The Charlie won't out-accelerate the Rhino until you get into the transonic region...
Nope .... they removed "part" of the MK82 theoretical bomb load (love them engineers) ... i.e., only 28 Mk82's were carried. Seldom employed, too heavy for a practical attack mission. 12 x Mk82's was the standard, any given day.I'm not 100% sure, but I think I may have read somewhere that during Vietnam part or all of the A-6 main gear doors were removed to carry 30 500lb class bombs.
Its also quite strange from a civilian point of view to see the different configurations used when loading the MERs, e.g flat-4, slant-4, staggered-4 etc.
Obi
Noticed the VF-111 avatar. I remember in the mid 70's walking out to CAG "Hollywood" Peterson's VF-111's F-4 on a sunny Whidbey morning. He had flown up from Miramar to visit with my dad who was the C.O. of VA-95 at the time. You didn't see many F-4's at Whidbey and I remember thinking how cool it was walking out to that sleek plane and the smell of jet fuel..."Rhino" was what the Air Force called their F-4's.
We (USN) did not.
Nope .... they removed "part" of the MK82 theoretical bomb load (love them engineers) ... i.e., only 28 Mk82's were carried. Seldom employed, too heavy for a practical attack mission. 12 x Mk82's was the standard, any given day.
The "variation" in MER loading was usually a reflection of how many and what types of bombs/other stores were being carried at any one time.