The Hawker P.1108 in the service of 800 Squadron, Royal Navy circa 1962.
The Hawker P.1108 was a last minute, and unofficial, submission to Spec M.148T/ NR/A.39 (like the Blackburn B.103 (Buccaneer) and the Shorts PD.13). As Rolls-Royce didn't have a suitable engine to allow twin-engines, Hawker used four RB.115 engines. The two crew sat side-by-side. There is no performance data but it was below that required by the specification. The bomb bay could carry a semi-recessed Green Cheese ASM or bombs and Red Angel rockets or RPs. RPs could also be carried under the wings.
The Fairey Green Cheese, originally Fairey Project 7, was developed to meet OR.1123 for use by Valiant bombers and later also the Fairey Gannet and the M.148T aircraft. The Green Cheese was to used against Sverdlov Class cruisers. It was basically a shorter Vickers 5,000lb Blue Boar TV-guided ASM with the GEC radar seeker from the Vickers Red Dean AAM and fitted with a smaller-thrust Smokey Joe booster/sustainer rocket as used on the English Electric Thunderbird SAM. A fixed-wing version would be carried externally by the Valiants and the flip-out winged version above used on the naval aircraft. It was too big fit inside the Gannet's bomb bay (and too heavy at 3,800lbs) and its size grew further. To avoid interception from SAMs on its descent it would jink and then hit the water at a 40 degree angle around 150ft from the target ship. The randome would shear off and an angled surface would force the missile upwards to explode under the keel. Then a predetermined distance splash was favoured but cost overruns and delays and the appearance of Fairey's Sea Skimmer ASM saw it cancelled in 1956. An ultimate development was the Cockburn Cheese (named after the Director of Scientific Research (Guided Weapons) Dr. Robert Cockburn. Green Flash would have had a Red Beard nuclear warhead. Eventually the toss-bombing Red Beard these studies.