So did straight stick -111's have 2 pilots then, or was there a Nav on the right in them as well?
So did straight stick -111's have 2 pilots then, or was there a Nav on the right in them as well?
There's not much glass in that thing. Clearly wasn't safe flying nap 'o the earth above the speed of sound. Flying Magazine would be aghast!![]()
See, it wasn't a G1000!![]()
See, it wasn't a G1000!![]()
See, it wasn't a G1000!![]()
Time lapse photography maybe?
There's not much glass in that thing. Clearly wasn't safe flying nap 'o the earth above the speed of sound. Flying Magazine would be aghast!![]()
As cool as the F-111 looks, it's performance was abysmal. Based on EM theory it couldn't out-perform any foe that it would have encountered. The book "Boyd" by Robert Coram goes into some pretty cool detail about it, as well as the development of the F-15 and F-16.
As cool as the F-111 looks, it's performance was abysmal. Based on EM theory it couldn't out-perform any foe that it would have encountered. The book "Boyd" by Robert Coram goes into some pretty cool detail about it, as well as the development of the F-15 and F-16.
snip
the 'Vark was a phenomenal deep-strike bomber.
Nor was it designed to out-perform anything turn-wise. It's key was its speed, and it high-tailed its ass out of bad situations more than once.
Worrying about an EM diagram for an F-111, is akin to an O-2 Skymaster pilot worrying about how the aircraft will operate in a transonic range.
Though interestingly, the first kill of Desert Storm in '91 was by an EF-111A that maneuvered an attacking Mirage F1 into the ground.