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De Havilland Spectre Rocket Engine
De Havilland spectre rocket engine (No. 13008), by De Havilland Aircraft Company, Hatfield, England, 1954-1958
De Havilland Spectre No 13008. The Spectre rocket engine propelled Britain's SR-53 interceptor aircraft. The SR-53 was intended as a manned stop-gap while guided ground-to-air missiles were being developed. Spectre burned kerosene fuel in hydrogen peroxide. It became the first fully controllable British rocket engine to fly when a trial unit was fitted to a Canberra aircraft in 1956. This photograph shows a cutaway of the Spectre in which the 'pepper pot' holes of the combustion chamber's injector head are clearly visible.
Details
- Category:
- Aircraft Propulsion
- Object Number:
- 1962-105/1
- Measurements:
-
overall: 1350 mm x 1700 mm x 700 mm,
- type:
- aircraft, aeroplanes and engines
- credit:
- Ministry of Aviation