BillRo said:I am planning on going - send me questions.
PaulMM (Overscan) said:Bill, use your best judgement. I guess most of them can be summarised as - did the USAF make a mistake not to order the F-23? I don't think you'll get an answer to that.
BillRo said:That is a lot of questions and I am not sure that they will let me monopolize the proceedings, but I will do my best. I am planning on making an audio recording but video may not be practical. I am sure that a video will become available in the future as they have for the other WMOF talks. I will ask and see if they will confirm that.
Bill
BillRo said:OK Ogami I will ignore that big list since you have it covered; we hope that the presentation will include answers, in which case my recording can be a record until the video comes out. I have a couple of other question from a few including Grigory and will concentrate on those.
Bill
quellish said:I heard there will be punch and pie, so...
sferrin said:Interesting. I'd always heard that the F120 powered YF-23 was the faster of the two but apparently that is not the case.
BillRo said:I went to the WMOF event today in Torrance and saw a bunch of my "old" Northrop colleagues; some came from as far away as the US East Coast and some that I hired from college were retired. PAV-2 was parked outside and both Paul Metz and Jim Sandberg were there and shared the presentation. The whole thing was video taped by the Palos Verdes couple who have done the rest and it will be available in a month. I thanked them for their efforts and told them how much the historical aviation community enjoys their work.
Attached are a few pix. I will pick up the previous threads and answer as many questions there that I can plus some I received separately. You will be able to get more precise answers when the video is released. I made a recording but I have not checked as to its quality yet.
Bill
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EFHywoWzNQ
YF-23 PAV2 First Flight and Walk Around by Test Pilot Jim Sandberg
Betty Wheaton interviews YF-23 PAV2 Test Pilot Jim Sandberg about the PAV2 first flight (landing gear problem), and Jim conducts a walk-around of the aircraft discussing typical checks he performed prior to a test flight. The YF-23 PAV2 is on display at the Western Museum of Flight. Produced by Jarel & Betty Wheaton for Peninsula Seniors www.pvseniors.org
https://youtu.be/iU8gWgz9n4U
YF-23 Walk Around and Design Features by Test Pilot Paul Metz
Betty Wheaton interviews YF-23 Test Pilot Paul Metz who conducts a walk around of the aircraft highlighting design features. YF-23 PAV2 is on display at the Western Museum of Flight. Produced by Jarel & Betty Wheaton for Peninsula Seniors www.pvseniors.org
I think the images of the Lockheed's "6th generation" concept with the comments about plagiarism are a bit unfair and unprofessional. In this industry everybody who survives tends to "borrow" from each other. More than anything it may reflect a subtle admittance that the F-23's balance of key characteristics was a better fit for the future than those of the F-22. Lockheed's work seems more in-line with views on aerial combat from the late '80s and '90s. Concepts like super-maneuverability were a big deal at the time and their ATF had a configuration including TVC to achieve that while Northrop forgo those in favor of greater stealth. Yet the value of super-maneuverability was much overrated in the face of continued air-to-air missile and situational awareness related developments.supacruze said:I have updated my Lockheed page with new images...
http://yf-23.net/Lockheed.html
https://youtu.be/Vpkv1ErWIf8
YF-23 DEM/VAL Presentation by Test Pilots Paul Metz and Jim Sandberg
YF-23 DEM/VAL program presentation by YF-23 Test Pilots Paul Metz and Jim Sandberg commemorates the 25th anniversary of the first flight. Produced by Jarel & Betty Wheaton for Peninsula Seniors www.pvseniors.org
I agree. It's not like Northrop invented the concept of the V-tail: even the F-117 had it before the YF-23 did. Other than being stealthy and having two engines, that's pretty much the only thing the Lockheed 6th-gen concept has in common with the YF-23 anyway.Colonial-Marine said:I think the images of the Lockheed's "6th generation" concept with the comments about plagiarism are a bit unfair and unprofessional.supacruze said:I have updated my Lockheed page with new images...
http://yf-23.net/Lockheed.html
sferrin said:Interesting. I'd always heard that the F120 powered YF-23 was the faster of the two but apparently that is not the case. (PAV-1 was the F119 powered aircraft.
"The GE powered aircraft were slower than the Pratt planes and the YF-23 PAV-1 was faster than the YF-22 aircraft. The Air Force chose the slowest plane with the slowest engine! "
???
Kryptid said:I agree. It's not like Northrop invented the concept of the V-tail: even the F-117 had it before the YF-23 did. Other than being stealthy and having two engines, that's pretty much the only thing the Lockheed 6th-gen concept has in common with the YF-23 anyway.
Sundog said:It's a well known fact that the YF-23 had the superior performance overall, when compared to the YF-22. But, as has been repeated often, the Air Force wanted to go the less risky route and was angry at Northrop's performance on the B-2, so they chose Lockheed Martin as the winner, since both designs met or exceeded the specs required by the ATF program.
Kryptid said:I agree. It's not like Northrop invented the concept of the V-tail: even the F-117 had it before the YF-23 did. Other than being stealthy and having two engines, that's pretty much the only thing the Lockheed 6th-gen concept has in common with the YF-23 anyway.Colonial-Marine said:I think the images of the Lockheed's "6th generation" concept with the comments about plagiarism are a bit unfair and unprofessional.supacruze said:I have updated my Lockheed page with new images...
http://yf-23.net/Lockheed.html
Steve Pace said:In my humble oppion I feel that the YF-22 was more agile, maneuverable than the YF-23. Nobody seems to address this. -SP
To add to Sundog and Overscan points.Steve Pace said:In my humble oppion I feel that the YF-22 was more agile, maneuverable than the YF-23. Nobody seems to address this. -SP