Posted on 08/27/2004 2:25:34 PM PDT by swilhelm73
ONBOARD USS JOHN C. STENNIS, Sasebo, Japan The U.S. Navys meanest, fastest and most agile fighter jet, nearing retirement, is deployed in the western Pacific Ocean for the last time.
The Grumman F-14, which entered military service in 1972, also is a movie star. At least for aviation aficionados, it upstaged actors including Tom Cruise in the film Top Gun.
Pilots flying the F-14s are from Fighter Squadron Three One, or VF-31, from Virginia Beach, Va. The VF-31 Tomcatters, also known as the Felix the Cat squadron, now are embarked on the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis.
The ship and squadron already have taken part in Summer Pulse 04 and Rim of the Pacific 04. They left Sasebo Wednesday for PASEX, an upcoming communications exercise with other nations in the region, said Stennis spokesman Lt. Corey Barker.
After this summer, the Tomcatters are to deploy once more from the U.S. East Coast, then head to the great aircraft retirement home in the desert, Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Tucson, Ariz.
Its still the best fighter jet in the world, said Lt. Andrew McLean, a VF-31 Tomcatter with three years experience at the F-14 controls. It was built during the Cold War when the Soviet Union was our major military threat. Its one of the last aircraft built intended to have overwhelming force, and they built these jets without cutting edges the best engines were put in them, the best radar, the best missiles It was designed for fleet defense, and did its job well, the pilot said.
The squadrons jets sport logos depicting Felix the Cat holding a bomb with a lit fuse. The unit has flown F-14s for 24 years, including the current version, the F-14D Super Tomcat.
Cmdr. Aaron Cudnohufsky, squadron commanding officer, said the Tomcat rightfully has become an American legend and not just because of the film.
I like to compare the F-14 to a Harley-Davidson, Cudnohufsky said. There are a lot of airplanes out there. But none have the beauty and grace of the Tomcat. Every time I am in the aircraft, I am in awe. It looks fast just sitting there.
The Tomcatters command master chief, Master Chief Petty Officer Tom Gall, called being part of a Tomcat squadron an honor. Even after 25 years in the Navy, he said, the planes aesthetics still leave him awestruck.
The Tomcat just looks sharp, Gall said. Its mesmerizing to watch it fly. Especially as it sweeps its wings back and goes in for the kill. Im quite certain that many people will miss it when it is gone.
Throughout its long career, the F-14 has performed many different missions, Gall said, making it a true workhorse of naval aviation ... air supremacy, or dog fighting, to reconnaissance and putting bombs on target.
The Navy has moved to the F/A-18 Super Hornet, more a multipurpose jet praised for its versatility, rather than the F-14s pure speed and maneuverability in a dogfight.
Today, were all seeking to do more with less, so with the new jets, there are some compromises, said McLean, whose pilot call sign is Lick. They are still great, but the F-14s were built as fighters and they were the best fighters.
The pilot said eventually VF-31 would transform into a squadron of F/A-18s, airplanes hes had the opportunity to fly.
The F-14, he said, is more like what you think of as a muscle car ... they have this sort of aura about them ... the F-14s are like that.
With the Super Hornets, you kind of get that new car smell, like with a new Mercedes. Its got power, but not overwhelming power, and has a lot of the luxury items and amenities, he added.
And the F-14s, being older, tend to take more maintenance. Youll have Super Hornet guys working 9-to-5 shifts, when our guys are regularly working 12-hour shifts and longer just to keep the Tomcats working at top level, he said. But when both planes are up and running at the top of their game, theres a lot of things the Super Hornet just cant replace that the Tomcat can do.
McLean said many lessons learned flying the F-14s Ill be able to take with me when I begin flying the Super Hornet.
Having worked almost exclusively on the F-14s for 16 years, Chief Petty Officer Scott Hadley, an aviation structural mechanic, said he believes retiring the storied jets, even if theyre showing their age, is the worst thing they could do in naval aviation. Absolutely.
From the Tomcatters Ready Room aboard the Stennis, he said, Theres nothing out there that can match it right now as far as capability plus, its truly a gorgeous aircraft.
But Hadley also admitted the jets are aging. Theyre getting crippled, and its hard to get parts.
Still, the F-14D Super Tomcats that the squadrons pilots fly go faster than Mach 2. Theyre still the fastest fighter jet on the carrier.
A Super Hornet cant even get close to us, Hadley said. Not only is it effective, its just gorgeous; its artwork. So we carry that pride.
bttt
If we are talking about beauty, it's got to go to the bombers:
In this order,
XB-70
B-1B
B-58
***
I'M WITH YOU ON THE BOMBERS, but...
You're wrong about all 3. The B-52 is the coolest looking plane ever built -- especially the D model in its Vietnam camouflage.
http://www.stratofortress.org/images/Source/strto2.jpg
Or check out this H model about to crash by some idiot pilot who was convinced he could whip it around like a Tomcat(second photo down)...
http://www.stratofortress.org/b52hpics.htm
So why is it going if it is still the BEST???
I remember as a kid reading how the F-4 was no match for the Soviets etc. & then feeling glee when it was reported that the F-14, F-15, F-16 got approved, went into production & succeeded.
Good old 463....I know a pilot who nailed a MiG flying that specific aircraft with the 432nd TRW out of Udorn in 1972. Steve Ritchie and Chuck DeBellevue (DeBellevue: 6 kills, navigator/WSO, highest scoring American ace of Vietnam....and someone needs to remind people that Lt. (j.g.) Bill Driscoll made ace as Randy Cunningham's RIO on 10 May 1972. Pisses me off that the GIBs get ignored) scored some of their kills in that bird. 463 had 6 MiGs to her credit when she was retired. I just wish I knew what became of her....probably torn up for scrap and made into a refrigerator, like the "Memphis Belle" almost was.....
Your hubby is gonna' be an airedale? Give him my Congrats!
Just out of curiosity, are you one of those folks who got his ass handed to him by a genius in an F-5?
Standard RIO/WSO chatter during your average fight:
"Airspeed 400, shoot him! Airspeed 290, will you shoot him?!? Lock him up! Shoot the bastard!"
After the fight:
"You are so lucky to have me."
Just one(and sadly the last one) in a long line of great Grumman "Cat" Carrier fighter
F4F Wildcat
F6F Hellcat
F7F Tigercat
F8F Bearcat
F9F Panther (early straight wing)
F9F Cougar (later sweep wing)
F10F Jaguar
F11F Tiger
F14 Tomcat
Thanks for the ping. F-14s left here here last year, replaced by Super Hornets.
Think I can get a good deal on one??
BTW, I rode a 777 out to Kalifornia last week ... you still got that gig?
I just found it really amusing that a 2-man fighter and a 10-man bomber were the exact same size!!!
Shame on you.
O I dont know here is a pretty aircraft of the late 50's early 60's that never got built the mach 3+ North American F108 Rapier
this is also the original aircraft the Phoenix missile system and radar was designed for (that latter went in the Tomcat)
Now THAT was one mean looking fighter. I would have loved to see it get built too.
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