Colonial-Marine
UAVs are now friend, drones are the real enemy.
- Joined
- 5 October 2009
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Did any of MDD's mockups show their design armed with the AIM-82, AIM-95 Agile, or AIM-97 Seekbat?
mithril said:question. did Fairchild ever do art of a twin tailed version of the FX proposal Pioneer posted?
Hillaker was opinionated and rebellious. One of the starting points of the F-16 was when Hillaker was dispatched by the bosses at Fort Worth to try to sell the Air Force their F-X contender - a competitor to the F-15. The new design had a swing wing, not so much because it made sense but because the high sheriffs thought that if it didn't, it would reflect poorly on the then-controversial F-111. After a less-than-enthusiastic hearing from the USAF, Hillaker was close to quitting - but then got the assignment to design a lightweight fighter prototype, quite possibly because someone at a high level knew damn well that it didn't stand a chance.
overscan said:No. They aren't Sidewinders, they are probably generic representations of SRM, a planned new short range missile which was abandoned after 6 months study in 1970.
Sidewinder isn't that much shorter than a Sparrow.
overscan said:Apparently declassified only in 2008, here is
THE F-15 EAGLE - Origins and Development. 1964-1972 by Jacob Neufeld (OFFICE OF AIR FORCE HISTORY)
http://www.afhso.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-120516-036.pdf
It contains a table showing that Fairchild placed second in the competition.
Massive brainfart. Forgot all about it!overscan said:Su-15 I think.
Several major avionics companies will be supporting potential airframe prime contractors in forthcoming competitions for USAF’s FX air superiority fighter and Navy’s VFAX close support aircraft. Autonetics is on the Lockheed/Ling-Temco-Vought team, while Raytheon is supporting the North American Los Angeles Div. and Columbus Div. effort. Westinghouse is backing the Boeing/Grumman team planned for the two competitions.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Northrop Corp. and Boeing Co. have told USAF informally they will not be in the bidding for the FX air-superiority fighter (AW&ST Oct. 7, p. 26). LTV Aerospace, which was to have been teamed with Lockheed-California Co. on the proposal, is considering bidding on its own. Republic Div. of Fairchild Hiller Corp., which was invited to bid, will team with Hughes Aircraft Co. as prospective co-prime contractors. Grumman, which was not named as one of the eight firms asked for proposals, was given a chance but opted out. Still in the bidding are McDonnell Douglas Corp., General Dynamics and North American Rockwell. Proposals are due Nov. 18.
danwild6 said:Has anyone got a 3-view of the Grumman Model 399