|
Entered service |
late 1970s |
|
Crew |
2 men |
|
Dimensions and weight |
|
Length |
12.25 m |
|
Wing span |
10.6
m |
|
Height |
4.25
m |
|
Weight (empty) |
3.3 t |
|
Weight (maximum take off) |
5.6 t |
|
Engines and performance |
|
Engines |
1 x Garret TFE731-221 turbofan |
|
Traction (dry / with afterburning) |
15.57 kN |
|
Maximum speed |
793 km/h |
|
Ferry range |
3 613 km |
|
Combat radius |
380 km |
|
Armament (C.101BB) |
|
Cannon |
1 x 30-mm DEFA cannon or twin 12.7-mm MGs |
|
Bombs |
up to 1 000 kg of bombs |
|
Other |
rocket pods |
|
On 16
September 1975 the Spanish Ministerio del Aire signed a contract
with CASA for the development of a new jet trainer capable of
carrying a wide range of weapons. Design was assisted by Northrop
(USA) and MBB (West Germany), but after the completion of the flight
development programme, which began on 27 June 1977, the entire
production was handled by CASA, except for items such as the US
powerplant and Dowty Rotol nose landing gear.
Features include a
low-powered turbofan of good fuel economy, tandem stepped seating
with Martin-Beker zero/zero seats, manual controls apart from
powered ailerons, and a large bay in the belly into which can be
fitted a range of stores packages.
CASA initially delivered 60
C.101EB-01s for the Spanish air force, which gained the designation
E.25 Mirlo. A second contract covered a further 28 aircraft and all
surviving machines received a nav/attack system upgrade between
1990-1992.
Fitted with a 16.46-kN thrust TFE731-3 engine
and provision for full armament, the C.101BB was the original export
model. Chile became the first export customer; it received 14
C.101BB-02s, four Spanish-built and ten assembled by ENAER. Locally
designated T-36 Halcon (hawk), these were intended for advanced
training but were later modified with ranging radar to serve as
A-36BB tactical weapons trainers.
First flown on 16 November 1983,
the C.101CC dedicated attack variant introduced an uprated 20.91 kN thrust TFE731-5-1J engine. Exports have been made to
Chile (23 C.101CC-02), Honduras (four C.101BB-03) and Jordan (16
C.101CC-04).
The C.101DD is the most advanced Aviojet variant. First
flown on 25 May 1985, it has HOTAS controls, a HUD and compatibility
with the AGM-65 Maverick ASM. Intended as an improved trainer with a
secondary light attack capability, it has failed to gain orders.
|