de Havilland DH.116 Super Venom
This Venom is shown in the markings of 892 Squadron, FAA, circa 1961 aboard HMS Victorious.
By late 1951, the search for an all-weather fighter for the Royal Navy was dragging on without any success. Following R.E. Bishop's visit to America in the summer of 1951. de Havilland decided to radically overhaul their Sea Venom to meet Staff Requirement NR/A.14, which was written around the Super Venom in March 1952. The brochure for the DH.116 was completed in January 1952. It still resembled the Sea Venom and used much of the same cockpit to save development time. The forward fuselage was designed so a single-seat cockpit could easily be fitted later on. The new swept wings folded just outboard of the intakes and had leading-edge and Fowler flaps. A T-tail was fitted. An advanced AI.17 or APS.21 radar would be fitted and armament was two 30mm ADEN cannon. The engine was the new Rolls-Royce RA.14 Avon with reheat (9,500lb dry, 14,000lb reheat).There was 562gal of internal fuel plus two 100gal drop tanks could be carried. Estimated rate of climb was 9,000ft/min on dry thrust and 29,000ft/min with reheat, time to 45,000ft was 4.1 min, operational ceiling was 51,500ft, max speed at sea level (dry thrust) was 698mph (Mach 0.92) or 740mph (Mach 0.975) on full reheat. At 30,000ft max speed was 685mph (Mach 1.02). Bishop argued the Super Venom would not become obsolete due to performance and could operate from all Fleet and Light Carriers.
Two prototypes were ordered but soon after de Havilland admitted they lacked the design staff capacity and they re-offered the navalised DH.110, now modified, which became the Sea Vixen.
Ever since first reading Tony Buttler's 'British Secret Projects: Fighters Since 1950' I've always wanted to draw the DH.116. not especially because its a world-beater, but because it just looks so sleek and 1950s.
I've also updated the Vickers V.1000 here:
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