Blackburn Firebrand

Firebrand
Centaurus IX-powered Firebrand T.F. Mk IV
General information
TypeStrike fighter
National originUnited Kingdom
ManufacturerBlackburn Aircraft
Primary userRoyal Navy
Number built220 + 3 prototypes[1]
History
Manufactured1942–47
Introduction date1945
First flight27 February 1942
Retired1953
VariantsBlackburn Firecrest

The Blackburn Firebrand was a British single-engine strike fighter for the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy designed during World War II by Blackburn Aircraft. Originally intended to serve as a pure fighter, its unimpressive performance and the priority allocation by the Ministry of Aircraft Production of Napier Sabre engines to the Hawker Typhoon caused it to be redesigned with an alternate engine as a strike fighter to take advantage of its load-carrying capability. Development was slow and the first production aircraft was not delivered until after the end of the war. Only a few hundred were built before it was withdrawn from front-line service in 1953.

  1. ^ "Blackburn B37 Firebrand". BAE Systems. Retrieved 1 August 2023.