Red Angel (rocket)

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Red Angel was an anti-ship rocket developed for the Royal Navy.[1] The name was one of the British rainbow codes.

Three-inch rockets were used successfully for anti-shipping attacks during World War II. Larger unguided rockets were developed at the end of the war, such as the 'Uncle Tom' to meet OR.1009. This used six of the three-inch rocket motors in a 9 foot airframe of 11.5 inch diameter.

Around 1950 the new Sverdlov-class cruisers caused concern in the Royal Navy, over the fear that the Soviet Navy was expanding into a wide-ranging blue water navy. A new weapon, Red Angel, was developed to meet this threat. This was larger than Uncle Tom and had a warhead intended to attack the deck armour of Sverdlovs. A salvo of six hits was thought to be sufficient to disable a Sverdlov.

Red Angel was 10 ft 9 in long and 11.25 inch in diameter. Overall weight was 1,055 lb with an 88 lb warhead.[1] Like Uncle Tom it had flip-out rear fins, but Tom's four large fins were replaced by six smaller.

It was first deployed on the Westland Wyvern, but had always been earmarked for the new naval attack aircraft developed in response to the Sverdlov threat, the Blackburn Buccaneer. The high-speed Buccaneer was noted for its rotating bomb bay and internal weapons stowage. This could carry four of the Red Angels.[1]

Attack targeting from the 3-inch RP onwards had recognised an unusual behaviour: a projectile that entered the water short of the target ship would steer itself upwards on a curving trajectory and travel horizontally. This not only encouraged a more damaging 'wet hit' below the waterline, but it also made targeting easier: the viable target zone on the sea ahead of the target had an apparent height twice that of the hull.[1]

All of these unguided rockets suffered from short effective range and Royal Navy policy in OR.1057 was that attacking aircraft should not have to approach closer than 10,000 yards.[1] This OR led to weapons that were longer-ranged and guided, such as the late 1940s 'Nozzle' and the later Green Cheese.

References

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