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#1
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![]() http://www.news.navy.mil/search/disp...story_id=17006 The only sad thing in this story is the fact that another squadron with a great history is gonna be shelved. But it reminds me about VA-55 Warhorses, disestablished while its crews fought in Desert Storm under the flags of other squadrons. I wonder if it is easy to pin down an F-15C flying F/A-18C? VFA-146, on their official web site, show some great-looking proofs to that: http://www.lemoore.navy.mil/vfa-146/...hootprint1.jpg http://www.lemoore.navy.mil/vfa-146/...hootprint2.jpg http://www.lemoore.navy.mil/vfa-146/...hootprint3.jpg Bravo Zulu, Blue Diamonds, for nice website and great photos! Jacek Zemlo (USN&USMC aviation enthusiast from Poland, and an armchair flyer;-) |
#2
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... http://www.news.navy.mil/search/disp...story_id=17006 The only sad thing in this story is the fact that another squadron with a great history is gonna be shelved. But it reminds me about VA-55 Warhorses, disestablished while its crews fought in Desert Storm under the flags of other squadrons. I wonder if it is easy to pin down an F-15C flying F/A-18C? VFA-146, on their official web site, show some great-looking proofs to that: http://www.lemoore.navy.mil/vfa-146/...hootprint1.jpg http://www.lemoore.navy.mil/vfa-146/...hootprint2.jpg http://www.lemoore.navy.mil/vfa-146/...hootprint3.jpg Bravo Zulu, Blue Diamonds, for nice website and great photos! Back in the day, the F-8 community put on a happy hour for the Phantom guys at the Miramar O-club. Composed of a few weeks of gunsight film that was equally embarrassing (a near-riot ensued). While we did enjoy a level of superiority to the less maneuverable jet, a really good Phantom driver would prevail. I learned this the hard way when I bumped into that particular driver one afternoon. And there came a time when I WAS that guy, with a few thousand hours under my belt. The F-18 is the better high alpha, turn radius airplane. That advantage can be overcome, but it takes skill and patience. The F-15 in the picture may never have seen his opponent (that's the usual way perfect gunsight pictures are generated ... ask Eric Hartmann), or he may well have lacked that skill and patience. R / John |
#3
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Well, I've asked that question also because of some articles I've found
in "Air Forces Monthly" old (early-to-mid-1990s) issues. In one of them - a comparison between F-16, F/A-18, MiG-29, and Mirage 2000 - it was stated that F/A-18C is the best in the "low and slow" scenario, these adavantages being dimmed when the speed and altitude increase. So, essentialy a strike aircraft, with a very good self-defense capabilities? In another, an F-14D pilot bragged that in so improved Tomcat he can successfully fight anything but F/A-18 WITH NO EXTERNAL FUEL TANKS. Personally, I think that it is difficult to see an F/A-18 with no external tanks (yeah, dropping them is possible, but would it be good as an everyday routine?). The underwing pylons must also cause some extra drag and loss in manoeuvrability (especially in F/A-18E/F), but dismounting them could reduce the plane's flexibility in rapidly changing battlefield environment. Best regards, Jacek Zemlo |
#4
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#5
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draggy. ISTR that the Swiss and maybe the Finns were interested in
developing a pure AAM pylon that would be much smaller and less draggy than the current pylons, but I don't know if that ever went forward. You can see the results of that research on the F-18 E/F as stations 2 and 10. Ray |
#6
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Raymond Marshall wrote:
draggy. ISTR that the Swiss and maybe the Finns were interested in developing a pure AAM pylon that would be much smaller and less draggy than the current pylons, but I don't know if that ever went forward. You can see the results of that research on the F-18 E/F as stations 2 and 10. I think not. 2 & 10 are designed to carry 1,000 lb. A/G stores IIRR, far heavier than needed for an AAM, and in addition there's no room for such a pylon on an F-18A/C wing. The intent was to replace the current 2 & 8; presumably 3 and 7 wouldn't need to be carried for the AD role in Swiss or Finnish airspace. At most they might need a C/L tank. Guy |
#7
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As it can be seen on aviation photo web sites (like www.airliners.net)
Suomi's and Switzerland's Hornets are quite often flown in a clean or "almost clean" (w/fuel tank on the centerline) fighter configuration. As for the USN/USMC Hornets it's a different story. You put one fuel tank under the wing. You put the second on the centerline (this pylon in F/A-18A/C is not suitable for PGMs, also not very good for dumb bombs, so why waste another underwing pylon for a fuel tank?!) You put FLIR/NITE Hawk on the port nacelle station. And you have an aircraft for any mission - day or night, fighter or strike, 2VX/4VX self-escort flight... That's a bit different with Marine F/A-18Ds, carrying LITENING on no.5 (centerline)station. East or West - the rule must be the same - when something is assembled and works well, DON'T TOUCH IT! - so I would not be surprised when a Rhino once configured as a tanker stays as a tanker for a next few days... The F/A-18E/F gives some more capabilities: Thanks to ATFLIR (two pods in one, as a matter of fact!), an AMRAAM can be carried also for CAS sorties. You can use the "small" outboard wing stations for additional HARM or AMRAAMs for self-defense, being still capable of carrying PGMs and LOT OF extra fuel. You can even put a Maverick on a Rhino in a tanker configuration, in case any surface contacts may appear in the area! Jacek |
#9
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In article .com,
() wrote: In one of them - a comparison between F-16, F/A-18, MiG-29, and Mirage 2000 - it was stated that F/A-18C is the best in the "low and slow" scenario, these adavantages being dimmed when the speed and altitude increase. So, essentialy a strike aircraft, with a very good self-defense capabilities? In another, an F-14D pilot bragged that in so improved Tomcat he can successfully fight anything but F/A-18 WITH NO EXTERNAL FUEL TANKS. Presumably, any CTOL fighter that is reasonably safe to make a carrier approach in must thereby have pretty good low-and-slow handling? Whereas planes built to operate off long concrete runways don't /have/ to be nearly so capable in that respect, and therefore usually aren't? --- John Dallman, , HTML mail is treated as probable spam. |
#10
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Ralph Savelsberg wrote:
Guy Alcala wrote: snip Some years back, a friend of mine asked a pilot from either VX-4 or 5 (before they amalgamated as VX-9) which a/c he'd rather have in a phone booth fight. The pilot said an F-14. My friend thought the pilot had misunderstood him, so clarified the question. thepilot gave thesame answer, and explained why. He said that nothing would beat the F-18 if both a/c were clean wing, but that when you put the normal pylons on both a/c it was a different matter. Of course, this referred to an early F-18A/C model with the -400 engines, so the -402s and FCS software improvements may have altered the odds, but the F-18's wing pylons are very draggy. ISTR that the Swiss and maybe the Finns were interested in developing a pure AAM pylon that would be much smaller and less draggy than the current pylons, but I don't know if that ever went forward. Guy Those have been developed and are in service with the Swiss AF. Such a pylon loaded with an AMRAAM can be seen in the picture to which I provided the link below: http://www.raf.mod.uk/news/images/nomad0403.jpg I don't know whether the Finnish AF uses them as well, but it does seem likely. Thanks for the picture. Quite a difference in size and (presumably) drag. One question -- does that look like the stock nose tow bar on the NLG? Guy |
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