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F-35C in Catapult Hookup Tests

scoolbubba

Brett327 gargles ballsacks
pilot
Contributor
Was the Navy's decision to go with the A-12 over the A-6F a place where we may have learned our lesson that good enough right now is better than perfect never? (Rhino out of the Hornet)

Have we forgotten that already with the Rhino vs JSF debacle we find ourselves in?
 

flaps

happy to be here
None
Contributor
good input. especially now when the country is broke. i would guess there is still a lot of growth potential in the hornets.
a lot of hornets with 'limited' capability might well be better than a few jsf's with unproven capability and cost/maintainability.
..
i do remember reading that the a6f was basically intended to be a test bed for the a12 weapon system.
 

bert

Enjoying the real world
pilot
Contributor
A little long, a little old, and a little off-topic, but this thread reminded me I had saved this:

The U.S. Navy answers the question: "Why did the chicken cross the road?"

Naval Education and Training Command (NAVEDTRA): The purpose is to familiarize the chicken with road-crossing procedures. Road-crossing should be performed only between the hours of sunset and sunrise. Solo chickens must have at least three miles of visibility and a safety observer.

Bureau of Naval Personnel (BUPERS): Due to the needs of the Navy, chicken was involuntarily reassigned to the other side of the road. This will be 3-year unaccompanied tour and we promise to give the chicken a good-deal assignment afterwards. Every chicken will be required to do one road-crossing during its career, and this will not affect its opportunities for future promotion.

Naval Air Warfare Center (NAWC): This event will need confirmation; we need to repeat it using varied chicken breeds, road types, and weather conditions to confirm whether it can actually happen within the parameters specified for chickens and the remote possibility that they might cross thruways designated by some as "roads."

Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Naval Forces, Europe (CINCUSNAVEUR): The purpose is not important. What is important is that the chicken remained under the OPCON of COMSIXTHFLEET and did not CHOP to the theater on the other side of the road. Without Chopping, the chicken was able to achieve a seamless road-crossing with near perfect, real-time in-transit visibility.

Naval Intelligence: What chicken?

Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIRSYSCOM): The chicken was instructed to hold short of the road. This road incursion incident was reported in a Hazardous Chicken Road-Crossing Report (HCRCR). Please re-emphasize that chickens are required to read back all hold short instructions.

Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWARSYSCOM): The "stovepipe" chickens of today will be replaced with a multi-function, supported, affordable, integrated and interoperable world-class chicken to warriors and supporting elements, enabling them to dominate the roads of today and tomorrow, as we move "Forward...From the Sea." Comptroller holds and corporate taxes, however, will require delay fielding for two years, unless Congressional plus-ups are approved.

NAVSEASYSCOM's Chicken Systems Program Office (PMS400CSPO): In a partnering relationship with the client, helped the chicken by rethinking its physical distribution strategy and implementation processes. The CSPO helped the chicken change to continue meeting its mission. However, the actual crossing of the road has not occurred due to the number of action items still open from the meeting.
 

A4sForever

BTDT OLD GUY
pilot
Contributor
....i do remember reading that the a6f was basically intended to be a test bed for the a12 weapon system.
That's a big negatory ... don't tell that to the guys who FLEW (and R&D'd) the most beautiful attack bird ever to hit the fleet ... and don't tell Grumman, either. :)
 

picklesuit

Dirty Hinge
pilot
Contributor
Man, the pitch on that engine is different. Maybe just my crappy headphones, but it sounds like an 18 engine with a little S-3 whine to it...anyone actually heard this thing in person?
 

squorch2

he will die without safety brief
pilot
Heard a rumor about needing triple hearing protection on the flight deck for F-35 ops - plugs, muffs and noise canceling.
 

Pags

N/A
pilot
Man, the pitch on that engine is different. Maybe just my crappy headphones, but it sounds like an 18 engine with a little S-3 whine to it...anyone actually heard this thing in person?
Flies over my house all the time. Doesn't seem to be that much louder than a Super Hornet.
 

BigIron

Remotely piloted
pilot
Super Moderator
Contributor
I work over by the runway in Pax. It's a loud bitch when it's hovering.
 
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