The story of
the Mirage begins
within the Korean
War. The Soviet
MiG-15 fighters wiped the sky
clear of the
straight-winged Lockheed F-80 Shooting Stars,
and even the
well-performing swept-wing F-86 Sabres
were mingled in
a hard dog-fight
against lighter, more nimble MiGs. The Sabres were
equipped with state-on-of-the-art
technology oh the 1940’s, such as
radar-guided leading computer gunsights,
hydraulic servo flight controls among
others. All in
all, this equipment
among with according fuel load, made
the 8-ton Sabre
two tons heavier
than the MiG-15,
but the engine
power was not
enough to equalize
the field. The
Sabre pilots felt
being outmaneuvered and outclimbed by the MiGs.
In the West
the MiG-15 was
a horrible hangover.
The pilots hungered
for more speed,
more power, more
performance. In the USA, this
development lead to the F-104 Starfighter, a fighter almost
too performing to handle. Another
way to adhere
the same problem
is to reduce
the weight of
the aircraft, which
in turn reduces
the required engine
power- This is
a vicious cycle,
as powerful engines
are large and
heavy, and thus
require a large
wing surface to
carry them, and
as powerful engines
inhale vast amounts
of fuel, also
the fuel load has to be large and yet carried
by the ever
larger wing. This
weight needs larger
landing and heavier landing gears to
carry the weight
on ground, and
eventually all this mass will require
more engine power,
and so the
cycle will go
on and on.
By counteracting the cycle, the
aircraft will do the opposite on
the drawing board.
This became a
trend in the
early 1950’s, and
thus was created a flock combat aircraft light as fairies: the A-4 Skyhawk for the US Navy, the British Folland Gnat, the Italian Fiat
G.91 and
the French Mirage.
But the Mirage’s
story was laid
by the French
government. They saw that the
development of fighter jets was aiming
past the two-Mach
mark. The Soviet
Union was developing
both her fighter
and bomber jets
at an advancing speed, and the French, ashamed
by the initial
loss, but yet
emerging on the
winning side of
the Second World
War, had to
counter this threat
by aircraft of
similar performance, or better. And
thus the company
founded by Marcel
Dassault in 1929 answered
to the government’s
wishes in the
year of the
Dragon 1952.
The government required a supersonic
interceptor to deflect the threat
of Soviet long-range
Tupolev bombers- The Dassault company was at the time producing sub-to-transonic Mystère-family fighter
jets for the
French Air Force,
so the following
product was baptized MD 550 Mystère-Delta, owing to its delta wing. The design
was at first
supposed to use
two Turbomeca
Gazibo turbojets, but the
prototype was eventually powered by twin
Armstrong Siddeley
Vipers instead. The engine was
quite primitive single-shaft axial-flow turbojet of only
12 kN
of thrust, but
similarly of quite light structure at only 250 kg.
|
With these little
muscles the MD
550 prototype was
able to reach
Mach 0,95 during
her preliminary test series in
July 1955. After
some fine tuning,
she could reach
Mach 1,3 on
level flight. The
advantages of the
delta wing were
apparent. With this design, a
low cross-section relative to the lifting
wing area could
be achieved. In
addition, both in trans- to supersonic speed the
compressive resistance forces grow
roughly at the rate of the wingspan, which makes
a highly swept wing – such as
a delta wing
– very advantageous for a fighter jet.
In addition, the
large wing area
of the delta
wing allows a
large wing tank
to be inserted
even in a
relatively thin wing cross-section, which
produces more range
with minimal to
no penalty in
aerodynamic resistance.
Thus the Mystère-Delta’s
wing was tapered
to traumatic 60
degrees, and the
wing hat length-to-thickness
ratio of an
athletic 5 %. Originally
the vertical stabilizer
was also of
a delta design,
but soon altered
for a F-tail
to smooth the
aircraft. The Viper
turbojets were upgraded with afterburners
and longer jetpipes for dash speed, and
the intakes redesigned
to be smaller
to improve supersonic
performance.
After these changes
the Mystère-Delta
weighed just 3610
kg. It really
was a light
fighter, and all
the reformations were large enough
in total to
justify renaming of the design:
she was now
on the Mirage
I.
But Mirage was
still underpowered
for her anticipated
mission, the interception of Soviet heavy,
soon supersonic bombers laden with
nuclear bombs. The small aircraft
was nimble, but
lacked the power.
The French Air
Force needed more
performance. Thus Dassault proposed
an upgraded version,
the Mirage II,
with more powerful
Gasizibo engines, but this
small improvement in performance didn’t receive much applause
from the Air
Force. Dassault
thus designed a
much more radical
revision, the Mirage
III.
Mirage III. Phtoto: Dassault |
She was much
more than an
enlarged Mirage I. As fighter
jets were on
more dire need
of speed than
ever, Dassault
designed servo-controlled shock cones for
the air intakes,
as the Starfighter had. In addition, the
delta winged structure
was redesigned according to the
newly discovered area rule, that
when approaching transonic
speeds, the airflow
will occasionally actually exceeding the
speed of sound.
This is due
to the fact
that the airflow
must always run
past the wing
profile, and all
exceedings of the sound barrier will result
in large air wave – the sound barrier
itself. This will
increase the resistance
of the airflow
significantly, and the speed in which point any
wing will encounter
this is called
the critical Mach
number for the
said wing profile.
To reduce the
number of these
shock waves, and
their intensity, the changes in
the cross-section of the aircraft
are designed to
be as smooth
as possible, and
thus the Mirage
was redesigned with a wasp-hull.
Consequently the wing sweep is
very steep, as
the speed of
overflying air is dominated by
the normal component
of the flow.
By sweeping the
wing, this flow
can be accelerated,
which in turn,
increases the speed
at which the
flow would
be transonic
– partially subsonic, partially supersonic. A delta wing is naturally steep,
and thus fit
for this purpose
like elbow grease
for anal sex.
The new approach
needed discarding the small turbojets designed
originally for missiles, and Dassault dropped Hermann Östrich into the engine bay.
He was a
former engineer of BMW, having
designed the BMW
003 jet engine,
one of two
types ever to
enter mass production on Nazi Germany,
The French forces
made him an
offer after he
had refused one
by the Americans,
and the French
forces relocated him at the former Dornier
production facility on Rickenbach, French-occupied Germany.
Östrich gathered around 200 engineers
and developers from BMW:s
jet engine project,
and employed them at his workshop,
Atelier Technique Aéronautique Rickenbach, colloquially known as
ATAR.
The BMW 003
formed the basis for the
ATAR family
– though the design
was so thoroughly reworked and redesigned
so many times,
that only the
concept roughly remained. In Nazi
Germany nickel was in short supply, and thus
all the high-temperature
alloys were scarce
to the designers
and manufacture. This is why the BMW 003 had hollow stamped-steel turbine blades, so
a pressurized airflow
could cool them.
Now, after the
war, the designers
had access to
nickel alloys and
state-of-the-art tools, and could substitute
the internally air-cooled blades with
much thinner, more
efficient ones. Östrich’s team used
the BMW 003
design as their
basis, but the
resulting ATAR
09 had little
more in common
than the axial-flow
design.
ATAR 09
had more blades
and stages. The
inflowing air was forced by a nine-stage compressor into an annular
combustor, which fed a two-stage turbine. The
compressor is of
a magnesium-alloy, save for the first
stage, which is
made of steel
in case of
foreign object damage. This 1400
kg beast could
burst 42 kN dry, 59 kN
with reheat.
Mirage III C. Photo: Wikipedia |
With these powers
invested, the Mirage
III climbed for
her maiden flight
on 17 November
1956. The French
Air Force, Armée de
l'Air, was impressed. The
design had now
the much needed
performance, so during the test
flight program, a pre-series
of 10 Mirage
IIIA aircraft
was ordered in
April 1957.
As Mirage was
showing the anticipated
performance, the AdA made
additional requirements to add multi-role capabilities
to the design.
This resulted in
enlarging the wings
even further and
the fuselage growing
nearly by two
meters. The pre-series Mirage IIIA also
received a Cyrano Ibis radar, more
sophisticated avionics and a brake chute. The intake
cones were also
improved with automatic
control system. In October 1958
Mirage IIIA
was recorded by
radar flying Mach
2,2 – the first
European aircraft achieving the past
Mach 2 mark,
despite the empty
weight now reaching
5900 kg. If
this wasn’t enough,
the Mirage could
be fitted with
a SEPR
booster rocket unit.
The pre-production was soon followed by the Mirage IIIC (C for Chasseur, Fighter in French), a fully operational all-weather interceptor model. Now yet again lengthened by half a meter, the Mirage IIIC featured hardpoints for missiles and twin 30 mm DEFA revolver cannons. The gun barrels were located under the intakes, which could result in gunblast reaching the intake, reducing oxygen partial pressure in the combustion chamber, and thus choking the engine. This was rectified by adding an automatic gun mode to the engine controls, which temporarily reduced the fuel flow when the guns were fired, thus keeping the combustion in stochiometric balance. The Mirage entered service in AdA in July 1961, year of the ox.
Isreaeli Mirage III CJ. The J-model receives outer winf hardpoints, bringing the total to five. The front side of this aircraft is covered with air victory markings. Photo: Wikipedia |
The Mirage was soon to be baptized in war, in the Six-Day War of 1967. Israel had countered the MiG-19 and MiG-21 purchased of Syria and Egypt by placing an order of 72 Mirage IIICJ interceptors, of which 65 had been delivered before the war. The Mirage played a key role in suppressing the Egyptian Air Force in a surprise attack early in the war.
In dogfight the Mirage proved to be more than her weight in gold, tearing 48 enemy fighters from the sky, including 23 of the feared Soviet-made state-of-the art MiG-21 interceptors, with only a loss of five of their own.
The Israelis had
received a fully
intact MiG-21 by
a Iraqi defector
during operation Diamond in August
1966, and inspected
and tested the
aircraft with care
before handing it over to the United States.
The MiG was
a close match
to the Mirage,
but the Mirage
had a more
sophisticated radar – the one on MiG-21F series
was more of
a radio rangefinder
for leading-computing gunsights than
a true air
combat radar. The
Mirage also had
a somewhat primitive
Cyrano radar system,
but it had
far more capabilities in detection and
could even illuminate
target for a
single Matra
R.530 semi-active
radar homing missile
carried in the
center pylon. The
missile performed poorly against maneuvering
targets such as
fighters, having originally designed to
shoot down heavy
bombers laden with
gravity nuclear bombs from a distance.
The main armament of the MiG-21 had similar difficulties, though. The K-13 (NATO reporting name AA-2 ATOLL) was a reverse-engineered copy of the American AIM-9B Sidewinder infrared homing missile, both only capable to seek to the hot exhaust of enemy aircraft, and thus only useful when fired from behind of the target. The MiG-21 F-13 and FL carried hardpoints for two of these missiles, while the Israeli CJ export version of the Mirage had four hardpoints for functionally similar, but lesser-performing Israeli Shafrir-1 missiles (and were thus later equipped with US-made AIM-9B instead). In missile combat, the two aircraft had roughly similar performance, as the kill probability of early air-to-air missiles was relatively low to begin with.
In dogfighting withing gun range, the Mirage had the edge. The MiG-21 F-13 had a single 30 mm NR-30 cannon with only 60 shells, which would run out in two seconds of gunfire. The Mirage had twin 30 mm DEFA cannons, with 125 shells each, lasting for 7 seconds – and thus allowing for several more bursts at the enemy, a significant advantage in dogfight. The MiG-21 FL version didn’t have a gun at all, instead carrying a larger radar antenna and thus better detection range.
The Mirage fire
control system used her Cyrano
radar to measure
the range to
the enemy and
computed the firing
solution accordingly in a leading gunsight. The
system was prone
to ground clutter,
as were all
radars of the
1960’s, and was
proven nearly useless
an a fats
maneuvering dogfight. The manufacturer Thomson-CSF responded
to this insight
with a simple
override switchboard with two switches: one
switch engaged the system was
zeroed at 250
meters, the another
engaged for 600
meters, and with
both engaged at
400 meters.
Australian Mirage IIIO's. Photo: Wikipedia |
All in all, of the 23 MiG-21s the Mirages tore from the sky, 22 were shot down with gunfire. Conversely, of the 5 Mirages lost, three were shot down by a Atoll missile. The Israelis had assumed the tactic to close the range in as soon as possible and engage in brutal close-quarters dogfight, as this gave them the advantage of Mirages larger ammunition supply and lesser wing loading, which allowed for higher performance in a turn relative to the MiG, which in turn had better climb rate (7100 m/min against Mirages 5000) and thrust-to-weight ratio (0,69 vs 0,59). Accordingly, the Mirages were unable to intercept pre-war MiG recon flights over Israel, as they traveled the 160 km routes in less that six minutes at Mach 1,5 at 18 000 m altitude, and the Mirages on Quick Reaction Alert duty required five minutes from runway to reach this altitude, flying at Mach 1,3 and traveled only 60 km on map. The MiGs were outside the reach of their missiles, save for the guns.
But the Mirage
proved to be
a sturdy workhorse:
Pilot Ezza
Dotan’s Mirage was hit in dogfight
by a K-13
missile, which exploded right under
the belly of
his jet. The
engine was swept
with shrapnel, but was able to provide enough
power for him to
turn against the
enemy, breaking their formation and
for him to
disengage by a
sharp turn straight
downwards, able to evade the confused enemy in
his crippled but
flyworthy plane. During the
descent, the engine
eventually flamed out, but Dotan managed to glide to base, where the maintenance
crew hastily repaired
the Mirage and
replaced the heroic ATAR
engine unit with
a fresh one.
Two days later,
the same Mirage
engaged dogfight again.
Dotan's Mirage III after the hit. Photo: Osprey publishing. |
Israel had another way to form the future for the Mirage. They made a request for a simplified version Mirage 5 for interdiction use with less avionics (as the East Mediterranean weather was usually clear), especially the radar which was an expensive piece of equipment, but pilots wouldn’t need them in a ground strike role. Dassault yet again stretched the fuselage by 30 cm for more fuel, and as the radar was omitted, avionics could be relocated to it’s place, further increasing the range, and the SEPR booster rocket was replaced with a fixed fuel tank (in most other models, this tank was optional to the rocket). This simplified design offered an 32 % increase in fuel load, and a total of 14 bombs could be carried, in a less expensive frame. Israel placed an order of 50 aircraft in April 1966.
The aircraft were still at the factory when the Six-Day War began, and as a result France placed Israel under arms embargo. The fresh aircraft rolling out from assembly line were assimilated to the AdA as Mirage 5F.
The embargo was
ambiguous: France wa willing
to deliver spare
parts after the
war, and e.g. Ernst Trost claims
that 20 Mirage
IIIs were flown by
AdA directly
to Israel, just
prior to the
war, and the
French pilots returned
by airliner the
following day. It is not clear how the
Israelis gained the blueprints and
manufacturing details for the Mirage
5, but they
did produce new
planes from scratch as the IAI
Nesher.
In Switzerland, a Sultzer
engineer Alfred Frauenknacht had been responsible
for destroying factory blueprints used
in license production of Swiss Mirage
IIIS. He burned waste
paper instead, and smuggled the
blueprints to Mossad agents. He was caught
and sentenced to
4,5 years in
prison in 1971,
but this is
only a part
of the espionage scheme – the Swiss
version of the
Mirage was of
Mirage III, type
already at Israeli
service, and Fraunknacht worked at Sulzer,
the engine manufacturer,
whereas the airframes themselves
were produced by F+W Emmen.
In addition, the
Nesher program went in
a very rapid
succession. The prototype was flown in September 1969, and
the serial production
aircraft deliveries began in
November 1971 – quite a short
time to reverse-engineer a supersonic fighter-bomber with all assorted
manufacturing details and plans. There
are some claims
that when modifying the Israeli Mirage
III’s to the
more powerful J79 engine, the Rockwell staff
was also seen
assembling Mirage 5’s, and that
the fuselages would
actually have been
imported by Aerospatiale from France and engines
from Belgium by
SABCA. There is no confirmed data, but
it’s likely that
the Israeli were
not alone in
their Nesher
program, and France
has notoriously been a willing supplier
of military hardware
with little questions
asked.
The Mirage 5
was ultimately the most popular export
variant of the
Mirage family, selling 517 units
to 11 customers,
even though the
French also developed a in-between model
of the two
main variants, the multi-role
Mirage IIIE
with less extra
fuel but equipped
with a a
radar.
Mirage 5 showing her impressive ordnance load. Photo: Dassault |
During the Falklands
War in 1982
the Mirages experienced
a fate similar
to MiG-21’s nearly two decades earlier:
they were torn
from the sky.
The Argentinian Air Force had
a very limited
operating window above the islands,
as the main
airport in Stanley
had too short
a runway for
the delta-winged jets to operate
(due to their steep
delta wing the
Mirage has a
high stall speed,
and thus landing
and takeoff speeds,
requiring a long
runway), and were
forced to fly
in from continental
air bases. The
Mirage III interceptors were at the extreme of their
endurance above the islands, having
just minutes of
time to maneuver
into combat. They
could not carry
missiles, as their
drag and weight
would have consumed
too much fuel,
and had to
engage the British
Sea Harrier VTOL
fighters with guns
– with subsonic speed, as the
very thin fuel
reserve didn’t allow supersonic or
even the use
of afterburner. The very nimble
Sea Harriers with
their newly acquired
AIM-9L all-aspect Sidewinder missiles had a
huge advantage in close-range dogfight
at slow speeds,
and shot down
a Mirage III
and damaged another
(which tried an
emergency landing at Stanley, only to
be accidentally shot down by Argentinian air defense) in this only fighter-to-fighter engagement of the war. The Royal Navy
aircrews had trained
against AdA
Mirages just prior
their deployment to the Falklands,
and the results
were overwhelming: when flying supersonic and carrying missiles,
the Mirages were
painstakingly at advantage against the
subsonic Sea Harriers,
able to fire
their missiles at higher altitude
and speed, and
thus at greater
range.
The Mirage 5
variants in other
hand had larger
fuel tanks and
much more endurance
than Mirage III
variants, and engaged British fleet in
many occasions among with smaller A-4
Skyhawk strike planes. Mirages
scored many hits
with unguided iron
bombs to several
ships, causing serious damage to
the destroyer HMS
Antrim and the frigate
HMS Plymouth, and
with Skyhawks
sank the frigate
HMS Ardent, in
spite that the
Argentine Air Force
was surprised by the war initiated
by the military
Junta of Argentina.
The pilots had
no training in
anti-shipping operations, and thus tended
to release their
bombs too close to their targets,
unaware that their
detonators didn’t have sufficient time
to arm properly,
ant the British
sappers were able
to disarm and
dismantle many bombs that had
hit directly, but
found buried deep
within ship hulls
with their detonators
still unarmed.
Argentinian Mirage 5. Photo: Wikipedia. |
The Sea Harriers
took their heavy
toll on upon
the oncoming Mirage
5 interdictors, shooting down 11 planes,
but as the
large numbers of
hits and heavy
losses to the
Royal Navy ships
indicate, the British
didn’t enjoy air
superiority during the campaign. The
Argentinian pilots flew a large amount of sorties
against the British
forces and air
defenses unescorted, approached against heavy
anti-air fire at
high speeds at
very low altitude
to release their
weapons at the
last minute. There
was no question
about the bravery
of the Argentinian
aircrews.
The Mirage was
modified with enthusiasm
on many parts
of the world.
Some regained Mirage
5’s air combat
capabilities by retrofitting a radar, the Israeli Neshers
had proprietary avionics, gunsights
appropriate air combat and often
carried air-to-air missiles, totalling over
a hundred kills
during the War
of Attrition in
the 70’s. The
Nesher was developed into
the IAI
Kfir multirole version,
with more powerful
General Electric J79
of the Phantom
II air superiority
fighter also in
service in Israel
and added canard
wings to increase
lift.
IAI Kfir. Photo: Wikipedia |
In South Africa,
the Kfir
was used as a basis for a further
developed Atlas Cheetah upgrade for
their Mirage III
airframes, with advanced features
such as a
HUD and HOTAS controls in 1986. In France Dassault
developed an upgraded version, Mirage 50,
in 1969, which
included an improved
Cyrano IV radar
and uprated ATAR
09K-50 engine of 50 kN dry
and 70 kN reheat thrust.
During the 1970’s
advancements in fighter technology were rapid,
and the first
generation Mirage family soon falling
into obsolescence. More modern, heavier
and outperforming multirole designs
were succeeding her. Thus Dassault developed a cousin for the Mirage proper,
the Mirage F1, which has relative mechanical and systems compatibility
with the original
Mirage, but is
of a different,
swept shoulder-wing design. Instead, in the early 1980s a
true successor, the Mirage 2000 was
put into service.
The 2000 has
a similar basic
design as the
original Mirage, but the aircraft
is designed from
scratch to be
he definitive iteration
of the Mirage
family.
The Mirage was
an effective interceptor
to counter the
Soviet bomber threat,
and more than
equal combatant to the feared
MiG-21. Her service
life and variant
tree grew through
the decades, and
the Mirage 5P is still operated in
Pakistani Air Force,
more than half
a century later.
The Mirage was
tossed into the
boxing ring, toe
to toe with
her best rivals
to fight of
the rule of
the air, the
land and the
sea.
In part due
to efficient operators,
in part due
to high design
quality the Mirage
enjoys a reputation
as one of
the most successful fighters of the
20th century, and
marked the capabilities
if the light
fighter design. Around a modest
empty wight, powerful
engine and a
large delta wing
was built a
warbird light as a feather, but which stung like a bee.
The Mirage was
a fairy wearing
combat boots.
Photo: Flight Inspiration |
References:
https://www.jta.org/1969/09/29/archive/israelis-have-no-comment-on-report-that-stolen-mirage-iii-plans-were-bought
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-01-17-mn-489-story.html
https://theaviationgeekclub.com/the-true-story-behind-israeli-nesher-fighter-the-mirage-5-built-by-rockwell-and-not-by-iai/