Hawker Siddeley Harrier & Sea Harrier — History, Specs & Stories

Hawker Siddeley Harrier jump jet hovering
Aircraft MuseumV/STOL Strike FighterHarrier

Hawker Siddeley Harrier
& Sea Harrier

The world’s first operationally successful “jump jet” — a vectored-thrust V/STOL fighter that took off vertically, hovered, and in 1982 wrote one of the most lopsided air-combat records of the jet age over the Falklands.

FirstOperational V/STOL combat jet in history
~20–23 : 0Sea Harrier Falklands air-combat record
Mach 0.97Top speed — subsonic by design
>800Harrier family built, all variants
Photo: D. Miller · CC BY 2.0
RoleV/STOL strike fighterEraCold War – presentMotorRolls-Royce Pegasus (vectored thrust)OriginUnited Kingdom · Hawker SiddeleyStatusRetired / frontline (AV-8B)Can a civilian fly the Harrier?
Het verhaal

The jet that didn’t need a runway

The Harrier is the aircraft that made vertical take-off, hovering and rolling-vertical landing a battlefield reality. It grew from the Hawker P.1127, designed around the Bristol Siddeley Pegasus vectored-thrust turbofan — a single engine whose four nozzles swivel from aft to straight down. The prototype made its first tethered hover on 21 October 1960 and its first conventional flight in March 1961, and by later that year could transition fully between hover and wingborne flight.

After the supersonic P.1154 was cancelled, the RAF took a developed subsonic version: the Harrier GR.1 entered service on 1 April 1969 as the first fixed-wing combat aircraft able to operate independently of runways. The Royal Navy’s Sea Harrier FRS.1 followed in 1980, and the US Marine Corps bought the type as the AV-8A. Britain, America, India, Spain and Italy all flew Harriers of one generation or another.

Its legend was sealed in the 1982 Falklands War, where 28 subsonic Sea Harriers defended the British fleet 8,000 miles from home against faster Argentine jets — and destroyed roughly 20–23 aircraft for no air-to-air losses. The concept outlived the aircraft: every lesson of Harrier V/STOL fed directly into today’s F-35B.

One engine, one throttle, one nozzle lever — and a fighter that could stop in mid-air and bow to the crowd.The Original Jump Jet — why the Harrier changed air power
01The Harrier’s origin: how the P.1127 hovered its way into history

The whole Harrier story rests on a single idea — Michel Wibault’s thrust-vectoring concept, turned into a practical engine by Rolls-Royce’s Stanley Hooker as the Pegasus. Nine evaluation aircraft, the Kestrel FGA.1, were flown by a tripartite squadron of British, American and West German pilots in 1965. When the supersonic P.1154 was axed the same year, the subsonic Harrier survived, first flying in 1966 and entering RAF service with No. 1 Squadron at Wittering in 1969.

No other Western vertical-take-off combat jet ever reached front-line squadrons. The Harrier did — and stayed there, in one form or another, for more than four decades.


Design & Engineering

What makes the Harrier special

01

The Pegasus vectored-thrust engine

A single Rolls-Royce Pegasus turbofan with four rotating nozzles — two cold fan, two hot exhaust — that swivel together from horizontal to vertical-down under one lever. It lifts, hovers and propels the Harrier with no separate lift engines: the elegant solution that made the entire jump-jet concept work.

02

Reaction controls for the hover

At zero airspeed, wings and tail do nothing. The Harrier bleeds high-pressure air to “puffer” reaction jets at the nose, tail and each wingtip, giving the pilot pitch, roll and yaw control while balanced on columns of thrust — one of the most demanding skills in aviation.

03

VIFFing — vectoring in forward flight

Deflecting the nozzles downward or forward during wingborne flight produces sudden deceleration and tighter turns. A Harrier could brake so violently that a pursuing fighter shot past into its sights — a combat trick no conventional jet could copy, and a decisive edge for a subsonic aircraft.

02The Harrier’s Pegasus: one engine, four nozzles, no lift jets

Rival V/STOL designs bolted separate lift engines into the fuselage — dead weight in cruise. The Pegasus instead split its whole thrust across four swivelling nozzles rotated in unison, so the same engine that flew the aircraft also lifted it. That single decision kept the Harrier light enough to be a useful combat jet rather than a hovering curiosity, and it is why the layout survived unchanged from the 1960s P.1127 to the F402-powered AV-8B.

03The Harrier’s VIFF trick: how a slow jet beat faster ones

The Sea Harrier was slower than the Mirages and Daggers it faced in 1982, and slower is usually fatal in a dogfight. VIFFing changed the maths: by swivelling the nozzles in forward flight the pilot could dump speed almost instantly, forcing a fast attacker to overshoot and become the target. Combined with the all-aspect AIM-9L Sidewinder and aggressive flying, it turned the Harrier’s biggest weakness — a lack of raw speed — into a close-combat advantage.


Technical Data

Full specifications

Airframe & Performance

Bemanning
1
Lengte
~14.5 m (47 ft 7 in)
Spanwijdte
~7.70 m (25 ft 3 in)
Hoogte
~3.7 m (12 ft 2 in)
Max speed
~1,180–1,200 km/h (~Mach 0.97, low level)
Serviceplafond
~15,000 m (~51,000 ft)
Empty / MTOW
~5,900 kg / ~11,900 kg (Sea Harrier FRS.1)
Production
Harrier family >800 (first-gen line ~700)

Propulsion & Armament

Motor
1 × Rolls-Royce Pegasus vectored-thrust turbofan
Thrust
~95.6 kN / 21,500 lbf (FRS.1 Mk 104)
Gun
2 × 30 mm ADEN cannon (pods)
Missiles
AIM-9 Sidewinder; Sea Eagle (Sea Harrier)
Hardpoints
5 — bombs, rockets, drop tanks
First flight
P.1127: 1960 · Harrier GR.1: 1966
Unit cost
Varies widely by variant/year (approximate only)
Cost per flight hour
No reliable public figure
04The Harrier’s numbers: what “over 800 built” really counts

Production totals depend on where you draw the line. The first-generation Harrier / Sea Harrier / AV-8A line is commonly cited at around 700 airframes (MilitaryFactory quotes 718 for the early line). Add the second-generation Harrier II / AV-8B and RAF GR5/7/9, and the whole family runs to over 800. Firm unit-cost figures are unreliable: they span multiple variants, decades and currencies, so treat any single dollar figure as approximate. What is certain is the aircraft’s value — it gave small carriers and forward strips a fast jet that nothing else could match.


Timeline

From tethered hover to the F-35B

1957–59

The concept

Wibault’s thrust-vectoring idea and Hooker’s Pegasus engine give rise to the Hawker P.1127.

21 Oct 1960

First hover

The P.1127 makes its first tethered hover — a jet rising straight up.

13 Mar 1961

First flight

The P.1127 flies conventionally; full transitions between hover and wingborne flight follow later in 1961.

1965

Kestrel evaluation

A tripartite squadron (UK, USA, West Germany) flies the Kestrel FGA.1; the supersonic P.1154 is cancelled.

31 Aug 1966

Harrier GR.1 flies

The first pre-production Harrier GR.1 takes to the air.

1 Apr 1969

Enters RAF service

No. 1 Squadron at RAF Wittering — the first runway-independent fixed-wing combat aircraft.

1971

Marines get the AV-8A

The first AV-8A is delivered to the US Marine Corps.

1980

Sea Harrier at sea

The Sea Harrier FRS.1 enters Royal Navy service aboard the ski-jump carriers.

1982

The Falklands

Sea Harriers down ~20–23 Argentine aircraft for no air-to-air losses — the type’s defining campaign.

2010–11

Britain bows out

The UK retires its entire Harrier fleet; India follows with the Sea Harrier in 2016. The AV-8B soldiers on toward the F-35B.


Stories & Eyewitnesses

From the flight line: twelve Harrier stories

Origins

The world’s first jump jet

How the P.1127 hovered in 1960 and rewrote what a fighter could do.

Read the full story
The P.1127 proved a jet could rise straight up, hover, and transition to wingborne flight using a single vectored-thrust engine. First tethered hover in October 1960, first free flight in March 1961. It beat every rival V/STOL concept into service and became the only Western vertical-take-off combat jet ever to reach front-line squadrons.
Falklands

Roughly 20 to 0

The Sea Harrier’s near-perfect air-combat record over the South Atlantic.

Read the full story
In 1982, 28 subsonic Sea Harriers defended the British task force against faster Argentine jets 8,000 miles from home. Armed with all-aspect AIM-9L Sidewinders and flown aggressively, they downed roughly 20–23 aircraft without losing one in air combat — one of the most lopsided fighter records of the jet age. The exact tally varies by source.
Tactics

VIFFing the enemy

Braking in mid-air to make a pursuer overshoot.

Read the full story
By swivelling the Pegasus nozzles forward during flight — Vectoring In Forward Flight — a Harrier pilot could decelerate violently, dropping speed so fast a chasing fighter shot past into the sights. No conventional jet could copy it, giving the “slow” Harrier a decisive close-combat trick.
Carriers

The ski-jump revolution

How a curved ramp turned small decks into fighter carriers.

Read the full story
The upward-curved ski-jump let a loaded Sea Harrier launch from short decks with more fuel and weapons than a flat run allowed. HMS Invincible and Hermes proved the concept in the Falklands, and the ski-jump became the template for light V/STOL carriers worldwide — still used for F-35B operations today.
USMC

Marines get their own air power

The AV-8 gives the Corps organic close air support.

Read the full story
The US Marine Corps embraced the Harrier to put jet firepower directly under Marine control, flying AV-8As and later AV-8Bs from amphibious assault ships and austere strips. It delivered close air support in the Gulf Wars, Afghanistan and Libya, and remains in USMC service into the mid-2020s.
Retirement

Britain grounds its jump jets

The controversial 2010 decision to axe the Harrier.

Read the full story
In the 2010 Strategic Defence and Security Review, Britain retired its entire Harrier fleet to save money, ending front-line UK V/STOL operations in 2011 and leaving the Royal Navy without carrier fast jets for years. Veterans and commentators fiercely criticised the cut, calling it a strategic gap until the F-35B arrived.
Field ops

Fighting from the forest

Dispersed, runway-free operations.

Read the full story
A Harrier didn’t need an airbase. RAF crews practised hiding jets in German woodland, launching from clearings and country roads, and refuelling at improvised sites — making them far harder to knock out than runway-bound fighters. This dispersal doctrine was a core reason NATO valued the type during the Cold War.
Engineering

One engine, four nozzles

Inside the Pegasus.

Read the full story
The Rolls-Royce Pegasus splits its thrust across four swivelling nozzles — two cold fan, two hot exhaust — rotated together by a single lever. It lifts, hovers and propels the aircraft with no separate lift engines, an elegant solution that made the whole Harrier concept work for over five decades.
Control

Puffer jets and the hover

How a jet balances at zero speed.

Read the full story
With no airflow over the controls in a hover, the Harrier steers using bleed-air “puffer” jets at the nose, tail and wingtips. The pilot balances the aircraft on columns of thrust — one of the most demanding flying skills in aviation, and the reason Harrier conversions were famously difficult.
Airshow

The bow and the hover

A crowd-favourite display act.

Read the full story
At airshows the Harrier could stop in mid-air, hover, spin on the spot, fly sideways and backwards, and “bow” to the crowd by nodding its nose — feats impossible for any conventional jet. These displays turned the jump jet into one of the most beloved show performers of its era.
Export

The Matador and the Sea Harrier abroad

The Harrier goes global.

Read the full story
Spain flew the AV-8S “Matador” from its carrier, later selling the jets to Thailand. India operated Sea Harrier FRS.51s from its carriers until 2016. These exports spread V/STOL naval aviation to nations that could not field large flat-top carriers, extending the Harrier’s reach far beyond Britain and the USA.
Legacy

From Pegasus to F-35B

The idea that outlived the aircraft.

Read the full story
Every lesson of Harrier V/STOL — ski-jumps, vertical landing, dispersed basing — fed directly into the F-35B Lightning II, today’s stealth jump jet. The Harrier retired, but its core concept lives on aboard modern carriers, proving the 1960s vision of runway-independent air power was decades ahead of its time.

Gallery

The Harrier in pictures

A Royal Navy Sea Harrier FRS.1 launching off the ski-jump of HMS Invincible in 1990.
A Royal Navy Sea Harrier FRS.1 launching off the ski-jump of HMS Invincible in 1990.Photo: PH3 Stephen L. Batiz, USN · Public domain
A US Marine Corps AV-8B Harrier launching from the deck of USS Kearsarge.
A US Marine Corps AV-8B Harrier launching from the deck of USS Kearsarge.Photo: U.S. Navy · Public domain
A Royal Navy BAe Sea Harrier FA2 in flight  the radar-improved upgrade.
A Royal Navy BAe Sea Harrier FA2 in flight — the radar-improved upgrade.Photo: Odessa3 · Public domain
Head-on view of a BAe Sea Harrier, showing the intakes flanking the cockpit.
Head-on view of a BAe Sea Harrier, showing the intakes flanking the cockpit.Photo: BadWolf42 · Public domain
A formation of US Marine Corps AV-8B Harriers of squadron VMA-513.
A formation of US Marine Corps AV-8B Harriers of squadron VMA-513.Photo: SSgt Scott Stewart, USAF · Public domain
Inside a Hawker Siddeley Harrier GR.3 cockpit, preserved at Newark Air Museum.
Inside a Hawker Siddeley Harrier GR.3 cockpit, preserved at Newark Air Museum.Photo: Roland Turner · CC BY-SA 2.0

Watch

The Harrier in motion

A hand-picked Harrier video is on its way.


Operations

Where the Harrier flew


Combat Record

The jump jet that proved itself in battle

The Harrier’s combat career runs from the South Atlantic to the deserts of Iraq. Its most famous chapter is the 1982 Falklands War, where the Sea Harrier defended the British fleet against a numerically superior, faster air force — and won. Kill tallies from that campaign vary by source, so treat them as claims.

~20–23Argentine aircraft downed by Sea Harriers, 1982
0Sea Harriers lost in air-to-air combat
4Wars flown by the USMC AV-8B (Gulf, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya)

Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Figures as of July 2026.


Questions & Answers

Everything people ask about the Harrier

Can I fly in a Harrier or Sea Harrier?
No. The Harrier and Sea Harrier are retired or frontline-only military V/STOL jets and are not available for civilian flights through MiGFlug. However you CAN fly several genuine military jets today — explore the options at migflug.com/flights-prices/.
How fast is the Harrier?
Roughly 1,180–1,200 km/h (about Mach 0.97) at low level — high subsonic. The Harrier was never designed to go supersonic; its edge was V/STOL and agility.
Is the Harrier supersonic?
No — top speed is about Mach 0.97. It traded raw speed for the ability to take off vertically and out-manoeuvre faster jets in close combat.
How does it hover?
The Rolls-Royce Pegasus engine’s four rotating nozzles vector thrust downward, while bleed-air reaction jets at the nose, tail and wingtips provide control at zero airspeed.
What was its Falklands record?
Royal Navy Sea Harriers destroyed roughly 20–23 Argentine aircraft in 1982 for no air-to-air losses. The exact figure varies by source. (Argentina flew the opposing A-4 Skyhawks, Mirages and Daggers.)
Is the Harrier still in service?
No first-generation Harrier remains in service. The second-generation AV-8B still flies with the US Marine Corps (retiring ~2027) and, in dwindling numbers, Italy and Spain.
How many Harriers were built?
The Harrier family totalled over 800 aircraft across all variants — the first-generation Harrier / Sea Harrier / AV-8A line plus the second-generation AV-8B and RAF GR5/7/9.
What is VIFFing?
Vectoring In Forward Flight — swivelling the engine nozzles while flying to brake hard and out-manoeuvre a pursuer, a trick unique to the Harrier.

Sources & Further Reading

Every fact, checked