Hi,
Browsing through the book again last night, I have to wonder whether if English Electric and Vickers had just been LEFT ALONE to do what they knew best, they could each have built their own contender to the GOR and had a flyoff for about the same money as was spent in the end. Sure, at the end of the day TSR2 had become unaffordable, but how much of that was due to Ministry interference in the aircraft's design?
Overall, I wonder whether anyone knew what they really wanted. TPTB wanted a 1000mi nuclear strike capability, which was about as far from "tactical" as it's possible to get and yet, in the setting of a general European war against the USSR and its allies, wasn't really strategic either. What got turned out in the end, briefly, was a beautiful airplane which was tremendously fast and a delight to fly, but which ultimately had every possible obstacle thrown in its path to the point where it's a miracle it even got off the ground.
It's little wonder that people compare TSR.2 with the CF-105 Arrow - the two aircraft are very much of a type (big, brutish delta types with very high speed), albeit to a different specification, and at least the Arrow was proven to nearly Mach 2 (with every indication of being able to go well beyond it) and
was still a going concern when the OR for TSR.2 was framed. I must admit - if I were making the decisions, with the benefit of hindsight, I'd have gove for a deal with the Canadians that would have made the aircraft affordable to the RCAF (through economy of scale) and adapted it appropriately for the strike role with the RAF (with the option of buying the Canadian interceptor version once Duncan Sandys' influence had waned). At the very least, the British had a GWS they could drop into the airplane, even if it was only AI23 and Firestreak (with Red Top to follow), and money saved on aircraft development on the British side of the pond could have been put into perfecting Radar Red Top, VSW or the Fairey SARH missile for the Canadians (and for Sea Vixens and Javelins in the RAF).
TSR2's other big weakness, from what Damien makes clear, is its conventional capability (iron bombs, rockets and Bullpup). However, by the time the aircraft was in service, that could have been sorted out by the availability of US laser-guided bombs, Walleye, and such. I'm trying to imagine a nice, fat LGB or EOGB in the bomb bay, a pair of Shrikes on the inner hardpoints and chaff/flare and AGM guidance pods on the outers. In THAT respect, it's a shame the aircraft didn't go ahead because even a degraded TSR.2 was a damn good airframe (once they got the engine sorted out, if ever
) and was in a position to benefit from the guided weapon revolution and transistor-driven miniaturisation.