Taken this afternoon.
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Sweet photo for real tho.
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Those have to be the Thunderbirds. Blue angles wouldn't have flown on such a wonky formation.
quote:Those have to be the Blue Angels. The Thunderbirds wouldn't fly such sh*ty aircraft
Those have to be the Thunderbirds. Blue angles wouldn't have flown on such a wonky formation.
quote:If you look closely, there are actually seven planes in the picture. The Blues are all bunched together and the seventh trailing craft was taking pictures. They were doing the flight this evening for photo ops/promo shots.
Those have to be the Thunderbirds. Blue angles wouldn't have flown on such a wonky formation.
quote:Exactly!
If you zoom in you can see that the rear plane is the only one with 2 seats. I'm guessing there was a photographer in the back seat using this as a photo op.
quote:You do realize that the F-16 beat the F-18 in the original fly off competition, and the F-18 was never supposed to be built, don't you?quote:Those have to be the Blue Angels. The Thunderbirds wouldn't fly such sh*ty aircraft
Those have to be the Thunderbirds. Blue angles wouldn't have flown on such a wonky formation.
quote:It was early....I misread.
Sounds like we are on the same side.
quote:Friendly fire.quote:You do realize that the F-16 beat the F-18 in the original fly off competition, and the F-18 was never supposed to be built, don't you?quote:Those have to be the Blue Angels. The Thunderbirds wouldn't fly such sh*ty aircraft
Those have to be the Thunderbirds. Blue angles wouldn't have flown on such a wonky formation.
quote:You know Thunderbirds are white aircraft, right?
Those have to be the Thunderbirds. Blue angles wouldn't have flown on such a wonky formation.
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Technically, the F-16 beat out the F-17.
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Technically, the F-16 beat out the F-17.
Technically, the YF-16 beat out the YF-17
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The F-18's replacement, the F-35C, only has a single engine. The reason the F-16 wasn't adopted by the Navy is because it wasn't feasible to beef up the landing gear and airframe to handle the rigors of carrier landings.
quote:While multi-engine may obviously be preferable for Navy operations, it certainly wasn't a requirement during the selection process for what became the F-18. When the Navy was looking to update from F-4s and A-7s, they ended up latching on to the Air Force's search for a lightweight, inexpensive fighter jet. The Air Force's winner was the F-16 and its loser was the YF-17 (eventually became the F-18), and the Navy's results were just the opposite. Had "multi-engine" been a requirement, the F-16 vs. F-18 competition wouldn't have been much of a competition. Added to that, one of the aircraft the F-18 was intended to replace (The A-7 Corsair) was single-engine too. In essence, neither the F-16 nor F-18 were initially designed with carrier operations in mind, but the F-18 lent itself better to the necessary adaptations when that time came.quote:
The F-18's replacement, the F-35C, only has a single engine. The reason the F-16 wasn't adopted by the Navy is because it wasn't feasible to beef up the landing gear and airframe to handle the rigors of carrier landings.
IIRC, it was actually BOTH of those reasons...
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Quote:The F-18's replacement, the F-35C, only has a single engine. The reason the F-16 wasn't adopted by the Navy is because it wasn't feasible to beef up the landing gear and airframe to handle the rigors of carrier landings.
IIRC, it was actually BOTH of those reasons...
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While multi-engine may obviously be preferable for Navy operations, it certainly wasn't a requirement during the selection process for what became the F-18.
quote:The reason they "ended up latching onto" the AF search was because their own search was coming in way too expensive and the Sec Navy made them look to the LWF. BTW, both of the planes the Navy HAD been looking at were dual engine.
When the Navy was looking to update from F-4s and A-7s, they ended up latching on to the Air Force's search for a lightweight, inexpensive fighter jet. The Air Force's winner was the F-16 and its loser was the YF-17 (eventually became the F-18), and the Navy's results were just the opposite.
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Had "multi-engine" been a requirement, the F-16 vs. F-18 competition wouldn't have been much of a competition. Added to that, one of the aircraft the F-18 was intended to replace (The A-7 Corsair) was single-engine too. In essence, neither the F-16 nor F-18 were initially designed with carrier operations in mind, but the F-18 lent itself better to the necessary adaptations when that time came.
quote:If the additional weight of gear was an issue with the F-16, it would have been with the F-17 too. The F-18 ended up being 10,000 lb heavier..
From things I had read through connections (grandfather worked 45 years in upper management at General Dynamics/Lockheed in FW) the F-16N was more feasible than was publicly stated.
The loss in performance due to heavier landing gear made the airframe "less than ideal", but not anywhere close to being scrapped. And from what he had heard, the 2nd engine for naval aircraft is purely opinion that is prevalent in some, not all, naval leadership. Look to the success of the A-4 for proof that single engine fighters can be valuable to the USN's mission
quote:Will dispute this. Fighters with dead engines have terrible glide ratios. In perfect, perfect conditions, you might dead-stick one in to a close and long runway. 99 times out of 100, they are going to pull the handle and give it back to the taxpayers.
The reason the F-18 won out for the Navy is because they wanted redundant engines. In the CONUS there is a runway every 10 yards. So if you loose an engine there is chance you can land somewhere if you start out high enough
quote:Thanks. It was at USAFA graduation, so they were barely above the east stands of the football field, and I was up in the west stands. So it was a great angle.
Great pic!