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There were pilots who confessed they were surprised when they were even able to do that much.Perhaps, the ground?
Define serious?The unguided air-to-air rocket will probably always remain a niche solution.
Was "Mighty Mouse" on F-89 the last serious attempt?
Define serious?
Wow. I never knew about rockets in the bay doors. Thank you for this picture.Define serious?
Missile bay doors on the F-102
View attachment 850116
12 Rockets total which is not very serious given the lack of accuracy of these things.
English Electric Lightnings had an option for 44 2in (51mm) rockets but they went in the area that the missile electronics went.
View attachment 850117
Doors either side of the nose gear. This supposed to be a Saudi MK 53. The rockets in the doors are a different size than the rockets in the pods?
DH 110 Sea Vixen had 14 round launchers each side of the nose gear on the MK I version.
Some others may have had them.
I don't know who had them last.
Some VVS pilots claimed successful kills with RS-82. If memory serves me right, one of them was Arseniy Vorozheikin, who allegedly shot down or damaged one Bf 109 with a rocket salvo and shot down another one with guns in a quick battle near the home airfield. His aircraft was an I-16.I seem to remember reading of a WWII rocket kill but can't remember the specifics so won't bore you further. I'm sure they could be used as unguided AAMs, and if I'm the rocket barge I'm going to want to unload a lot of weight quickly anyway, even though I'm stuck with the pylons.
As an aside, I always loved/was baffled by those overwing pylons, it's like "do we have room here? there, stick in a pod" kind of thing. Very MacGyver.
Yes. The British (and a number of other NATO countries) adopted the French Thomson Brandt 68mm rockets which are different than the US 2.75in (70mm) rockets.Wow. I never knew about rockets in the bay doors. Thank you for this picture.
Aren't Electric Lightning's overwing pods for air-to-ground rockets?
AAAH ! Facts (or their scientific review) is a zillion times better than comment !FWIW the report below is dated from 1951 and looks at the then current vs the next generation of air defense systems planned and/or speculated upon. It is an interesting read.
The report mentions an additional factor in the use of the 2.75" FFAR for the interceptors, said factor being the then operational airborne and ground based FC radars possessing virtually no low altitude targeting capability.
Definitely not. The Su-7 (as "pure" fighter) could carry only underwing ORO-57K launchers with S-5 rockets intended primarily for air-to-air use.Then remained a "mystery" : did early design of the Sukhoi Su-7 also involved an internal air-to-ground rocket pack ?
The Su-7 (as a "pure" fighter, not Su-7B) reached mass production in late 1958, 132 were produced in 1958-1960, its design never included internal rocket launchers - from very early project development stages.I sort of remember to have seen a suggestion to that effect sometime somewhere, but failed to corroborate. Obviously, it never reached production