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"Ed Rasimus" wrote in message
... On Sun, 21 Sep 2003 18:08:02 -0400, "Bob Martin" wrote: Anyone have data on typical chaff/flare loads for F-4's, both in Vietnam and modern day? Thanks No flares on F-4s in SEA. (Photo-flash carts on RF-4s only). No self-protection chaff carts either. We carried cardboard boxes (about the size of a box of Xmas tree tinsel) in the speedbrake wells. Open the boards to deploy. Try not to use speed brakes earlier in the mission. One time use. Ed, do you possibly know the reasons why no chaff/flare dispensers were mounted on Phantoms at the time (and, AFAIK, for most of the 1970s)? From the standpoint of our days this appears as a very strange measure to me: given how many R-13 shots could have been averted over Vietnam alone.... BTW, from what I know a USAF Lt.Col. who was in the back-seat of the IIAF RF-4E when this was intercepted by a Soviet AF MiG-21 deep inside the Soviet airspace, in November 1973, used photo-flash cartriges to decoy four R-13s: this was the reason the Soviet pilot had no other way out but to ram the Phantom (one could find this story on the walls of quite a few former Soviet AF bases in East Germany). The MiG-pilot was killed when his plane disintegrated, while the Iranain pilot and the USAF WSO survived. Although the engagement happened by the day, the crew of that RF-4E said the cartriges were so powerful, they had a feeling somebody turned a second sun right behind their backs each time one was deployed.... Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 |
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