Thank you for the replies, I'm thinking, purely academically, replacing the RR Avon 207 with the Avon 301 used by the Lightning, as it has a bit more power...
The RA.29
Avon Mk 301 is fun idea but its reheat adds 225 kg (500 lbs) aft of the c/g. In any case, reheat is not all that practical as a retrofit for the
Hunter airframe.
... Ordnance wise... Air-to-air, maybe Redtop or Firestreak AAM, as offering Sidewinders may cause an issue with US weapons being used by Goverments not that friendly to the US.
Few early AAMs were cheaper or lighter than the AIM-9B. But, being designed for a completely different role provides
Firestreak or
Red Top with advantages that are now largely forgotten. First is that they could slaved to radar for launch (unlike early-model
Sidewinders). As a result, the British missiles "outperformed the US missiles in both maximum engagement angle and against supersonic targets." That was partly because
Firestreak or
Red Top were slightly more manoeuvrable than AIM-9B (15 G max overload vs 10 G).
The downsides were the sheer size of the British missiles ... although that provided them with space for much bigger warheads (22.7 kg warhead vs 4.5 kg). That size and warhead had also dictated by the anti-bomber role for
Firestreak or
Red Top.
As For the Canberra, the Spey is a good call. However, as Avons are ahead of the forward main spar, would there be an issue in centre of gravity shifting rearwards? Would replacing the Canberra forward fuselage with a B-57 style FF counteract the CG problem?
I don't think that any airframe changes would be required to maintain c/g. Like the TF33s,
Speys would also be mounted forward of that spar. The
Spey Mk.250 is only 128 kg (58 lbs) lighter than the original
Avon 207. That slight difference could likely be accommodated simply by moving some equipment about.