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#1
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OK. I have seen the debate over GWB as an F-102 pilot, so I was wondering
about a couple of things. First, was the F-102 taken out of service in the early 1970s? I have to ask because as a kid I remember the Guard around here flying F-106s up to around 1990 or 1991 or so, and they were closely related to the F-102. Though I recall them being (much) faster. Mach 1.8 vs. Mach 2.32 IIRC. Second, if GWB was trained on the F-102, and had asked about other planes, would he have been assigned to the -106 or was Texas going to a different fighter? The program wher Guard piolts were flying in Vietnam was mentioned, and the USAF turning him down because the USAF was phasing out the -102. I guess the time needed to retrain the guy on another type would have prohibited him making the cutoff date? Makes sense, though, and the USAF forces in the area could have been phasing out the -102 (which was more suited as a bomber interceptor for CONUS defense than dogfighting) earlier than counterparts in the US or Europe. Third. did the F-102 have a gun or just internal missiles in a weapon bay? The F-106, as I recall, carried Falcon missiles (Or GENIEs*) and later had a 20mm Vulcan cannon installed as well. Fourth, the F-102 and F-106 just look cool. Had to say that. Good designs, and you can see the evolution in fuselage flow in the later design. (Though the previous one had those cool mini-cones at the tail.) DEP *There was a massive "Was GENIE a rocket or a missile" debate on another group, which I won't get into here. I think the verdict was a rocket, which it was, guided missile or not. |
#2
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![]() OK. I have seen the debate over GWB as an F-102 pilot, so I was wondering about a couple of things. First, was the F-102 taken out of service in the early 1970s? Yes....the Duece as it was called in Air Force circles was phased out of most National Guard units in the early 70's. I recall the Pennsylvania National Guard replacing them with A7 Corsairs while in Texas they were replaced with F101 VooDoos. Second, if GWB was trained on the F-102, and had asked about other planes, would he have been assigned to the -106 or was Texas going to a different fighter? The Texas Guard transitioned to the F101 Voodoo which they flew till the early 80's when they moved to the F4 and now they fly F16's |
#3
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![]() "David E. Powell" wrote in message s.com... OK. I have seen the debate over GWB as an F-102 pilot, so I was wondering about a couple of things. First, was the F-102 taken out of service in the early 1970s? The last one left ANG service in 1976, though they had finsished their operational role in 1975. I have to ask because as a kid I remember the Guard around here flying F-106s up to around 1990 or 1991 or so, and they were closely related to the F-102. Though I recall them being (much) faster. Mach 1.8 vs. Mach 2.32 IIRC. Second, if GWB was trained on the F-102, and had asked about other planes, would he have been assigned to the -106 or was Texas going to a different fighter? You don't normally "ask" about other planes, you fly the aircraft assigned to your unit. As another poster has mentioned, his unit transitioned to the F-101. The program wher Guard piolts were flying in Vietnam was mentioned, and the USAF turning him down because the USAF was phasing out the -102. No, the reason he was not accepted was that they had plenty of more experienced F-102 pilots available at that time, and they were taking the most experienced volunteers. A couple of years after this, the situation had apparently changed, and an ANG F-102 pilot (2LT type) from Palace Alert flew the last F-102 intercept of a Bear out of Iceland. Palace Alert was not limited to sending F-102 pilots to Vietnam or Thailand--it provided pilots to various F-102 operating locations. I guess the time needed to retrain the guy on another type would have prohibited him making the cutoff date? Makes sense, though, and the USAF forces in the area could have been phasing out the -102 (which was more suited as a bomber interceptor for CONUS defense than dogfighting) earlier than counterparts in the US or Europe. Third. did the F-102 have a gun or just internal missiles in a weapon bay? No gun, just internal mounted Falcon AAM's and a few 2.75 inch unguided FFAR's in tubes withing the weapons bay doors. The F-106, as I recall, carried Falcon missiles (Or GENIEs*) and later had a 20mm Vulcan cannon installed as well. Yep. Brooks Fourth, the F-102 and F-106 just look cool. Had to say that. Good designs, and you can see the evolution in fuselage flow in the later design. (Though the previous one had those cool mini-cones at the tail.) DEP *There was a massive "Was GENIE a rocket or a missile" debate on another group, which I won't get into here. I think the verdict was a rocket, which it was, guided missile or not. |
#4
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![]() "David E. Powell" wrote in message s.com... OK. I have seen the debate over GWB as an F-102 pilot, so I was wondering about a couple of things. First, was the F-102 taken out of service in the early 1970s? I have to ask because as a kid I remember the Guard around here flying F-106s up to around 1990 or 1991 or so, and they were closely related to the F-102. Though I recall them being (much) faster. Mach 1.8 vs. Mach 2.32 IIRC. HANG (Hawaii) flew 102 until 1977 (last unit as best I can find out). Now the be TOTALLY correct Deuce was flown much longer than that as drone. The Six was faster due to the fact that F-106 had engine with more thrust (J75 vice J57). Not sure, but don't think Deuce had variable inlet either (open to correction) Second, if GWB was trained on the F-102, and had asked about other planes, would he have been assigned to the -106 or was Texas going to a different fighter? The program wher Guard piolts were flying in Vietnam was mentioned, and the USAF turning him down because the USAF was phasing out the -102. I guess the time needed to retrain the guy on another type would have prohibited him making the cutoff date? Makes sense, though, and the USAF forces in the area could have been phasing out the -102 (which was more suited as a bomber interceptor for CONUS defense than dogfighting) earlier than counterparts in the US or Europe. Good source on F-102 ops both CONUS and PACAF... http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/f102_2.html Shows 111th FIS (TANG) operated F-102 from 1960 - 1975 (as mentioned transitioned to 101) Interesting to note that PACAF had Deuce in service up to 70/71 at Okinawa and Clark ..... DEP *There was a massive "Was GENIE a rocket or a missile" debate on another group, which I won't get into here. I think the verdict was a rocket, which it was, guided missile or not. Not to restart this but.... GENIE was NOT guided (basically a bullet). Good in that it could not be jammed with ECM or decoyed with flares. (ECM could impact AI radar in interceptor of course). Genie was one of the more difficult to employ due to fact pilot had to be VERY precise in "steering the dot" and get in proper firing solution. Mark |
#5
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Shows 111th FIS (TANG) operated F-102 from 1960 - 1975 (as mentioned
transitioned to 101) Actually the 111th flew both F-102s and F-101s from 1969 until 1976. During that time period the unit was responible for both Deuce and VooDoo training. When the deuce was phased out, the 111th continued with the F-101B until 1982. I cover that on my website. http://angelfire.lycos.com/dc/jinxx1/images/TEXANG.html CB |
#6
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![]() "Jinxx1" wrote in message ... Shows 111th FIS (TANG) operated F-102 from 1960 - 1975 (as mentioned transitioned to 101) Actually the 111th flew both F-102s and F-101s from 1969 until 1976. During that time period the unit was responible for both Deuce and VooDoo training. When the deuce was phased out, the 111th continued with the F-101B until 1982. I cover that on my website. Sounds a bit early for first arrival of the Voodoo; "1971 saw the arrival of the McDonnell Douglas F-101B Voodoo to the 147th FIG. The F-101 did not replace the F-102 it was just an addition to the role of combat crew training. Now the 147th was tasked with training of aircrews in the F-102 and F-101. 1974 saw the end of the Delta Dagger's days at Ellington; the "Texans" would now solely operate the F-101." www.fencecheck.com/articles/base_visits/ article_01_07_2004_lance_pawlik.php "On 6 May 1971 the unit received F-101F fighter interceptors and became the training center for all Air Guard interceptors. In August 1974, after 14 years of service, the unit's F-102s were retired, but the unit maintained a full fleet of F-101s." www.houstonaviationalliance.com/ meeting02/05/ang_info.html That latter source seems to have the best info on the unit's history; it agrees with that found on the TXANG official website, http://www.agd.state.tx.us/main/air/airindexframe.htm . There was an overlap in flying the F-102 and F-101, but that did not occur until mid-1971 (I'd suspect they did not actually strat doing any F-101 training operations until maybe 72, since it would take some time to spin up the unit on the "newer" aircraft. Brooks http://angelfire.lycos.com/dc/jinxx1/images/TEXANG.html CB |
#7
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On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 13:43:56 GMT, "Mark T. Evert"
wrote: The Texas Guard transitioned to the F101 Voodoo What year was this? all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#8
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... What year was this? The 111th FIS flew the F-102A from 1960 to 1975 and the F-101B from 1971 to 1981. Both fighters were used in the Combat Crew Training School run by the unit from 1970 to 1976. |
#9
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On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 16:03:28 GMT, "Mark" wrote:
"David E. Powell" wrote in message ws.com... OK. I have seen the debate over GWB as an F-102 pilot, so I was wondering about a couple of things. First, was the F-102 taken out of service in the early 1970s? I have to ask because as a kid I remember the Guard around here flying F-106s up to around 1990 or 1991 or so, and they were closely related to the F-102. Though I recall them being (much) faster. Mach 1.8 vs. Mach 2.32 IIRC. HANG (Hawaii) flew 102 until 1977 (last unit as best I can find out). Now the be TOTALLY correct Deuce was flown much longer than that as drone. The Six was faster due to the fact that F-106 had engine with more thrust (J75 vice J57). Not sure, but don't think Deuce had variable inlet either (open to correction) The six also had an area-ruled fuse, that is significant for a +mach bird. Al MInyard |
#10
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![]() "Alan Minyard" wrote in message ... On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 16:03:28 GMT, "Mark" wrote: "David E. Powell" wrote in message ws.com... OK. I have seen the debate over GWB as an F-102 pilot, so I was wondering about a couple of things. First, was the F-102 taken out of service in the early 1970s? I have to ask because as a kid I remember the Guard around here flying F-106s up to around 1990 or 1991 or so, and they were closely related to the F-102. Though I recall them being (much) faster. Mach 1.8 vs. Mach 2.32 IIRC. HANG (Hawaii) flew 102 until 1977 (last unit as best I can find out). Now the be TOTALLY correct Deuce was flown much longer than that as drone. The Six was faster due to the fact that F-106 had engine with more thrust (J75 vice J57). Not sure, but don't think Deuce had variable inlet either (open to correction) The six also had an area-ruled fuse, that is significant for a +mach bird. Actually, Al, the 102 used area rule--the lack of area rule resulted in the first protype YF-102 being firmly subsonic. Redesign to incorporate area rule yielded the F-102A, which was our first supersonic interceptor. Brooks Al MInyard |
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