Posted on 01/17/2015 5:58:44 AM PST by Zhang Fei
(IraqiNews.com) On Thursday, a local source in Nineveh province said, that the Wild Boar aircraft which belongs to the U.S. Air Force has carried out four air strikes that killed and wounded dozens of ISIS elements, adding that the aircraft sparked panic in the ranks of ISIS.
The source said in an interview for IraqiNews.com, The U.S. aircraft A-10 Warthog (Wild Boar) carried out, at dawn today, four air strikes on gatherings of ISIS elements in the village of Sultan Abdullah in Makhmour district, southeast Mosul, adding that, The raids resulted in the death and injury of dozens of ISIS elements.
Surprised it hasn’t been pulled off of ISIS killing duty yet. Wouldn’t want to offend them and deny them the chance of their 72 helen thomas’s by being killed by a flying pig. /s
Living near an air force target base, I have watched the A-10 in action and believe it to be the best weapon for the task assigned. Kill ISIS!
For the A-10, during civilian airshows, pyrotechnics are placed on the ground to simulate impacts.
Bottom line, no blanks were ever fired from the A-10, no A-10 30MM blank rounds were ever manufactured and the A-10 does not and has never had an on-board smoke dispenser.
Certainly is! Heck of a jet.
LRS bombers are decades away and the use of âdronesâ is far off as well. Heck, we can’t even deploy a unmanned tank operating on a battlefield that is basically at 1-G, fore-and-aft, and around 20kts or so. . .imagine the difficulties of an RPV that is able to operate effectively in a 360 dimensional environment at near-sonic to supersonic speeds. . .and maintaining total situational awareness while employing ordnance and defending against threats. Enders Game-type of technology is necessary, IMHO.
I am far from an expert on the A-10, but this leaves me with something of an enigma.
Yes, has me scratching my head as well.
The hog with the tails of the B-25.
Or Willy Pete.
I was flying the in a military MOA in my civilian aircraft once where they do A-10 training back in Louisiana before they shut down England Air Force Base in Alexandria. I noticed an A-10 about 300 meters off my right wingtip and then looked left and their was another one. This was in dual use airspace both civilian and military. They were at the same speed as I, only 120 knots. They can get slow. I assume control was play “vectors to the bad guy” and I was the designated bad guy. I waggled my wings and both did the same and peeled off 90 degrees. It was a good day.
Yup. A-10s can get very slow based on load-out and fuel.
Fun to intercept civilian aircraft in the MOA. Both have a right to be there but always fun to sneak up anyway. . .especially if ATC calls out traffic in the MOA and the aircraft is not talking with ATC (for deconfliction). . .and ATC calls out traffic: “Type and altitude unverified, please confirm”. . .means fun times!
Once in pilot training out of Laughlin AFB, Del Rio, TX, I was a student on a solo flight in a T-38. ATC calls out traffic in the MOA (”Type and altitude unverified, please confirm”), so, apparently ATC forgot I was a student and therefore had no judgment. . .so off I went to intercept the guy. I saw him, C-172, just tooling along not talking to ATC. . .so I did a high to low conversion to his stern and throttled back to idle, deployed the speed brakes and got as slow as I could (clean with no flaps), about 220kts when I zipped by him. . .as I passed abeam of him I looked over at him (he wearing a baseball cap, holding a thermos up to his lips), hit the burner and did a climbing barrel roll. . .and called ATC and verified his type and altitude.
That was fun.
Pentagon To Scrap Warplane Islamic State Fears Most
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3250845/posts
As someone else around here has already said, muslims don’t like warthogs.
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