The
Panavia Tornado is a family of twin-engine
combat aircraft, which was jointly
developed by the United
Kingdom
, West
Germany
and Italy
.
There are three primary
versions of the Tornado; the
Tornado IDS (
Interdictor/Strike)
fighter-bomber, the
suppression of enemy air defences Tornado
ECR (Electronic Combat/ Reconnaissance) and the
Tornado ADV (Air Defence Variant)
interceptor. In 2008
Air
Forces Monthly labelled the aircraft "for more than a quarter
of a century... the most important military aircraft in Western
Europe."
Developed and built by
Panavia, a
tri-national consortium consisting of
British Aerospace (previously
British Aircraft Corporation),
MBB of West Germany,
and
Alenia Aeronautica of Italy,
the Tornado first flew on 14 August, 1974, and saw action with the
RAF,
AMI
(Italian Air Force) and
Royal
Saudi Air Force in the
Gulf War.
International co-operation continued after
its entry into service within the Tri-National Tornado
Training Establishment, a tri-nation training and evaluation
unit operating from RAF Cottesmore
, England. Including all variants, 992 aircraft were
built for the three partner nations and Saudi Arabia
.
Development

Operators of the Panavia Tornado
During the 1960s, aeronautical designers looked to
variable geometry designs to gain the
manoeuvrability and efficient cruise of straight wings with the
speed of swept-wing designs.
Britain
and France
initiated
the AFVG (Anglo French Variable Geometry) project in 1965, which
ended with French withdrawal in 1967. In 1968, West Germany
, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy, and Canada formed
a working group to examine replacements for the F-104 Starfighter, initially called the
Multi Role Aircraft (MRA), and later called the Multi Role
Combat Aircraft (MRCA). Britain joined the MRCA
group in 1968, and a memorandum of agreement was drafted between
Britain, West Germany, and Italy.

A formation including a USAF F-15C,
West German Tornado and RAF Tornado
The programme was intended to produce a single-seat replacement for
the F-104G, and a two-seat strike fighter for Britain and West
Germany. Canada and Belgium pulled out in 1969. The four remaining
partner nations - United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, and the
Netherlands, formed
Panavia Aircraft GmbH on
26 March, 1969, though the Netherlands pulled out in 1970. The
United Kingdom and West Germany each had a 42.5% stake, with the
remaining 15% going to Italy. The scope of work for production was
also agreed upon - the front fuselage and tail assembly in the
United Kingdom, the centre fuselage in West Germany, and the wings
in Italy.
A separate multinational company, Turbo Union, was formed in June 1970 to develop
and build the RB199 engines for
the aircraft, with ownership similarly split 40% Rolls-Royce, 40% MTU, and 20% FIAT
.
At the conclusion of the project definition phase in May 1970, the
concepts were reduced to two designs; a single seat Panavia 100
which West Germany initially preferred, and the twin seat Panavia
200 which the
RAF preferred and
which would become the Tornado. In September 1971 the three
governments signed an Intention to Proceed (ITP) document. At this
point, the aircraft was intended solely for the low-level strike
mission. The RAF decided it needed an air defence fighter, and
initiated the development of the
Tornado ADV.
The contract for the Batch 1 aircraft was signed on 29 July, 1976.
The first aircraft were delivered to the RAF and Luftwaffe on 5
June and 6 June, 1979 respectively. The first Italian Tornado was
delivered on 25 September, 1981.
On 29 January, 1981, the Tri-national
Tornado Training Establishment (TTTE) officially opened at RAF Cottesmore
.
Production ended in 1998. The last aircraft, a RSAF (Royal Saudi
Air Force) IDS, was completed by British Aerospace on 24 September
that year.
Design

The Tornado undergoing
maintenance
The Tornado was designed as a low-level supersonic ground attack
bomber, capable of taking off and landing in short distances. This
requires good high-speed and low-speed flying characteristics. In
general, an aircraft which is designed to fly at high speeds
usually has poor low-speed characteristics. In order to achieve the
desired high-speed performance, an aircraft has a highly swept or
‘delta’ wing platform. However, these wing designs are very
inefficient at low speeds where unswept wing planforms are
required. In order for an aircraft to be operated efficiently at
both high and low speeds,
variable
wing sweep is a desirable feature; this was incorporated into
the Tornado design.
When the wings are swept back, the Tornado IDS increases its
high-speed low-level capability by reducing drag. When sweeping,
the wings partially slide into the fuselage, reducing the exposed
wing area. This gives the aircraft a low gust response in turbulent
low-level winds. This not only makes flight much more comfortable
for the aircrew but also makes the aircraft a more stable platform
from which to aim and deliver unguided weapons at low level.

A 27 Sqn RAF Tornado GR1 with its
wings fully swept back
The aircraft was designed to be land-based and operate from large
airfields that were considered to be vulnerable to aerial attack.
Therefore, during the development of the aircraft, short field
landing capability was considered essential in order to enable the
aircraft to operate from short strips on potentially damaged
runways and taxiways. With the wings swept fully forwards the
Tornado IDS generates greater lift because of the increased exposed
wing area and the use of full-span flaps and slats. This gives
greater lift at lower speeds, reducing the minimum landing speed
required and therefore giving shorter landing distances. Thrust
reversers are also fitted to help in this respect, the Saab Viggen
being the only other fighter aircraft to include this feature. The
reversers contribute to the appearance of soot on the fin
surface.
The cockpit is of conventional design with a
centre stick and left hand throttles. In
general, when the pilot wants to fly at low speed, a cockpit
selection lever is used to sweep the wings forward. This maximises
lift. When flying faster the wings are swept further back. In
flight the Tornado GR4 uses three sweep angles - 25, 45 and 67
degrees, with a corresponding speed range appropriate for each
angle. While on the Tornado ADV wing sweep may also change
automatically to accommodate different store configurations, the
IDS, ECR and GR versions of Tornado offer manual wing sweep only.
However, automatic wing sweep is not used operationally.
Operational history
German Air Force (Luftwaffe)
The
prototype model made its first flight on 14
August 1974 from Manching
airbase in
what was then West
Germany
. The first service delivery was made on
27 July 1979, with
deliveries totalling 247 IDS variants, including 35 special ECRs.
Originally the Tornados equipped five fighter-bomber wings,
replacing the
F-104 Starfighter.
Two wings were disbanded in 2003 and 2005 and a third was
reequipped with the Tornado ECR. When the last Tornado wing of the
German Navy was disbanded in 2005, its Tornados formed a new
reconnaissance wing in the Luftwaffe.
German
Tornados undertook NATO
combat
operations during the Kosovo War, the
first combat operation for the Luftwaffe since World War II. British and Italian IDSs
also participated.
In 2007, a detachment of 6 Tornados of the
Aufklärungsgeschwader 51
"Immelmann" (51st reconnaissance wing) deployed to Mazar-i-Sharif
, Northern Afghanistan
, to support NATO forces.
ASSTA upgrades

A German Navy Tornado IDS landing at
RAF Mildenhall in 1984 with the Thrust Reverse deployed
Beginning in 2000, German IDS, ECR and RECCE Tornados received the
ASSTA 1 upgrade. The major modification of the ASSTA 1 (Avionics
System Software Tornado in Ada) upgrade was the replacement of the
weapons computer with a MIL-STD 1553/1760 or Ada MIL-STD 1815
computer. The Tornados also received an internal
GPS, a
Laser Inertial Navigation System,
and the "Tornado Self Protection Jammer" ECM-pod. The new computer
supports the
HARM III, HARM 0 Block IV/V
and
Kormoran II missiles, the
Rafael Litening II Laser
Designator Pod and
GBU-24 Paveway
III laser-guided bombs.
The ASSTA 2 upgrade began in 2005 only for the 85 ECR and RECCE
Tornados, as the IDS is in the process of being replaced by the
Eurofighter Typhoon. It mainly
consists of digital avionics, a new ECM suite and provision for the
Taurus cruise missile.
German Navy (Marineflieger)
In addition to the order made by the Luftwaffe, the
German Navy's
Marineflieger also received 112 IDS variants .
These equipped two wings until 1994, when one was disbanded. The
second was disbanded in 2005 with its aircraft and duties passed on
to the Luftwaffe.
Italian Air Force (Aeronautica Militare)

A flight of Italian Tornado IDS
The first
Italian prototype made its maiden flight on 5 December, 1975 from
Turin
, Italy. The Aeronautica Militare received
100 Tornado IDS (15 were later converted to ECR configuration).
They took
part in the first Gulf War in 1991, losing
one plane to AAA, and in Kosovo
in 1999,
with the IDS in the bombing role and the ECR for suppression of
enemy anti-aircraft radars (firing 115 HARM missiles). There
is an ongoing Italian programme to improve the Tornado's
capabilities. For ten years the Italian Air force used 24
Tornado ADVs, leased from the
Royal Air Force as stop-gap between the
retirement of the
F-104
Starfighter and the introduction of the
Eurofighter. It is planned to replace
the Tornado IDS/ECR fleet in Italian service with the
F-35 Lightning II.
Royal Air Force
The first British prototype made its maiden flight on 30 October,
1974. On 11 July, 1985, the RAF reconnaissance version (GR1A) made
its maiden flight. RAF Tornado GR1s and GR1As were used during the
Gulf War,
Operation Desert Fox
and the Kosovo War.
For the Gulf War (
Operation
Granby), the
ALARM missile and
TIALD pod were rushed into service for RAF IDSs. Seven
RAF aircraft were lost during the conflict. Three were shot down in
combat, three crashed on operations and one was lost in a
non-combat incident. Laser guided bombing was introduced at
Muharraq on 2 February using
Blackburn Buccaneers as airborne
designators. Over 1500 bombing sorties and 100 JP233 sorties were
flown by RAF Tornados during the Gulf War. It was widely reported
in the popular press that Tornados were shot down by
AAA fire and
MANPADS during delivery of the
JP233 munition. On 17 January, 1991, a Tornado was
shot down by an Iraqi
SA-16 missile after a
failed bombing run.
On 14 February, 1994, the RAF received the first GR.1B maritime
strike aircraft.

A Tornado GR1 of XV Sqn RAF.
As early as May 1984 the UK
Ministry of Defence
began studies for the first Tornado upgrade project, but the
project stalled. In March 1993 a new Mid-Life Upgrade (MLU) project
was launched. On 29 May, the first GR4 development aircraft made
its maiden flight. On 29 July, 1994 the UK signed a contract for
MLU of GR1/GR1A/GR1Bs to GR4/GR4A standard. The first flight of an
upgraded GR4 was on 4 April, 1997, with the first delivery to the
RAF on 31 October. The GR4 entered front line service on 28 April,
1998. The Tornado GR4 made its operational debut in patrols during
Operation Southern Watch.
The aircraft flew from Ali Al Salem in Kuwait, and patrolled a
large part of southern Iraq. Several times bombs were dropped when
the aircraft were fired upon by Iraqi ground defences.
The GR4 version's full wartime debut came in
Operation Telic, the British part of the
invasion of Iraq in 2003. The aircraft, according to all
indications in the public domain , performed well. The campaign in
Iraq marked a number of firsts for the aircraft.
No. 617
Squadron used the
Storm
Shadow Missile for the first time, and enhanced
Paveway smart bombs were used to attack
runways.
On 23 March, 2003, a Tornado GR4 was lost to
friendly fire when it was engaged and shot
down by a U.S.
Patriot missile
battery. Both crew members were killed.
In early
2009, Tornado GR4s are due to replace the detachment of Harrier GR7/9 ground-attack aircraft that has
been based at Afghanistan’s Kandahar
airfield since November 2004.
Royal Saudi Air Force

Saudi Arabian Tornado ADV
variant
On
September 25, 1985, UK and Saudi Arabia
signed the Al Yamamah I
contract including, amongst other things, the sale of 48 IDS and 24
ADV model Tornados. The first flight of a RSAF Tornado IDS
was on March 26, 1986, and the first Saudi ADV was delivered on
February 9, 1989. Saudi Tornados undertook operations during the
Gulf War. In June 1993 the
Al Yamamah II
contract was signed, the main element of which was 48 additional
IDSs.
In September 2006 it was reported that the Saudi government signed
a contract worth £2.5 billion ($4.7 billion) with BAE Systems to
upgrade possibly 80 aircraft in the Saudi Air Force fleet which it
wants to keep until 2020.
Variants
The
Tornado is cleared to carry almost all the air-launched weapons in
the NATO
inventory,
including cluster bombs, anti-runway
munitions, and nuclear
weapons. The aircraft also has a limited air-to-air
capability with
Sidewinder AAMs.
RAF IDS variants were initial designated the
Tornado GR1
with later modified aircraft designated Tornado GR1A, Tornado GR1B,
Tornado GR4 and Tornado GR4A. The GR1 was delivered in a dark
sea-grey/dark-green wraparound camouflage, but this was changed to
dark grey during the late 1990s. In operations over Iraq some GR1s
received a sandy "pink" scheme. GR4s participating in the 2003 Iraq
War were painted in a light grey scheme. German Navy examples
normally sported a distinctive black/blue/gunmetal grey camouflage
pattern.
RAF Tornado GR1

Formation take-off of a Tornado GR.1
and a Tornado F.2 prototype
The RAF Tornado GR1 was the first generation version of the Panavia
Tornado strike aircraft of the
Royal Air
Force. The first of 228 GR1s was delivered on June 5, 1979, and
the type entered service in the early 1980s. 142 aircraft were
upgraded to GR4 standard from 1997 to 2002, after which time the
GR.1 designation was abandoned.
The Tornado was designed for ultra-low-level penetration strikes on
Warsaw Pact targets in Europe using both
conventional and tactical nuclear weapons, e.g.
WE.177. However, the end of the
Cold War precluded it from ever seeing that use. A
major feature of the GR.1 was its
terrain-following radar, which
allowed all-weather hands-off low-level flight, but current
doctrine eschews extreme low-level flight and relies on inertial
navigation with GPS updates rather than TFS. The RAF Tornado IDS
aircraft have a
Laser Range Finder and Marked
Target Seeker (LRMTS) under the fuselage on the
starboard side, just forward of the nose
landing gear in an aerodynamic fairing. This
system consists of a laser that can be used to measure the
slant range of a point on the ground relative to
the aircraft. This information is then used by the aircraft's
avionics to compute targeting information
for the crew. The LRMTS laser sensor can also be used to receive
reflected laser energy from a third-party laser, allowing the crew
to find targets that have been marked by troops on the ground or
another aircraft. The laser cannot be used for guiding
laser-guided bombs. IDS aircraft supplied
to Italy, West Germany and the
Tri-National Tornado
Training Establishment do not have the LRMTS system, but the
aircraft supplied to the Royal Saudi Air Force do.
Its actual combat debut came in 1991 in the
Gulf War.
Nearly 60 GR1s were deployed by the United
Kingdom to air bases at Muharraq
(Bahrain
), Tabuk
and Dhahran
in Saudi Arabia. In the early stages of
Operation Granby RAF Tornado GR.1s
were used to target Iraqi military airfields using 1,000 lb
(450 kg)
unguided bombs in
loft-bombing attacks and the
JP233 runway denial weapon. Six RAF Tornados were
lost, as was one Italian Tornado. Of the RAF aircraft, 4 were lost
while delivering unguided bombs, one was lost after delivering
JP233, and one was lost trying to deliver
laser-guided bombs.
Following the end of the initial phase of the war, the GR.1s were
switched to medium level strike missions. However they lacked both
equipment and training to complete these missions properly.
In an
emergency deployment, the UK
sent out a
detachment of Blackburn
Buccaneer aircraft equipped with the Pave
Spike laser designator,
allowing the GR.1s to drop precision guided weapons. A
further crash programme was initiated which saw some GR.1s fitted
with the
TIALD system.
In the aftermath of
the war, British
forces
remained in the Gulf, with GR1s being based at Ali Al Salem
airbase in Kuwait
for
operations over the southern no fly zone. GR.1s based there
took part in
Operation Desert
Fox in 1998.
1999 saw further action for the GR1 in the
Kosovo War.
Aircraft operated from RAF Bruggen
in Germany during the first part of the war, flying
precision strike missions. They later moved to a base on Corsica
shortly before the war ended to bring them closer
to the combat zone.
Following the Kosovo War, the GR1 was phased out as more and more
aircraft were upgraded to the GR4 standard. The final GR1 was
upgraded in 2003 and returned to the RAF on June 10.
RAF Tornado GR1B
The Tornado GR1B was a specialised anti-shipping variant of the RAF
Tornado GR1.
Based in Scotland
at RAF Lossiemouth
, they replaced the Blackburn Buccaneer in the
anti-shipping role, delivering the Sea Eagle anti-ship missile. It
did not have the ability to track shipping with its radar and
relied on the missile's seeker for target acquisition.
When the Tornado GR1 strike aircraft of the Royal Air Force were
updated to the GR4 standard in the late 1990s there was no
corresponding GR4B version of the GR4. It was judged that a
specialised anti-shipping variant of the aircraft was no longer
needed as the threat from surface warships the GR1B was designed to
operate against had decreased, and also because the
Sea Eagle missile was coming towards the end of
its shelf-life and there were no plans to replace it due to the
cost of doing so.
RAF Tornado GR4
As early as 1984 the UK Ministry of Defence began studies of a
Mid-Life Update (MLU) of the aircraft to rectify shortcomings of
the GR1. This update, to Tornado GR4 standard would improve
capability in the medium level role while maintaining the Tornado's
exceptional low-level penetration capability. The GR4 upgrade was
not approved until 1994, after it had been revised to include
lessons learned from the GR1's performance in the 1991 Gulf War.
One major change was the move from low level penetration to medium
level attacks, while maintaining the low level capability.
The
contracts were signed with British Aerospace (later BAE Systems
) in 1994 for the upgrade of 142 GR1s to GR4
standard, work began in 1996 and was finished in 2003.
Upgrades to the more than twenty-year old aircraft included
FLIR (Forward-Looking InfraRed), a wide-angle
HUD (
Heads-Up Display), improved
cockpit displays, NVG (
Night Vision Goggles) capabilities, new
avionics and
weapons
systems, updated computer systems, and a
Global Positioning System
receiver. The updated weapons system allowed integration of the
latest offensive weapons, for example the Storm Shadow and
Brimstone missiles and reconnaissance
equipment such as the
RAPTOR pod.
As of
late 2006, the GR4 fleet is being fitted with a new 12.8-inch
Multi-function display in the
rear cockpit to replace the circular Combined Radar and Projected
Map Display (CRPMD): The BAE Systems
Tornado Advanced Radar Display Information System
(TARDIS) is an Active-matrix liquid
crystal display. TARDIS is currently being fitted to
aircraft of the
Fast Jet and Weapons
Operational Evaluation Unit (No. 41 Squadron RAF), before being
fitted to all GR4 aircraft.
RAF Tornado GR1A/GR4A
The GR1A was a reconnaissance variant of the RAF IDS. It is also in
service with the Saudi Air Force. With the upgrade of the GR1 to
GR4 standard, similarly the GR1A became the GR4A. The GR4A is
equipped with the internally mounted TIRRS (Tornado Infra-Red
Reconnaissance System), one on each side of the fuselage and a
single IRLS (Infra-Red LineScan) reconnaissance sensor mounted on
the underside of the fuselage. The sensor package replaced the
27 mm cannon. Unlike most reconnaissance packages which store
their images on 35 mm film or similar, the GR1A used video
tape to save information. This allowed instant evaluation on the
ground without need to develop the film, and even allowed some
evalution during the return flight from the objective by the
navigator/weapons system officer.
The RAF ordered 30 airframes, either as rebuilds of GR1's or as new
airframes, and 25 aircraft were upgraded to GR4A standard. The GR4A
retains almost all of the offensive capabilities of the GR4. As
RAPTOR becomes the principal reconnaissance
sensor of Tornado in RAF service, TIRRS will be phased out. To this
end, the RAF's Tactical Reconnaissance Wing at RAF Marham which
comprises
II Squadron and
13 Squadron now fly both GR4A
and GR4 variants, since the sensors specific to the GR4A are not
essential to the reconnaissance role.
Luftwaffe IDS

Formation of five German Tornado IDS
with one MiG 29
The German Air Force (
Luftwaffe) received
212 Tornado IDSs.
On January 13, 2004, the then German
Defence Minister
Peter Struck announced major changes to
the German armed forces. A major part of this announcement
is the plan to cut the German fighter fleet from 426 in early 2004
to 265 by 2015. Assuming the full German order for 180
Eurofighter Typhoons is fulfilled, this
will see the Tornado force reduced to 85.Luftwaffe Tornado IDS have
2 Mauser 27 mm canons.
Marineflieger IDS
The
German Navy's air wing
(Marineflieger) received 112 Tornado IDSs. In late 2004 the last
Tornado unit was disbanded. The maritime combat role has been
assumed by the Luftwaffe which has upgraded a unit of its Tornados
to carry the
Kormoran II and
AGM-88 HARM missiles.
Aeronautica Militare IDS

A Tornado IDS of the Italian Air
Force
The Italian Air Force (
Aeronautica
Militare Italiana) received 100 Tornado IDS. 57 were
operational as of July 2004. In July 2002 Italy signed a contract
with NATO Eurofighter and Tornado Management Agency (NETMA) and the
Panavia partner companies for the initial upgrade of 18 IDSs.
Alenia Aeronautica is responsible
for the upgrade, the first of which was completed in November 2003.
The first phase of the upgrade will see a modernised avionics
suite, new digital radios, a SATCOM capability and new weapons
capabilities for the carriage of
Joint Direct Attack Munitions,
Raytheon Enhanced Paveway III laser guided bombs
and the
MBDA Storm
Shadow. A further upgrade is being developed by Alenia which
will improve mission capabilities, a new Defence Aids Sub-System
(DASS) and a
MIDS communications capability.
The decision of whether or not to upgrade the whole fleet will
follow, as the purchase of 109
F-35
Lightning II fighters has been decided by the Italian
government to replace the Tornado.
Tornado ECR

Luftwaffe Tornado ECR
Operated by Germany and Italy, the ECR is an IDS variant devoted to
SEAD missions. It was first delivered on May
21, 1990. The ECR is equipped with an emitter-locator system (ELS)
which is designed to locate enemy radar sites and armed with the
AGM-88 HARM. The Luftwaffe's 35 ECRs
were delivered new, while Italy received 16 converted IDSs. German
ECRs were equipped with a
Honeywell
infra-red imaging systems for reconnaissance, however operational
experience lead to the removal of this system; It was considered
impractical for one aircraft to be tasked with both SEAD and
reconnaissance. German ECR Tornado's participated successfully
during Operation Allied Force in former Yugoslavia and launched a
total number of 236 AGM-88 HARMs.
Italian ECRs (IT-ECR) differ from the Luftwaffe aircraft in that
they were never equipped with a reconnaissance capability and as
IDS conversion they are equipped with RB199 Mk.103 engines.
Luftwaffe ECRs are equipped with RB199 Mk.105 which have a slightly
higher thrust rating. The first IT-ECR was delivered on February
27, 1998, and formally accepted on April 7.
The RAF and RSAF IDS carry
ALARM missiles in
this role.
Tornado ADV
The Tornado ADV is a fighter variant of the Tornado, developed for
the RAF (known in service as the Tornado F.2 or F.3) and also
operated by Saudi Arabia and Italy.
Operators
| Unit |
Base |
Version |
Status |
Notes |
| AMI |
| 102° Gruppo, 6° Stormo |
Ghedi |
IDS |
Active |
|
| 154° Gruppo, 6° Stormo |
Ghedi |
IDS |
Active |
|
| 156° Gruppo, 6° Stormo |
Ghedi |
IDS |
Active |
|
| 12° Gruppo, 36° Stormo |
Gioia del Colle |
ADV F.3 |
Inactive |
1995-2004 |
| 155° Gruppo E.T.S., 50°
Stormo |
Piacenza |
ECR |
|
| Deutsche Marine |
| Marinefliegergeschwader
1 |
Jagel |
|
Disbanded |
1982-1993 |
| Marinefliegergeschwader
2 |
Eggebek |
|
Disbanded |
1986-2005 |
| Luftwaffe |
| Jagdbombergeschwader 31
"Boelcke" |
Nörvenich |
IDS |
Active |
34 aircraft, Slated for transition to Eurofighter in 2009 |
| Jagdbombergeschwader
32 |
Lagerlechfeld |
ECR |
Active |
34 aircraft, Receives ASSTA 2 Upgrade, remains in service |
| Jagdbombergeschwader
33 |
Büchel |
IDS |
Active |
36 aircraft, Slated for transition to Eurofighter in 2012 |
| Jagdbombergeschwader 34
"Allgäu" |
Memmingen |
|
Disbanded |
Disbanded 2003 |
| Jagdbombergeschwader 38
"Friesland" |
Jever |
|
Disbanded |
Disbanded 2005 |
| Aufklärungsgeschwader
51 "Immelmann" |
Jagel/Schleswig |
RECCE |
Active |
46 aircraft, Receives ASSTA 2 Upgrade, remains in service |
| RAF |
| No. 2 Squadron |
Marham |
GR4/4A |
Active |
12 aircraft |
| No. 5 Squadron |
Coningsby |
F3 |
Disbanded |
1987-2003 |
| No. 9 Squadron |
Marham |
GR4/4A |
Active |
12 aircraft |
| No. 11 Squadron |
Leeming |
F3 |
Disbanded |
1988-2005 |
| No. 12 Squadron |
Lossiemouth |
GR4/4A |
Active |
12 aircraft |
| No. 13 Squadron |
Marham |
GR4/4A |
Active |
12 aircraft |
| No. 14 Squadron |
Lossiemouth |
GR4/4A |
Active |
12 aircraft |
| No. XV Squadron |
Lossiemouth |
GR4 |
Reserve |
26 aircraft. GR4 Operational Conversion Unit |
No. 16 Squadron |
Laarbruch |
GR1 |
Disbanded |
1983-1991 |
| No. 17 Squadron |
Brüggen |
GR1 |
Disbanded |
1985-1999 |
| No. 20 Squadron |
Laarbruch |
GR1 |
Disbanded |
1984-1992 |
| No. 23 Squadron |
Leeming |
F3 |
Disbanded |
1988-1994 |
| No. 25 Squadron |
Leeming |
F3 |
Disbanded |
1989-2008 |
| No. 27 Squadron |
Marham |
GR1 |
Disbanded |
1983-1993 |
| No. 29 Squadron |
Coningsby |
F3 |
Disbanded |
1987-1998 |
| No. 31 Squadron |
Marham |
GR4/4A |
Active |
12 aircraft |
| No. 43 Squadron |
Leuchars |
F3 |
Disbanded |
1969-2009 |
| No. 56 Squadron |
Leuchars |
F3 |
Disbanded |
1992-2008 |
| No. 111 Squadron |
Leuchars |
F3 |
Active |
16 aircraft |
| No. 617 Squadron |
Lossiemouth |
GR4/4A |
Active |
12 aircraft |
No. 229 OCU
(No 65 Squadron)
|
Coningsby |
F2/3 |
Renumbered 56(R) Sqn |
1984-1992 F.2/3 Operational Conversion Unit |
| No. 1435 Flight |
Mount Pleasant |
F3 |
Replaced by Typhoon F2 |
4 aircraft, based in the Falklands |
| Tri-National Tornado
Training Establishment |
Cottesmore |
IDS, GR1 |
Disbanded |
|
Tornado Weapons Conversion Unit
(No.
45 Squadron)
|
Honington |
GR1 |
Renumbered XV(R) Sqn |
1981-1992 |
| Royal Saudi Air Force |
|
KAAB |
IDS |
Active |
96 IDS |
| No. 7 Squadron RSAF |
|
IDS |
|
|
| No. 29 Squadron RSAF |
|
ADV |
|
|
| No. 34 Squadron RSAF |
|
ADV |
|
|
| No. 66 Squadron RSAF |
|
IDS |
|
|
| No. 75 Squadron RSAF |
|
IDS |
|
|
| No. 83 Squadron RSAF |
|
IDS |
|
|
Aircraft on display

Gate guard Tornado on display in
Jagel, Germany
Although still an operational aircraft, a number of older aircraft
are on public display:
- XX946 Tornado Prototype P02 on
display at the RAF
Museum Cosford
, England.
- XX947 Tornado Prototype P03 on
display at Shoreham
Airport
, England.
- XX948 Tornado Prototype on display at Hermeskeil,
Germany
- XZ631 Tornado GR1 on display at
Yorkshire
Air Museum
, Elvington, England.
- ZA319 Tornado GR1T Gate Guard, MoD DSDA, Bicester,
England.
- ZA354 Tornado GR1 on display at
Yorkshire
Air Museum
, Elvington, England.
- ZA362 Tornado GR1 on display at Highland Aviation Museum,
Inverness, Scotland.
- ZA374 Tornado GR1 on display at the
National Museum of the United States Air
Force
, Wright Patterson, Ohio, USA
- ZA457 Tornado GR1 on display at
RAF
Museum
, Hendon, England.
- ZA465 Tornado GR1 on display at
Imperial War
Museum
, Duxford, England.
- ZE934 Tornado F3 on display at National Museum of Flight, East
Fortune, Scotland
- MM7210 Tornado F3 on display at the
Italian Air
Force Museum
, Vigna di Valle, Italy
- 43+74 Tornado IDS of the German
Navy, Marinefliegergeshwader 1 at the Pima Air
& Space Museum
, Tucson, AZ
- 43+96 Tornado gate guard at the
German air base in Jagel, near Schleswig,
Schleswig-Holstein
, Germany
- Tornado IDS on display at the Luftwaffenmuseum
, Berlin, Germany
- Tornado IDS on distplay at the Technikmuseum Speyer
, Germany
Specifications (Tornado GR4)
See also
References
Notes
- German ‘Tornado’ aircraft deploy to Mazar-e
Sharif, NATO ISAF Press Release #2007-270
- Luftwaffe Resource Center: Panavia Tornado
- [1]
- [2]
- Lawrence, Richard R.. Mammoth Book Of How It Happened:
Battles, Constable & Robinson Ltd, 2002.
- RAF Tornados to replace Harriers in
Afghanistan
External links