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Vought A-7 Corsair II Attack Fighter |
DESCRIPTION:
Needing a tactical attack fighter with greater range and payload than the A-4, the US Navy approached the Vought company about building a suitable aircraft. The resulting A-7 was developed as a subsonic attack version of the F-8 Crusader fighter. The Corsair, without the variable-incidence wings of the F-8, was soon recognized as an exceptionally accurate attack bomber and was purchased by the Navy, Marines, and Air Force. The final variant built was the A-7K tactical trainer used by the Air National Guard. The last two US Navy A-7 squadrons saw service in the Gulf War before being disbanded upon their return to the US. By 2004, about 100 examples of the A-7 remained in service with Greece and Thailand.
Data below for A-7E |
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HISTORY: | |
First Flight |
(YA-7) 27 September 1965 (A-7D) 26 September 1968 |
Service Entry
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October 1966
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CREW:
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one: pilot
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ESTIMATED COST:
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unknown
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AIRFOIL SECTIONS: | |
Wing Root | NACA 65A007 |
Wing Tip |
NACA 65A007
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DIMENSIONS: | |
Length | 46.13 ft (14.06 m) |
Wingspan | 38.75 ft (11.80 m) |
Height | 16.02 ft (4.90 m) |
Wing Area | 375 ft² (34.83 m²) |
Canard Area |
not applicable
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WEIGHTS: | |
Empty | 19,781 lb (8,972 kg) |
Normal Takeoff | unknown |
Max Takeoff | 42,000 lb (19,050 kg) |
Fuel Capacity |
internal: unknown external: unknown |
Max Payload
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15,000 lb (6,804 kg)
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PROPULSION: | |
Powerplant | one Allison TF-41-A-2 turbofan |
Thrust |
15,000 lb (66.72 kN)
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PERFORMANCE: | |
Max Level Speed |
at altitude: 645 mph (1,040 km/h) at 5,000 ft
(1,525 m) at sea level: 690 mph (1,110 km/h) |
Initial Climb Rate | 5,000 ft (1,525 m) / min |
Service Ceiling | 42,000 ft (12,800 m) |
Range |
typical: 620 nm (1,150 km) ferry: 2,490 nm (4,605 km) |
g-Limits |
unknown
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ARMAMENT: | |
Gun | one 20-mm M16A1 Vulcan cannon (1,000 rds) |
Stations | eight external hardpoints |
Air-to-Air Missile | AIM-9 Sidewinder |
Air-to-Surface Missile | AGM-45 Skrike, AGM-62 Walleye, AGM-65 Maverick, AGM-84 Harpoon, AGM-88 HARM, Wasp |
Bomb | GBU-10/15 Paveway laser-guided, Mk 82/83/84 GP, BLU-107 Durandal, cluster bombs |
Other |
ECM pods, FLIR pod, rocket pods
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KNOWN VARIANTS: | |
YA-7 | Prototype |
A-7A | Production attack plane with a Pratt & Whitney TF-30 engine and two 20-mm Mk 12 cannons; 199 built for the US Navy |
A-7B | Improved attack bomber with an uprated engine; 196 built |
A-7C | Improved attack plane with new avionics and a Vulcan cannon, 67 built |
TA-7C | Two-seat trainer; 24 converted from the A-7B and 49 from the A-7C |
A-7D | US Air Force attack plane with a new engine, new Vulcan cannon, and new nav/attack system for improved bombing accuracy; 459 built |
A-7E | Definitive Navy attack model with a new engine and FLIR system; 551 built |
A-7H/TA-7H | Land-based version of the A-7E built for the Greek Air Force; 60 one-seat and 5 trainers built |
EA-7L | Electronic warfare model |
A-7P | Re-built A-7As for Portugal; 50 converted including 6 two-seat trainers |
A-7K
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Two-seat trainer for the US Air National Guard; 32 built
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KNOWN COMBAT RECORD: |
Vietnam War (USN, USMC, USAF, 1968-1972) Lebanon - US Multinational Force (USN, 1982-1983) Libya - Operation El Dorado Canyon (USN, 1986) Iraq - Operation Desert Storm (USN, 1991) |
KNOWN OPERATORS: |
Greece, Elliniki Polimiki Aeroporia (Hellenic Air Force) Portugal, Força Aérea Portuguesa (Portuguese Air Force) Thailand, Kong Tha Han Lur Thai (Royal Thai Navy Air Arm) United States (US Air Force) United States (US Air National Guard) United States (US Marine Corps) United States (US Navy) |
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