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They retired the F-14 prematurely, but they did it.
They reired the Hellcat prematurely, but they did it.
They retired the Bearcat prematurely, but they did it.
I think they should have kept the F-86 around longer, too.
"They retired the F-14 prematurely" - With the mission-capable F-18's introduction, the larger and more expensive Tomcat was no longer nessecary.
Regarding the RAF I always thought that the Jaguar was retired well before its due date. It never had the publicity the Harrier had, but it was in service in roughly the same time scale and was a much better strike aircraft than the Harrier.
The F-86 in foreign service saw the last type retired by the Bolivian or Argentine Airforce in the late 80's or early 90's (this is off the top of my head, can easily be clarified) but in U.S. service, the last F-86 was retired in the 1970's from ANG assignment.Wasn't the F-100 simply an F-86 upgrade to accommodate the new P&W J-57 engine? Like the F6F, didn't the NA F86/FJ enjoy a reasonably long post-USAF/USN life in foreign garb and in the Air Guard?
Hi oldcrow,
I tend to agree with you. The F-18 can carry about 60% of the bomb load of an F-14, about 60% as far at about 80% of the speed.
So, with the F-18, we deliver less bombs (or more aircraft) to a target not as far off, take longer to get there and need more tankers to get the thing home.
On the plus side, the avionics in the F-18 are much nicer to operate and are more capable than the F-14 avionics.
All in all, I'd much rather have upgreded the F-14D and stayed with it, assuming the airframes were good to go. I am not aware of airframe issues with the wing pivot, but I suppose that's possible. With the F-14D, the plane finally got the engines it was designed for, and the performance was outstanding. A major avionics upgrade might have been just the ticket. Hey, we're still flying F-15's of about the same vintage.
As for the F-86. I'm talking about front-line retirement. We DID keep many in guard and reserve units for a long time, but their numbers were declining in main stream Air Force beginning in 1954 up through transition out of active USAF service later. Yes, Sabres did serve in front-line units into the 1990's, with the last front-line Sabres being in Bolivia. I was speaking of front-line USAF service above.
I'm lucky since the museum where I volunteer operates an F-86F on a regular basis and I'm currently working on an F-86 restoration for a private owner. It is coming along nicely. It started life as a Canadair Sabre Mk 6, but we are converting it to have a slatted leading edge. We are fitting US-made slats to a Canadian Sabre, but also had to make new lower skins for the leading edge since the auilliary tanks on a Sabre Mk 6 (basically an F-86E with more thrust) are about two feet inboard of where the aux tanks are on an F-86F. Since the main wing is pure F-86E, it made sense to switch the leading edges to match the main wing.
Basically there are four wings on the F-86 line. There is a short wing and a long wing, both of which can have a slatted or unslatted leading edge. The short wing is easy to tell since the aileron goes out to the wingtip. If the aileron stops before the wingtip, then it is a long wing. The slats are pretty self explanatory. Right now we are trying to get new bearings for the slats.
I've heard a convincing rant from a retired USAF F-16 pilot that the Tomcat was kept in service much too late as it was. Summing up:
- big fat money chewer with the fuel economy of the carrier that it launches from
- based around a radar that was next to useless in look-down
- only advantage in a fight was its ungodly lift letting it get down to low speeds that most jets wouldn't dare to go to
- when used 'properly' put the plane so low on energy the pathetically weak engines rarely allowed it to recover which is why pretty much anything made after 1970 could crush it in air combat
- pathetically low operational readiness
- from about the mid 80's onward it cost as much in a year to keep them up and running as it would have to replace them
but ...
- looked pretty for recruitment opportunities
I've heard a convincing rant from a retired USAF F-16 pilot that the Tomcat was kept in service much too late as it was. Summing up:
- big fat money chewer with the fuel economy of the carrier that it launches from
- based around a radar that was next to useless in look-down
- only advantage in a fight was its ungodly lift letting it get down to low speeds that most jets wouldn't dare to go to
- when used 'properly' put the plane so low on energy the pathetically weak engines rarely allowed it to recover which is why pretty much anything made after 1970 could crush it in air combat
- pathetically low operational readiness
- from about the mid 80's onward it cost as much in a year to keep them up and running as it would have to replace them
but ...
- looked pretty for recruitment opportunities