Avro Canada CF-103
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The Avro Canada CF-103 was a proposed Canadian
interceptor Interceptor may refer to: Vehicles * Interceptor aircraft (or simply "interceptor"), a type of point defense fighter aircraft designed specifically to intercept and destroy enemy aircraft * Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, a police car * ...
, designed by Avro Canada in the early 1950s as a development, and possible replacement of the company's
CF-100 Canuck The Avro Canada CF-100 Canuck (affectionately known as the "Clunk") is a Canadian twinjet interceptor/ fighter designed and produced by aircraft manufacturer Avro Canada. It has the distinction of being the only Canadian-designed fighter to e ...
, that was entering service at the time with the
Royal Canadian Air Force The Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF; french: Aviation royale canadienne, ARC) is the air and space force of Canada. Its role is to "provide the Canadian Forces with relevant, responsive and effective airpower". The RCAF is one of three environm ...
(RCAF).Milberry 1984, p. 317. Although intended to be capable of flying at
transonic Transonic (or transsonic) flow is air flowing around an object at a speed that generates regions of both subsonic and supersonic airflow around that object. The exact range of speeds depends on the object's critical Mach number, but transonic ...
speeds, the CF-103 only offered a moderate increase in performance and capability over the CF-100; subsequently, the aircraft never progressed beyond the mock-up stage.


Design and development

Even before the prototype of the CF-100 had flown, Avro Canada was conducting studies of potential advanced variations of the aircraft, as the RCAF was seeking an interceptor with greater high-speed performance.Campagna 2003, p. 55. Due to the perceived limitations of the CF-100's original "thick", straight wing, Chief Designer John Frost proposed a series of refinements that included a thinner
swept wing A swept wing is a wing that angles either backward or occasionally forward from its root rather than in a straight sideways direction. Swept wings have been flown since the pioneer days of aviation. Wing sweep at high speeds was first investigate ...
. In December 1950, the Avro Aircraft Design Office decided to proceed with a redesign, primarily incorporating the early series CF-100 fuselage structure with a new swept wing and
tail The tail is the section at the rear end of certain kinds of animals’ bodies; in general, the term refers to a distinct, flexible appendage to the torso. It is the part of the body that corresponds roughly to the sacrum and coccyx in mammals, r ...
surfaces as part of the C-100S design study. Frost considered the new design as an interim aircraft between the CF-100 and the more advanced C-104 project.Page et al. 2004, p. 11. The salient changes to the basic wing planform were in decreasing its chord and thickness, and adding a 42° sweep to the leading edge, creating a near-
delta wing A delta wing is a wing shaped in the form of a triangle. It is named for its similarity in shape to the Greek uppercase letter delta (Δ). Although long studied, it did not find significant applications until the Jet Age, when it proved suitabl ...
configuration. The tail surfaces were also swept back.Milberry 1981, p. 49. One version that was considered featured two streamlined fuel tanks blended into the leading edge of the wings near the three/quarter position.Valiquette 2009, p. 74. Despite the use of more powerful engines, the redesign had very modest performance specifications, with a planned maximum diving speed of Mach 0.95, scarcely better than the placarded Mach 0.85 speed limit of the production CF-100 Mk 2 and Mk 3.Milberry 1981, p. 48. Avro executives, recognizing that the company had already suffered due to the protracted development of the CF-100, determined that Frost's revised design would provide a "hedge" against the CF-100's failure to secure long-term contracts. In 1951, the Canadian Department of Trade and Commerce issued an order for two prototypes and a static test airframe, under the CF-103 project designation. Jigs, tools and detailed engineering drawings were in place by June 1951, with wind tunnel testing, conducted at
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, completed by November 1951. Although a wooden
mock-up In manufacturing and design, a mockup, or mock-up, is a scale model, scale or physical model, full-size model of a design or device, used for teaching, demonstration, design evaluation, promotion, and other purposes. A mockup may be a ''protot ...
of the CF-103 was built, along with a separate cockpit area and engine section that was partially framed in, the mock-up did not feature an undercarriage unit nor any interior fittings.Page 1981, p. 70. Two different tail designs were fitted with the initial effort only having a swept leading edge of the tail, while the definitive version had a much more raked appearance. The engineering and installation requirements for the CF-103's proposed Orenda 17 jet engines were not finalized, as the experimental "hybrid" using an Orenda 8 compressor unit and Orenda 11 two-stage turbine, matched to a "
reheat An afterburner (or reheat in British English) is an additional combustion component used on some jet engines, mostly those on military supersonic aircraft. Its purpose is to increase thrust, usually for supersonic flight, takeoff, and combat ...
" unit, had not been fully developed.


Cancellation

During 1951, flight tests carried out by Chief Development Test Pilot S/L
Janusz Żurakowski Janusz Żurakowski (12 September 1914 – 9 February 2004) was a Polish fighter and test pilot. At various times in his life he lived and worked in Poland, the United Kingdom, and Canada. Early life Żurakowski was born in 1914 to Polish paren ...
and other members of the Flight Test unit, revealed the development potential of the CF-100 had outstripped the intended performance envelope of the CF-103, while Frost and the Design Office became preoccupied with more sophisticated designs as potential replacements for the CF-100. Work on the CF-103 stalled, with the maiden flight originally scheduled for the summer of 1952, postponed to mid-1953. With
Cold War The Cold War is a term commonly used to refer to a period of geopolitical tension between the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies, the Western Bloc and the Eastern Bloc. The term '' cold war'' is used because the ...
pressures mounting, the Canadian government demanded that production of the latest CF-100 fighter, as well as developing more advanced variants of the Canuck should predominate, leading the Avro company to curtail the moribund CF-103 project in December 1951.Milberry 1984, p. 317. Although the mock-up languished in the experimental bay at the factory, a dramatic event served to preclude any attempt to restart the project. On 18 December 1952, from a height of 33,000 ft (10,000 m), Żurakowski dived the CF-100 Mk 4 prototype (RCAF Serial No. 18112) to Mach 1.06. His "unauthorized" test flight resulted in the final scrapping of the mock-up.Zuk 2004, p. 184.


Specifications


See also


References

;Notes ;Citations ;Bibliography * Campagna, Palmiro. ''Requiem for a Giant: A.V. Roe Canada and the Avro Arrow''. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 2003. . * Milberry, Larry. ''The Avro CF-100''. Toronto: CANAV Books, 1981. . * Milberry, Larry. ''Sixty Years: The RCAF and CF Air Command 1924-1984''. Toronto: CANAV Books, 1984. . * Page, Ron. ''Canuck: CF-100 All Weather Fighter''. Erin, Ontario: Boston Mills Press, 1981. . * Page, Ron, Richard Organ, Don Watson and Les Wilkinson ("The Arrowheads"). ''Avro Arrow: The Story of the Avro Arrow from its Evolution to its Extinction''. Erin, Ontario: Boston Mills Press, 1979, reprinted Stoddart, 2004. . * Stewart, Greig. ''Shutting Down the National Dream: A.V. Roe and the Tragedy of the Avro Arrow''. Toronto: McGraw-Hill-Ryerson, 1991. . * Valiquette, Marc-Andre. ''Destruction of a Dream: The Tragedy of Avro Canada and the CF-105 Arrow, Volume 1''. Montreal: Marc-Andre Valiquette (self-published), 2009. . * Zuk, Bill. ''Avrocar, Canada's Flying Saucer: The Story Of Avro Canada's Secret Projects''. Erin, Ontario: Boston Mills Press, 2001. . * Zuk, Bill. ''Janusz Zurakowski: Legends in the Sky.'' St. Catharine's, Ontario: Vanwell, 2004. .


External links


CF-103


{{DEFAULTSORT:Avro Canada Cf-103 Abandoned military aircraft projects of Canada CF-103 Twinjets 1950s Canadian fighter aircraft