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Vlado -
Realize that the Navy has some kind requirement for FAC(A) aircraft to be 2-seaters. With the Tomcat leaving, I'm guessing they must have the F model to be able to continue to fulfill this role. I worked with a number of F-14 FACs and F-18F FACs over in Iraq last year, and they were some of the best I've seen ever (Marines and A-10s included). Also, realize that the 2 seats in the Tomcat were needed because of the lack of automation with the AWG-9 radar -- for the intercept role, you needed that RIO back there to work the gadget. The 2 seats in the F-18F are there for a different reason -- it is a striker, and like the F-15E the Super Bug is able to employ a wider range of air-to-ground ordnance more precisely with that 'FO back there guiding it in. I don't agree with the other poster's assertion that "High alpha pitch up is not a wise manuver in ACM." I'm not sure what kind of "Air Combat Maneuvering" that poster has ever done, but in the stuff I've done the ability to point your nose and/or completely stop your forward movement over the ground is *very* valuable. In a single circle BFM fight, that is *exactly* the type of aircraft performance I'd like. Same thing goes for if I'm in a defensive engagement...the ability to slow down quick and remain flying is pretty convenient when you want to set up a flight path overshoot and the hopeful follow-on reversal. People downplayed the ol' Flanker's "Cobra Maneuver" a decade ago not because it didn't have tactical application, but because it wasn't executable in a "real" flanker without the radar removed, etc. You can talk until you're blue in the face about "his wingman will pop you when you get too slow" -- and there is absolutely something to be said about that -- but to say that there is no tactical application, or that it's not wise, is not correct. "MLenoch" wrote in message ... I hadn't realized that the F/A-18F is currently replacing the the F-14 in fleet service. Why does the two seater need to replace the F-14? Cannot the single seat F/A-18E do the same role? Since the F/A-18F is replacing the F-14, we will be seeing the Hornet at local airshows instead of the Tomcat for the Navy flight demonstrations. Having seen the Hornet just this past weekend, the aircraft was flown in the demo with both seats occupied. I couldn't help but comment about how strong a stomach the back seater must have. The F/A-18F has a much more robust flight display than the F-14; the aircraft seemed more agile in the slow speed regime than the Tomcat. Two maneuvers stood out: the high alpha pitch up, where it suddenly stopped with the shredding air being easily heard during the pitch up. Secondly, during a high alpha - slow speed climb out, the Hornet seemed to do a rudder roll, which almost looked like a light aircraft snap roll. Some recent publications described the F/A-18E & Fs as being almost departure proof. This lends itself to some interesting flight display maneuvering. (More 2 cents, but no politics) VL |
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