Astro we’re you any good when you tried helos? I’m sure it took some getting used to.
There is a great book on it that I need to read again, by Jay Stout. I knew Jay's Dad really well and have all of his books, but that's the book that launched him as an aviation History author. And it is a very good one. I can't remember if that's where I read about it, but I'll check it out and see what I find.I don’t doubt it…but the guys who were lower didn’t come back…so…
I first flew a helicopter, a TH-57 (Bell Jet Ranger) when I was in primary flight training. I had a total of about 20 hours of flight time at that point, so, not much experience at all. I could hover, but it was really hard. Regular flight in a helicopter is easy.Astro we’re you any good when you tried helos? I’m sure it took some getting used to.
Last time I saw a Tomcat was at the Ft Lauderdale air show and was on the pier when they made a high speed pass above us.
Was a shame no F-14 2.0 was ever budgeted for service.
There is a big need, in certain scenarios, for a long range, high speed fighter that can carry a large weapon payload from a carrier.Did it really have a mission? As much as there’s criticism over the F-35, that may be more capable than a refreshed version of the Tomcat.
I’ve seen a Tomcat at an aviation museum. But from the road.
How much faster is a loaded F-14 than a loaded F-35? It's my understanding that, because the F-35 carries most of its weapons internally, it can get much closer to its max speed with a combat load than an F-15 could, meaning the speed difference between the two jets in a combat situation isn't nearly so big as when comparing clean jets (which is where the quoted top speeds come from). I'd imagine similar would be true of a comparison against the F-14, no?The USN needs range, speed and payload as a result. The F-35 is a step in the right direction, with decent range (and a big improvement over the Super Hornet) but it still lacks speed.
You have to go apples to apples with the comparison.How much faster is a loaded F-14 than a loaded F-35? It's my understanding that, because the F-35 carries most of its weapons internally, it can get much closer to its max speed with a combat load than an F-15 could, meaning the speed difference between the two jets in a combat situation isn't nearly so big as when comparing clean jets (which is where the quoted top speeds come from). I'd imagine similar would be true of a comparison against the F-14, no?
Not saying the F-14 isn't faster, much less that an updated one couldn't be. Genuinely curious what you think the difference would be in a realistic situation vs. comparing on-paper top speeds.
Astro,
Can you verify if there is any truth to this story? It does come off sounding a bit cowboyish, and farfetched. The whole "stay and fight" scenario seems "iffy".
After he dropped all of his ordnance what more could he have done? Waste precious fuel using a $50 million dollar jet to strafe with his guns? It makes "Maverick" buzzing the tower seem lame.
Exactly. Well said. Thank you for the picture, too, it helps to understand when you’ve never seen a tie down chain.I'm not Astro, but here is my take:
Aircraft are always chocked and chained unless actually in motion. The deck moves, sometimes a lot, and unpredictably. You do not want to allow the aircraft to move at all. My experience is A-4/A-7, both of which required nine chains (three on each gear). I see twelve on the F-14 that you posted. Heavier airplane requires more chains. The stresses imposed by the tie downs are far less than the aircraft is designed for.
The tie down chains are adjustable by means of a screw adjuster on one end. They are installed with minimal slack, and then tensioned to hold the aircraft firmly in place.
View attachment 191516
I'm not Astro, but here is my take:
Aircraft are always chocked and chained unless actually in motion. The deck moves, sometimes a lot, and unpredictably. You do not want to allow the aircraft to move at all. My experience is A-4/A-7, both of which required nine chains (three on each gear). I see twelve on the F-14 that you posted. Heavier airplane requires more chains. The stresses imposed by the tie downs are far less than the aircraft is designed for.
The tie down chains are adjustable by means of a screw adjuster on one end. They are installed with minimal slack, and then tensioned to hold the aircraft firmly in place.
View attachment 191516
Yes, exactly!Aren’t these also carrier landing gear? They’re designed for extremely violent takeoffs and landings. Chaining them down would seem pretty mild compared to a carrier landing.
I met a guy at the KOA campground in Green River, UT a couple summers ago. He was a F-14 driver and was one of the pilots that flew the first F-14s from the factory on Long Island. He told me that he was the first F-14 driver to have a double engine flame out. He made it back to San Diego after he got one of the engines restarted. The running engine was way over temp and he had serious doubts about making a safe landing, but they did. He said he spent a week in conference rooms with Grumman and PW going over every detail of what happened before the flame outs. If I remember this correctly, the flame-outs happened just after he went to full afterburner and moved the throttles. The problem was moving the throttles. The flame-out wasn't supposed to happen, but it did. They figured the cause out and fixed the issue.If you flamed out both engines, you were in big trouble.
I met a guy at the KOA campground in Green River, UT a couple summers ago. He was a F-14 driver and was one of the pilots that flew the first F-14s from the factory on Long Island. He told me that he was the first F-14 driver to have a double engine flame out. He made it back to San Diego after he got one of the engines restarted. The running engine was way over temp and he had serious doubts about making a safe landing, but they did. He said he spent a week in conference rooms with Grumman and PW going over every detail of what happened before the flame outs. If I remember this correctly, the flame-outs happened just after he went to full afterburner and moved the throttles. The problem was moving the throttles. The flame-out wasn't supposed to happen, but it did. They figured the cause out and fixed the issue.
He went on to spend a career at United and retired as 757/767 captain.