FLYBOYJ
"THE GREAT GAZOO"
Thank you for the video.
The book about the F-104 by Gerard Paloque notes that Belgium lost 41% of its F-104s in 20 years, Italians lost 37% by 1992, the Canadians lost 46% in 25 years. All of the 3 countries have had a continued training and use of aircraft, unlike the new Luftwaffe, yet suffered the same.
And again, you have to break down those losses. as the video did.
According to Joe Baugher - A total of 41 Belgian Starfighters, including three TF-104Gs, were lost in accidents, or nearly 37 percent of the force. Addressing other aircraft of the day...
"The F-100 had a bad safety record in Danish service, with fully a third of the fleet being lost to accidents. Danish F-100s were grounded, returned to flying status, then grounded again several times. The Danish F-100s were finally retired from service in the early 1980s when they were replaced by General Dynamics F-16As.
During its period of service with the German armed forces, about 270 German Starfighters were lost in accidents, just under 30 percent of the total force. About 110 pilots were killed. However, the attrition rate in German service was not all that much greater than that of the F-104 in service with several other air forces, including the United States Air Force. Canada had the unenviable record of losing over 50 percent of its 200 single-seat CF-104s in flying accidents. The loss rate of Luftwaffe Starfighters was not all that extraordinary, since the Luftwaffe had suffered a 36 percent attrition rate with the Republic F-84F Thunderstreak, the Starfighter's immediate predecessor. There was nothing intrinsically dangerous about the Starfighter, since the Royal Norwegian Air Force operating identical F-104Gs suffered only six losses in 56,000 flying hours, and the Spanish Air Force lost not a single one of its Starfighters to accidents."
The F-102 accident rate was over 13 per 100,000 flight hours
That is showing accidents up to 1983. I think by the time the -104 was phased out it had something like 4.6 accidents per 100,000 flight hours. The F-100 was up around 14~ and again I'm including NATO operators. Lastly you have to break down the accident cause.In US service, the loss rate per 100 000 hours was worse for F-104 by 50% than for the F-100:
View attachment 578896
Premise of the thread is that F-104 is designed around a bigger wing from the get go, not that it received a bigger wing later in it's life.
OK - then from the get go one would have to look at how the aircraft would have performed with it's original engine. If the bigger wing degraded performance would further development been attempted?
Last edited: