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KenV wrote:If you're going to hit a tanker on your mission, you do it mid-mission, much closer to the target area. You plan to fly to your prudent limit of endurance taking into account alternate landing sites plus some margin, and that's where you schedule your tanker rendezvous. Better yet, you fly into the target area with fairly empty tanks and plan on hitting a tanker on the way OUT.
KenV wrote:>>"If you need to dogfight (Which by the way is highly unlikely in todays world.) you just drop your external loads."<<If you dump your weapon load before reaching your target, the enemy has already beat you without firing a shot. That's the LAST thing you want to do. DCM (defensive combat maneuvering) calls for some very aggressive piloting to avoid getting shot down while reaching the target with your payload.
KenV wrote:And I'm talking here about ground fire as well as from enemy fighters, so aggressive maneuvers are NOT limited to air-to-air dog fight situations.
KenV wrote:>>" Navy fighters routinely have just enough fuel to get to the target, complete the mission, egress, and then go "feet wet" (plus some reserves) on the assumption that they can hit a tanker once back over water. In any event fighters very seldom tank just before getting to the target area and NEVER tank to max fuel just before going into the target area.
KenV wrote:Beyond that, most external fuel tanks today are not "drop" tanks as used in WW2 fighters. They are much more complex and not intended to be jettisonned in combat.
KenV wrote:My point exactly. DACM is designed to AVOID a merge, get you to the target, and get you there with all your weapons. DACM requires AGGRESSIVE flying with high bank angles, high AOA, and lots of loading and unloading. My point was that aggressive manuevers are NOT reserved for dog fighting. And further, you do not want to enter a defended target area with an aircraft anywhere near max weight, and in fact, you want to be as light as you possibly can be and still get your mission accomplished and survive.
KenV wrote:The whole mind set of "I can always drop my load" indicates very poor planning because that kind of planning means I am planning to lose.
KenV wrote:Weight is usually THE limiting factor in any kind of manuevering. External fuel tanks are designed to handle the same stresses as the aircraft. Air-to-air weapons can also go to the max g loading of the aircraft.
KenV wrote:With the high weights of an air-to-ground mission, the aircraft's g-loading is limited. But all air-to-ground weapons can more than handle the aircraft's max g-loading when it is flying an air-to-ground mission.
KenV wrote:Keep in mind that wings are designed for up bending loads. But hanging ordnance on the wing bends it down. Pulling G with ordnance bends it down even more. that is one BIG reason why the max landing weight is always MUCH lower that the max take of weight. At takeoff, the aircraft weight is supported be the wing and the wing is producing lift and bending upward. Upon landing, the landing gear supports the aircraft and all the inertia of the wing and the ordnance haning on it causes down bending moment. Hence, the landing wt restriction.
KenV wrote:1. This thread was about the F-16XL being a superior ground attack platform, not a fighter plaltform. That is a Hi-Lo-Lo-Hi mission that would be carefully mission planned to keep the fuel state during the Lo segments relatively low, and certainly would NOT be planned with a full bag of gas during the Lo segments.
KenV wrote:2. Even flying CAP (combat air patrol), which can often involve lots of loitering, you don't plan on arriving on station with a full bag of gas.
KenV wrote: It is exceedingly rare to have multiple ACM (Air Combat Maneuvering, or "dogfighting") engagements and no one plans for that.
KenV wrote: Yowsa!!! That makes for a lousy "strike" fighter in my opinion.
KenV wrote:Agreed. But even when carrying BVR missiles, most fighters also carry a 'winder and a gun in the event of a visual engagement. It sounds to me that if these early F-16s are carrying a BVR missile or any kind of bomb load, the options (in the event of either ACM or DACM) are to restrict maneuvering, overload the pylon, or jettison the load,.
Without getting into a lot of details, lets just say I have a lot of current experience in the F/A-18C. NAS Lemoore (the Navy's west coast master jet base and its largest) has a few operational F/A-18E/F squadrons now. Every single pilot I know still flying F/A-18C/D wants to fly the new Super Hornet. We all lust for it.Many lust MORE for the Super Tomcat, but as you said, that's another story entirely.