With its roots dating back to the late 1940s and the de Havilland Comet
airliner, the Nimrod already had pedigree when it first appeared in the
late 1960s in place of the Avro Shackleton in the Maritime
Reconnaissance role. Fewer than fifty were built for the RAF, the type
being steadily upgraded throughout its career right up to its retirement
in 2011. Compared to the Shackleton, the Nimrod brought comfort and
reliability to its multi-role long-range activities, including
anti-submarine warfare, maritime surveillance and anti-surface warfare.
The Nimrod saw action during the Falklands War, the Gulf Wars,
Afghanistan and a continued contribution (since 1977) to Operation
Tapestry - the protection of the UK's Sovereign Sea Areas. Specialist
versions of the Nimrod also served in the signals intelligence role
while other attempted developments failed, such as the Airborne Early
Warning role and the final, costly MRA.4 versions, neither of which
entered RAF service. This book tells the story of this remarkable
aircraft.