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#11
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"JASON BOWMAN" wrote in message ... OK, am I thinking of the wrong thing then? I know the A-12 as the attack version of the SR-71. Someone said that it was never more than a full-scale mock-up. I know the A-12, at least the 1 I'm thinking of, flew, and was tested firing missiles. What am I missing??? The A-12 was a project for a Navy stealth attack jet: flying wing, two man crew (I think), cancelled in '91 by then SecD Cheney due mainly to cost over runs. A-12 was never a *military* designation for any member of the Blackbird family. A-12 was a Lockheed and/or CIA name for the CIA bird that was later build, in modified form, for the USAF as the SR-71. |
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#12
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The A-12 was a project for a Navy stealth attack jet: flying wing,
two man crew (I think), cancelled in '91 by then SecD Cheney due mainly to cost over runs. AKA The flying dorito. Due mainly to being led down the primrose path by NAVAIR. The aircraft was hugely overweight, GD was having serious problems with major composite structures. The prototype was in final assembly and in big trouble. A friend who worked the MacAir side of the program thought it was fixable, but not on the cheap or on the schedule. I think it's very possible the PMA didn't know the truth, less possible his deputy didn't. When the real word finally came out, heads rolled and the A/C was cnx'd. R / John |
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#13
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Oh ok. That makes sense then. Thanks for clarifying.
-- Jason "Tex Houston" wrote in message ... "JASON BOWMAN" wrote in message ... OK, am I thinking of the wrong thing then? I know the A-12 as the attack version of the SR-71. Someone said that it was never more than a full-scale mock-up. I know the A-12, at least the 1 I'm thinking of, flew, and was tested firing missiles. What am I missing??? -- Jason You're confusting the CIA designator for the aircraft which was of the SR-71 family with the DoD designated naval attack aircraft of a much later period which was abruptly canceled. The FA-18E/F was the stop-gap measure employed. Regards, Tex Houston |
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#14
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jason- OK, am I thinking of the wrong thing then? I know the A-12 as the
attack version of the SR-71. BRBR The 'Dorito'....A-12 P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
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#15
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Doug "Woody" and Erin Beal wrote:
On 5/18/04 7:50 PM, in article t, "Thomas Schoene" wrote: If you're denying it's overweight, then I think you're in denial. It is... That comes from folks working in the program. They're trying to deal with it, but 2,000 lbs (I hadn't heard 3,300 lbs.) is a lot to lose. No, I'm not denying that it's overweight. However, I'm questioning whether the weight issue is as bad as presented. Planes are *always* overweight at this point in the design process. I think the reports tend to confuse the current design weight with the final target weight. If it's 3000 pounds over now, that does not mean it will be 3000 pounds over at IOC. Presto, a 2000-lb weight savings. Presto! Diminished striking capability for a STOVL aircraft... How novel. Shrug. That's why STOVL isn't suitable for all users. The Marines don't necessarily need big bombs; smaller ones are actually more appropriate for most CAS missions. As long as it can haul the 8 x 250-lb small-diameter bombs they're talking about, the plane is well-armed for CAS. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right." - Senator Carl Schurz, 1872 |
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#16
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The original post had a lot of 'maybes' and 'mights' in it. Sounds to
me like a bunch of quibblers who want to canx out and help out the budget. As for 2x2000 pound bombs, the only thing where bigger is better is in cluster munitions. Note that USAF wants smaller LGBs - 250 pound size. Since just as in nukes HE bomb damage radius is a cube root function of the explosive yield - laser guidance lets a smaller bomb do the same job. Now if you can hit the target dead on - smack in the middle - a 100 pounder would work just fine. 50 pounds of HE is more than a field artillery shell carries. And what's wrong with a pair of steam cats? The RN carriers weren't supposed to have cats? That would be really dumb! A properly designed steam cat could launch STOVLs with the ship lying to. Walt BJ |
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#17
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"JASON BOWMAN" wrote in message ...
OK, am I thinking of the wrong thing then? I know the A-12 as the attack version of the SR-71. Someone said that it was never more than a full-scale mock-up. I know the A-12, at least the 1 I'm thinking of, flew, and was tested firing missiles. What am I missing??? -- Jason A-12 Stood for "Archangel" not "Attack" Theres was a fighter version designated the YF-12 and a proposed nuclear strike variant the "R-12" though |
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#18
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Prowlus wrote:
"JASON BOWMAN" wrote in message ... OK, am I thinking of the wrong thing then? I know the A-12 as the attack version of the SR-71. Someone said that it was never more than a full-scale mock-up. I know the A-12, at least the 1 I'm thinking of, flew, and was tested firing missiles. What am I missing??? -- Jason A-12 Stood for "Archangel" not "Attack" Theres was a fighter version designated the YF-12 and a proposed nuclear strike variant the "R-12" though. No, the bomber variant was designated B-71, a contemporary of the YF-12. That number was in the correct bomber sequece after the B-70 Valkyrie. Apparently that's how the Air Force Blackbird came to be designated SR-71, as a recce variant of the B-71 bomber. Similarly, there was briefly a proposed RS-70 recce version of the B-70 bomber. (But Curtis LeMay prefered SR to RS, so he swapped the letters for the SR-71.) -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right." - Senator Carl Schurz, 1872 |
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#19
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On 5/22/04 12:00 PM, in article
et, "Thomas Schoene" wrote: No, I'm not denying that it's overweight. However, I'm questioning whether the weight issue is as bad as presented. Planes are *always* overweight at this point in the design process. I think the reports tend to confuse the current design weight with the final target weight. If it's 3000 pounds over now, that does not mean it will be 3000 pounds over at IOC. I get snippets from folks in the program quite often. It won't necessarily be 3000lbs over at IOC. That's what they're working on right now... Trying to trim the excess. In fact, the 3000 lbs is mostly due to the lift fan machinery on the B-model. A and C models aren't suffering as much. I think I may have mis-spoken on that point earlier. Presto, a 2000-lb weight savings. Presto! Diminished striking capability for a STOVL aircraft... How novel. Shrug. That's why STOVL isn't suitable for all users. The Marines don't necessarily need big bombs; smaller ones are actually more appropriate for most CAS missions. As long as it can haul the 8 x 250-lb small-diameter bombs they're talking about, the plane is well-armed for CAS. Talked to some Brits that were in town last week. They made the same case. It's an obvious solution. Frankly, what might work better though would be to (here goes the crazy rant...) BRING BACK THE INTRUDER!!! Imagine being able to carry 22 x 500 lb JDAM on smart 1760-compatible MER's in your very own SWIP Block 1A jet... Doing the work of 5 F-35's with one airframe (at least in the last conflict). Sorry about the insanity. Couldn't help it. --Woody |
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#20
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Doug \"Woody\" and Erin Beal wrote:
BRING BACK THE INTRUDER!!! Imagine being able to carry 22 x 500 lb JDAM on smart 1760-compatible MER's in your very own SWIP Block 1A jet... Doing the work of 5 F-35's with one airframe (at least in the last conflict). Might as well rig up a C-2A as a bomb truck. Just roll'em off the back of the ramp. As long as we are fighting enemies who only have RPGs... |
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