| The Jet Provost (formerly Hunting P.84) became the standard two-seat basic jet trainer of the RAF. More than 450 were built.
CREW | 2 |
ENGINE | 1 x BS "Viper 11", 10.9kN |
WEIGHTS |
Take-off weight | 3310 kg | 7297 lb |
Empty weight | 2112 kg | 4656 lb |
DIMENSIONS |
Wingspan | 11.3 m | 37 ft 1 in |
Length | 9.9 m | 33 ft 6 in |
Height | 3.1 m | 10 ft 2 in |
Wing area | 19.9 m2 | 214.20 sq ft |
PERFORMANCE |
Max. speed | 660 km/h | 410 mph |
Range | 1075 km | 668 miles |
ARMAMENT | 2 machine-guns, bombs, missiles |
Jan, e-mail, 12.07.2012 13:04 Anyone interested, I have original framed in flight photographs of the first Percival Prince, commissioned and the Hunting Percival, from around the 1950's.
I am looking to sell them. reply | Mike Laundy, e-mail, 04.03.2012 23:10 I did my flying scholarship at Luton in 1963 and watched the jet Provosts coming back from airtest. 2 years later I was learning to fly on the MK3 and Mk4 versions in the RAF, and later as an RAF QFI I instructed for 4 years on the Mk5 reply | Dick Billington, e-mail, 30.11.2010 18:46 I was apprenticed at Hunting Aircraft and worked both on the prototype and the production versions of the Jet Provost used by the RAF as a training aircraft. The prototypes had the long stalky undercarriage often shown in early pictures whereas the production versions were equipped with the short and practical undercarriage shown in the diagram. The early production aicraft built at Luton were not armed, however modifications were introduced to allow later production aircraft to carry weapons, I know as I worked on the installations. Some Luton built aicraft were therefore capable of carrying some armament, however when Hunting Percivals were sold to the British Aircaft Corporation they re-engineered it into the very competant Strikemaster version. Which was the version used very succesfully in Oman. reply | Clive Allkins, e-mail, 02.02.2010 17:31 I don't think it's correct to show the JP as having any armament - I think that was only the follow-on Strikemaster (but I might be wrong!) reply |
| leo rudnicki, e-mail, 22.04.2009 15:38 Look under BAC Strikemaster for the rest of the story. reply | bruce milne, e-mail, 23.11.2008 02:50 Was this the forerunner of the Strikemaster which was greatly respected while in service in the Sultanate of Oman. reply |
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