One designed in the 1950s with sliderules, one designed in the late 70s with computers. Comparing apples to chairs again, FM.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
And the Eagle? You keep talking about how the F-4 was replaced by the Eagle...so why not compare it to that?FEOS wrote:
You haven't been paying attention, have you?
The F-16 gets scoffed at by everyone except the F-16 community when anyone says it performs CAS. It has neither the range nor the payload to perform the function adequately in comparison to any other platform...to include the F-4 when it was still in service. The Viper is good for one pass, but then it's winchester or bingo or both. Any other platform has the legs and ammo to stick around.
Besides that:
F-4 Combat Radius: 422 miles
F-16 Combat Radius: 340 miles
F-4 weapons payload: 18,650 lb
F-16 weapons payload: 17,000 lb
Wow they are so radically different. It's like one was an ancient design built like a flying anvil, and the other was a lightweight modern fighter design.
No, but I do know one of the chief designers of the F-35 quite well. He's got a fairly decent handle on aircraft design in general, I'd say.FM wrote:
But you don't know anyone who developed it.FEOS wrote:
You have no idea who I know or don't know, FM. The saying originated in the Vietnam-era Phantom aviator community. I know--and interact daily with--plenty of those guys.
Do you know it when you type it?FM wrote:
I mean, no I don't know who you know, but I know bullshit when I smell it.
How about if they explain ad nauseum exactly how they meant it? Will you be quite so confident that they meant it exactly opposite of how they actually meant it simply because that's what's convenient for your argument?FM wrote:
Still quite confident 'brick' would refer to it's flying ability rather than its aesthetics, should I ever hear someone use it in a similar manner again.FEOS wrote:
Now you know better. Doesn't that give you a warm fuzzy feeling inside?
Leading-edge slats.FM wrote:
How?FEOS wrote:
maneuverability issues were resolved by 1967 with the E model.
You haven't the slightest fucking clue what you're talking about, FM. Of course it was used according to its strengths and to minimize its weaknesses in the air. Without the gun, all they had was superior speed, radar, and missiles...all of which their training was focused on leveraging. However, with the poor missile performance of the day, that proved inadequate to the mission at hand, so improvements in both equipment (addition of the gun and leading-edge slats) and tactics/training (due to the addition of the gun) had to take place to accommodate.FM wrote:
It was not used according to its strengths and weaknesses in the air. Due to lack of training the craft wasn't used to take advantage of its speed and therefore altitude advantages.FEOS wrote:
You say "misused". It wasn't "misused". It was used according to its strengths and to minimize its weaknesses. The high KDR in Korea is also attributed to the fact that many of those US pilots had high levels of combat time from WW2, whereas the nK pilots they were flying against did not. That was not the case in Vietnam. You're comparing apples to chairs in that regard.
If everyone had known the outcome, would they have designed the same plane? Probably not. They probably would've designed the F-15E, if the technology of the time would've allowed it. Not sure that it would have. In fact, the F-4 may very well have been the F-15E of its time. But we'll get to that.
You could certainly attribute the K change to the radical change in aircraft tactics compared to the sprightly Sabre used in Korea.
Of course the technology wouldn't have allowed them to make the F-15, that's just stupid. They wouldn't have changed ANYTHING else? Because that is just outright naive if you can't see any other flaws besides the lack of gun.
What else would they have changed? Tell me that. What, in your vast aviation experience and depth of aerospace engineering knowledge, would you change about the design of the F-4--not knowing the conflict in Vietnam was coming, btw--to make it a better fighter? Better than it has already been assessed, which is the best of its time, btw.
First, you're the one who equated countries that still operate the F-4 to those who "shit in dirt holes"...not me.FM wrote:
People who shit in dirt holes don't buy fighter jets.FEOS wrote:
Last time I checked, Germany, Turkey, Egypt, Greece, South Korea, and Japan didn't regularly "shit in dirt holes".
Still thoroughly unimpressed. Not countries known for their ridiculous military spending.
Second, what does level of military spending have to do with anything? That is irrelevant.
It's an important point to show that first-world countries still view it as a viable combat fighter fifty years after it hit the field. We retired it because we could, and that was only 14 years ago. It flew in active service with the USAF for nearly 40 years.FM wrote:
Why you don't use only its American service record I don't understand. We built it, we discarded it after some time, other countries went through the garbage for our scraps. If you're going to use other air forces to extend its service record you have to try to keep a straight face in telling me their air force is at least as powerful as ours.
And? The F-15A hit the street in 1975. The F-16A in 1976. What does 1998 have to do with anything?FM wrote:
F-15A/B: $27.9 millionFEOS wrote:
I know damn well it had to be replaced by two different aircraft to meet the same mission requirements. It certainly wasn't a cheaper solution to replace one plane with two (or four).
F-16C/D: US$18.8 million
Both in 1998
You're the one who made the point that the F-15 had an afterburner. As if it were something unique.FM wrote:
Wow, really FEOS? It's also fucking small and light comparatively. Brilliant comparison.FEOS wrote:
The F-16 is more manueverable than the F-15, FM. It has less wing area than the Eagle. And the F-4 has AB, as well.
Of course the Phatnom II has afterburner, why wouldn't it?
Those records were for production fighter aircraft, I believe. Namely because they were intact until broken by the F-15 in 1975, when clearly the SR-71 had broken the speed records numerous times prior to that.FM wrote:
Absolute speed records can only be set by fighter aircraft?FEOS wrote:
It wouldn't have beaten those speed records. Ever. Because those speed records were for fighter aircraft, which the SR-71 wasn't.
Well if that were the case, then it wouldn't have been much of a "grave threat" then, would it? So now you know more than the VPAF pilots who fought against it as well as those who flew it? Man, you are doing some serious learnin' in those college classes of yours...FM wrote:
Of course, the F-4 is mostly what they were fighting and the F-4's "advanced features" probably included missiles that in fact didn't work.FEOS wrote:
From VPAF ace: "Our training included a lot of discussion about fighting the F-4," he remembered, "which was considered the gravest threat due to its advanced features."
So, the first production aircraft to make extensive use of titanium is "meh"?FM wrote:
That is your definition of engineering feats? You're the kind of guy that would give Obama and Al Gore a Nobel Prize huh?FEOS wrote:
"advanced features"...hmmm. That would imply some sort of feats of engineering, wouldn't it?
As to engineering feats (SOURCE):
- First production aircraft to make extensive use of titanium
-- Next production aircraft to make extensive use of titanium was the SR-71 (which you stated was an engineering marvel, and rightly so)
- First fighter with pulse Doppler radar with look-down and shoot-down capability
Those are in addition to the speed, altitude, and speed-to-altitude records that it held (which, btw, are a result of engineering feats, as well) until
surpassed by the F-15 in 1975--as already pointed out.
Other aircraft (like the Blackbird) easily have lists of innovation as long as your arm. Maybe that impresses you, frankly that seems less-than-stellar considering they had a military budget to design cutting edge aircraft.
Military engineering is cool because it is the essence of engineering. Taking the bleeding edge of science and putting it into a usable, rugged package with essentially limitless upper bounds on performance. The F-4 was entirely meh. Again props to the people who made the engine, besides that the shell surrounding the engines was essentially a shell surrounding the engines.
First fighter with pulse doppler LD/SD capability is "meh"?
All those performance records are "meh"?
The proven ruggedness in combat is "meh"?
The fact that it was the most advanced fighter of its time is "meh"?
Seriously. You know the square root of fuckall about engineering if you truly think that.
No. It can't. Jesus fuck, dude. Seriously. You need to stop embarrassing yourself.FM wrote:
Cluster bombs as well.FEOS wrote:
No, FM. It can't. Eventually, it will drop the SDB. Right now, it's the 1000lb JDAM. That's it.
Because they haven't been integrated and tested yet. SDBs are still under development for the entire fleet, IIRC.FM wrote:
Why can't it already drop SDBs?
See comment above about needing to stop embarrassing yourself. Seriously. You know not what you are talking about. At fucking all.FM wrote:
Right.FEOS wrote:
It's really just not that simple, FM, and it would take far more space and time than it's worth to educate you on the topic.
We are fighting a different war. We don't need bunker busters. A swarm of F-22s could handle 99% of the missions we fly right now.
lrn2wikiFM wrote:
So how are they different?FEOS wrote:
We were talking about the WW mission, yes? The F-16CJ (Block 50) replaced the F-4G in the WW mission. I was talking about those two, not comparing the F-16A and the F-4G.
Not sure. I didn't ask base ops. All kinds of aircraft come through all the time.FM wrote:
What was the Phantom II on the flight line for?FEOS wrote:
What do you mean? Was there something to address there? Other than you misplacing my response?
It was. I don't merely think it was. It was. If it weren't, it wouldn't have been the plane of choice for both the Navy and Air Force aerial demonstration squadrons.FM wrote:
I don't equate turning to being a good fighter. You on the other hand think the F-4 was a maneuverable plane.FEOS wrote:
I'd rather ask them what they had to do to shoot down a MiG-19. Not get into a turning fight with one. That's just stupid. Even F-15 pilots don't like to get into turning fights with other planes. It simply removes too many advantages. The fact that you boil down "what is good in a fighter" to how well it performs in a turning fight shows just how little you really understand about what makes a good/great fighter.
I merely pointed out that the source that you seem to use for most of your information on the topic (TV) disagrees with you.FM wrote:
Okay, you do not get to talk about your Air Force career anymore if you're going to quote the Military Channel. One of the shittiest shows at that.FEOS wrote:
The F-4 is the #3 fighter of all time, behind F-15 and P-51. All time. Not just jets. Notice the fighters that supposedly outclassed it according to you aren't even on the list. So, looking at the timeframe in which it operated, that would make it #1 for its time.
Also, notice how the only way non-Allied aircraft got on the list was by tying or being one of the first jet fighters ever?
What would it take to be considered "special" or more than "lukewarm" to you? Just what exactly are your standards, FM? You can't seem to apply your own criteria consistently when you state them, and you seem to think you could have designed a better aircraft at the time. Go ahead and show us all how you could've done better.FM wrote:
The F-4 did nothing special. Advances were lukewarm. It went really fast. K.FEOS wrote:
Judged against the scientific advances of the time (see the "firsts" above), and even against the other craft of the time, the F-4 meets your criteria. Yet you still claim it doesn't. So you're not applying your own criteria to this particular case. Why not?
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular