David Hingtgen Posted October 14, 2016 Author Posted October 14, 2016 I posted the pic I did, because a brief search didn't bring up any "true" configuration A-7F pics--with a fully-feathered nozzle. A longer search still doesn't bring up any. Was every single pic of the A-7F in that configuration scrubbed from the 'net? I may have to take a pic of a photo from a book... ::edit:: Finally--the OTHER A-7F: Quote
spanner Posted October 14, 2016 Posted October 14, 2016 that never happened did it? a A-7 with feathered engine nozzle!? that photo kinda looks photoshopped anyways! hehe! Quote
David Hingtgen Posted October 14, 2016 Author Posted October 14, 2016 It's not. Unless books from the 80's are full of shopped pics and false info... Production A-7F's were to have F-16-style F100-220 engines, with full nozzles. But the protypes only got to fly like that a few times. Most of the time they still had "normal" A-7 rear fuselages. A-7F's would have rocked. Quote
spanner Posted October 14, 2016 Posted October 14, 2016 (edited) it could be that im so not use to seeing a Corsair without a variable exhaust like that which makes it look strange.. but that photo still doesn't look quite right. and you're right, there isn't a single photo of a A-7F with that exhaust on the net anywhere! Upon further investigation, as far as I can tell even if a Corsair was fitted with an F100 engine, it never got the nozzle. In a way it kinda makes sense as those nozzles (for that size engines anyway) are usually only fitted to aircraft of much higher mach capability. I think the A-7F only able to do not much more than mach 1.2 so maybe the nozzle wasn't necessary?? probably didn't have an after burner perhaps? of course im guessing out of my arse.. but it does seem to be the trend. Edited October 14, 2016 by spanner Quote
Shadow Posted October 14, 2016 Posted October 14, 2016 I doubt the top speed of the A-7F was as important as the difference in acceleration it would have had over the A-7D and E. Back in the early 90s, I lived outside Rickenbacker Airbase and there was a Guard unit of A-7s there. I remember always seeing them fly over the house as a kid. Kind of miss those birds. And I agree, the A-6 was a good looking bird and carried a ridiculous bomb load to boot. Great in bad weather and night. Would have been interesting to see one with a modern loadout of SDBs and JDAMs. Quote
Vifam7 Posted October 14, 2016 Posted October 14, 2016 it could be that im so not use to seeing a Corsair without a variable exhaust like that which makes it look strange.. but that photo still doesn't look quite right. and you're right, there isn't a single photo of a A-7F with that exhaust on the net anywhere! Upon further investigation, as far as I can tell even if a Corsair was fitted with an F100 engine, it never got the nozzle. In a way it kinda makes sense as those nozzles (for that size engines anyway) are usually only fitted to aircraft of much higher mach capability. I think the A-7F only able to do not much more than mach 1.2 so maybe the nozzle wasn't necessary?? probably didn't have an after burner perhaps? of course im guessing out of my arse.. but it does seem to be the trend. Looks like the nozzles were simply covered over for aerodynamics reasons? I agree with David that the A-7F would have been awesome. Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted October 14, 2016 Posted October 14, 2016 A-7F still wouldn't have been chosen over the A-10 because as we know it didn't have a big enough gun, 3,000 rounds of ammunition, actually had avionics and was far, far too fast. If it also had RCS reduction features than that would have been the absolutely final nail in the coffin. Quote
Shadow Posted October 14, 2016 Posted October 14, 2016 Doubt the A-7F would have been in direct competition with the A-10. It would have been competing with the F-16 and Legacy Hornet. Quote
spanner Posted October 14, 2016 Posted October 14, 2016 Looks like the nozzles were simply covered over for aerodynamics reasons? I agree with David that the A-7F would have been awesome. oh! so they do have a variable exhaust nozzle! I never noticed or looked close enough at the business end of a Corsair.. it makes me wonder what the benefits of having the nozzle covered over at the end like that then? Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted October 15, 2016 Posted October 15, 2016 Doubt the A-7F would have been in direct competition with the A-10. It would have been competing with the F-16 and Legacy Hornet. A previous poster wondered if A-10s would still have been in service if the A-7F had gone ahead; I took the opportunity to make an allusion to a certain other aircraft which has also been compared to the A-10 recently... Quote
David Hingtgen Posted October 15, 2016 Author Posted October 15, 2016 oh! so they do have a variable exhaust nozzle! I never noticed or looked close enough at the business end of a Corsair.. it makes me wonder what the benefits of having the nozzle covered over at the end like that then? Only the A-7F does. All in-service versions are fixed. I would like a perfectly end-on view of an A-7F like that. Regular A-7's don't even have what I would consider a nozzle--it's a pipe! But the fuselage itself is slightly oval. I wonder if the A-7F's was reprofiled to be circular, or if the movement of the petals is so relatively small that there are no clearance or heat issues. Took this pic myself, because every model gets it wrong and so few people believe me: Oval fuselage, round exhaust. (this is the A-7 at the Tico Warbird museum---highly recommended, as they have A-4/A-6/A-7/F-4/F-8/F-14/F-16/F-18/F-101/F-105, and are only like 1 mile from Kennedy Space Center) Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted October 21, 2016 Posted October 21, 2016 Hello, Sailor! http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-37725327 Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted October 21, 2016 Posted October 21, 2016 (edited) Time for a pet peeve about the "Civilisation VI" introduction; as its only been released this morning (and I haven't even played it myself yet), and I know how super-sensitive spoilers can be, just as a precaution aircraft nerdiness follows behind spoiler tags: In the intro, at about 01:45 in, theres a scene that appears to be set during "The Battle of Britain", where a Spitfire flies past the camera. And its the thing everyone gets wrong; its the wrong Mark of Spitfire because it has cannon barrels on the wings. Though there were a few cannon armed Spitfires used during the Battle, there were only about thirty of them, and the cannon didn't work very well at that stage so they were later replaced with machine-gun armed models. Oh, and its always Spitfires too. Never Hurricanes... Haven't checked to see if the in-cockpit view is correct though... Edited October 21, 2016 by F-ZeroOne Quote
Knight26 Posted October 21, 2016 Posted October 21, 2016 A-7s are probably the second loudest plane I have ever encountered. That round pipe and oval exhaust are a big reason for that. I would bet money at the A-7 would have been quieter. The loudest plane, frigging F-35. Everyone on EAFB new when that plane spun up, it was super loud, even louder than the C-17s on the ramp next to our building. Quote
NZEOD Posted October 21, 2016 Posted October 21, 2016 If you like jets and carriers, heres what REALLY goes on during a 7hr combat patrol... Hello, Sailor! http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-37725327 Could it pump out any more position marking smoke? That's a shonky engine setup for a modern ship! Quote
NZEOD Posted October 21, 2016 Posted October 21, 2016 (edited) I posted the pic I did, because a brief search didn't bring up any "true" configuration A-7F pics--with a fully-feathered nozzle. A longer search still doesn't bring up any. Was every single pic of the A-7F in that configuration scrubbed from the 'net? I may have to take a pic of a photo from a book... ::edit:: Finally--the OTHER A-7F: its photoshopped. this is the same airframe Full code 71-0344 - currently on display at the Air Force Flight Test Center Museum, Edwards AFB, California Edited October 21, 2016 by NZEOD Quote
ErikElvis Posted October 21, 2016 Posted October 21, 2016 Could it pump out any more position marking smoke? That's a shonky engine setup for a modern ship! I know right. That's the first thing that I thought. Quote
spanner Posted October 29, 2016 Posted October 29, 2016 apologies in advance as im not sure if this has been posted in here previously but its still a very cool bit of footage! Quote
spanner Posted October 29, 2016 Posted October 29, 2016 beautiful footage of a F-4 Phantom startup and take off! Quote
electric indigo Posted October 31, 2016 Posted October 31, 2016 Apparently, the new Tamiya 1/48 Tomcat kit comes with markings for the Iranian Air Force Quote
spanner Posted October 31, 2016 Posted October 31, 2016 Apparently, the new Tamiya 1/48 Tomcat kit comes with markings for the Iranian Air Force that looks fantastic! I'd love to have one on display in Iranian markings. Quote
NZEOD Posted October 31, 2016 Posted October 31, 2016 Amazing they are still flying 40 of them and have even upgraded them! Clever buggers! Quote
spanner Posted November 1, 2016 Posted November 1, 2016 Amazing they are still flying 40 of them and have even upgraded them! Clever buggers! Its very cool than Iran still has them going but from my understanding.. of those claimed 40 or so that are still flying, not all are actually mission capable.. and of those which are will only become fewer and fewer before long. Quote
Shadow Posted November 1, 2016 Posted November 1, 2016 The F-14 is used more as an AWACS in the IRIAF from what I've read in the past. It's also uncertain if the AIM-54As Iran has have been refurbished and are still functional as extended storage wasn't kind to US inventory Phoenix's. Quote
miles316 Posted November 1, 2016 Posted November 1, 2016 What is wrong with the nozzles on the F-14 model? The F-14 is used more as an AWACS in the IRIAF from what I've read in the past. It's also uncertain if the AIM-54As Iran has have been refurbished and are still functional as extended storage wasn't kind to US inventory Phoenix's. From what I understand the Iranians ran out of usable AIM-54s during the Iran/Iraq war, and supposedly Jerry-rigged Hawk missiles to launch from the F-14s. Quote
MechTech Posted November 1, 2016 Posted November 1, 2016 (edited) Due to time constraints, I usually stick to the modelling threads, but thought of you guys this weekend at the Patuxent River Naval Base Air Expo. The Decepticons are getting bolder! Same emblem on the nose too. Its a test and evaluation Osprey. On a side note, if any of you guys needs specific photos of the following aircraft on display at the Patuxent Naval Air Museum where I volunteer, just PM me. They are not operational of course, so they're missing engines and the main components. This is a quick paste from Wikipedia (not mine). NA-4M Skyhawk McDonnell Douglas RA-5C Vigilante North American NA-6E Intruder Grumman NA-7A Corsair II Ling-Temco-Vought F-4J Phantom II McDonnell Douglas NF-6A(F4D) Skyray Douglas F9F-8B Cougar Grumman F-14A Tomcat Grumman NF/A-18A Hornet McDonnell Douglas E-2B Hawkeye Grumman AH-1J Seacobra Bell TH-1L Iroquois Bell SH-2G Seasprite Kaman CH-53A Sea Stallion Sikorsky S-2D (S2F-3) Tracker Grumman S-3B Viking Lockheed T-34B Turbo Mentor Raytheon T-39D Sabreliner North American Rockwell X-32B JSF STOVL Demonstrator Boeing X-35C JSF Carrier Demonstrator Lockheed Martin Recent additions: T-2 Buckeye T-38 Talon H-3 Sea King MiG-21 Cockpit and nose section Have a good day! - MT Edited November 1, 2016 by MechTech Quote
mickyg Posted November 1, 2016 Posted November 1, 2016 (edited) MechTech, that's awesome! Miles316: the Tomcat has two engines but when landing, only one is needed to maintain hydraulic pressure so the other is usually shut down. It's always only the same specific one, from what I can recall. I think it has to do with which systems that engine runs. Anyway, with the other engine shut down, the nozzle "relaxes" if you will, and (I think) opens fully, while the other one stays puckered like you see. Any twin engine jet probably does the same, it's just the earlier Tomcat engines, as depicted here in the Tamiya kit, have a much more extreme look to them when fully opened or fully closed. Check out Wikipedia for some general info on the Tomcat - it's a great read and might just get you hooked on the old 'cat. The newer engined Tomcats have a much more silver nozzle and whilst they too exhibit this half open, half closed look on the ground, it's nowhere near as extreme to look at. In other news, pre-ordered that kit from HLJ today! Build the 2 Hasegawa kits that I've semi started or sell them along with all the extras and just build the Tamiya...? Edited November 1, 2016 by mickyg Quote
Retracting Head Ter Ter Posted November 2, 2016 Posted November 2, 2016 Paint job is looking better. Quote
Smiley424 Posted November 2, 2016 Posted November 2, 2016 So a NASA WB57 has been hanging out on Guam the past couple weeks, chasing storms in the area. It's a modified B57 Bomber that NASA uses for high altitude atmospheric research. I was able to check out the aircraft up close, though no pictures. It's an impressive aircraft, the wings are huge as well as the engines. It came in so high up, at 60000 feet, where I've only seen RQ-4 Global Hawks fly. The pictures are from when they were doing some engine testing/maintenance, and they were spooling the engine. It also has a slow approach speed, between 120 - 150 kts on final. Took me be surprise and I had to bend out a following 737 so it wouldn't eat up the WB57 on final. Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted November 2, 2016 Posted November 2, 2016 (edited) I had to look up B-57; forgot it was the US version of the Canberra. For a moment I read it as "B-58", which would have been all kinds of even more awesome. Edited November 2, 2016 by F-ZeroOne Quote
Knight26 Posted November 2, 2016 Posted November 2, 2016 Sorry it's so low Res David, but at least it's both of them. Quote
spanner Posted November 2, 2016 Posted November 2, 2016 Im very curious to see how the Chinese stealth fighter compares to the US & Russian equivalents.. Quote
Shadow Posted November 3, 2016 Posted November 3, 2016 (edited) To me, it comes off as more of an interceptor/anti-AWACS craft than a fighter. That's atleast what I'm wagering it was designed for. To aid in area-denial efforts, particularly to support aircraft. It's a Mig-31 with stealth features. Edited November 3, 2016 by Shadow Quote
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