Republic F-105 Thunderchief

In 1951 Republic began private venture develop¬ment of a single seat tactical fighter bomber which the company anticipated would be a successor to the F 84F Thunderstreak. The F-105 Thunderchief, or company model AP-63. Alexander Kartveli’s design team originally intended a straight fuselage for the craft but, after seeing NACA data assembled by Richard Whitcomb, was won over by the wasp-waist or ‘area rule’ configuration which enhanced transonic flight performance. At first intended for the Allison J71 engine and powered in prototype form by the Pratt & Whitney J57, the F-105 attained its successes with the 7802kg thrust Pratt & Whitney J75-P-19W turbojet which provided 11113kg thrust with afterburning. Its mid-mounted wing, swept 60 degrees, and the F-105 stood high on its tricycle gear.

Republic F-105 Thunderchief Article

Development began when two J57-powered YF-105As commenced flying 22 October 1955, soon followed by 15 aircraft designated JF-105B and F-105B for test programmes.

The two 1955 YF-105A, 54-0098 and 54-0099, were service testers with 15000 lb P&W J57 engines. The first flew on 22 October 1955, piloted by Russell M Roth.

Republic YF-105A 54-0098

The F-105A was not built in favour of the F-105B. Three RF-105A photo-recon version were built in 1956.

F-105B

Production F-105Bs, long delayed by development problems, began to roll from Republic’s Farmingdale line during 1958 and the USAF accepted its first machine on 27 May 1958. The 335th Tactical Fighter Squadron, temporarily moved to Eglin AFB, Florida, began to work up in the new aircraft only to find that, given its complexity and production slippages, it would not become operational until 1960. Meanwhile, a two-seat strike variant, the F-105C, had reached the mock-up stage but was not built.

December 1960

Though technical problems persisted and critics were calling the ‘Thud’ a maintenance nightmare, Republic proceeded with the F-105D variant which afforded true, all-weather capability by introducing General Electric FC-5 fully integrated automatic flight fire-control system.

The F-105 has mid-set sweptback wings, sweptback tail surfaces, and a one-piece all-moving tailplane mounted low on the fuselage and with a ventral stabilising fin. The ailerons are used only at low speeds and the main roll control is by five section spoilers forward of the large slotted flaps on each wing. The leading edge is variable-camber. ‘Clover-leaf’ air brake is around the exhaust nozzle. Each undercarriage leg has a single wheel, the mains retracting into the wings and nose wheel retracting forward.

The F 105D was powered by a Pratt & Whitney J75 P 19W turbojet engine that develops 26,500 lb thrust (with after¬burning). The F-105D’s fuselage was lengthened by 0.381m. Some 610 were manufactured, and first flight took place at Farmingdale 9 June 1959. The F-105D model soon equipped all three squadrons of the 4th Tactical Fighter Wing at Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina. United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE) were the first overseas recipient of the F-105D, the 36th TFW at Bitburg AB, West Germany re-equipping from 12 May 1961 and the 49th TFW at Spangdahlem soon following. In the early 1960s, with a war growing in Asia, F-105Ds joined the 18th TFW at Kadena AFB, Okinawa.

F-105D

The F-105D was by now a proven ordnance-carrier. More than 14,000 lb (6,350 kg) of weapons can be carried on under fuselage/wing stations. An internal weapons bay was also provided, and both conventional and nuclear weapons can be deployed. With multiple ejector racks (MER), it could carry an impressive load of external fuel, ECM gear, and eight 340kg bombs on long-range missions. The F-105D could also operate with the Martin AGM-12 Bullpup air-to-surface missile, which was to prove remarkably ineffective against ‘hard’ targets in Vietnam and would be observed bouncing off the Thanh Hoa Bridge. In addition, the F-105D model could carry 70mm rocket pods, napalm canisters and the AIM-9 infra-red (IR) air-to-air missiles, while its integral M61A1 Gatling-type 20-mm cannon proved invaluable in the dual roles of air-to-air combat and air-to-ground strafing. A late-model variant of the F-105D was the F-105D T-Stick II fitted with additional avionics which bestowed all-weather bombing capability, housed in a prominent dorsal fairing extending along the spine of the fuselage to the tail.

The F-105E was another two-seat variant that was not developed.

In May 1962 Republic proceeded with the tandem two seat F-105F. The first aircraft of this type (62 4412), which made its first flight 11 June 1963, was some 900kg heavier as well as slightly longer than earlier Thunderchiefs in order to accommodate the second crewman in tandem. The second F 105F, which flew for the first time on July 25 1963, flew thirty seven demonstration flights from Andrews AFB on August 18th, turn¬around being consistently completed within twenty minutes. The performance of the two seat F 105F is within 3% of the single-seat F-105D.

The two seat F 105G, developed from the F 105F combat/trainer version, carries advanced ‘Wild Weasel’ equipment to detect emissions from enemy radar sites, controlling surface-¬to air missiles, and missiles which can destroy the sites.

143 F-105Fs were delivered and 61 were later reconfigured for the electronic warfare or ‘Wild Weasel’ role in Vietnam, at first under their original designation and later as the F-105G.

After cancelling all airshows for two big summer months the Airforce Thunderbirds reverted back into F-100s in August 1965 to complete the season. They had started in Republic F-105s but a series of accidents throughout the Air Force grounded all Thunderchiefs.

Thunderbird F-105s

The F-105D, F-105F and F-105G all fought in North Vietnamese skies, the F-104D model fighter-bomber so extensively that over half of the 610 built eventually fell to Hanoi’s air defences. After withdrawal from South East Asia in 1969-70, the Thunderchief soldiered on in Reserve and Air National Guard units, eventually flying its final sortie in 1984. At one time no fewer than 14 USAF and 11 ANG squadrons operated the type, which was built to the extent of 833 examples. Perhaps because of its complexity, no F-105 was ever exported.

Republic F-105 Experiences

Gallery

F-105B
Engine: 1 x Pratt & Whitney J75-P-5, 25,000 lb
No built: 75

F-105D
Engine: 1 x Pratt & Whitney J75-P-19W, 76.5kN / 26,500 lb reheat
Wingspan: 10.59 m / 35 ft 9 in
Wing area: 35.77 sq.m / 385.02 sq ft
Length: 19.61 m / 64 ft 4 in
Height: 5.97 m / 20 ft 7 in
Max take-off weight: 23967 kg / 52838 lb
Empty weight: 12474 kg / 27501 lb
Fuel capacity: 1000 Imp.Gal
Aux fuel weapons bay: 290 Imp.Gal
Underwing & fuselage fuel: 3 x 375 Imp.Gal
Max. speed: 1208 kt / 2237 km/h / 1420 mph / M2.15 at 36,000 ft
Cruising speed: 508 kt / 940 km/h
Ceiling: 12560 m / 41200 ft
ROC: 34,500 fpm
Range w/max.fuel: 3846 km / 2390 miles
Crew: 1
Armament: 1 x 20mm cannon, M61 Vulcan/1029rds, 6350kg of weapons
Hardpoints: 6
Inflight refuel: yes

Republic F-105 Thunderchief

Republic P-47 Thunderbolt

P-47D Thunderbolt

The P-43 Lancer design developed further into the P-47 Thunderbolt for USAAF. Designed by Alexander Kartveli, to provide ground clearance for the 12′ four-blade prop, the unique telescoping landing gear was 9″ shorter when retracted. First flew in its XP-47B prototype form on 6 May 1941.

Republic P-47 Thunderbolt Article

Eglin Field testing effects of machine gun and cannon on P-47

The first P-47B production delivery was on 18 March 1942.

The P-47C had a mach .73 (556 mph) terminal dive and a .69 (525 mph) red-line.

A dorsal fin was added to compensate for the loss of aft keel surface and introduced on P 47D 27 RE and subsequent batches. P-47D had a mach .72 (550 mph) red-line dive speed and rolled 91 d/s @ 300 mph

XP-47H

In 1943, two P-47D-15-RE airframes (serials 42-23297/23298) were selected for testing with the new experimental 2300 hp Chrysler XIV-2220-1 sixteen-cylinder inverted Vee liquid-cooled engine. These aircraft were redesignated XP-47H. The liquid-cooled Chrysler engine with its large under-fuselage radiator radically changed the appearance of the Thunderbolt, and increased overall length to 39 feet 2 inches. With the increased power and improved streamlining, a maximum speed of 490 mph was anticipated.

North American P-51 Mustang & Republic P-47 Thunderbolt Article

Although the project was begun in August 1943, the two P-47D-15-RE airframes were not actually converted until 1945. Test flights began on July 26, 1945. One of the XP-47Hs actually attained a speed of 490 mph in level flight. The Chrysler engine failed to deliver the promised power output, and the maximum speed attained during tests was only 414 mph at 30,000 feet, poorer performance than the “stock” P-47D. In any case, the Chrysler XIV-2220 engine never achieved production and the advent of jet propulsion killed any further USAAF interest in the development of even faster piston-engined fighters. Consequently, no further work was undertaken on the XP-47H project.

The XP-47J differed from other Thunderbolts in its engine, being powered by a ‘C’ series Double Wasp or Pratt & Whitney R-2800-57 driving a four-blade 13-ft Curtiss Electric propeller —employed after a plan to try out a contra-rotating propeller was dropped. But the XP-47J also had a distinctive cowling shape with an engine-cooling fan below and set back from the propeller hub. And there were other differences from standard Thunderbolts, some trivial: the six .50-calibre guns with 267 rounds per gun protruded from the wing leading edge in a different manner from those of other P-47s. The XP-47J was first flown on August 2, 1944 at the manufacturer’s Long Island, New York, facility and subsequently evaluated at Wright Field, Ohio. Apart from its remarkable high speed, the XP-47J could climb at 4,705 ft/min, reached a speed of 811kph, and the service ceiling was 45,000ft. Maximum range was 1,070 miles at 10,000ft. The XP-47J did not enter production.

XP 47J

P-47M had a P&W R2800-56.

Modified with longer, stronger wings, the P 47N could carry addi¬tional fuel for long distances flown in the Pacific War. Some 1,816 of this last production version were built. The P-47N dove to mach .83 (632 mph)

XP-47N Thunderbolt

Production began at Republic’s plant in Farmingdale, though others were also built at a Republic factory in Evansville, Indiana, and by Curtiss Wright in Buffalo, New York. A total of 15,863 built, of which 15,329 were built during Second World War. They were priced at $83,000+ Production was at Farmingdale (suffix -RE) and Evansville IN (suffix -RA), as well as subcontract to Curtiss for P-47G.

During WW2, Thunderbolt’s ratio of aerial combat victories to losses was 4.6:1 in downing 2,752 enemy aircraft, besides destroying 3,315 more on the ground. Official records also credit P-47 with some 9,000 locomotives and 86,000 railroad cars, 6,000 armored vehicles and tanks, and 68,000 trucks.

P-47 Described Pt1

Gallery

P-47B
Engine: Pratt & Whitney R-2800-21 Double Wasp, 2000 hp
Wingspan: 40 ft 9.25 in / 12.4 m
Length: 34 ft 10 in
Height: 12 ft 8 in
Empty weight: 9010 lb / 4087 kg
MAUW: 12,700 lb / 5760 kg
Max speed: 412 mph
ROC: 2800 fpm / 855 m/min
Service ceiling: 38,000 ft
Range int/fuel: 575 mi
Armament: 8 x 0.5in Colt-Browning 267, 350 or 425 rds each

P-47C
Engine: Pratt & Whitney R-2800-59 Double Wasp, 2300 hp
Wingspan: 40 ft 9.25 in / 12.4 m
Length: 36 ft 1.25 in / 11.03 m
Height: 14 ft 2 in / 4.03 m
MAUW: 14,925 lb
Max speed: 433 mph
ROC: 2800 fpm / 855 m/min
Service ceiling: 42-43,000 ft / 13,000 m
Armament: 8 x 0.5in Colt-Browning 267, 350 or 425 rds each

P-47D
Engine: Pratt & Whitney R-2800-59 Double Wasp, 2300 hp (most)
Wingspan: 40 ft 9.25 in / 12.4 m
Length: 36 ft 1.25 in / 11.03 m
Height: 14 ft 2 in / 4.03 m
Empty weight: 10,700 lb / 4853 kg
MAUW: 19,400 lb / 8800 kg
Max speed: 428 mph / 690 kph
ROC: 2800 fpm / 855 m/min
Service ceiling: 42-43,000 ft / 13,000 m
Range int/fuel: 1000 mi / 1600 km
Max range ext/fuel: 1900 mi / 3060 km
Armament: 8 x 0.5in Colt-Browning 267, 350 or 425 rds each
Hardpoints: 3-5
Bombload: 2500 lb / 1134 kg

P-47D
Engine: 1 x Pratt & Whitney R-2800-59W Double Wasp, 1890kW / 2800 hp
Propeller: Hamilton Standard 24E50, 6507 A. O.
Wingspan: 12.43 m / 41 ft 9 in
Wing area: 27.87 sq.m / 299.99 sq ft
Length: 11.02 m / 36 ft 2 in
Height: 14 ft 2 in
Empty weight: 4513 kg / 9950 lb
Max take-off weight: 7938 kg / 17500 lb
Fuel capacity: 308 Imp.Gal
Max. speed: 697 km/h / 433 mph at 25,000 ft
Max ROC: 7280 fpm
Ceiling: 12495 m / 41000 ft
Range: 950 mile
Range w/max.fuel: 3058 km / 1900 miles
Crew: 1
Armament: 6 x 12.7mm machine-guns, 1134kg of weapons
External load: 2500 lb

Republic P-47D-28-RA
Engine; 1 x 2,430 h.p. Pratt & Whitney R-2800-59 radial
Prop; 13ft-diameter Curtiss Electric C5425-AI14
Wingspan; 40ft 9.5in
Length; 36ft 1.75in
Height; 14ft 0in
Wing area; 300 sq.ft
Empty weight; 10,0001b
Gross weight; 14,5001b
Maximum weight; 17,5001b
Maximum speed; 423 m.p.h. at 30,000ft
Landing speed; 105 m.p.h.
Climb to 15,000ft; 6.2min
Climb to 20,000ft; 8.5min
Climb to 25,000ft; 11 min
Climb to 30,000ft ; 14min
Service ceiling; 42,000ft
Maximum range; 1,030 miles at 10,000ft (5.3hr)
Normal range; 590 miles at 25,000ft
Armament; 6 or 8 x 0.50in machine guns 267-425 rounds per gun
Maximum bomb load; 2,5001b
Number built 1,028 P-47D-28-RA at Evansville, Indiana, USA

P-47G
Engine: R2800, 2300 hp
Max speed: 433 mph @ 30,000ft
Service ceiling: 40,000 ft.

P-47M
Engine: Pratt & Whitney R-2800-55 or -77 Double Wasp, 2800 hp
Wingspan: 40 ft 9.25 in / 12.4 m
Length: 36 ft 1.25 in / 11.03 m
Height: 14 ft 8 in
MAUW: 14,700 lb
Max speed: 470 mph
ROC: 2800 fpm / 855 m/min
Service ceiling: 42-43,000 ft / 13,000 m
Armament: 6 x 0.5in Colt-Browning mg

P-47N
Engine: Pratt & Whitney R-2800-55 or -77 Double Wasp, 2800 hp
Wingspan: 40 ft 9.25 in / 12.4 m
Wing area: 321.951 sq.ft / 29.91 sq.m
Length: 36 ft 1.25 in / 11.03 m
Height: 14 ft 8 in
Weight empty: 11003.0 lb / 4990.0 kg
MAUW: 21,200 lb / 9616 kg
Internal fuel: 594 Imp.Gal
Wing load: 67.45 lb/sq.ft / 329.0 kg/sq.m
Max speed: 467 mph / 751 kph / 406 kt
Cruising speed: 261 kt / 483 km/h
ROC: 2800 fpm / 855 m/min
Service ceiling: 42-43,000 ft / 13,000 m
Max range ext/fuel: 2350 mi / 3800 km
Armament: 8 x 0.5in Colt-Browning 267, 350 or 425 rds each
Hardpoints: 3-5
Bombload: 2500 lb / 1134 kg
Crew: 1

XP-47H
Engine: Chrysler.

XP-47J
Max speed: 504 mph
ROC: 4705 fpm
Service ceiling: 45,000 ft
Max range: 1070 miles

Republic P-47 Thunderbolt

Republic F-84 Thunderjet / Thunderstreak / RF-84 Thunderflash

Republic F-84B Thunderjet

The first prototype Republic XP-84 made its maiden flight on 28 February 1946, powered by a General Electric J35 engine.

Fifteen YP-84A were built in 1946 for service trials; 45-59482 to 45-59496.

Republic YP-84A 45-50490

Dubbed ‘Thunderjet’, the straight-winged F-84 saw operational service in Korea from December 1950, first as an escort fighter to B-29 bombers and then in the ground attack role. The F-84G was developed to carry nuclear weapons for tactical warfare and was used by TAC and SAC; F-84Gs without nuclear weapon delivery systems were supplied to various NATO air forces and no less than 4,457 straight-wing Thunderjets were built.

F-84E Thunderjet

Although it shared the same generic designation number as the straight-winged F-84 Thunderjet, the Republic F-84F Thunderstreak was essentially a new aircraft. The prototype XF-84F was an F-84E Thunderjet fitted with 40 degree sweptback wing and tail, and longer, faired-in cockpit hood. It was powered by a 5200 lb Allison J-35-A-25 turbojet. When Curtiss-Wright acquired a license to build the Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire turbojet in America, Republic fitted an imported Sapphire in the YF-84F prototype which flew on 14 February 1951. The USAF ordered this aircraft into production, with a Wright-built J65 Sapphire, as the F-84F Thunderstreak.

Republic F-84 Thunderstreak Article

F-84F

The RF-84F served as the backbone of NATO tactical strike forces, operating with Belgium, France, Italy, Greece, the Netherlands, Turkey and West Germany.

Yugoslavian F-84Gs

On 10 March 1953, five days after a Polish pilot had defected with his MiG-15 to the Danish island of Bornholm, two Czechoslovakian MiG attacked two American F-84G Thunderjets over Regensburg in Bavaria. One of the Thunderjets was shot down by the 23mm and 37mm cannon of one of the MiGs. The pilot ejected safely over Czechoslovakian territory.

By 1955 the F-84F Thunderstreak was the standard U.S.A.F. fighter-bomber, replacing F-86 Sabres and F-84E and -G Thunderjets. Can carry the tactical atomic bomb, and can be carried itself by GRB-36 “mother-plane”. Versions carried by GRB-36 have anhedral (downswept) tailplane.

Initially conceived by Republic dating 1949, the Thunderstreak was first flown in prototype form as the YF-84F on 3 June 1950, this aircraft using a standard F-84E fuselage with a swept wing and being powered by a single Allison YJ35-A-25 engine rated at 2359-kg (5,200-lb) thrust. Early flight testing of this aircraft very quickly revealed that the performance left a great deal to be desired and it was therefore decided to incorporate the British Sapphire (Wright J65) engine, impetus for the change being largely provided by US involvement in the Korean War, although in the event the F-84F did not see action in that conflict. Adoption of the more powerful engine in turn necessitated some redesign and it was not until late 1952 that the first production specimen made its maiden flight. Altogether 2,711 F-84Fs were built for service with allied nations from the late 1950s onwards.

F-84F

A specialized photo-reconnaissance derivative of the F-84 known as the RF84F Thunderflash was evolved more or less concurrently, this being most easily recognized by its revised air inlet layout which permitted the battery of cameras to be mounted in the extreme nose section. The RF-84F Thunderflash photo-reconnaissance aircraft had cameras in lengthened nose, only 4 guns, and wing-root air intakes. It too can be carried by GRB-36. The first prototype flew in February 1952. Including the prototype YRF-84F, 716 Thunderflashes were built, almost half of this figure being destined for overseas service under the terms of the Mutual Defense Aid Program, examples being supplied to Italy, Greece, West Germany, Turkey, the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Taiwan, France and Norway.

It has another distinction so far as the USAF is concerned, being the aircraft with which flight refuelling techniques for fighters were developed.

RF-84F

A total of 4457 F-84 “Thunderjet” were built.

The second attempt to use the B 36 as an aircraft carrier took place in 1955 and 1956. Seeking a reconnaissance aircraft with sufficient range to reach the Soviet Union, the USAF came up with FICON, which stood for Fighter In CONvair. By hitching a Republic RF 84 Thunderflash to a B 36, the photo-reconnaissance jet’s range could be extended from 3220 km (2000 miles) to 19,310 km (12,000 miles). Some thought was also given to a nuclear bomb equipped Thunderstreak substituting for the Thunderflash. Twenty five RF 84Fs were modified for parasite duty. On a typical mission the mother ship B 36 would depart from Fairchild Air Force Base, Spokane, Washington to be joined in the air by an RF 84K (as the parasite Thunderflashes were designated) from Moses Lake Air Force Base. The fighter would be hoisted into the B 36’s bomb bay.

F-84G Thunderjet

The F-84G Thunderjet featured conventional ailerons, elevators, rudder and trailing edge flaps. An air-brake is under the centre fuselage. The tricycle undercarriage has a single wheel on each unit, the mains retracting inward into the wings, and nose-wheel retracts rearward.

Even in the mid-1950s the superiority of the jet powerplant for combat aircraft was questioned by some. A modern technology propeller driven by a turbine (a turboprop) offered high speeds, long endurance and low landing speeds. To test this concept the USAF commissioned two XF-84Hs from Republic.

XF-84H

Powered by the Allison XT-40 coupled turboprops driving a singe supersonic blade propellor, the noise the F-84H made has been described as an ‘unholy shriek’, leading to the nickname ‘Thunderscreech’. Resonance off the ground made groundcrew physically sick. The two aircraft only made a dozen test flights, all but two of which resulted in emergency landings and the USAF refused to accept it for their own tests, cancelling the programme in 1956.

The first XF-84H spent 40 years on a pole at Bakersfield Airport, California, its propeller slowly (and quietly) rotated by an electric motor.

Gallery

F-84E Thunderjet
Fighter-bomber
Engine: 5,000 lb. thrust Allison J35-A-17 turbojet.
Wingspan: 37 ft. 5 in
Length: 38 ft. 5 in
Loaded weight: 18,000 lb.
Max. speed: 630 m.p.h.
Ceiling: over 45,000 ft
Normal range: 1,700 miles
In flight refueling: yes
Armament: 6x.50 in. machine-guns
Bombload: 4 x 1,000 lb. bombs or up to 32 x 5 in. rockets.
Crew: 1

Republic F-84F Thunderstreak
Type: single-seat strike fighter
Powerplant: one 3275-kg (7,220-lb) thrust Wright J65-W-3 turbojet
Maximum speed 1118 km/h (695 mph) at sea level
Initial climb rate 2499 m (8,200 ft) per minute
Service ceiling 14020 m (46,000 ft)
Combat radius, clean 724 km (450 miles)
Ferry range 3444 km (2,140 miles)
Maximum take-off 12701 kg (28,000 lb)
Wingspan 10.26 m (33 ft 7¼ in)
Length 13.23 m (43 ft 4¾ in)
Height 4.39 m(14 ft4¾ in)
Wing area 30.19 sq.m (325 sq ft)
Armament: six 12.7-mm (0.5-in) M3 machine-guns
Bomb load, 2722 kg (6,000 lb)
Crew: 1

RF-84F Thunderflash
Engine: Wright J65-W-7, 7800 lb
Wingspan: 33 ft 7 in
Length: 47 ft 7.75 in
Height: 15 ft
Max speed: 679 mph at SL
Max ROC: 8000 fpm
Service ceiling: 46,000 ft
Max range: 2200 mi
Armament: 4 x .50 in mg

F-84G Thunderjet
Engine: 1 x Allison J35-A-29, 24.9kN / 5600 lb
Wingspan: 11.4 m / 37 ft 5 in
Length: 11.7 m / 38 ft 5 in
Height: 3.8 m / 12 ft 6 in
Wing area: 24.2 sq.m / 260.49 sq ft
Wheel track: 16 ft 6 in
Max take-off weight: 8455-10670 kg / 18640 – 23523 lb
Empty weight: 5033 kg / 11096 lb
Max. speed: 970 km/h / 603 mph
Cruise speed: 775 km/h / 482 mph
Ceiling: 12350 m / 40500 ft
Range w/max.fuel: 1680 km / 1044 miles
Armament: 6 x 12.7mm machine-guns
Bombload: 4500 lb
Crew: 1

XF-84H
Engine: 1 x 5850 hp Allison XT40-A-1 turboprop
Wingspan: 10.18 m / 33 ft 5 in
Length: 15.67 m / 51 ft 5 in
Height: 4.67 m / 15 ft 4 in
Max take-off weight: 8123 kg / 17908 lb
Max. speed: 837 km/h / 520 mph
Crew: 1

Republic F-84E Thunderjet
Republic F-84F Thunderstreak
RF-84F Thunderflash

Republic SPA / AT-12

From its P-35 single-seat tighter Republic (latterly Seversky) developed the Model 2PA Guardsman two-seat escort fighter and fighter-bomber with the same type of rearward semi-retracting main landing gear units and the glazed rear portion of the cockpit expanded rearward to accommodate the second crewman. There was no US market for such an aeroplane, so the company looked for export sales.

Two were sold to the USSR as 2PA-L/As, 20 2PA-B3s went to Japan with the local designation A8V1, and 52 2PA-204Ls were ordered by Sweden to supplement her J 9 fighters (P-35s sold with the company designation EP-1-06s). Early in World War II the US administration embargoed the delivery of the 2PA-204Ls to Sweden, and these were taken into the USAAC inventory as AT-12 advanced fighter trainers with the designation AT-12. The aircraft saw limited use in this role during the first part of World War II.

AT-12
two-seat advanced tighter trainer
Span: 12.5m (41ft )
Length: 8.43m (27 ft 8in)
Powerplant: 1 x Pratt & Whitney R-1830-45, 783kW (1,050 hp)
Armament: 4 or 7 x 7.62-mm (0.3-in) mg
Bombload: 227 kg (500 lb) under wings
Max T/O weight: 2918 kg (6,433 lb)
Max speed: 285 mph at 10,000ft
Operational range: 1,200 miles

Republic P-43 Lancer

The Lancer was a single-seat interceptor fighter that first appeared in service evaluation YP-43 form in 1940. With a Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp radial engine and bulky fuselage, it was clearly a product of the Republic Aviation Corporation. Production for the USAAF, RAAF and China totalled 272 aircraft in three versions. Six P-43B reconnaissance fighters were allotted for Australian RAAF use, as PRU aircraft.

The P-43 Lancer design was developed further into the P-47 Thunderbolt.

P-43
Engine: 1 x Pratt-Whitney R-1830-47, 1167kW
Length: 8.69 m / 29 ft 6 in
Height: 4.27 m / 14 ft 0 in
Wing area: 20.72 sq.m / 223.03 sq ft
Max take-off weight: 3600 kg / 7937 lb
Empty weight: 2565 kg / 5655 lb
Wingspan: 10.97 m / 36 ft 0 in
Max. speed: 562 km/h / 349 mph
Ceiling: 11580 m / 38000 ft
Range: 1287 km / 800 miles
Crew: 1
Armament: 2 x 12.7mm machine-guns, 2 x 7.62mm machine-guns

Republic P-43 Lancer

Renard R-31 / R-32

In view of replacing the ageing Breguet XIX observation aircraft of the Aéronautique Militaire Belge, the Renard company developed a twin seat parasol-wing aircraft which in the first studies was designated as Renard RR (for Rolls-Royce). The renamed Renard R.31 was designed by Alfred Renard of Constructions Aéronautiques G. Renard to meet a requirement of the Belgian Air Force for a short ranged reconnaissance and army co-operation aircraft.

It was a parasol monoplane of mixed construction, powered by a Rolls-Royce Kestrel engine, with a welded steel tubing structure with metal sheet covering the forward fuselage and fabric covering of the remainder of the airframe. The wing was held in position by a single Vee strut on each side, conjoined with its fixed under carriage. Armament consisted of one or two forward-firing 7.62 mm Vickers machine guns and one 7.62 mm Lewis machine gun in flexible mount in rear cockpit. There was also a rarely used provision for dropping four 10 kg bombs under the wings.

Powered by a Rolls-Royce Kestrel II engine developing 487hp, it first flew at Haren airfield at Evere, near Brussels, on 16 October 1932, piloted by Renard test-pilot Charles Rooms.

The Aéronautique Militaire placed an order for 28 R.31s was placed in March 1934, with six to be built by Renard and the remainder by SABCA. One aircraft was fitted with a Lorraine Petrel engine for evaluation, but this was later replaced by the normal Kestrel engine.

After 1936 a second aircraft was fitted with an enclosed canopy and a Gnome-Rhône Mistral Major radial engine, becoming the R-32, with this then being replaced by a Hispano-Suiza 12Y engine, but the R-32 did not show sufficiently improved performance to gain a production order. The Renard R-32 was reworked as a normal R.31 thus becoming the 35th machine for the AéM.

A further six R.31s were ordered in August 1935 by the AéM. The aircraft received the military registrations N-1 to N-35.

The R.31 entered service with the Belgian Air Force in 1935, replacing the Breguet 19 in the 9e and 11e Escadrilles d’Observation based at Liège. In service, it was not popular, as it had poor handling, being vulnerable to entering flat spins if mishandled, with all aerobatics therefore being banned.

All the Renard R-31’s were used by the Bierset based observation squadrons – 9/V/1Aé (Sioux on blue circle) and 11/VI/1Aé (Sioux on red circle). At the start of the war 21 aircraft were available who were operational during the whole of the “18 day Campaign” flying their last mission on May 27th, 1940.

The R.31 was hopelessly obsolete, and those that were not destroyed on the ground in the early hours of the German Blitzkrieg invasion of Belgium in May 1940 were ravaged by German fighters as they bravely attempted to gather information on the German invasion. None apparently functioned as ground support aircraft during the brief Belgian Army resistance, flying 54 reconnaissance sorties in support of the Allied forces defending Belgium, with the last mission (which was also the final mission flown by the Belgian Air Force in its attempt to repel the Germans, being flown on the afternoon of 27 May 1940. Following the German occupation of Belgium, the Luftwaffe had no interest in the machines and those that had survived the initial onslaught were unused or were destroyed. Overall, these machines had no significant impact on the war although they were briefly involved.

As not a single Renard R.31 remains anywhere in the world, a number of volunteers at the Royal Army Museum at Brussels is building a 1/1 scale replica using the original blueprints.

Renard R-31 Aircraft Histories

Renard R.31
Engine: 1 × Rolls-Royce Kestrel IIS V-12, 358 kW (480 hp)
Wingspan: 14.40 m (47 feet 2¾ inches)
Length: 9.20 m (30 ft 2 in)
Height: 2.92 m (9 ft 7 in)
Wing area: 32 m² (344 ft²)
Empty weight: 1,330 kg (2,926 lb)
Loaded weight: 2,130 kg (4,686 lb)
Maximum speed: 294 km/h (159 knots, 183 mph) at 4,000 m(13,120 ft)
Cruise speed: 238 km/h (129 knots, 148 mph)
Range: 650 km (351 nm, 404 mi)
Service ceiling: 8,750 m (28,700 ft)
Wing loading: 66.6 kg/m² (13.6 lb/ft²)
Power/mass: 0.17 kW/kg (0.10 hp/lb)
Climb to 2,000 m (6,560 ft): 5.5 min
Climb to 5,000 m (16,400 ft): 11.7 min
Crew: 2
Armament: 2 or 3 7.62 mm Vickers machine guns

Renard R-31
Renard R-32

Raytheon T-6 Texan II / AT-6 Wolverine

Raytheon Aircraft won a USAF and USN Joint Primary Aircraft Training System competition with the Beech Mk.II trainer, derived from the Pilatus PC-9.

Raytheon’s contract with the U.S. joint armed services to provide up to 700 T-6ATexan II JPATS trainers through the year 2014 continued to pay dividends for the Wichita based airframer. The Air Force and Navy exercised an option for 22 additional Texan IIs, an order valued at almost $65 million.

The first production T-6A Texan II flew on 15 July 1998.

Apart from the JPATS program, Raytheon has orders for 138 T 6As, including a 45 airplane deal with the Greek Air Force.

The first production Beechcraft AT-6 light attack aircraft made a ceremonial first flight on 20 August 2013 at Wichita, Kansas. The single-engined 1,600shp (1,190kW) Pratt & Whitney PT6 turboprop aeroplane took to the air at about 10:30 local time with test pilot Lionel Alford at the controls.

The aircraft was loaded with a pair of 66 gal (250 litres) drop tanks, two inert GBU-58 laser-guided bombs and two LAU-131 seven-shot rocket launchers. The AT-6 was also carrying a L-3 Wescam Mx-15Di electro-optical infrared camera. Although a production aircraft, it is a company-owned asset. Beechcraft has not secured an order for the type. When asked why the company would fly the first flight with such a heavy load, Derek Hess, the company’s senior vice-president for business development, says: “Because it’s so easy.”

The aircraft had demonstrated air-to-air gunnery with .50 caliber machine guns and the potential exists to employ Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinders to counter certain aerial threats.

T-6C Texan II

The AT-6TH Wolverine attack variant is derived from the T-6C Texan trainer and is designed to carry out close air support and surveillance missions. The AT-6 has an L3 Wescam MX-15D multi-sensor package that includes colour and IR cameras, laser designator, laser illuminator, and laser rangefinder.

Royal Thai Air Force AT-6TH Wolverine

The Royal Thai Air Force (RTAF) received eight AT-6TH Wolverine light attack aircraft in 2025 acquired from the United States as part of its ongoing fleet modernization program.

Assigned to Squadron 411, part of Wing 41 based in Chiang Mai, the AT-6TH Wolverine, manufactured by U.S. company Textron Aviation, is designed for close air support, armed surveillance, and tactical training missions.

Gallery

T-6A Texan II
Engine: Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-68, 1100 hp
Length: 33.268 ft / 10.14 m
Height: 10.696 ft / 3.26 m
Wingspan: 33.301 ft / 10.15 m
Wing area: 175.346 sq.ft / 16.29 sq.m
Max take off weight: 6299.7 lb / 2857.0 kg
Weight empty: 4601.8 lb / 2087.0 kg
Max. speed: 310 kt / 575 km/h
Cruising speed: 230 kt / 426 km/h
Initial climb rate: 3996.06 ft/min / 20.30 m/s
Service ceiling: 35007 ft / 10670 m
Wing loading: 35.88 lb/sq.ft / 175.0 kg/sq.m
Range: 850 nm / 1574 km
Endurance: 3 h
Crew: 2

PZL PZL.30 / LWS LWS-4 / LWS-6 Żubr

PZL.30 Żubr

The LWS-6 Żubr (PZL.30, wisent / Bison) was a Polish twin-engined medium bomber, produced by the LWS factory before World War II. A short series was used for training only, because it was inferior to the contemporary PZL.37 Łoś design.

The PZL.30 was designed by Zbysław Ciołkosz) for PZL in the early 1930s, initially as a 12-passenger passenger airliner. When the Polish Airlines LOT bought Douglas DC-2 aircraft instead, the design was converted to a bomber, with a projected bomb load of 1,200 kg. The PZL.30 was developed as a less-advanced, alternative medium bomber design, in case the more modern bomber design, the PZL.37 Łoś would fail. The first prototype, designated PZL.30 (or PZL.30BI) was flown in March 1936 by Bolesław Orliński.

The maiden flight of the PZL.30 took place only three months before the PZL.37 Łoś prototype flew. Although developed at the same time as the PZL.37, the PZL.30 was inferior to its counterpart, being slower, had a much smaller bomb load than the Łoś and yet was produced at a similar price.

The PZL.30 prototype, initially powered with two 420 hp Pratt & Whitney Wasp Junior engines, was further refitted as the PZL.30BII, with more powerful Bristol Pegasus VIII engines. The aircraft was accepted for a limited production run by the LWS state factory in Lublin, of which Ciołkosz became the technical director and project lead. The second prototype was designated LWS-4.

It was planned to produce 16 aircraft for the Polish Air Force, with the designation: LWS-6 Żubr. The Żubr was given a military code number 71 and the series was to have factory numbers 71.1 to 71.17, but the aircraft were given different code numbers eventually due to secrecy.

The production aircraft incorporated further changes, among others the landing gear retracting into the fuselage sides was changed to more conventional one, retracting into the engine nacelles. After a prototype crashed on 7 November 1936, caused by de-laminating plywood wing skins, the wing had to be reinforced. Due to this increased weight, the LWS-6 had a smaller bomb load than expected. A modified prototype was made with a double tail fin, and flown at the end of 1937. The definitive variant, however, in the course of production, returned to a single enlarged tail fin configuration. A series of 15 aircraft were built in 1938.

In 1937 the factory proposed to build a floatplane torpedo bomber variant LWS-5, instead of developing LWS-1 (R-XXA) design by Jerzy Rudlicki. It was supposed to be fitted with two Short floats of the Lublin R-XX prototype. At first the Polish Navy exhibited interest and work on the LWS-1 was cancelled despite its progress, but then due to problems with LWS-5 development, work on the prototype was canceled. It was evident that the underpowered LWS-5 could not carry an effective offensive load.

Apart from the Polish Air Force, the Romanian Air Force showed an interest in the Żubr prototype in 1936, and considered a purchase of 24 aircraft. On 7 November 1936, after the Pegasus-powered prototype encountered a mid-air structural failure and crashed at Michałowice, all on board dying, including two Romanian officers on board, Romania ordered the PZL.37 Łoś instead.

The LWS-6 was a conventional high-wing cantilever monoplane. It featured mixed construction (metal and wood). The fuselage was rectangular in cross-section, made of a metal frame, covered with metal (upper fuselage) and canvas (sides and bottom) with the front section made of duralumin. Wings were of wooden construction and plywood covered. There was a crew of four: pilot, commander-bombardier, radio operator and a rear gunner. The bombardier was accommodated in the glazed nose, with a forward twin machine gun turret with a notable pointed “beard” below the turret. The pilot’s canopy was located above the fuselage, offset to the left. The rear gunner operated twin machine guns in a semi-retractable upper dorsal turret, elevating to a working position, along with a “trap” ventral position, operating the same way. The main undercarriage retracted into engine nacelles. The aircraft was powered by two Bristol Pegasus VIII radial engines, normal power: 670 hp (500 kW), take-off power: 680 hp (520 kW). Bombs were carried in a bomb bay in the fuselage, the maximum load was 660 kg.

A total of 15 LWS-6 bombers were delivered to the Polish Air Force in 1938-1939. From the outset, they were considered obsolete, and were assigned to training units, mainly to the 3rd Training Dyon. In operational service, the LWS-6 revealed several faults, for example, the undercarriage retracted on some aircraft during landing. Reportedly, the crews later flew with the undercarriage permanently locked down. As training aircraft they had their armament removed. There was only one crash, without fatal injuries.

During the invasion of Poland in 1939, Żubrs were not used in combat. Several were destroyed on the ground, along with many other training aircraft. The Germans captured several LWS-6s, including the twin-tailfin prototype, and used them for blind flying training until at least 1942 (among others, in Blindflugschule Schleissheim). Ironically, the Luftwaffe service of this bomber was longer than the Polish one.

The Soviets captured four aircraft after their invasion on Poland and subsequently used them as communication aircraft.

LWS-6
Engines: 2 × Bristol Pegasus VIII, 680 hp (520 kW)
Wingspan: 18.50 m (60 ft 8 in)
Wing area: 49.5 m² (532.6 ft²)
Length: 15.40 m (50 ft 6 in)
Height: 4 m (13 ft 2 in)
Empty weight: 4,788 kg (10,533 lb)
Loaded weight: 6,747 kg (14,843 lb)
Max takeoff weight: 6,876 kg (15,127 lb)
Useful load: 1,959 kg (4,319 lb)
Maximum speed: 341 km/h (212 mph)
Cruise speed: 280 km/h (174 mph)
Range: 750-1,250 km (466-776 mi)
Service ceiling: 6,700 m (21,975 ft)
Rate of climb: 408 m/min (6.8 m/s) (1,338 ft/min)
Wing loading: 129 kg/m² (26.4 lb/ft²)
Crew: four (pilot, commander-bombardier, radio operator, rear gunner)
Armament:
2 × 7.7 mm Vickers F machine guns in nose turret
2 × 7.7 mm Vickers F machine guns in upper dorsal rear turret
1 × 7.7 mm Vickers F machine gun in ventral underbelly position
Bombload: 660 kg (1,450 lb)

PZL Mielec TS-11 Iskra

Design of the P.Z.L. Mielec TS-11 Iskra (Spark) two-seat turbojet-powered primary and advanced trainer began in 1957, being intended as a replacement for the TS-8 Bies two-seat basic trainer. Four prototypes were built, and the first flight of the type was recorded on 5 February 1960.

PZL Mielec TS-11 Iskra Article

Following type approval during 1961 initial deliveries began in March 1963, and the TS-11 became operational with the Polish air force in 1964. Since that time well over 500 have been built, manufactured not only for use by the nation’s air force, but also for export to India, which procured 50. A cantilever mid-wing monoplane of all-metal construction, the TS-11 has retractable tricycle landing gear and is powered by a single turbojet mounted within the fuselage, aft of the cockpit.

Early aircraft were powered by the Polish-designed HO-10 turbojet developing 780kg thrust, but from the mid-1960s TS-11s have been powered progressively by the 2,205 lb / 800kg thrust SO-1 turbojet, the similarly rated but improved SO-3, or the uprated SO-3W. The Iskra was being replaced in Polish air force service by the I-22 Iryda.

Later developments were the Iskra 100 with attack capability and the Iskra 200, built as single and two seaters. The Indian Air Force also operated the Iskra 100.

Limited production of the 1987 version of the TS-11, the Iskra-Bis DF, continued at Mielec. The Iskra-Bis DF is a tandem-seat combat and reconnaissance trainer powered by a single uprated 10.8kN SO-3W turbojet. It is equipped with a 23mm cannon in the forward fuselage, an S-13 camera gun, and four underwing hardpoints for 100kg of bombs, rockets, and gun pods. For recon¬naissance training three cameras may be carried, one in each intake fairing and one in the cockpit floor.

0823 PZL-Mielec TS-11 200bis(R) Iskra 1H08-23

Gallery

Engine: 1 x Narkiewicz turbojet, est 1,760 1,980 lbs.t. (800 900 kgp)
Max speed, 497 mph (800 kph)
Service ceiling 39,370 ft (12 000 m)
Loaded weight, 7,496 lb. (3 400 kg)
Span, 32 ft 9.5 in (10 m)
Length, 36 ft 1 in (11m)
Height, 10ft 10 in (3.3 m)

PZL-WSK TS 11 bis DF Iskra
Engine: 1 x SO-W3, 1100kg
Installed thrust: 10.8 kN
Span: 10.06 m / 33 ft 0 in
Length: 11.15 m / 37 ft 7 in
Wing area: 17.5 sq.m / 188.37 sq ft
Height: 12 ft 6 in / 3.500 m
Empty wt: 2560 kg / 5644 lb
MTOW: 3840 kg / 8466 lb
Max speed: 770 kph / 478 mph
Initial ROC: 1140 m / min
Ceiling: 37730 ft / 11,500 m
T/O run: 660 m
Ldg run: 720 m
Fuel internal: 1200 lt
Range: 675 nm / 1250 km
Armament: 1 x 23 mm
Hardpoints: 4
Bombload: 400kg
Crew: 2

PZL Mielec TS-11 Iskra