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Guess a plane part 4 (Read 609 times)
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 9:59am
Theis
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Colonel
Always somewhere, sometime..
Rødovre, Denmark
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Posts: 6116
Ok this time its a fighter
Good luck!
Bar by Mees
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Reply #1 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 10:02am
C
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Colonel
Earth
Posts: 13144
Chuck Yeager's favourite fighter....
(look in your PMs
)
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Reply #2 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 10:13am
town
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Colonel
I still fly like a girl
Harrogate, North Yorkshire
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Posts: 527
tigershark? Am I too early
&&&&Shop at SKYSIM.CO.UK
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Reply #3 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 12:10pm
Undecided
Ex Member
Townof_hgate's right, it's an F-20 Tigershark.
Although I personally prefer it's slightly older brother the F-5.
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Reply #4 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 12:24pm
Theis
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Colonel
Always somewhere, sometime..
Rødovre, Denmark
Gender:
Posts: 6116
Correct!
Northrop developed the F-20 Tigershark in response to a U.S. Government call for the private development of a tactical fighter specifically tailored to meet the security needs of allied and friendly nations.
The first flight of the Tigershark was made August 30, 1982. The Mach 2 class F-20 Tigershark's basic single-seat configuration was formally designated the F-20A. The F-20 combined propulsion, electronics and armament technologies with improvements in reliability to sustain high sortie rates in adverse weather.
The F-20 incorporated a combination of advanced technology features. The F-20 could carry more than 8,300 pounds of external armaments and fuel on five pylons. It could carry six Sidewinder missiles on air-to-air missions. For air-to-ground missions, more than 6,800 pounds of armament could be carried. Two internally mounted 20mm guns were standard equipment on the Tigershark.
The avionics system features a General Electric multimode radar, Honeywell laser inertial navigation system, General Electric head-up display, Bendix digital display and control set and Teledyne Systems mission computer.
The F-20 is powered by a General Electric F404 engine, with 17,000 pounds of thrust. The F404 is recognized as one of the world's most reliable advanced technology engines. It is also used to power the U.S. Navy/Marine Corps F/A-18A Hornet strike fighter.
Once airborne, the F-20 pilot utilized his multimode radar, which could detect and track targets at ranges of up to 48 nautical miles "look up" and 31 nautical miles "look down." The F-20 mission computer coordinated the aircraft's weapons systems. The head-up display placed critical weapons, target and flight data at the pilot's eye level. This allowed him to fight without having to look down. Northrop designed a new panoramic canopy for the F-20 that gave the pilot a 50 percent increase in rearward visibility over previous Northrop fighters. An improved seat and headrest design combined to substantially expand over-the-shoulder visibility, which is critical in air-to-air combat.
Aerodynamic features of the F-20 included an enlarged leading edge extension to the wing, which generated up to 30 percent of the lift maneuvers. The "shark-shaped" nose allowed the F-20 to maneuver at much higher angles of attack than current operational fighters. The F-20 airframe could withstand nine G's.
The F-20 was reliable and easy to maintain. Based on comparisons with the average of contemporary international fighters, the F-20 consumed 53 percent less fuel, required 52 percent less maintenance manpower, had 63 percent lower operating and maintenance costs and had four times the reliability.
Specifications
Maximum Speed Mach 2 class
Sea level rate-of-climb 52,800 feet/minute
Combat ceiling 54,700 feet
Takeoff distance 1,600 feet
Takeoff Distance 4,200 feet
Scramble order to brake release 52 seconds
Scramble order to 29,000 feet 2.5 minutes
Time to 40,000 feet from brake release 2.3 minutes
Acceleration Time 0.3M to 0.9M, at 10,000 feet 28 seconds
Sustained Turn Rate 0.8M at 15,000 feet 11.1 degrees/second
Maximum Load Factor 9g
Length 46 ft 6 in
Height 13 ft 10 in
Wing Span 26 ft 8 in
Internal Fuel 5,050 lbs
External Fuel 6,435 lbs
Takeoff Weight clean 18,005 lbs
Combat Thrust/Weight ratio 1.1
Combat Weight 50% fuel, 2 AIM-9 missiles 15,820 lbs
Maximum Weight 27,500 lbs
# Armament
# Two AIM-9 missiles
# Five pylons, more than 8,300 lbs external armaments
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Reply #5 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 3:58pm
C
Offline
Colonel
Earth
Posts: 13144
Quote:
Townof_hgate's right, it's an F-20 Tigershark.
Although I personally prefer it's slightly older brother the F-5.
I just found an old mag from 1981, and it advertised the new Northrop Tigershark, and it was originally designated as the F-5
G
before it became the F-20.
I didn't know that...
Charlie
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Reply #6 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 6:23pm
SilverFox441
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Colonel
Now What?
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
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Posts: 1467
All three pictures show A/C that carried the F-5G designation.
If you look closely you can see the shorter, square back canopy that is common to the F-5 series. It was approximately the same time as the designation change to F-20 that the new canopy was designed to improve rearward visibility.
Steve
(Silver Fox)
Daly
&&
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Reply #7 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 6:42pm
Beaker
Ex Member
That's rather interesting; but the two jets in the first shot,
farthest from the lens,
would appear to have the newer canopy installed.
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Reply #8 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 7:04pm
C
Offline
Colonel
Earth
Posts: 13144
Quote:
That's rather interesting; but the two jets in the first shot,
farthest from the lens,
would appear to have the newer canopy installed.
...and the red one was famous for its F-20 legend on its tail...
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Reply #9 -
Feb 4
th
, 2005 at 10:38pm
SilverFox441
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Colonel
Now What?
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
Gender:
Posts: 1467
At least two of the prototypes carried both designations during the life.
There was actually a rather mordib joke in the Airforce at the time...it suggested that the F-5G was a much safer aircraft, none of them had ever crashed.
A sharp eyed observed can note another thing in these pictures...
The nose will tell you which planes were built as "new construction" and which used the older F-5E/F forward fuselage assemblies...which were slightly flattened for F-5G use. You'll see that all the F-5G's use the older fuse assembly, true F-20's have a subtly reshaped nose...more round premitting a larger antenna for the radar.
Canada seriously considered picking up the whole project at one time...but that fell through sadly. There was a fair degree of commonality between the F5G/F-20 and the CF-18, same engines, same radar (smaller antenna in the '20) and many of the same avionics.
Steve
(Silver Fox)
Daly
&&
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Reply #10 -
Feb 5
th
, 2005 at 2:59am
Theis
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Colonel
Always somewhere, sometime..
Rødovre, Denmark
Gender:
Posts: 6116
here is the original pics
Bar by Mees
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