|
Entered service |
1976 |
|
Crew |
2 men |
|
Dimensions and weight |
|
Length |
11.17 m |
|
Wing span |
9.39
m |
|
Height |
3.99
m |
|
Weight (empty) |
3.64 t |
|
Weight (maximum take off) |
7.75 t |
|
Engines and performance |
|
Engines |
1 x Rolls-Royce/Turbomeca Adour Mk 151-01
turbofan |
|
Traction (dry) |
23.12 kN |
|
Maximum speed |
1 038 km/h |
|
Combat radius |
556 - 1 039 km |
|
Armament |
|
Cannon |
optional podded 30-mm ADEN cannon |
|
Missiles |
AIM-9L Sidewinder air-to-air missiles |
|
Bombs |
680 kg of practice stores |
|
Originally designated
Hawker P.1182, the Hawk has been developed into a range of
world-beating trainer and combat aircraft. No prototype was built,
the first five aircraft off the line being allocated to flight
trials, begun on 21 August 1974. Deliveries commenced in 1976, and
in 2001 the Hawk T.Mk 1 and T.Mk 1A weapons trainer remained as the
RAF's only basic/advanced jet trainer. There is no sign of a
replacement despite rapidly dwindling airframe life among the badly
overstretched fleet.
In November 1981 the US Navy selected the Hawk
as its new-generation trainer, and ultimately procured the Hawk Mk
60-based T-45A Goshawk.
Export two-seat Hawk
variants include the Mk 50 series, based closely on the Hawk T.Mk 1
and sold to customers including Finland, Indonesia and Kenya; the Mk
60 series with the uprated 5 700-lb st (225.40-kN) Adour Mk 861
engine for customers including Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Kuwait, Saudi
Arabia, South Korea, Switzerland and Zimbabwe; and the heavily
modified Mk 100 series.
The later features a revised wing, with
wingtip missile launch rails, advanced attack avionics and a chisel
nose housing optional forward-looking infra-red or laser sensors. With its
advanced/weapons training and formidable attack capabilities, the Mk
100 has been exported to Abu Dhabi, Malaysia and Oman. A radical and
surprising development of the basic Hawk airframe is represented by
the Mk 200 series. This single-seat air-superiority and
ground-attack aircraft has an APG-66H radar in a revised nose radome
and a pair of in-built 25-mm ADEN cannon beneath the cockpit floor.
Exports of this variant have been made to Indonesia, Malaysia and
Oman.
|