Hi Astro14
Forgive my ignorance. If the F14 is flying at Mach 2.1 why is only 900 knots indicated? How do you know your actual speed if it differs from the indicated speed?
Thanks.
In the low visibility later paint schemes, the arrow and square are still there for the crash and rescue crews, but they’re grey.
What was the rationale behind low vs high visibility paint schemes? I think I can appreciate that for ground-based aircraft, some camouflage might be helpful to hide them from flyover (?). But I doubt paint colors make much of a difference when it’s an F-14 parked on nonskid.
The thinking was that the low visibility makes the airplane less visible, reducing the tactical disadvantage of being seen, or gains tactical advantage by not being seen.What was the rationale behind low vs high visibility paint schemes? I think I can appreciate that for ground-based aircraft, some camouflage might be helpful to hide them from flyover (?). But I doubt paint colors make much of a difference when it’s an F-14 parked on nonskid.
The thinking was that the low visibility makes the airplane less visible, reducing the tactical disadvantage of being seen, or gains tactical advantage by not being seen.
From a practical perspective, the low visibility paint didn’t make a lot of difference. In some atmospheric conditions, high gloss paint was more easily seen, but for the most part, the airframe itself was visible, regardless of contrast or color.
The low visibility paint became the US standard. All new jets are delivered in that set of flat greys.
It does. Most wars that are fought are not between two militaries with highly sophisticated weapons, but usually military with sophistication advantage against enemy with rudimentary weapons. In that case, all comes down to ground support and that enemy is going to use anti aircraft guns, portable IR missiles. Think about it: what is higher chance? Going against Russians/Chinese or having to fight guy with GS23 in back of Toyota pick up truck?To pull the string a bit more - does it matter since radar is used? This isn’t WWII with gunsights and close in battles (though I get your picture of the gun sight on the F-15, and the need for them).
I had read sometime back that American Airlines went “paint less” (probably still some clear coat?) to save cost AND weight. Not sure if such things are considerations here too...
Sure, there are a lot of factors. But, IMO it matters depending environment.When on the ground looking up, the gloss paint is actually harder to see than the flat grey or dark grey, of modern fighters.
Visual acquisition of an airplane depends on background, atmospherics, contrast, reflected light, size, aspect, range and speed.
Changing paint schemes is one tiny factor in mitigating acquisition.
Flying below an overcast (cloud layer overhead) is a great way to be seen from the ground. Very high contrast. Paint matters little in that case.
Sure, there are a lot of factors. But, IMO it matters depending environment.
No, was in anti aircraft defense.Curious question....
Have you flown a fighter jet ?
Yeah...we got paid to do that...and I loved it.
So, to answer what’s going on in the video you see, let’s first talk about the cat shot. EMALS is the new technology, electromagnetic induction to provide the force to accelerate an airplane from dead stop to about 170 knots in a space just under 100 meters. Steam is the old, and still prevalent, technology.