Tuesday, March 27, 2012

North American Mach 3 F-108: Great Aircraft Fails


See the defence media network where this came from for more stories: http://www.defensemedianetwork.com/stories/the-north-american-xf-108-rapier/

This is a great story on the forerunner to the YF-12, XB-70 triple sonic fighter and bomber and the F-14 AWG-9 Phoenix interceptor.

The North American XF-108 Rapier

A 'might have been' that wasn't, intended to intercept a threat that never was

F-108A
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Rendering of a notional U.S. Air Force F-108A interceptor. The big North American Aviation aircraft was intended to intercept Soviet bombers at long range. Artists conception by Erik Simonsen
It was going to be the biggest, fastest and most heavily armed fighter in the air. The North American F-108 Rapier, designed in response to a U.S. Air Force preliminary study of Oct. 11, 1955, was going to be the heaviest fighter of its era, weighing even more than the Soviet Union’s huge Tupolev Tu-128 “Fiddler.” It was also going to be quite numerous: the Air Defense Command (ADC) wanted 480 of them.
It was not to be. Instead of becoming the most spectacular warplane of the 1950s, the F-108 Rapier became a “might have been,” an aircraft that was never built, never flown, never tested.
“Nothing was wrong with the design,” said Richard Schmidt, an engineer who worked on the project. “It was simply the wrong time.”
North American XF-108 Rapier Mockup
A mockup of a North American XF-108 Rapier. The cancellation of the F-108 program on Sept. 23, 1959, ensured that it never went past the mockup phase. U.S. Air Force photo
The F-108 was in part a direct reaction to the appearance of the Soviet Union’sMyasishchev Mya-4 “Bison” bomber at the May 1955 Tushino air show in Moscow. The U.S. air attache telephoned Washington to report that the Soviets had enormous numbers of the new bomber. In fact, the Soviet were simply flying the same three airplanes around in circles and having them appear repeatedly over the audience. To counter this threat, ADC would need an interceptor that could travel far from U.S. cities and engage attacking bombers in the distant north.
By January 1959, North American had completed a full-scale mock-up of the F-108, which would have been capable of intercepting a bomber 1,000 miles from its target. The finished aircraft would be ready for a first flight in March 1961 and would join ADC squadrons in July 1963. The F-108 was to supplant the shorter-legged F-106 Delta Dart by operating autonomously far beyond the limits of the existing SAGE (Semi-Automatic Ground Environment) air intercept system. The F-108 would carry three big GAR-9 Falcon missiles, later called AIM-47s, on a rotary launcher in an internal weapons bay.

An AIM-47A waiting to be loaded aboard a YF-12.


The GAR-9 missile was to be powered by a Lockheed storable liquid-propellant rocket motor capable of driving the missile to hypersonic speeds of up to Mach 6 and out to a range of 115 miles. The Rapier (the popular name assigned officially on March 15, 1959) was to employ a large and complex air-to-air AN/ASG-18 radar system developed by Hughes.


The F-108 design featured a large “cranked” delta wing (the wing size and shape was redesigned several times) and two afterburning General Electric J93-GE-3AR turbojets engines, the same powerplants that would later appear on North American’s XB-70 Valkyrie bomber. The big interceptor was designed with a pilot and radar operator seated in tandem in individual ejection capsules, and was intended to have a maximum speed of Mach 3 at altitude (1980 miles per hour at 75,550 feet).
F-108 Rapier
The F-108 Rapier was the last fighter design by the iconic North American Aerospace company, later absorbed into The Boeing Company. North American photo
But the price tag of the F-108 kept going up.
More importantly, U.S. officials soon learned that the Soviets were giving top priority to intercontinental ballistic missiles – bypassing the bomber as a strategic nuclear weapon. Very belatedly, U.S. experts learned that only 34 “Bisons” were built and that they lacked true intercontinental reach; other Soviet bombers were produced in small numbers only.
Mostly because of cost and perhaps only serendipitously because the Soviets didn’t have a large bomber force, the Pentagon abruptly canceled the F-108 Rapier project on Sept. 23, 1959.
The Rapier was the last fighter design from North American, the maker of the P-51 Mustang, F-86 Sabre and other legendary air-to-air warplanes.
The work on the Rapier was not wasted. The work Hughes did on the radar was later transferred over to the Lockheed F-12 interceptor, a derivative of the SR-71 Blackbird, and when the F-12 was cancelled, the radar evolved into the AWG-9 later carried by the Grumman F-14 Tomcat. Likewise, if the F-12 had become operational, it would have used the version of the Falcon missile intended for the “might have been” F-108 Rapier, which also become the base from which the AIM-54 Phoenix was developed. The Phoenix became the Tomcat’s principle armament, and so the U.S. Navy became the principal beneficiary of the Air Force’s investment

Click here for another shot of XB-70 model with a female model


F-35 Lightning II in 2011

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