Thursday, October 24, 2019
F -14 Tomcat :: essays research papers
   F-14 TOMCAT        Wing span: 64 feet unswept; 38 feet swept    Length: 62 feet 7 inches    Height: 16 feet    Weight: Empty: 40,104 pounds     Maximum take-off: 74,348 pounds    Speed: Maximum: 1,544 mph    Cruise: 576 mph    Ceiling: More than 56,000 feet    Power plant: Two Pratt and Whitney TF-30-P412A turbofan engines with    afterburners; F-14B and F-14D: F-110-GE-400 augmented turbofan engines    with afterburner    Crew: two    Contractor: Grumman Aerospace    F-14 Tomcat, sleek, powerful, deadly, and the real star of the movie Top    Gun. The F-14 Tomcat followed a history of "Cats" in the military. The F-4F    Wildcat and the F-6F Hellcat that fought in the skies years before the    Tomcat ever bit the air. In the late 1960's, the U.S Navy decided to decided    to focus on an aircraft dedicated to fleet defense. Grumman had already    begun developing the F-14, and was definitely headed for a "Cat"    designation. The person responsible for this project was Admiral Tom    Conolly, Deputy Chief, Naval Operations for Air. The aircraft was dubbed    "Tom's Cat" long before the official name of "Tomcat" was ever adopted.    (novia.net, 1999)    Overall, the Navy's Grumman F-14 Tomcat is without equal among    today's Free World fighters. Six long-range AIM-54A Phoenix missiles can be    guided against six separate threat aircraft at long range by the F-14's AWG-9    weapons control system. For medium-range combat, Sparrow missiles are    carried; Sidewinders and a 20mm are available for dogfighting. In the latter    role, the Tomcat's variable-sweep wings give the F-14 a combat maneuvering    capability that could not have been achieved with a "standard" fixed    planform wing. (history.navy, 1999)    In full forward-sweep position,the wings provided the lift needed for    slow-speed flight, especially needed during carrier landings. In swept-back    positions, the wings blend into the aircraft, giving the F-14 Tomcat a    dart-like silhouette for high-speed, super-sonic flight (using Pratt & Whitney    TF30-P-412A Turbofans). (novia.net. 1999)     By 1972, the first of the F-14 Tomcat's off the production line were    sent to the US . In October of 1972, two squadrons were formed with the    F-14 Tomcat to begin flight operations. (novia.net, 1999) All in all,    fourteen aircraft were used for the development program. The fully    proven F-14 was introduced to the fleet only 51 month after contract    award! (Anft, 1998)     The F-14 Tomcat was designed to carry a million dollar missile, the    Phoenix . The AIM-54 Phoenix has a range of over 100 miles and sole    purpose was to destroy Soviet bombers. The F-14 Tomcat program came    down to a test at the Naval Missile Test Center at Point Mugu, CA in    November, 1973. The Pentagon wanted an aircraft that could take on six    different targets at once, and on that day in November, the Tomcat    					    
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