F-14 to fly again?

Most of them were destroyed to prevent Iran from getting spare parts.
How/why is that even a concern? Is it that difficult to keep planes in a secure enough area that hostile governments can't get their hands on them? Or do some or all end up being demilitarized and sold, thus making them available through various channels to our adversaries?
 
How/why is that even a concern? Is it that difficult to keep planes in a secure enough area that hostile governments can't get their hands on them? Or do some or all end up being demilitarized and sold, thus making them available through various channels to our adversaries?
About 70 of them are in museums - not all museums are equally secure. Some critical parts are easily removed.

The Navy had to go back and remove those critical parts from the airplanes on display.

Since the aircraft type was retired, there was no need to keep spare aircraft in the desert, no need for spare parts, so, most of them that were in storage at AMARC were shredded, including my favorite, Victory 211, BuNo 161134, a block 110 TARPS airplane in which I flew several combat missions.

Here it is on Cat 3, about to launch on a combat mission, in 1991

IMG_0070.webp

It happened to have my name on the canopy rail at the time.
 
Which aircraft did you work on that were sun downed ?

Tomcat was a very complex aircraft and needed lots of maintenance hours to keep them flying.

I did get to see the Tomcat demo at air show the last year before retirement.
A-6, EA-6B, and E-2C. E-2C was still flying, but being parked as I retired 2 years ago. It's a real pain in the behind for logistics people to scrounge for things. Even a simple flap screwjack can be unavailable.
 
Hi.
Ward Carrol has made a piece on this subject. He talks to a former Tomcat pilot about what will be needed to get one flying.

I am guessing Astro would find this interesting as a trip down memory lane.

 
That whole thing has made huge waves in social media and F-14 nutts are going crazy over it, especially after the clip by Ward Carrol. Some speculate that Jarod Isaacman is behind the act. If that was the case, funding wouldn't be much of an issue I suppose. ....However, I don't want to be the party pooper but Carrols video only talks about the Senate draft, i.e. S.4161.

If anybody cares, read up on H.R.8331 which is the House of Reps counter proposal. The explicit statement of the option of "making one flyable" has been deleted. One could still kind of implicitly read a potential airworthiness into the "...operation in a public static display, an airshow...." ref. clause e/2 (the comma makes all the difference!) but if the text would be kept like that, one would walk on very thin ice in regards to a permission to turn one flyable again. In any case the express statement of possibly making one example airworthy again has been erased. The whole thing is now "in conference", i.e. house and senate have to haggle the matter out between each other but so far it is all but as rosy as some enthusiasts paint it.

https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th...1-CB3lUwWFjYe0OTMSFE5M3Holkn1NCLS5Kc_rkaf5t1g

BTW: Just two weeks ago an Iranian regime sanctioned propaganda outlet published an at least apparently authentic clip of an Iranian Tomcat landing at an Iranian airfield indicating that indeed some examples might have survived the air raids, however nobody knows for sure as it is always the case with Iranian publications such as this. As much as the IRGC and the regime hate their regular airforce including their F-14s, they sure know how to instrumentalize them as a tool for propaganda.

If there indeed was anything halfway substantial to this, I wonder if that had any impact on teh decision making process regarding the "Maveric Act" bill?!
 
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