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#1
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![]() This was a pretty typical SIOP mission: http://skyraider.org/skyassn/warstor/reid.htm I'll bet some folks would like to see this kind of endurance on today's flight deck... Bob wrote: I know of 12 hour flights but 24 seems a stretch. In order to stay airborne that long your gas load would just about take up any chance of carrying a weapon heavier than a hand gernade. I'd mostly worry about oil in a hop that long. As I recall we had no oil quantity gauge and when the pressure started to drop you had to be pretty close to a suitable landing spot. Only heard of one "stay awake" pill, think it was a bennie. Handy for liberty but really whacked you out after. Got to wonder about the 3 hour FJ-4B hops. Must have been refueled? FJ-4Bs I saw all leaked so much fluid just sitting on the line, I'd think it'd be out of everything by 3 hours. My F-8 might make a 3.0 hop but I guarantee it'd end with an flame out approach. Happiness was 1.5 hour cycles. I had a 1.501 hour ass. |
#3
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Charlie Wolf wrote:
On 1 Feb 2005 05:45:27 -0800, wrote: This was a pretty typical SIOP mission: http://skyraider.org/skyassn/warstor/reid.htm I'll bet some folks would like to see this kind of endurance on today's flight deck... Well - an S-3 has pretty good legs... With 2 drops they can fly about 7.5 on max conserve. That might be to low fuel warning lights though.... BTW, That's without re-fueling. The S-3 that brought the terrorist back form the east Med in the 80's flew over 11.0, I think. I've got one hop over 10 hours in the H-60. That includes three or four hot fuel stops (which is far more than necessary- between 3 and 3.5 hour flight is normal, I even got a 4.3 out of one tank in that particular aircraft a week prior to the long flight- but it's better to have too much than too little fuel) and admittedly one getting out for a pitstop (no relief tubes in the model I flew). Actual strapped in the seat time was over 12 hours, luckily no dry suit. Having a flight crew for conversation helps make the time go by too. Why such a long flight? My ship was on a hot range most of the day... nothing special, no war or anything like that going on. Oh, and to be clear, it was an experience I never care to repeat ![]() |
#4
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Well - an S-3 has pretty good legs..
True, but they are all on the their way to some quiet retirement spots in the desert. With 2 drops they can fly about 7.5 on max conserve. That m=ADight be to low fuel warning lights though.... Its arguable that an aircraft in the vein of a Spad would have been a much more suitable platform to have orbiting over Fallujah than what is now available. While youir point about the Hoovers' long legs is a good one, how many War Hoovers were waiting overhead to drop when the Marines called? How dependent is carrier air on land based assets such as tanker and ELINT today? Answer is: pretty much completely. That's a particularly awkward issue in these tight budget times considering that the traditional big selling point of carriers has always been their ability to function *without* (the now absolutely essential) land based support. In 1961 the typical airgroup could boast an effective *unrefueled* radius of 2000nm carrying a 12000 lb weapon(and that internally to boot). Can a 2005 vintage CVG even match half of that 1961 era unrefueled combat radius and deliver ordinace the size of a ~5000 lb. GBU-37? |
#5
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#6
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Very interesting post, sidis, think we must first decide on just what
the primary mission of our CVG's is or are. The 1961 whale could indeed go out 2000 miles, drop an internally carried payload of 12000 lbs and have enough fuel to return. This hop would have to be unescorted by fighters or ECM birds. Maybe an okay mission for SIOP but not so good for over the beach stuff like, Vietnam, or IRAQ. I think the major change is that our CVG isn't tasked to seek out and destroy the Soviet fleet. Now the most likely scenarios include missions over land defended by AAA and SAMs. Whales would not survive there just as the Spads couldn't survive the North Vietnam defenses. I think we have a brand new ball game to equip for. It wouldn't bother me a bit to tank from a land based asset since we can get these tankers to wherever. The CVG still needs an integral tanking capability and I believe it has one, not like the old days but adequate to cover night OPs, etc. If I need ECM jammers, I don't care where they come from, overhead assets, EA-6's, or the girl scouts as long as they get it done when I need it. I completely agree that Marines could use some Spads overhead for some realistic CAS but as long as we have a ROE which prohibits airplanes from descending below 20 grand, well the Spad will have to remain a relic of older days. I also agree we probably would be hard pressed to make a 1000 mile, unrefueled strike with anything we have today. I'm just not sure we need to anymore. |
#7
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Interesting article in this month's Proceedings has this to say:
http://www.usni.org/proceedings/arti...o02Stone-2.htm The Navy's senior leaders proudly assert that "naval aviation allows us to take credible combat power across the globe without a permission slip."23 This may once have been true, but the all-Hornet air wing is sorely taxed to take its combat power further than 150 miles from the nearest blue water. Except for small strikes, this capability, once available to a carrier air wing with organic, dedicated tankers, now exists only when the Navy has Air Force tanker support, which requires permission from a host country. |
#8
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I don't understand what you mean by " but the all-Hornet air wing is
sorely taxed to take its combat power further than 150 miles from the nearest blue water.". Do you mean 150 miles from an overland target area? I'm no fan of the short legged Hornet but I think it could make a 500, maybe 600 mile strike and return? USAF and NATO tanker support can be based a long ways from the target area, how far I don't know. Probably far enough not to need a permission slip from any non-friendly country. I would love to see an F-14/A-6 CVG but the chance of this is about like getting Spad CAS for the Marines. |
#9
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That's a quote from the Proceeding article written by Lt Stone an
F/A-18 driver. I see you have to register to read it...USNI registration is free so log on and check out the whole article. He also notes: -Even a 2,000-pound bomb (the largest available to carrier-based aircraft) can cause only limited damage. The idea of destroying a large building or hardened bunker with one conventional bomb and 100% reliability in wartime is laughable. Even in benign environments, strike planners expect only 70% effectiveness. In Afghanistan, where 93% of the ordnance employed was precision-guided, only 84% of all sorties (and fewer bombs) hit their targets.13 If the enemy had the ability to jam GPS signals, the weapons' reliability would be reduced significantly. -The Hornet's ability to carry four 2,000-pound bombs is dependent on a short-range strike that does not require external fuel tanks to be carried on wing pylons. Virtually all current areas of concern require long-range drop tanks, however, and the Hornet's maximum bomb load is reduced accordingly. The two extra wing pylons on the Super Hornet, widely touted as improvements over the "baby" Hornet, will be occupied by fuel tanks to support other aircraft on all but the shortest strikes. -During any major operation, the ability to sustain a high combat tempo is directly related to the ability of an air wing to keep jets airborne. Reducing complements by 16% may not appreciably affect the ability to conduct occasional low-intensity strikes, but it severely diminishes the number of sorties sustainable in wartime. |
#10
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but the all-Hornet air wing is
sorely taxed to take its combat power further than 150 miles from the nearest blue water.". Do you mean 150 miles from an overland target area? I'm no fan of the short legged Hornet but I think it could make a 500, maybe 600 mile strike and return? I have seen the Hornets in action as a A-6 Driver. The 150 mile range is realistic, any more range would require non indiginious tanking. In the late 80's we practiced long range strikes of over 1000 miles from the carrier (Enterprise) with our own tanking. It was a pretty wild scenario but suffice it to say it would have been a strike against terrorist and terrorism before those *******s did their deed on Sep11. In the early 90's when the sun was setting on the last of the long range carrier strike aircraft the Navy came up with a new warfare slogan called "From the Sea" this was litorial warfare policy designed to match the carriers reduced capibility to that of the Aircraft on board. An interesting 180 degree change of thinking from what the carrier was designed to do. Given the scenario that we have faced for the last 12 years its no wonder that Rumsfeld wanted to know were the A-6's were when he became SecDef. The A-6 would have been the perfect delivery platform for the Iraq ops. 20-28 MK-82 GPS bombs overhead at 25K for 3-4 hours. Rant Over. Sparky |
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