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From 1942 the RAF created an effective close support force that operated closely with Allied armies as they closed in on the enemy heartlands in Europe and the Far East. Fighter-bombers, such as Hawker's Typhoon and Hurricane, became key to these operations. Post war, the successful policy of using former interceptors for ground attach continued with the Hawker Hunter filling that role. This changed in the 1960s when the prospect of a major conventional war in Europe prompted the Air Staff and British aircraft companies to examine dedicated air support types such as the Harrier and Jaguar.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
From 1942 the RAF created an effective close support force that operated closely with Allied armies as they closed in on the enemy heartlands in Europe and the Far East. Fighter-bombers, such as Hawker's Typhoon and Hurricane, became key to these operations. Post war, the successful policy of using former interceptors for ground attach continued with the Hawker Hunter filling that role. This changed in the 1960s when the prospect of a major conventional war in Europe prompted the Air Staff and British aircraft companies to examine dedicated air support types such as the Harrier and Jaguar. Alongside the aircraft, weapons were developed to tackle the main targets: the Warsaw Pact tank armies. As Warsaw Pact air forces improved, the air threat was addressed by deep strike types such as the ill-fated TSR.2, followed by Buccaneer and Tornado, initially with nuclear weapons, latterly with weapons such as JP.233 and Storm Shadow for use against airfields. These new weapons could only be used if the targeting information was available, which required a new battlefield surveillance system that entered service as ASTOR. Typhoon to Typhoon reveals how the lessons of World War Two were absorbed and how support for the Army in the field moved from employing retired interceptors in the 1940s to the swing-role aircraft in service in the 2020s. Using recently declassified information, Typhoon to Typhoon examines the design studies and new systems that included the work on AST.396 to replace the Harrier and Jaguar and the tortuous route to the Eurofighter Typhoon. Key weapons such as ALARM, JP.233 and Storm Shadow, plus the technologies that allowed the day/night attack capability that made these new aircraft and weapons effective, are also analyzed. Drawing on research in company and government archives, Typhoon to Typhoon describes how the RAF developed the aircraft and weapons for its close support, interdiction, counter-air and reconnaissance forces from the late war years to today's precision strikes in the Middle East. Illustrated throughout with photographs, drawings and specially commissioned artwork, Typhoon to Typhoon is a unique reference to the aircraft, weapons and technologies developed for air support of the British armed forces since 1945.
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Autorenporträt
In 1978 his interest in aircraft took Chris Gibson into the Royal Observer Corps where he represented his group, area and country in aircraft recognition competitions between 1980 and 1991. On the standing down of the ROC in 1991, Chris began researching historical aviation and has written several books on un-built projects, particularly guided weapons.