When
Hawker Aircraft Ltd. was introducing their Sea Fury
prop-driven naval fighter in 1944, they began to
consider how to apply the new jet-engine technology to
the Fury design. Rolls-Royce had just introduced the
famous “Nene”, that had adequate thrust to propel
the big Fury airframe. In November 1944, Hawker provided
a preliminary concept of a Nene-powered Fury to the
British government, with the designation P.1035. And
that was the start of the Sea hawk... The first
prototype flew on September 2, 1947.
In
1951, the "Super-Priority" scheme was
accelerated to speed the production of certain critical
aircraft, and the Sea Hawk was one of them. The end
result was that manufacturing was relocated to Armstrong
Whitworth Aircraft (another member of the Hawker
Siddeley group) and the Sea Hawks started appearing at
the RAF carriers.
It
was an elegantly streamlined straight-wing jet fighter.
The Sea Hawk had air intakes in the wing roots, and the
jet pipe was bifurcated to create more room in the aft
fuselage, with jet nozzles just aft of the wing. It was
not an advanced design, but it had beautiful handling
characteristics.
The
Sea Hawk was built for the Royal Navy, the Dutch MLD,
the German Marineflieger, and India. With
the last production in 1961 and serving until the early
1980s was a very successful aircraft. Until the
production ended 537
Sea Hawks were built.