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The AH-64 was what scared the chair force into actually building the A-10.Is it true that the real reason the airforce built the A-10 was to force the Army to scrap the Cheyenne?
SOCOM has wanted a turboprop CAS for a long time. They want a high time on target, high loiter time, low cost platform for highly permissible environments. We've been wearing out high cost airframes running sorties in areas where the largest AA threat is a DShk.Plus politically they're a poison FU pill to the U.S. Army. Offer up a plane with little or no survivability in a CAS environment. So it will have to operate at higher and higher attitude where it can't actually do CAS and is redundant as any F-35, F-15 or drone can carry a bomb and drop it.
In 1943, Luftwaffe chief Herman Goering laid out the so-called 3x1000 specification for a plane that could fly one thousand kilometers an hour carrying one thousand kilograms of bombs with fuel enough to travel one thousand kilometers and back—while still retaining a third of the fuel supply for use in combat. Such an airplane could strike targets in Britain while outrunning any fighters sent to intercept it.
This is quite an interesting plane & only 3 of these Horten HO 229's were built by the Nazi's towards the end of WW2. It was supposedly the first jet propelled flying wing aircraft. I think just one is still in existence & is undergoing restoration at the Smithsonian.
Smithsonian HO229 article
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What remains of the last Horten.
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https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/nazi-germanys-stealth-fighter-story-ho-229-30932
Obviously not a real pic but there are hardly any photos of this plane online.
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My nephew just got me to play War Thunder with him a bit this weekend and now I'm constantly thinking about the F6F Hellcat, my absolute favorite prop job.
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This girl was the primary Ace Maker (at an impressive 305) of WW2 for the United States. With over 5200 kills and a reported 19.1:1 kill ratio against the Japanese, this thing may not be as iconic as the F4U Corsair, but it certainly burdened a bigger load and proved easier to fly, fight and land. Sure, it benefited from being the primary fighter against the Japanese in the marianas Turkey Shoot, where inexperienced Japanese Zero pilots in large numbers were annihilated by better trained, equipped and more aggressive American pilots with much more combat experience, but it's still hard to argue with the fact that no other allied aircraft managed anything close to the same kill ratios enjoyed by F6F pilots
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The Hellcat could outperform almost every single Japanese plane in top speed, stability and overall acceleration, making it the ultimate choice for Zoom and Boom tactics outside of the P-38, which also did amazing against the Japanese in WW2. The Hell cat could outturn the Zero above 250mph, but when it got slow, the lighter Japanese fighters became a real threat, so American pilots learned to never come off the throttle and never engage past 3/4ths of a turn against Japanese fighters, it was better to make a pass, accelerate through it and come back around in the vertical while your wingmen would circle over head to wait for an opening to make theirs. This became known as the Wheel of Death and the meat Grinder, where American pilots would stack their Hellcats a few thousand feet above the enemy and descend in groups of 2 to destroy flights of Japanese aircraft.
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If the F4U was "whistling death" for the Japanese pilots, the Hellcat was certainly "inevitable defeat" as the unending swarms of Hellcats would continuously and relentlessly destroy enemy fighters and bombers en masse for the duration of the war. In 1944 the US Navy introduced a radar equipped version that would harass and destroy any attempts for the Japanese forces to hide at night in hopes of resupply, with several F6F-5N crews becoming aces as well.
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Marines flying off carriers also used the Hellcat with great success as a strike and CAS platform as well as a fighter, providing support for marine landings at Tarawa, Okinawa, Iwo Jima and Saipan to defeat Japanese troops in contact with US ground forces. It could carry bombs, rockets and even the first US "Bunker Buster" the Tiny Tim, a massive rocket for the age that packed more punch than any other rocket int he US inventory. While designed initially for anti-shipping and use by the B-25 and SBC Helldiver, the Hellcat and Corsair used them to great effect destroying Japanese defenses and shipping during the Siege of Okinawa, with the rocket being so powerful that a few planes firing them were damaged by the blast of the rocket motor.
So while the venerable Corsair was immortalized by the exploits of Pappy Boyington and his VMA-214 squadron mates, the face of Air Supremeacy in the Pacific looks different than some would assume
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They don’t make planes like these anymore do they?My nephew just got me to play War Thunder with him a bit this weekend and now I'm constantly thinking about the F6F Hellcat, my absolute favorite prop job.
View attachment 881259
This girl was the primary Ace Maker (at an impressive 305) of WW2 for the United States. With over 5200 kills and a reported 19.1:1 kill ratio against the Japanese, this thing may not be as iconic as the F4U Corsair, but it certainly burdened a bigger load and proved easier to fly, fight and land. Sure, it benefited from being the primary fighter against the Japanese in the marianas Turkey Shoot, where inexperienced Japanese Zero pilots in large numbers were annihilated by better trained, equipped and more aggressive American pilots with much more combat experience, but it's still hard to argue with the fact that no other allied aircraft managed anything close to the same kill ratios enjoyed by F6F pilots
View attachment 881266
The Hellcat could outperform almost every single Japanese plane in top speed, stability and overall acceleration, making it the ultimate choice for Zoom and Boom tactics outside of the P-38, which also did amazing against the Japanese in WW2. The Hell cat could outturn the Zero above 250mph, but when it got slow, the lighter Japanese fighters became a real threat, so American pilots learned to never come off the throttle and never engage past 3/4ths of a turn against Japanese fighters, it was better to make a pass, accelerate through it and come back around in the vertical while your wingmen would circle over head to wait for an opening to make theirs. This became known as the Wheel of Death and the meat Grinder, where American pilots would stack their Hellcats a few thousand feet above the enemy and descend in groups of 2 to destroy flights of Japanese aircraft.
View attachment 881271
If the F4U was "whistling death" for the Japanese pilots, the Hellcat was certainly "inevitable defeat" as the unending swarms of Hellcats would continuously and relentlessly destroy enemy fighters and bombers en masse for the duration of the war. In 1944 the US Navy introduced a radar equipped version that would harass and destroy any attempts for the Japanese forces to hide at night in hopes of resupply, with several F6F-5N crews becoming aces as well.
View attachment 881272
Marines flying off carriers also used the Hellcat with great success as a strike and CAS platform as well as a fighter, providing support for marine landings at Tarawa, Okinawa, Iwo Jima and Saipan to defeat Japanese troops in contact with US ground forces. It could carry bombs, rockets and even the first US "Bunker Buster" the Tiny Tim, a massive rocket for the age that packed more punch than any other rocket int he US inventory. While designed initially for anti-shipping and use by the B-25 and SBC Helldiver, the Hellcat and Corsair used them to great effect destroying Japanese defenses and shipping during the Siege of Okinawa, with the rocket being so powerful that a few planes firing them were damaged by the blast of the rocket motor.
So while the venerable Corsair was immortalized by the exploits of Pappy Boyington and his VMA-214 squadron mates, the face of Air Supremeacy in the Pacific looks different than some would assume
View attachment 881277
Nope. Props are a death sentence on a fighter these daysThey don’t make planes like these anymore do they?
Well maybe an attack plane, but you’re right about fighters.Nope. Props are a death sentence on a fighter these days
Opinion on this bad boy?
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A list of my favorite military planes:
I can see right through that faggot
Can’t believe that this was one of the best fighter jets ever.I can see right through that faggot
The best modern fighter aircraft produced by the Great Satan, despite being a big ol' thing almost as chubby as the F-4.F-8 Crusader (Always love planes that naturaly have the "Shark Mouth" aesthetic, even without the paint)