c172captain
Well-Known Member
Do figthers use bleed heat from the engines like other jets or do they utilize other de-ice equipment?
I'll piggy back onto that one. What are the weather limitations of a fighter?
Personally, on the jets I've flown, I'm pretty happy that the USAF decided to focus on how well the airplane fights and the weapons it has, rather than if it could work a hot wing into the mix.
Your larger, big winged aircraft are going to have anti-ice/de-ice quipment. The E2/C2 had prop de-ice, wing de-ice, engine anti-ice etc. The little jets, like the T-45 have only some engine anti-ice feed by 5th stage bleed air.
If you fighters don't have any de-ice equipment, how would you handle a situation where you need to climb/fly through a layer where you'd be known to have icing conditions? Obviously most scenarious would be avoided but what if there is a layer at 16,000ft that you need to climb through and it's 5,000ft thick? Just balls to the wall and climb through it as fast as possible?
It seems strange that in some cases (norther latitudes in winter) that a fighter would be limited to VFR only.
You climb fast and stay at low AoA (at least a Hornet consideration so we don't shed ice build up off the bottom of the LEX's and into the intakes).
Re: blackhawk.....as JB might have told you, we are TACAN only, so it's that, a PAR, or a "Hornet-1" approach (self contained radar app)
Personally, on the jets I've flown, I'm pretty happy that the USAF decided to focus on how well the airplane fights and the weapons it has, rather than if it could work a hot wing into the mix.
So what happens if you encounter an enemy fighter in icing conditions?![]()
Chances are they won't be flying, either.
But, fact of the matter is, "rules" go out the window when the risk level goes up. If it's important enough, we'll fly and fight in whatever weather conditions exist.