Tally Ho!
Our enemies fear the F 15 Eagle because she's still like the ultimate Air Superiority fighter
Even today, a modernized Eagle is still considered a formidable
opponent, and manufacturer Boeing has proposed updated versions that
could keep the airframe flying for the better part of a century.
The F-15 traces its roots to the air war in Vietnam, and the
inauspicious showing of American Air Force and Navy fighters versus
their North Korean counterparts. Large, powerful American fighters,
designed to tackle both air-to-air and air-to-ground missions, were
performing poorly against their smaller, less powerful—but more
maneuverable—North Vietnamese counterparts. The 13:1 kill ratio American
fliers enjoyed in the Korean War dropped to an abysmal 1.5 to 1 kill
ratio in Vietnam.
Contemporary fighters, such as the F-4 Phantom, had been designed
under the assumption that the air-to-air missile had rendered dogfights
obsolete, and with them the need for superiority maneuverability and a
gun for air combat. The U.S. Air Force decided it needed a dedicated air
superiority fighter, one that combined two powerful engines, a powerful
radar, a large number of missiles and a gun. Above all, it had to be maneuverable enough to win a dogfight.
The Air Force issued a request for proposals for the new FX fighter
in 1966, and no fewer than six companies submitted competing paper
designs. No prototypes were built. The air service selected McDonnell
Douglas (now a part of Boeing) in 1969, ordering 107 full-scale
development planes.
The F-15 was a formidable aircraft. Early versions were powered by
two Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-100 afterburning turbofan engines,
producing 14,500 pounds of static thrust—23,500 with afterburners. This
gave the aircraft a thrust-to-weight ratio of greater than one, making
it so powerful that it was the first fighter to exceed the speed of
sound in vertical flight. The F-15 had so much thrust it could climb to
sixty-five thousand feet in just 122 seconds. In horizontal flight, the
F-15 could reach speeds of Mach 2.5, and cruise at speeds of Mach 0.9.
The Eagle’s AN/APG-63 nose mounted radar was the most advanced of its
day, a solid state radar with “look down/shoot down” capability and a
range of up to 200 miles. This allowed the F-15 to pick out low-flying
enemies on radar against the clutter generated by the ground. The radar
was also the first to incorporate a programmable system processor, which
allowed moderate upgrades to be done via software and not intrusive
hardware updates.
The F-15 was also designed with long range in mind. Carrying three
six-hundred-pound fuel tanks, the F-15 had a range of three thousand
miles, making it possible to fly from the continental United States to
Europe without stopping or midair refueling. This would make it possible
to quickly reinforce NATO air defenses in case of a crisis in Europe,
and later would permit the Air Force to quickly dispatch F-15s to Saudi
Arabia during Operation Desert Storm.
The F-15’s first air-to-air kill
was on June 27, when Israeli Air Force ace Moshe Melnik shot down a
Syrian Air Force MiG-21 in his F-15A. Melnik would eventually down four
aircraft from F-15As and F-15Cs, for a career total of eleven enemy fighters shot down.
Melnik’s kill was the start of a remarkable string of 104 consecutive
air-to-air victories for the F-15, with not a single Eagle lost.
The USAF bought its last F-15 in 2001, but foreign sales have kept
Boeing’s production line humming since. The company has twice in recent
years tried to again attract the interest of the Air Force, first with
the semi-stealthy Silent Eagle
in 2010. In 2016, Boeing again introduced a new F-15, Eagle 2040C.
Eagle 2040C is designed to carry up to sixteen AIM-120D AMRAAM
radar-guided missiles, more than four times the original number. The
Talon HATE datalink would allow the upgraded design to network with the
F-22 Raptor. One concept of operation would have the stealthy—but
relatively short on firepower—F-22 flying among enemy aircraft, passing
on targeting information to a Eagle 2040C acting as a flying missile
battery.
In a world still dominated by fourth-generation fighters, the F-15 is an
aging—but still formidable—fighter. The lack of sufficient numbers of
F-22 Raptors to replace the Eagle has delayed the fighter’s retirement,
and it now trains to complement the F-22 on the battlefield. The lack of
a current, viable replacement means it will be at least until the early
2030s before the remaining C and E models are retired. The F-15
airframe in all its flavors will almost certainly spend an impressive
half-century in active service— a first for a front line U.S. Air Force
fighter.
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