The Nord 1500 Griffon: France Stacked a Ramjet on a Turbojet and Hit Mach 2.19

by | May 19, 2026 | History & Legends, Military Aviation | 0 comments

In the late summer of 1957, in the South of France, a 35-year-old test pilot named André Turcat climbed into the cockpit of an aircraft that, by every reasonable standard of aerospace engineering, should not have flown. The Nord 1500 Griffon II had a turbojet engine. It also had a ramjet engine. The two engines were stacked one inside the other, in the same nacelle, sharing the same air intake and the same exhaust nozzle. Turcat would later look back on the Griffon as one of the most exhilarating — and most unforgiving — aircraft he ever flew.

Over the following two years, Turcat would take the Griffon II to Mach 2.19, a speed exceeded by no other French aircraft of the 1950s. He would prove that a combined turbojet-ramjet propulsion system could work in a piloted aircraft. He would survive flights at temperatures and dynamic pressures that no French airframe had yet been engineered for. And then, in 1961, the French Air Force would quietly cancel the programme, leaving the Nord 1500 Griffon to become the most spectacular orphan of post-war French aerospace.

Over the next two years, Turcat flew the Griffon II to progressively higher speeds. Step by step the envelope expanded until, in late 1958, the Griffon II reached Mach 2.19 — the Griffon's maximum recorded speed and, at the time, the fastest any French aircraft had ever flown. The achievement won Turcat the Harmon Trophy, the international aviator award. It also confirmed, definitively, that the combined-cycle propulsion concept worked.

Nord 1500 Griffon I in flight, c. 1956
The Griffon I, the turbojet-only first prototype, in flight around 1956. It reached Mach 1.3 before the Griffon II — with the integrated ramjet — took over the programme. (Wikimedia Commons)

Why the Programme Ended

The Griffon should, by every technical measure, have led to a French Mach 3 interceptor. By 1960 the propulsion concept was proven. The airframe handled. Turcat's flight envelope work had identified the structural and thermal limits. The French Air Force should have, on this evidence, ordered a production interceptor.

It did not. The reason was the 1962 first flight of the Lockheed A-12, progenitor of the SR-71 Blackbird, the Soviet Mikoyan Ye-150 series (also Mach 2.65 and never produced), and a clear shift in French strategic thinking toward nuclear deterrence rather than high-speed interception. France was building its own nuclear strike force around the Dassault Mirage IV bomber. The Air Defence Force's requirement for a high-altitude interceptor evaporated when surface-to-air missiles improved enough to do the same job at a fraction of the cost. The Mirage III, in production at Dassault, could intercept Soviet bombers at Mach 2 with off-the-shelf missile armament. The Griffon offered Mach 2.19 and the promise of Mach 3 — but only at the price of an entirely new powerplant supply chain, an entirely new airframe-temperature engineering programme, and entirely new pilot training.

Nord 1500 Griffon II at Musée de l'air et de l'espace, Le Bourget
The Nord 1500 Griffon II on permanent display at the Musée de l'air et de l'espace, Le Bourget, near Paris. It is the only surviving Griffon and one of the most-photographed exhibits in the museum's post-war wing. (Wikimedia Commons)

On 5 June 1961, the Griffon II made its final flight, and the programme was formally closed. Nord Aviation merged with Sud Aviation in 1970 to form Aérospatiale, the company that would build Concorde. André Turcat went on to become the man who took Concorde up for its 1969 maiden flight and past Mach 2 the following year — a career arc that owed everything to the Griffon work he had done a decade earlier.

The Long Shadow

The Griffon's technology never quite disappeared. The combined-cycle propulsion concept resurfaced in the British Reaction Engines SABRE programme in the 2010s — an air-breathing rocket engine that combines turbojet, ramjet and rocket modes in the same nacelle. The Griffon's integrated turbojet-ramjet was the first piloted-aircraft prototype to demonstrate the basic principle Reaction Engines is still working on sixty-five years later.

The Griffon II itself sits today at the Musée de l'air et de l'espace at Le Bourget, near Paris. Visitors who walk past it usually do not realise how unusual its engine is. The single massive air intake hides the dual-stage propulsion system inside. The aircraft looks, from the outside, like a large supersonic delta-wing fighter. Inside the nacelle, the most ambitious propulsion experiment in 1950s European aviation sits silent.

André Turcat died in 2016, aged 94, with the Griffon and the Concorde both behind him as the two defining aircraft of his career. Both were Mach 2 aircraft. Both were French. Only one ever entered service. The Griffon — the one with a ramjet bolted to a turbojet, the one that nobody else had ever quite tried — deserves more than the footnote it has become.

Sources: Wikipedia — Nord 1500 Griffon; Plane Historia; MilitaryFactory; BuzzHint; Musée de l'air et de l'espace, Le Bourget; André Turcat, Pilote d'essais : Mémoires (2005).

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