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#11
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![]() Harry Andreas wrote: In article . com, wrote: I was flying them with the crappy flight controls, crappy engines, crappy CADC...etc... I flew the F-14A+ in VX-4..nice engines, crappy avionics. I saw the F-14D...was in the planning for the cockpit...and it sucked compared to the analog F-16N I flew... unless you need to fire a missile... -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur ???Don't know what you mean? F-16N had all the plumbing for Aim-9...even tho they were training aides only...just like the first gen F-16.... I worked on the radars for the various versions of the F-14. I've also observed the F-16's radar (N was a Block 30 IIRC) with the APG-66 was pretty woeful compared to the AWG-9 or APG-71. There's just no comparison. The radar is part of the Avionics suite BTW... -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur Except when the fookin radar didn't work, it didn't matter how good it was on paper. In the 12 months I flew the F-16, I launched w/o a radar exactly ZERO times, in about 450 hrs...I had a radar fail once in that time. It was standard to launch off the boat(VF-31, USS Forrestal) w/o a stinkin radar about 30 days into the cruise. I saw better radar availability with the F-4S(Awg-10) than I EVER did with the AWG-9...APG-71 had MUCH better availability than the HAWG-9....The inspired by the A-6, designed in the late 60s, F-14, never to be modified in the 2 decades it existed, was an embarrassment when compared to aircraft like the F-16C and F-15C/E....even the 'D' model...too little too late. If the F-14A became the 'C' model like it was supposed to, along the lines of USAF and now F-18 A/C, the F-18F wouldn't exist. |
#12
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![]() Except when the fookin radar didn't work, it didn't matter how good it was on paper. In the 12 months I flew the F-16, I launched w/o a radar exactly ZERO times, in about 450 hrs...I had a radar fail once in that time. It was standard to launch off the boat(VF-31, USS Forrestal) w/o a stinkin radar about 30 days into the cruise. I saw better radar availability with the F-4S(Awg-10) than I EVER did with the AWG-9...APG-71 had MUCH better availability than the HAWG-9....The inspired by the A-6, designed in the late 60s, F-14, never to be modified in the 2 decades it existed, was an embarrassment when compared to aircraft like the F-16C and F-15C/E....even the 'D' model...too little too late. If the F-14A became the 'C' model like it was supposed to, along the lines of USAF and now F-18 A/C, the F-18F wouldn't exist. For whatever reason, the F-14 seemed to be the red-haired stepchild when it came to system upgrades. The engines were late (the F-14B was supposed to come along with roughly airframe 49). WCS got the minimum incremental upgrades in software (tape driven for God's sake!). Never got AAMRAM. A lot of program managers are wearing the legion of merit when they should be reading letters of reprimand. The F-15 is a nice example of how to manage an airframe. The Turkey an example on how to neglect one. R / John |
#13
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![]() John Carrier wrote: Except when the fookin radar didn't work, it didn't matter how good it was on paper. In the 12 months I flew the F-16, I launched w/o a radar exactly ZERO times, in about 450 hrs...I had a radar fail once in that time. It was standard to launch off the boat(VF-31, USS Forrestal) w/o a stinkin radar about 30 days into the cruise. I saw better radar availability with the F-4S(Awg-10) than I EVER did with the AWG-9...APG-71 had MUCH better availability than the HAWG-9....The inspired by the A-6, designed in the late 60s, F-14, never to be modified in the 2 decades it existed, was an embarrassment when compared to aircraft like the F-16C and F-15C/E....even the 'D' model...too little too late. If the F-14A became the 'C' model like it was supposed to, along the lines of USAF and now F-18 A/C, the F-18F wouldn't exist. For whatever reason, the F-14 seemed to be the red-haired stepchild when it came to system upgrades. The engines were late (the F-14B was supposed to come along with roughly airframe 49). WCS got the minimum incremental upgrades in software (tape driven for God's sake!). Never got AAMRAM. A lot of program managers are wearing the legion of merit when they should be reading letters of reprimand. The F-15 is a nice example of how to manage an airframe. The Turkey an example on how to neglect one. R / John HEAR, HEAR....Geeezzz, we saw the F-4J become the F-4S fercrissake, with more mods(smokless engines, 1527 cockpit mod, new wings!!! with slats, AWG-10B), than the F-14 got while the F-14 had been around for 15 years!! |
#14
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![]() DDAY wrote: I was out at the Stephen F. Udvar-Hazy annex of the National Air and Space Museum today (near Dulles airport) and saw their newest acquisition: an F-14D Tomcat. This is one of the remanufactured F-14As, and it is one that shot down a MiG in 1989. Oddly, it does not have a MiG silhouette painted on it. Any idea why? Anybody have a list of the preserved Tomcats? I saw one up in Kalamazoo a few weeks ago. I know that there an F-14B at the New England Air Museum in Windsor Locks, CT, and an A model at the National Warplane Museum in Elmira, NY. I believe the NEAM bird is former VF-143, but I don't know the provenance of the other aircraft. -JTD |
#15
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#16
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#17
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![]() "DDAY" wrote in message k.net... I've now seen several more. The Ronald Reagan Library has one. The USS Midway museum has another. The San Diego Aerospace Museum has one. And I think there are others on some of the other preserved carriers such as the Intrepid. D There is also one at Bob Pond's museum in Palm Springs. Static display only but most of his other aircraft are flyable. Gorgeous F7F Tigercat. Tex |
#18
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![]() DDAY wrote: I've now seen several more. The Ronald Reagan Library has one. The USS Midway museum has another. The San Diego Aerospace Museum has one. And I think there are others on some of the other preserved carriers such as the Intrepid. Forgot that one! The Intrepid does indeed have a Tomcat. IIRC, it's the prototype for the F-14D conversion. |
#19
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![]() Gordon wrote: wrote: I know that there an F-14B at the New England Air Museum in Windsor Locks, CT, and an A model at the National Warplane Museum in Elmira, NY. I believe the NEAM bird is former VF-143, but I don't know the provenance of the other aircraft. Is it painted as a "Sans Reproache" or a "Pukin' Dawg"? v/r Gordon There was indeed a certain bent-over silhouette on the tailfin when I looked it over a few months ago, and "Pukin' Dogs" painted on the wing root. On that airframe, at least, the World Famous Pukin' Dogs live on. I think it may have been specially painted to go into the museum, now that I think about it- it was in a light gray color scheme similar to what the Tomcat wore when it first went into service, and was painted with side number 143. Granted, it could be a coincidence, but it would be a rather large one. -JTD |
#20
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