McDonnell Douglas F-4F Phantom II

McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II

PaysGermany
TypeChasseur intercepteur d’avions supersoniques à longue portée/chasseur-bombardier
Premier volLe 27 mai 1958
Construit5195

Galerie de photos d’un McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II, The McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II est un chasseur/chasseur-bombardier supersonique biplace, bimoteur, tous temps et à longue portée, développé à l’origine pour la Marine américaine par McDonnell Aircraft.

Source: McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II sur Wiki

McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II
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McDonnell F-4S Phantom Walk Around
PhotographeBill Maloney
LocalisationMusée de l’air MAPS
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McDonnell Douglas F-4C Phantom II Walk Around
PhotographeVladimir Yakubov
LocalisationMusée du vol, Seattle
Photos102
McDonnell Douglas F-4F Phantom II Walk Around
PhotographeBurhand Donke
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Voir aussi :

Seconde Guerre mondiale : l’histoire visuelle définitive de la Blitzkrieg à la bombe atomique (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Carte par carte de la Seconde Guerre mondiale (carte par carte de l’histoire du Danemark) - Amazon


A Brick with Engines

Lla F-4 Phantom II is the ultimate example of Cold War engineering: a massive, twin-engine beast that proved if you put enough thrust behind a brick, it will fly—and it will fly at Mach 2. Originally designed for the Navy, it was so capable that it was adopted by the Air Force and Marines, becoming the only aircraft flown concurrently by both the Blue Angels and the Thunderbirds. It held 15 world records, including absolute speed and altitude. Though it famously lacked a gun in its early versions (a mistake corrected in the F-4E), it dominated the skies over Vietnam and remained a frontline icon for over three decades.

Attribute Technical Specification (F-4E Phantom II)
Rôle All-Weather Interceptor / Fighter-Bomber
Crew 2 (Pilot and Weapon Systems Officer / RIO)
Moteur 2 × General Electric J79-GE-17A afterburning turbojets
Vitesse maximale Mach 2.23 (2,370 km/h / 1,470 mph) at 40,000 ft
Combat Radius 680 km (422 miles)
Armement principal 1 × 20 mm M61A1 Vulcan Gatling cannon (640 rounds)
Artillerie Up to 8,400 kg (18,650 lbs) on 9 external hardpoints
Total Produced 5,195 aircraft

Design Engineering: Aerodynamic Quirkiness

  • Lla « Bent » Look: Wind tunnel tests showed the Phantom was unstable. Instead of redesigning the whole plane, engineers simply angled the outer wing panels up 12 degrees (dihedral) and the tailplanes down 23 degrees (anhedral). This « bent » appearance gave the F-4 its unmistakable silhouette and its « Double Ugly » nickname.
  • Boundary Layer Control: To help this heavy jet land on carriers at safe speeds, the F-4 used « blown flaps. » High-pressure air from the engines was blown over the flaps to keep the airflow attached at high angles of attack, preventing stalls during the « trap. »
  • Variable Intakes: The massive air intakes use movable ramps to slow supersonic air to subsonic speeds before it hits the engine. This allowed the F-4 to maintain engine efficiency from sea level all the way up to its Mach 2.2 top speed.
  • The Smoke Trail: The J79 engines were legendary for their power but also for their thick, black smoke trails. Enemy pilots in Vietnam could often spot a Phantom from miles away just by looking for the « two pillars of soot » in the sky.

Operational History: The MiG-Killer and the Wild Weasel

  • Lla « Gunless » Controversy: Early Phantoms relied entirely on Sparrow and Sidewinder missiles. When these proved unreliable in the turning dogfights of Vietnam, pilots demanded a gun. The F-4E finally integrated the Vulcan cannon internally, making it the definitive « Gunfighter. »
  • The Wild Weasels: The specialized F-4G variant was the king of « Electronic Warfare. » Its job was to intentionally let North Vietnamese or Iraqi radars lock onto it, then follow that radar beam back to the source with a Shrike or HARM missile. « First In, Last Out » was their motto.
  • Global Workhorse: Beyond the US, the Phantom was the backbone of air forces in Israel, Iran, Germany, Japan, and Turkey. In the 1973 Yom Kippur War, Israeli Phantoms (called Kurnass Ou « Sledgehammer ») performed desperate, hero-making strikes against armored columns.
  • The Record Setter: In 1959, an F-4 set a world altitude record of 98,557 feet. The pilot had to shut down the engines at the top of the arc and glide back down until the air was thick enough to restart them.

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