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Hi All,
I am reading a book written by John Nichol, name of the book is "Exclusion Zone". They fly aircraft called Tempest GR7. I have now been googling around for a while, but simply did not find any data on what sort of aircraft this "Tempest GR7" is. Does it even exist? Could the novelist be referring to Harrier GR7? Probably not, since in the book it has two engines. How about Tornado GR1? It has two engines and some of them had calls like "Tempest" during war around Persian Gulf in the beginning of 90's. This is driving me crazy, I usually can recognise most planes and now I hate reading a book where they fly all the time in a plane that I don't even know what it looks like! I would be happy if someone could point me to correct source of information or just tell me that the whole Tempest GR7 is bollox. Regards, Janne |
#2
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"JetA1" wrote in message
... Hi All, I am reading a book written by John Nichol, name of the book is "Exclusion Zone". They fly aircraft called Tempest GR7. I have now been googling around for a while, but simply did not find any data on what sort of aircraft this "Tempest GR7" is. Does it even exist? Could the novelist be referring to Harrier GR7? Probably not, since in the book it has two engines. How about Tornado GR1? It has two engines and some of them had calls like "Tempest" during war around Persian Gulf in the beginning of 90's. This is driving me crazy, I usually can recognise most planes and now I hate reading a book where they fly all the time in a plane that I don't even know what it looks like! I would be happy if someone could point me to correct source of information or just tell me that the whole Tempest GR7 is bollox. It's likely a fictional name. There was of course a Tempest during WW2 though. John |
#3
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In message , JetA1
writes Hi All, I am reading a book written by John Nichol, name of the book is "Exclusion Zone". They fly aircraft called Tempest GR7. I have now been googling around for a while, but simply did not find any data on what sort of aircraft this "Tempest GR7" is. Does it even exist? Could the novelist be referring to Harrier GR7? It's a fictional aircraft created for the book, loosely based on the Tornado at a guess. Back in WW2 I seem to recall the Tornado and Tempest competed for the same staff requirement, and the Tempest won so the name languished a little: Nichol may have used a historical in-joke to use his Tornado experience without being sued for libel. I would be happy if someone could point me to correct source of information or just tell me that the whole Tempest GR7 is bollox. It's an invented aircraft, though more like David Mace's Soviet stealth fighter (from "Shadowhunters") than outrageously fictional craft like the Firefox: at a guess, meant to be "sort of but not quite" a real aircraft rather than a complete fabrication. Is the book any good? -- When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite. W S Churchill Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#4
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In article ,
Paul J. Adam wrote: In message , JetA1 writes Hi All, I am reading a book written by John Nichol, name of the book is "Exclusion Zone". They fly aircraft called Tempest GR7. I have now been googling around for a while, but simply did not find any data on what sort of aircraft this "Tempest GR7" is. Does it even exist? Could the novelist be referring to Harrier GR7? It's a fictional aircraft created for the book, loosely based on the Tornado at a guess. Back in WW2 I seem to recall the Tornado and Tempest competed for the same staff requirement, and the Tempest won so the name languished a little: Nichol may have used a historical in-joke to use his Tornado experience without being sued for libel. Tornado and Typhoon, IIRC: Tornado had the Rolls-Royce Vulture X-24, Typhoon the Napier Sabre H-24 (Jeez what a choice..). Tempest had a new thin wing and a longer fuselage and a choice of Napier Sabre or Bristol Centaurus and was very much the Typhoon done as it ought to have been (mind, if the engines had worked right the Typhoon/Tornado would have been in service for late 1940, and if it had it would have come as a nasty shock to a lot of folk flying aeroplanes with balck crosses on them). Tempest, I'd therefore surmise, is meant to be some hypothetical development of the Typhoon, maybe optimised for air-ground given the "GR" designation. -- Andy Breen ~ Interplanetary Scintillation Research Group http://users.aber.ac.uk/azb/ "Time has stopped, says the Black Lion clock and eternity has begun" (Dylan Thomas) |
#5
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In article , "Paul J. Adam"
wrote: In message , JetA1 writes Hi All, I am reading a book written by John Nichol, name of the book is "Exclusion Zone". They fly aircraft called Tempest GR7. I have now been googling around for a while, but simply did not find any data on what sort of aircraft this "Tempest GR7" is. Does it even exist? Could the novelist be referring to Harrier GR7? It's a fictional aircraft created for the book, loosely based on the Tornado at a guess. Back in WW2 I seem to recall the Tornado and Tempest competed for the same staff requirement, and the Tempest won so the name languished a little: Nichol may have used a historical in-joke to use his Tornado experience without being sued for libel. I would be happy if someone could point me to correct source of information or just tell me that the whole Tempest GR7 is bollox. It's an invented aircraft, though more like David Mace's Soviet stealth fighter (from "Shadowhunters") than outrageously fictional craft like the Firefox: at a guess, meant to be "sort of but not quite" a real aircraft rather than a complete fabrication. In the early 90's there were some proposals to fit out the Tornado with heavy duty weasel gear for sale to USAF. Many professionals still can't quite believe that they went with a single engine, single operator, limited range aircraft for the mission. -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur |
#6
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![]() "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article , "Paul J. Adam" wrote: In message , JetA1 writes Hi All, I am reading a book written by John Nichol, name of the book is "Exclusion Zone". They fly aircraft called Tempest GR7. I have now been googling around for a while, but simply did not find any data on what sort of aircraft this "Tempest GR7" is. Does it even exist? Could the novelist be referring to Harrier GR7? It's a fictional aircraft created for the book, loosely based on the Tornado at a guess. Back in WW2 I seem to recall the Tornado and Tempest competed for the same staff requirement, and the Tempest won so the name languished a little: Nichol may have used a historical in-joke to use his Tornado experience without being sued for libel. I would be happy if someone could point me to correct source of information or just tell me that the whole Tempest GR7 is bollox. It's an invented aircraft, though more like David Mace's Soviet stealth fighter (from "Shadowhunters") than outrageously fictional craft like the Firefox: at a guess, meant to be "sort of but not quite" a real aircraft rather than a complete fabrication. In the early 90's there were some proposals to fit out the Tornado with heavy duty weasel gear for sale to USAF. Many professionals still can't quite believe that they went with a single engine, single operator, limited range aircraft for the mission. The Tornado Mid Life Update was for a lot of things that ultimately the government couldn't afford. Unfortunately the first gulf war came and showed the RAF they could do with most of the upgrade, but they couldn't find the money.......... |
#7
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![]() It's an invented aircraft, though more like David Mace's Soviet stealth fighter (from "Shadowhunters") than outrageously fictional craft like the Firefox: at a guess, meant to be "sort of but not quite" a real aircraft rather than a complete fabrication. Too bad that it appears to be fictional. This sort of lowers my respect towards this novelist. I like it when writers keep their technical data as facts. Tom Clancy has always been my favorite for that, every time I check, Clancy has everything put correctly. Is the book any good? Well, it is not the best one I've read, but yes, it is good. I like the way Nichol writes. He is able to cover up some flesh around characters of the book. Rgds, Janne |
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