Distance:
Landing Distance:
Max Take Off Weight:
77,111 Kg
169,999 lbs
Max Landing Weight:
Max Payload:
10,000 Kg
22,046 lbs
Fuel Tank Capacity:
11,140 gallon
42,169 litre
Baggage Volume:
Seats - Economy / General:
5 seats
Seats - Business Class:
Seats - First Class:
Cabin Height:
Cabin Width:
Cabin Length:
Exterior Length:
30.45 metre - 99.90 feet
Tail height:
8.28 metre - 27.17 feet
Fuselage Diameter:
2.6 metre - 8.53 feet
Wing Span / Rotor Diameter:
33.83 metre - 110.99 feet
Wing Tips:
No Winglets

The B.1 is the initial production version of the Avro Vulcan. The B.1A featured an Electronic Countermeasures (ECM) system, the B.2 had larger and thinner wings and powered by Olympus 201-202 engines. Nine B.2 were also converted to MRR (Maritime Radar Reconnaissance) versions while six were converted for air-to-air refueling.

It can accommodate five crew members including a pilot, co-pilot, AEO, Navigator Radar, and Navigator Plotter. Two extra seats could also be fitted for crew chiefs if required. It has an external length of 29.59 meters, an external height of 6 meters, and a fuselage diameter of 2.6 meters. The tail height is 8.08 meters and the wheelbase is 9 meters. It has a wingspan of 30.30 meters and a wing area of 330.2 square meters. It has an empty weight of 37,908 kg if equipped and crewed, a maximum takeoff weight of 77,111 kg, a maximum payload of 10,000 kg, and a fuel tank capacity of 11,140 US gal.

Four Bristol Olympus Mk.101/ Mk.102/ Mk.104 power the Vulcan. It is an axial-flow two-spool turbojet engine with a six-stage LP and eight-stage HP axial compressor, ten flame tubes cannular combustors, and a single-stage HP single-stage LP turbine. Each engine produces a maximum takeoff thrust of 11,000 lbf. The aircraft has a maximum speed of 561 knots at altitude and a cruise speed of 493 knots at 45,000 feet. The travel range is 2,265 nautical miles. It can fly up to 55,000 feet and can climb at a rate of 16,000 feet per minute.

Armaments included twenty-one 454 kg of unguided bombs, a Blue Danube nuclear gravity bomb, a Violet Club 400 kt nuclear gravity bomb, a U.S. Mark 5 nuclear gravity bomb supplied under Project E, a Yellow Sun Mk. 1 400 kt nuclear gravity bomb, a Yellow Sun Mk.2 1.1 Mt thermonuclear gravity bomb, a Red Beard nuclear gravity bomb, and a WE.177B parachute-retarded nuclear gravity bomb.

 

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