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General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark
Description
RoleAll-weather attack
Crew1 Pilot, 1 Weapons Systems Officer
Dimensions
Length73.5 ft22.4 m
Wingspan (spread)63 ft19.2 m
Wingspan (swept)31.92 ft9.74 m
Height17.08 ft5.22 m
Wing area (spread)657.07 ft²61.07 m²
Wing area (swept)525 ft²48.77 m²
Weights
Empty47,481 lb21,537 kg
Loaded82,819 lb37,577 kg
Maximum take-off98,950 lb44,896 kg
Powerplant
Engines2 Pratt & Whitney TF30-P-100 turbofans with afterburner
Thrust25,100 lb111.65 kN
Performance
Maximum speed1,653 mph ( Mach 2.5)2,660 km/h
Combat range1,330 mi2,128 km
Ferry range3,634 mi5,814 km
Service ceiling56,650 ft17,270 m
Rate of climb25,550 ft/min7,890 m/min
Armament
GunsOne M61 Vulcan 20mm cannon (seldom fitted)
Bombs31,500 lb14,288 kg

The General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark (the nickname was unofficial for most of its lifespan, but it was officially named "Aardvark" at its retirement ceremony for the United States Air Force) is a long-range strategic bomber, reconnaissance, and tactical strike aircraft. The F-111 project was long considered an expensive failure, but the end result was a capable, albeit costly, aircraft.

1 Development

The F-111's beginnings were in the TFX, an ambitious early 1960s project to combine the USAF requirement for a fighter-bomber with the U.S. Navy's need for a long-range carrier defence fighter to replace the F-4 Phantom II and the F-8 Crusader. The fighter design philosophy of the day concentrated on very high speed, raw power, and air-to-air missileAn air-to-air missile (AAM is a (usually guided) missile fired from an aircraft for the purpose of destroying another aircraft. List of air-to-air missiles For each missile, short notes are given, including an indication of its range and guidance mechaniss.

The USAF's Tactical Air CommandThe Tactical Air Command TAC was a command of the United States Air Force charged with battlefield-level (tactical) air combat, including light bombardment, close air support of ground troops, interdiction of enemy forces, and air transport of ground troo (TAC) was largely concerned with the fighter-bomber and deep strike/interdiction role, which in the early 1960s still focused on the use of nuclear weaponmushroom cloud of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945 lifted nuclear fallout some 60,000 feet (18 km) above the epicenter. A nuclear weapon is a weapon that derives its energy from nuclear reactions and has enormous destructive power a single ns. In June 1960This is a list of aviation-related events from 1960: Events January January 1 Fiji Airways is reconstituted, becoming equally owned by BOAC, QANTAS, and Tasman Empire Airways. February February 9 the US Air Force opens its National Space Surveillance Cont the USAF issued a specification for a long-range interdiction/strike aircraft able to penetrate SovietThere are two main meanings to the word soviet Soviet (council) can mean a council of workers, a term that was used from the late Imperial Russia days. After the October Revolution, soviets (councils) became the main form of government at all levels: ente air defenses at very low altitudes and very high speeds to deliver tactical nuclear weapons against crucial Soviet targets like airfields and supply depots. Included in the specification were a low-level speed of MachSee: Ernst Mach Mach number inertial mass Mach kernel Mach band. 1.2, a high-altitude speed of MachSee: Ernst Mach Mach number inertial mass Mach kernel Mach band. 2.5, a combat radius of 890 mi (1,475 km), good short-field performance, and a ferry range long enough to reach Europe unrefueled. Dogfighting maneuverability and cannon armament were considered of little importance. (This would change within a few years as experience showed that close-in dogfighting remained important in air combat: guns and an emphasis on agility were reintroduced to fighter design, but only after the F-111 was developed.)

The U.S. Navy, meanwhile, had since 1957This is a list of aviation-related events from 1957: Events January January 18 Three Boeing B-52 Stratofortresses make the world's first round the world, non-stop flight by turbojet-powered aircraft. The flight is completed in 45 hours 19 minutes, with an been searching for a long-range, high-endurance interceptor to defend its carrier groups against the new generation of Soviet jet bombers, which by then were being armed with huge anti-ship missiles with nuclear warheads. The Navy needed a Fleet Air Defense (FAD) aircraft with better loiter performance and load-carrying ability than the F-4 Phantom, equipped with a powerful radar and a battery of long-range missiles to intercept both bombers and their missiles.

Since the cancellation of the F6D Missileer in December 1960 the Navy had been reconsidering variable geometry for the FAD requirement. The trend toward ever bigger, more powerful fighters posed a problem for the Navy: the current generation of naval fighters were already barely capable of landing on an aircraft carrier deck, and a still larger and faster fighter would be pose even greater problems. An airframe optimised for high speed (most obviously with a high-angle swept wing) is inefficient at cruising speeds, which reduces range, payload, and endurance, and leads to very high landing speeds. On the other hand, an airframe with a straight or modestly swept wing, while easier to handle and able to carry heavy loads over longer distances on a minimum of fuel, has lower ultimate performance. Variable geometry, which the Navy had tried and abandoned for the XF10F Jaguar in 1953, offered the possibility of combining both in a single airframe.

Both of these requirements were about to be married by politics, and then checkered by considerable controversy. Newly appointed United States Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, who had just come from a successful stint as president of the Ford Motor Company, was a great believer in commonality--adapting a single common mechanical platform that could be customized for various applications. He felt that imposing this principle on military procurement would lead to substantial cost savings. As a result, on 16 February 1961, less than a month after taking office, McNamara ordered the services to consider a single basic aircraft that could be developed in different versions for each service. At one stage, it was even planned to use it for the United States Army and the United States Marine Corps as a close support aircraft. Although the by August 1961 the services insisted that a single aircraft was not technically feasible, McNamara ordered the development of a common aircraft to proceed anyway.

The program was dubbed TFX (Tactical Fighter Experimental). Requests for proposals were issued to Boeing, General Dynamics, Lockheed, Northrop, Grumman, McDonnell, Douglas Aircraft, North American Aviation, and Republic. Nine proposals were received in December 1961, and while the USAF and Navy felt that none were entirely suitable, on 19 January 1962 they indicated that the Boeing and GD proposals looked most promising.

After a series of subsequent proposals, in September 1962 the USAF and Navy indicated the preferred the Boeing design, but McNamara again overrode their decision, and the Department of Defense awarded the contract to General Dynamics on 24 November 1962, in part because the GD design promised to be more affordable and allow greater commonality--a decision that was to seem particularly ironic consider what followed. Grumman, which had greater experience with carrier aircraft, was engaged as the primary subcontractor.

The TFX design eventually emerged as an aircraft in the 20-ton (empty) class with a maximum take-off weight of almost 50 tons. It had been intended to use titanium for large portions of the airframe to save weight, but this proved prohibitively expensive. The TFX was powered by two afterburning Pratt & Whitney TF30 turbofans in the 80 kN class. The high mounted wings were attached to a pair of giant swivels, allowing it to take off, land, and loiter with a modest 16° sweep (for maximum lift and minimum landing speed), cruise at high sub-sonic speeds with a 35° sweep, or sweep back to a 72.5° maximum for fast supersonic dashes at more than Mach 2. Despite its high maximum speed, its modest thrust fraction (thrust-to-weight ratio) made early versions somewhat underpowered, exacerbated by compressor stalls and other engine problems that forced a hasty redesign of the engine inlets.

Largely at Navy insistence, the F-111 had a crew of two seated side-by-side, and production versions did not have ejection seats, instead using a pressurized crew compartment that could be ejected as a self-contained escape capsule. If deployed, it blew the nose off the aircraft and descended under a 70 ft (21 m) parachute. The escape module meant that two crew could work in "shirt sleeves" without pressure suits or oxygen masks.

First flight of the F-111A, as the USAF version was designated, was 21 December 1964, and entry into service with the USAF began 18 July 1967.

The Navy version, the F-111B, was cancelled in December 1968, but the F-111 went on to serve with the USAF through the mid- 1990s, performing with distinction in the 1991 Gulf War. Although Great Britain had expressed interest in the program in 1967, the British F-111 was cancelled, and the F-111's only export customer was Australia's RAAF.

The F-111 was the first regular production variable-geometry aircraft (the earlier Navy XF10F Jaguar had been cancelled in 1953), and the first supersonic swing-wing aircraft. Despite its clear advantages, variable geometry remains a relatively unusual feature in military aircraft, due to higher cost, and the extra weight imposed by the swing wing mechanism. Nevertheless, several other types have followed, including the Soviet Sukhoi Su-17 ( 1966), MiG-23 ( 1967) and Tupolev Tu-160 bomber ( 1981), the U.S. F-14 Tomcat naval fighter ( 1970) and B-1 bomber ( 1974), the European Panavia Tornado ( 1974). Of notable interest is the Sukhoi Su-24 'Fencer' ( 1970), which bears a more than superficial resemblance to the F-111.



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