NewmanF16
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 30, 2007
- Posts
- 115
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Thud, Hun, Rhino, Warthog/Hog, Bone, Stinkbug, Mud Hen, Sparkvark, Deuce, Six, Buff, Spad, Ramptor, Viper...and I'm sure there are more. It seems most self-respecting pilots rename their jets when the official name just doesn't fit (or sucks, for that matter).
Yeah but, I'm pretty sure there hasn't been a worse "official" name than that one. - and it's always a good time using it whenever possible to give a little back to our falcon brethren (since we always have to listen to the Kadena crew chief thing I STILL hear about 25+ years later). Cheers.
Oh, so it was a crew chief now...:laugh:
I meant pilot (implied) and his CC. Can't say I know all the details (thankfully) since I think I was still in high school.
This still gets more mileage than the cross-dressing F-16 pilot of the mid-90's. I guess the 90's SNAPs are a little more accepting.
BZZZZZT!!
I've heard many a fighter pilot (usually non falcon drivers) call it the fighting falcon. As a matter of fact, no self-respecting fighter pilot should call it anything else (unless you go with the informal "lawn dart", "pork falcon" or just "porker"). Falcon's the offical AF name for the jet. You must be thinking of the pilots that call it some other name that starts with a "V". That name was made up by the early drivers who didn't like the official AF name. Kind of like giving yourself a cool callsign at your naming ceremony instead of the one you really deserve.
The maintainers point of view: Yes, and that single GE motor came out well after the PW F-100-100. Pratts response was to put a DEEC on the engine and make the -220.
Due to the crash rate of the F16's with Pratt F100-100's the USAF put the DEEC mod on them but didn't fund it for the Eagle. The Eagle community only got DEECs after a large push by the Guard community. Studies had shown the mod paid for itself after approx three years on the jet.
The difference between the design of the GE and the Pratt allows for a better thrust to weight (GE) however the Pratt is better from a MX point of view. The Pratt is assembled in three pieces (fan, cumbustor, and AB sections) while the GE is a tube opened along it's length. Should the GE suffer anything greater than small nicks on the front blades it's pulled and sent back to depot. The Pratt allows for swapping out sections and getting most of the engine back into the air quickly (good for keeping jets airborne without a large supply of extra engines).
Pratt followed with the F100-229 which is in the same thrust class as the GE-129 however it's roughly 1000lbs per engine heavier.
The pilots point of view from a guy who has never flown the GE is I would rather have the GE (more thrust, less weight). We don't pull engines, or pay for them so it's not hit from the pilots perspective.
Yes, the Eagle is underpowered by today's standards. But engines, and many other upgrades, were passed over due to the F22 (since the mid 80's).
The F16 community will probably start feeling this type of pinch as the F35 gets closer.
... I'd fly a GE F-16 across the pond anyday of the week - and if you had the chance to fly it, you would as well. Night and day compared to the -100's in the F-15C's.