The best fighter of the 1950's.

The best fighter of the 1950's

  • Supermarine Scimitar

    Votes: 1 0.8%
  • Hawker Hunter

    Votes: 7 5.7%
  • MIG-19

    Votes: 5 4.1%
  • F-105 Thunderchief

    Votes: 6 4.9%
  • English Electric Lighting

    Votes: 11 8.9%
  • F-100 Super Sabre

    Votes: 9 7.3%
  • Dassault Super Mystère

    Votes: 2 1.6%
  • MIG-21

    Votes: 26 21.1%
  • F-86 Sabre

    Votes: 18 14.6%
  • F-8 Crusader

    Votes: 21 17.1%
  • F-106 Delta Dart

    Votes: 8 6.5%
  • F-102 Delta Dagger

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • F-104 Starfighter

    Votes: 9 7.3%

  • Total voters
    123

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Just to be fair the actual combat weight of the Lightning was around 15,000 to 15,500 kg, so the wing loading was only 351 kg/m^2.

So for comparison..

Lightning:
Wingloading = 351 kg/m^2
T/W ratio = 0.96

MIG-17:
Wingloading = 237 kg/m^2
T/W ratio = 0.63

On the 17, knock off about 1000kg. Loaded 5,324kg, fully loaded 6,286 kg.
 
An Electric lightning F.6:
25297.jpg

thunder-citys-lightning-f6-zu-bey-performs-a.jpg
 
I did, the wing loading is 237 kg/m^2 and the T/W ratio is 0.63 at 5370 kg weight.

Ok

Well the Lightning with a third more power to weight ratio and the MiG-17 with 114kg less wing loading - interesting.

A properly trained Lightning pilot should best the MiG from medium distances, I would still avoid a turning fight.
 
I wouldn't be scared of a turnfight with a MIG-17 if I was in a Lightning, and for three reasons primarily:

1. I know I can power through the tightest of turns
2. If it turns out that the MIG-17 can turn slightly better than me in a plain horizontal turnfight, well then I simply point my nose up abit and force the fight into a climbing turnfight.
3. I know that if he even as much as starts to gain an advantage on me in a turnfight I can either simply point my a/c directly up into the sun and climb away effortlessly or level out and speed out of there in no time.

But I am quite convinced that because of the Lightnings huge advantage in T/W ratio it will outturn the MIG-17 at any speed. Esp. the later Lightning F.6 should be able to outturn the MIG.
 
I wouldn't be scared of a turnfight with a MIG-17 if I was in a Lightning, and for three reasons primarily:

1. I know I can power through the tightest of turns
2. If it turns out that the MIG-17 can turn slightly better than me in a plain horizontal turnfight, well then I simply point my nose up abit and force the fight into a climbing turnfight.
3. I know that if he even as much as starts to gain an advantage on me in a turnfight I can either simply point my a/c directly up into the sun and climb away effortlessly or level out and speed out of there in no time.
I could agree with the first two to a point - I don't think the third item will come into play because things are going to happen so quickly you probably won't have time to think about that and if he's already on you're tail, you're dead.

I did jet combat simulations in lumpy T-33s, L-29s and 39s and things happen very quickly in those slugs, I could only imagine how much quicker a visual dogfight would be in a 17 vs, Lightening.


But I am quite convinced that because of the Lightnings huge advantage in T/W ratio it will outturn the MIG-17 at any speed. Esp. the later Lightning F.6 should be able to outturn the MIG.
The F.6 was introduced in the late 60s if we put this in a Vietnam perspective. I think the MiG-17 might hold its own against the earlier heavier Lightning in a turning contest.

For me, I wouldn't take the chance - I'd exploit the full advantage of my aircraft and stay in the vertical.
 
Wouldnt it be better for the Lightning to exploit its missile fitout, to which the Mig has no answer at all ???? How efficient were the Red Top missiles carried by the Lightning???
 
I wonder if the 86 belongs here as it was introduced operationally in 1949?

I think it does Bill, based on the fact that numerous new variants were produced and flown throughout the Fifties, including the CA-27, whereas the Lightning to me is more of a sixties aircraft. Until very late in the decade the "Lightning" was the "big mouth" P.1A/B, which demonstrated a number of problems.



But that's just my opinion.

This is Gunston's list from "Fighters of the Fifties" which includes prototypes and projects.

He has very high praise for the Avro CF-100 (and the Arrow :| ), Hunter and the Vought XF8U-3 Crusader - "By far the best fighter we (the US) ever cancelled".

 
In my opinion the Mig-21F-13 was a quit good 50's fighter. Fast agile good climb cannon and rocket armed. Less radar, but with radar range finder coupled to gyro gun sight. Pilots how flow it called it "sports car". Even ten years later in Vietnam a challenging dogfighter…..
 
In my opinion the Mig-21F-13 was a quit good 50's fighter. Fast agile good climb cannon and rocket armed. Less radar, but with radar range finder coupled to gyro gun sight. Pilots how flow it called it "sports car". Even ten years later in Vietnam a challenging dogfighter…..

But it could only stay in the air for a half hour! Although formidable in Vietnam, they still were pretty much mauled.
 
And with only 20+ of them in the inventory, they sure as h*ll couldn't afford to lose them....

Depending who you talk to during operation Bolo, the NVNAF lost 2/3rds of their MiG-21s, 7 of them. There would have been more if the F-4s had a gun or had more reliable Sparrow Missiles. I believe at least 4 of them were duds during the engagement.
 
The Mig -21 was very small, about the size of an F-5, so adaptability was limited. I also think it was somewhat limited at low level by the delta wing.
Light and powerful typically makes a good dogfighter, but for the broader terms of fighter, it was limited.
 
So what about a comparison between the Lightning and the F-106. Who's got the edge in your opinion ?
 
Lightning:
Wing loading = 328 kg/m^2
T/W ratio = 1.02

Delta Dart:
Wing loading = 254.7 kg/m^2
T/W ratio = 0.70
 
I knew a B-58 pilot who, if I remember correctly, stated that the only aircraft he encountered that could run an intercept on the B-58 was the F-106.
My father in law ran the last operational F-106 squadron in the USAF. These were the chase planes used on the B-1B program. He said he also had a chance to fly dissimilar air combat simulations against F-15s, and depending on the pilot and scenario, sometimes the -106 would come out on top.

He said it lost a lot of energy in turns and didn't accelerate fast, but would continue to accelerate to the point where it would self destruct, one of the fastest aircraft he flew.

This is him in his aircraft
 

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