F-111 Aardvark, The Aircraft that Defined an Era

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  • čas přidán 24. 04. 2024
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    The F-111 started out as a cost-saving aircraft to work for both the USAF and the US Navy but ended up being rejected by the Navy, however, it went on to be on of the most trusted assets for the USAF for the next 30 years and its advanced design inspired a generation of high-performance swing-wing fighters and bombers in the US, Soviet Union, and Europe over the next 2 decades.
    This is the story of the F-111 Aardvark.
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    Written, Researched and Presented by Paul Shillito
    Images and footage: Images and footage : General Dynamics, USAF, US Navy, RAAF, RAF, Grumman
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Komentáře • 479

  • @CuriousDroid
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    • @jamesjross
      @jamesjross Před 19 dny

      love you. hope you're okay.

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      @xxdesertstorm Před 19 dny +1

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    • @steveshoemaker6347
      @steveshoemaker6347 Před 19 dny

      As always a BIG THUMBS UP.....Thanks Paul.....
      Old F-4 Phantom ll pilot Shoe🇺🇸

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      @therocinante3443 Před 19 dny +1

      NordVPN is a scam, bruv.

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  • @grantm902
    @grantm902 Před 19 dny +153

    Technically any aircraft that crashes on land is a "groundbreaking aircraft"

    • @RetinaBurner
      @RetinaBurner Před 19 dny +6

      One could say that they made quite an impression. They also left their mark on history.

    • @woopimagpie
      @woopimagpie Před 18 dny +5

      Thanks Dad. Groan.

    • @MurCurieux
      @MurCurieux Před 18 dny +2

      Just threw up in my mouth… Thanks Dad.

    • @yz4901983
      @yz4901983 Před 12 dny

      Nice

    • @ownage11445
      @ownage11445 Před 11 dny

      Hence the reason it was called the aardvark it was good at burrowing itself

  • @LordandGodofYouTube
    @LordandGodofYouTube Před 19 dny +160

    I was working just outside of Darwin, Australia one day and I looked up and one of these flew over my head at about a few hundred meters altitude, backwards, at about 50 knots or so. It was hanging off of the bottom of a helicopter on its way to an aircraft museum. One of the strangest things I've ever seen.

    • @scottjustscott3730
      @scottjustscott3730 Před 18 dny +2

      Sounds awesome. Any idea what type of helicopter it was? I would guess CH-47 or CH-53?

    • @LordandGodofYouTube
      @LordandGodofYouTube Před 18 dny +1

      @@scottjustscott3730 I'm not sure what model, but it was twin rotor so I imagine it was a Chinook.

    • @dunxy
      @dunxy Před 18 dny +1

      A8-113 - Darwin Aviation Museum, Winnellie, NT I imagine!

    • @LordandGodofYouTube
      @LordandGodofYouTube Před 18 dny

      @@dunxy I think so, it was a long time ago that I was there.

    • @phlodel
      @phlodel Před 18 dny +6

      At first, I thought this was going o be one of those nonsense, sarcastic comments. In the end, it rings true. What an amazing sight!

  • @declanmcquay3476
    @declanmcquay3476 Před 18 dny +44

    My uncle was one of the engineers sent from Australia to help (in his words) keep the wings on the F-111, as he specialised in stress and fatigue in air craft.

  • @luke144
    @luke144 Před 19 dny +91

    As a kid I would build tester models. The F-111A was my third model I ever built. I would hang them from my ceiling with fishing line. The wings moved. I had it dogfighting mig 17-F. Not exactly historical I don't think. I must have built 50 blackbird modles. I stuffed 3 E rocket engines in a larger model and it actually flew. The sight of this jet brought back so many memories.

    • @RivetGardener
      @RivetGardener Před 17 dny

      Same here. I loved this bird along with the B-58 Hustler.

  • @TheRpg1964
    @TheRpg1964 Před 19 dny +120

    Note that even though the F-111 was retired in USAF service 1996 and the EF-111 in 1998, The Royal Australian Air Force retired them in 2010!

    • @ailouros6669
      @ailouros6669 Před 19 dny +2

      The RAAF had no alternative but to keep them flying for as long as they did until they got so expensive to maintain that they needed to be replaced. Plus there were no threats to the F-111 in the region that would have prompted the RAAF to replace them earlier.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Před 19 dny +2

      The USAF had no replacement for the EF-111 and had to rely on the Navy for EW support after that. A bit premature methinks.

    • @simongeard4824
      @simongeard4824 Před 18 dny +18

      I think the Aussies mostly kept them on for their air-show party trick...

    • @PiDsPagePrototypes
      @PiDsPagePrototypes Před 18 dny +5

      One of the stupidest things any Australian government ever did,... The amount of money wasted on the F-35's, would have easily paid for new F-111 airframes to have been built, ready to swap avionics and powerplants over from existing jets. Australia still doesn't have the intercept capability that the F-111's gave the nation, nor the capability for 'Supersonic Diplomacy'.
      And, on top, after Australia had helped fund the development of the F-35's, a US senator tried to pass a bill preventing the jets going to the countries that had already paid for them....

    • @maxwellyedor7610
      @maxwellyedor7610 Před 18 dny +8

      @@PiDsPagePrototypes Rebuilding new f111 fuselages would cost significantly more than buying brand new, complete, f35s.
      With the f35 they get a 5th gen, stealth, aircraft that has EW capabilities, better radar, ability to operate newer munitions, the ability to work collaboratively with their Allie’s in air, and an aircraft that the majority of Western airforces will operate for the next 50 years. F35 is a better buy by bar.
      They could have gone for some f15ex to bolster their interception abilities and carry more bombs, but as long as they stay friendly with the US/Japan/S Korea, they’ll be well covered in those departments in the region.
      As far as US Senators trying to block export sales, our elected officials try to do a lot of dumb stuff, luckily most of the time it fails to even make it to a vote.

  • @inmyopinion6836
    @inmyopinion6836 Před 19 dny +40

    "Suffered less losses" because Texas Instruments delivered the FLEER scanner system. My Father worked on its development. I got to see the unit on a shake table when I was 12. Father-Son Day only came once a year. Christmas, Fourth of July, my birthday...... they all fell short to what went on there. I would not miss that day. I saw a piece of glass the size of a tennis ball that would cost a million dollars. One of 12 lenses spinning at 20,000 RPM to read the elevation related to forward location at 600 MPH, 50 feet off the ground! THIS system on the F111 was a prototype eventually ending up as the guidance system for the Cruise Missile !

  • @edwelndiobel1567
    @edwelndiobel1567 Před 19 dny +65

    That ejection system was astounding!

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před 15 dny +4

      It was neato but never really worked like it should. Most guys that ejected wound up with career-ending back injuries. It was a cool idea but the damn thing just landed too hard. The seats needed foam padding that could handle crash loads or a structure that had crushable components to absorb crash loads. The ejection systems was one of those good ideas that just never panned out and wound up hurting more than it helped.

    • @matthewnewnham-runner-writer
      @matthewnewnham-runner-writer Před 10 dny

      Very true,@@Skank_and_Gutterboy(except for one small detail: ejection seats have minimal padding to prevent the seat building up speed during the ejection sequence and rising upwards to meet the pilot/nav/WSO/RIO's body at high speed and causing immediate injury before even leaving the aircraft.
      As to the career-ending injuries, we had a few guys at Mtn Home AFB who had ejected and lost 2 inches in height when ejecting caused so-called 'spider fractures in (typically) two vertebrae, shortening the spine.
      And most tragically, we lost our wing commander, Col Ernie Coleman, to an accident where parachutes on the capsule didn't malfunctioned (or was it the air bags, or both - I've forgotten) when he and his WSO had to eject. As a result, Ernie broke his back and was paralysed from mid-chest for the rest of his life.

  • @josephglatz25
    @josephglatz25 Před 19 dny +39

    Fun fact, the EF-111 Raven actually has a single air to air kill credited to it. An Iraqi Mirage F-1 tried to intercept an EF-111 during Desert Storm at low level, and ended up crashing into the desert during the high speed chase. The Raven crew, Captain James Denton and Captain Brent Brandon were credited with a maneuver kill as a result.

    • @Sintesi.
      @Sintesi. Před 18 dny +1

      this fact isnt fun, especially for the iraqis in the mirage. i dont see this as a "kill". i think to get a kill, you have to actually engage in combat, and shoot your target with your weapons. from what i gather from your story, the f111 was being chased by the mirage and the mirage either pilot errored or ran out of fuel and crashed. you cant get a kill when you are running away.

    • @chloehennessey6813
      @chloehennessey6813 Před 17 dny

      @@Sintesi.Maybe they shouldn’t chase planes? And it is a kill.
      Maneuver kills are a thing in fighter communities. Just so happens a EWA got the kill. The F-15 diving down to take the Mirage out watched the pilot fly into a hill. Believe they call that CFIT.

    • @josephglatz25
      @josephglatz25 Před 17 dny +10

      @@Sintesi. Well, take that up with the world's air forces. Some recognize maneuver kills, some don't.

    • @fix0the0spade
      @fix0the0spade Před 8 dny +1

      @@Sintesi. The F-111 crew went round the side of a hill top, the F-1 tried to cut the corner and found the hill top. The incident happened at night in total darkness, the F-111 crew had night vision, the F-1 pilot didn't. Getting the enemy to do something wrong and crash still counts as a kill, in this case their weapon was their night vision goggles.

  • @tepidtuna7450
    @tepidtuna7450 Před 19 dny +36

    I remember these from an airshow in Sydney's west in the early 1980s. I watched it fly silently overhead at tremendous speed, followed a few seconds later by the most insanely loud crack and thunder.
    Earlier that day I met and shook hands with Chuck Yeager (retired). What an amazing day for a kid.

    • @Koreelah
      @Koreelah Před 13 dny

      While visiting a hilltop home in eastern Australia I was looking DOWN into the sunken lounge room when, in the huge window, I caught a movement: an F-111 had just dropped over the far hills into the valley below. I ran outside in time to see it buzz the house and do a massive dump and burn.
      (Impressive flying but poor targeting- his mate’s house was on a different hilltop!)

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape Před 19 dny +24

    Shuttle astronaut Mike Mullane survived an ejection from an F-111 earlier in his career. He called that his "first" rocket ride.

  • @joshnixon2370
    @joshnixon2370 Před 18 dny +17

    In Brisbane Australia, every year our city festival would have a couple of F-111s from Amberley squadron do a dump and burn over the river, truly impressive - and deafening - to watch. As a kid, less than 200m from it, and feeling the heat and wash is something I'll never forget. The squadron kept a couple around for years after the rest had been grounded and decommissioned, just for the festival.

  • @Bdub1952
    @Bdub1952 Před 19 dny +76

    Five of my eight years in the USAF were involved with the F111F at Mtn Home AFB, and the F111A in Thailand and Nellis AFB. As an avionics technician I was thrilled that the electronics were cutting edge at the time, but our shop kept very busy with repairs to the Line Replaceable Units and the actual test stations and central computer that ran them. This was before the age of disk drives of course, and we loaded punch tapes into the central computer which ran the tests on the LRUs at the test stations that the central computer controlled. My last three years were spent supporting the new (at the time) F15A.
    My USAF experience led to a career in electronics, troubleshooting and repair, training, technical writing.
    Can't say I owe it all to the F111, but it sure was an exciting way to kick off my career.

    • @paultorbert6929
      @paultorbert6929 Před 18 dny +1

      I was at Mt Home AFB in 76-79…. If you were there then, did you know Herb Dubberly or Steve Laing ???? They were jet-macs…..

    • @Bdub1952
      @Bdub1952 Před 18 dny +5

      @@paultorbert6929 Sorry, the names aren't familiar, Paul. I shipped out to Korat in '74.

    • @paulholmes672
      @paulholmes672 Před 18 dny +5

      @@paultorbert6929 I was there same time, in the 366 AMS to start and the the 391st, before heading to the Heath in 79.

    • @jnbfrancisco
      @jnbfrancisco Před 18 dny +5

      I was an FTD Instrument and autopilot instructor at Mt Home from 1977 to 1980. A fellow brought a Yaw Flight control computer to me that the O level shop thought was bad and they wanted me to help them prove it was bad because the I level repair said there was nothing wrong with it. After they told me about the pilot reported malfunction I told them that it was normal operation and there was no malfunction. He left with a very discussed look on his face. Later I heard that they switched data plates on that computer I guess to trick the I level folks. I heard that someone got into much trouble over that. Did you ever hear about that? The reason that they were sure there was a problem and that the computer was bad is a long story. I felt bad about the whole thing because I thought I had done a good job teaching many O level students over the years but apparently I didn't.

    • @Bdub1952
      @Bdub1952 Před 17 dny +1

      @@jnbfrancisco Interesting story, no, I shipped off to Thailand in Nov '74.

  • @mountvernon5267
    @mountvernon5267 Před 18 dny +19

    I worked in-shop avionics on SAC's FB-111A fighter/bombers. I loved working on the Inertial Navigation system and Terrain Following RADAR systems. The FB-111A also had the Astrotracker, which tied in with the doppler RADAR and Inertial systems. That system would lock onto a star for navigation. The FB's had the longer wings and updated avionics, and regularly won SAC's Bomb-Nav competitions. These were only at 2 bases in the US - Plattsburgh in upstate (*way* upstate!) NY, and Pease in New Hampshire. Amazingly, I am watching this video the day after we returned from an F-111 reunion in Layton, Utah where we had around 200 of the folks that flew or maintained these aircraft, getting together with people that we may not have seen for the past 45 years!

    • @paulholmes672
      @paulholmes672 Před 18 dny +3

      Twas a good reunion, always good to catch up with old friends and memories.

    • @mr.pavone9719
      @mr.pavone9719 Před 17 dny +1

      I used to watch the FB-111s take off and land from my bedroom window or as they'd fly over the Pyramid Mall in Plattsburgh. You could always tell the tourists from the locals. The tourists would look up and the locals paid them no mind.

  • @captainkirk4271
    @captainkirk4271 Před 19 dny +86

    First Lazerpig.
    Now CuriousDroid.
    AARDVARK!!!
    The deadliest plane you never wanted to be on the wrong end of. What a beast of a jet!

    • @Wallyworld30
      @Wallyworld30 Před 19 dny +17

      Of course the Lazerpig loves a plane that was nicknamed "The Pig".

    • @abialo2010
      @abialo2010 Před 19 dny +3

      can you prove hes not actually lazerpig? have you ever seen them in the same place at the same time?

    • @samgeorge4798
      @samgeorge4798 Před 19 dny +10

      ​@@abialo2010Curious droid actually makes well researched videos?

    • @captainkirk4271
      @captainkirk4271 Před 19 dny +2

      @@abialo2010 💀💀💀💀💀

    • @captainkirk4271
      @captainkirk4271 Před 19 dny +2

      @@samgeorge4798 please don't, harambe. Don't hurt yourself like that.
      Lazerpig does his due diligence, he just presents it drunk, and sexy.

  • @CoopaCoop
    @CoopaCoop Před 17 dny +7

    Always find it so crazy how all these plane designs look basically brand new even though a lot of them are over 50 years old. Wild.

  • @K-Effect
    @K-Effect Před 18 dny +7

    The F-111 still has the coolest pilot ejection system of any aircraft. I think the original B-1 bomber started off with this type of injection system but they opted out for a more traditional type like the B-58 had.

  • @tech5298
    @tech5298 Před 19 dny +41

    I can still remember watching two of those Jets fly from north to south the entire distance of Panamint Valley in California. When I picked up my field glasses, I was overjoyed to watch them playing tag with one another, the one pushing out in front slowly, opening the wings and slowing down while the one in back folded the wings and sped up and they were doing this down the whole valley. Of course I don’t think anyone was around for 20 miles just me doing my prospecting. I’m guessing this might’ve been 40 years ago but I really can’t remember anymore. I think I was about 2000 feet elevation, and the jets were almost even. Thinking back now, I tracked them for about 10-15 miles before they disappeared into the forbidden zone, and they were on the other side, into the Slate Range, not on the west facing range nearest Briggs cabin.

    • @guaporeturns9472
      @guaporeturns9472 Před 19 dny +2

      That’s cool. On another note , I always wanted to go poke around out in that desert

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 Před 19 dny +1

      I'm jealous, always wanted to see various places around death valley. The jets must have been from China lake.

    • @tech5298
      @tech5298 Před 18 dny

      @@jr2904
      Go to the Panamints in spring! Monday thru Thursday… just thinking about it makes me want to go camping. Long time ago I was working deep in a box canyon, half way up the side, and heard a jet. I set down the mcloud digger just in time to see an A10 scooting up from the valley:canyon floor, below the canyon’s ridge lines, and I saw every detail in the cock pit as i looked down. I wanted to yell out to the world at what a marvelous thing I had just experienced! The pilot never turned his head (of course)

    • @tech5298
      @tech5298 Před 18 dny

      @@guaporeturns9472
      Lots to explore. Discover Surprise Canyon. Desolate, almost untouched, lots and lots of rocks. Something really big must have happened to create all that deeply disturbed yet majestic and lung-filling, geologic beauty. It must have been one hell of a “lightning storm in space”. (I’m not a believer in classic geology.)

    • @nsh1980gmail
      @nsh1980gmail Před 18 dny +1

      Find any gold there?

  • @RaoulStankovitch
    @RaoulStankovitch Před 19 dny +22

    Look up Dr. Jo Dean Morrow and his 9 PhD's groundbreaking research into strain based metal fatigue. He won a Naval contract to find out why the Titanium swing-wing joints had failed... gruesomely to both the flight crews and the wreckage. High speed wing snaps at 100ft leaves little intact.... here's to Dr. Jo-Dean and his favorite pin-ball machine.....his team are heros in the world of proper fatigue resistant design. Oh and a tip of the fedora to Herb Anderson of MTS for designing and building the axial servo hydraulics....you kids, study why this technology came about... blended technologies just like the MAKO knee replacement.....When faced with a problem, look outside 'your industry's technical box'.

  • @Anamnesia
    @Anamnesia Před 18 dny +8

    I always had a soft spot for the F-111... In Australia you'd see them all the time at major Race shows (like Formula-1) where they'd do a flyby with their famous Dump and Burn.
    I vividly remember the 1985 Adelaide F1 Grand Prix (the first Adelaide Grand Prix being in 1984). It was a cool & cloudy day. The F-111's did their flyby with dump and burn & even from 200m above us, you could feel the heat from the flamage - a most welcoming warmth on such a chilly day!

    • @cerealport2726
      @cerealport2726 Před 17 dny +1

      I lived in Adelaide at the time, and was more or less on the aircraft turning circle, so they'd do their pass over the track, and circle back, coming over my house. Standing on the roof also gave us a good view of the planes. Good times for a 10 year old boy...

  • @mattfrederick6013
    @mattfrederick6013 Před 16 dny +3

    Thanks for this video. My dad was a flight test engineer on the F-111 at Edwards AFB in the late 60’s. Always love learning more about what he worked on.

  • @msromike123
    @msromike123 Před 18 dny +5

    My Dad worked for General Dynamics and did landing gear stress analysis on that airplane. Thank you for the video!

  • @Chris_Toney
    @Chris_Toney Před 18 dny +5

    My father (Ben Toney) spent his entire career working on the F-111 program. He retired as the F-111 Program Directory. Towards the end of his career the USAF had retired their fleet, and he spent a lot of time supporting the RAAF. It was a beautiful aircraft.

  • @UncleJoeLITE
    @UncleJoeLITE Před 19 dny +9

    As a little kid on Fraser island, 2 F1/11s silently flew over our heads at Mach 8 [it seemed].
    Few seconds later the sound wave knocked us over! We were just little ofc.

  • @Maddog00427
    @Maddog00427 Před 19 dny +13

    The Pig... I used to love watching these things fly out of Townsville as a kid.

  • @dayeeoliver
    @dayeeoliver Před 19 dny +13

    You and Scott Manley should make a video together

  • @Solidboat123
    @Solidboat123 Před 18 dny +6

    Also the highest-scoring tank killer in the Gulf War

  • @richardl6751
    @richardl6751 Před 19 dny +15

    At 7:35 I worked on the TF-30 engines from the F-111 while in the Air Force in the mid 70s and worked at the "test cell" for a while where we would run and test the engines after they were repaired. The figure of 18,000 lbs of thrust for the basic engine is correct but 21,000 lbs with the afterburner is not correct. The correct figure is probably declassified but I won't state it here other than to say it was MORE.

    • @zapofpv2002
      @zapofpv2002 Před 11 dny

      I overhauled and tested the F-111 TF30-P103 engines at Amberley Australia, and the dry thrust was about 10,500 lb's and 18,500 lb's with afterburner depending on atmospheric conditions. The later engines TF30-P107 and TF30-P109 had up to about 21,000 lb of thrust with afterburner. Testing the engines after overhaul was the best job I have ever had. Especially when one engine failed to start which resulted in a very large fire in the test cell. Ah the good old days 🙂

    • @richardl6751
      @richardl6751 Před 10 dny

      @@zapofpv2002 Interesting, that's not what our force meter showed in zone 5 AB.

  • @theyapsta
    @theyapsta Před 18 dny +5

    I saw one of these take off when I was a high school kid back in the 80's at an air show at Ohakea airforce base in NZ. To this day it was straight up the loudest thing my ears have ever been exposed to. You could really feel it too.
    The F15 was there too. Took off and did a vertical climb with full afterburners until it almost disappeared and then came back down again trailing vapours off the wing tips into an almost supersonic low pass.
    I'll never forget the F111 though.

  • @twentysevenlitres
    @twentysevenlitres Před 18 dny +4

    My absolute favourite RAAF aircraft. Sad day when they retired. I flew up to Newcastle just to see them in their last ever public performance.

    • @slickstrings
      @slickstrings Před 18 dny

      I was there too. Back in 2010. That was an amazing airshow.

  • @StaK_1980
    @StaK_1980 Před 18 dny +3

    I have a soft spot for swing-wing aircraft. The F-111 is no exception. Thank you for covering this aircraft!

  • @lotto77102
    @lotto77102 Před 18 dny +7

    My favourite story about the Pig from an old mate that used to fly them; apparently dump and burns were very much a big no-no everywhere other than here in Aus, where they were cleared very specifically for only doing it straight and level at certain speeds and altitudes
    Eventually, they got cleared to do it through the entire flight envelope through the sheer power of the pilots mucking about and setting their fuel on fire. The old mate I was talking to was saying he even used to pulse the dump on and off while flying over his home base's residential area to let his wife know he was home!

    • @zapofpv2002
      @zapofpv2002 Před 11 dny

      The problem with the dump and burn was if you deployed the speed break, which was the large panel that covered the main landing gear, there was a chance that the turbulence would cause the burning dumped fuel to be sucked into the main wheel well that could result in a fire. That is why all dump and burns were performed with the aircraft in a nose up attitude, gaining in altitude.

  • @Jedda73
    @Jedda73 Před 19 dny +5

    I lived near Williamtown RAAF airforce base in NSW Australia as a kid. This was one of the primary bases we flew our F-111's from, so I would regularly see these aircraft flying overhead. They would perform practice runs along the coast and out to sea, so I have seen these aircraft using full afterburners quite a few times, shooting flames out the exhaust as long as the aircraft. Unfortunately due to the contracts we signed with the US government to get hold of them, when the F-111's were retired, the government was forced to destroy them, which they did by burying them, and running bulldozers across them. It was a very sad day to see those aircraft destroyed, permanently ending their era in this country.

    • @slickstrings
      @slickstrings Před 18 dny +3

      The disposal via burial wasnt so much because of the US security agreement. It was because the airframes had asbestos bonded throughout and was too difficult to remove so the other materials could be scrapped. It was indeed very sad. Ive seen 2 preserved in museums.
      The security agreement was for both the technology ans especially engine parts which could possibly be sold on the black market to iran to help keep their f14s flying. They both used the t30 engine.

  • @TheOneTrueSpLiT
    @TheOneTrueSpLiT Před 19 dny +21

    From 1987 I worked as a software engineer in Airborne Displays Division of GEC Avionics at Rochester, on the wall above my desk was a poster of an F-111 with "LIBYA" at the top while underneath each letter written vertically were the words "Lakenheath Is Bombing Your Ass" 😉

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT Před 19 dny

      😅 Reminds me of a song I haven't thought of in years, decades even; _"we circled France all night"_ (sung to the tune of we could have danced all night) about how the strike package was boring holes in the sky because somebody forgot to get clearance to cross French airspace

  • @lonfowler9843
    @lonfowler9843 Před 16 dny +3

    Built in my hometown, Fort Worth. During WW2 the Plant built B-24s. From the B-36 through the F-111, and finally the F-16,... and with a SAC base and Naval Reserve Base next door to the Plant, us kids in the 50's-80's Fort Worth got daily air shows with all kinds of aircraft.

  • @kineticdeath
    @kineticdeath Před 18 dny +4

    back in the late 90's my family went on a big trip down to the snowy mountains region in NSW australia and on one day we took a day trip to visit one of the underground hydro power stations. While we were milling around outside the tunnel waiting for the shuttle bus a solitary F-111 went racing through the mountain valley. I'd say it was less than 200 meters above ground, and well below the tops of the valleys edges. What a sight and sound! Also i was there for the last ever public dump and burn, performed at the williamtown airshow at RAAF williamtown, only a couple of hours away from where i live

  • @chrisschene8301
    @chrisschene8301 Před 18 dny +3

    When I was in the airforce, I was an avionics technician. I worked in inertial navigation, terrain following radar, communication systems, fire control radar and electronic counter measures
    I worked the night shift and it wa so cool seeing the F111 take off on, what i belive was, full afterburner with a fire behind the jet as long as the jet itself. It was cool to see that at night.
    I recall the most frustrating part of the job for me was getting wing glove antennas mounted so they were flush and torqued properly. The rest of the job was changing out system boxes and running mainly canned tests by pushing buttons. I had to exchange an inertial navigation assembly once and was really nervous as it cost 1 million dollars, so the crew chief told me, and 1 million was a lot in 1973.
    There were some Russian trawlers out in the gulf of Mexico and potus Nixon sent F111s to fly low over the ruskies to harras them. I went out with a work order to repair an F111 and the plane was missing a and they came back a few hours later and the pilots told me they were having a great time blowing the ears out of Ivan. I wasn't happy I was forced to change wing glove antennas because they were partially melted

  • @garyb7132
    @garyb7132 Před 17 dny +3

    I worked on these from 84 to 90 at RAF Upper Heyford, I have fond memories of my time with them. And the places we went with them on TDYs.

  • @Donuthan
    @Donuthan Před 19 dny +6

    Any time I see this stunner I just think of that discussion between Indonesian military higher ups, one of them saying:
    "The Australians have a bomber that can fly over here and put a bomb right through the window at any moment!"
    That may be slightly paraphrased,
    but I think there's some truth to it.

  • @tjmcguire9417
    @tjmcguire9417 Před 17 dny +1

    Thank you for featuring this aircraft. I have watched her fly many many times in my life. I consider her one of the most beautiful aircraft ever built. And when she goes/ SHE GOES. Her specs for speed, ceiling and all else were way beyond anything at the time...and in fact even now an F15 would be hard to match her. She was in the realm of F-22 specs. Gorgeous machine. As Michael Scott might say: "Threat Level Midnight". 8-)

  • @finoxb944
    @finoxb944 Před 17 dny +1

    As a medium bomber the F-111 really was unmatched, despite being a failure as a nominal "fighter". It brought a medium range strike capability that really hasn't been filled since it's retirement. Great video.

  • @saltycracker2344
    @saltycracker2344 Před 18 dny +1

    That transition for the sponsor was one of the smoothest I've ever seen.

  • @mk1cortinatony395
    @mk1cortinatony395 Před 19 dny +2

    I worked on these in Filton late 80's. We had the treat of being near the runway and could watch them ground test and then take off back to their base. Lovely power to weight for its day and near vertical after take off was a treat for us to watch.

  • @ArlingtonRV
    @ArlingtonRV Před 19 dny +3

    I was stationed at RAF Lakenheath in 1986 when we launched the strike on Libya. I had only been on the flight line a few weeks at that time and it was very interesting indeed. The video mentioned how much of the maintenance budget was used by the F-111s in Desert Storm (I was there too, but with F-15s from Bitburg). That's not surprising since the F-111 was such a pig. Pilots may have loved it, crew chiefs, not so much. I did learn a lot in the 2 years I worked on them though.

  • @ryanclarke2161
    @ryanclarke2161 Před 19 dny +21

    Fun fact the F111 could carry the equivalent of 4 Nissan patrols under each wing.

    • @gavinjames8749
      @gavinjames8749 Před 18 dny +10

      Having trouble converting your weight units into the standard international units.Would 4 Nissan Patrols be roughly 0.9 of the weight of an adult male African elephant?

    • @RivetGardener
      @RivetGardener Před 17 dny

      What is a Nissan Patrol?

    • @ald6424
      @ald6424 Před 17 dny +1

      @@RivetGardener It's an SUV built by Nissan so weighs approximately 2 tonnes.
      A quick google has found that the max external load was 25k pounds or 11.25 metric tonnes, so it's more like 2 under each wing, still pretty impressive. (also total max take-off was apparently 45 met tonnes, what a beast!)

    • @ryanclarke2161
      @ryanclarke2161 Před 16 dny

      @@gavinjames8749 yes thats about it

  • @erasmus_locke
    @erasmus_locke Před 19 dny +3

    Built in flamethrower for defense during dogfights

  • @alexjohnward
    @alexjohnward Před 18 dny +4

    I thought you would mention the sound of the F111 being recorded on Voyagers Golden Records!

  • @spladam3845
    @spladam3845 Před 16 dny +1

    As a kid in to jet planes this aircraft was never my favorite, I preferred the more flashy fighters, but I now recognize the F-111 as one of the most underrated warplanes of all time.

  • @Mike-tg7dj
    @Mike-tg7dj Před 18 dny +2

    There's nothing like seeing four F-111s screaming across the sky at treetop height barrelling toward your troop convey. I can still see it, and yes they were in a hurry because they punched the sound barrier. It was wild. Glad they wete on our side.

  • @maryjaneaskew7664
    @maryjaneaskew7664 Před 15 dny

    Reading all the comments you can see how much loved the f111 was in Australia.
    I was good friends with a pilot out of Amberly and was told that the "pig" came from its unusual cockpit and nose design that resembled a pig snout. The planes were bought by the RAAF due to the unrest in Indonesia at the time hence why they had a different configuration to the US versions. Not to dog fight but to be a ultra fast long range bomber.
    Last i saw one was in 2007 off the Kangaroo Point cliffs at the Brisbane Riverfire festival. The pilots came in so low i could look straight across at them in the cockbit. Then they lit up the afterburner and everything was orange and you could feel the heat. Then proceeded at a steep climb over the story bridge and this thing then took off like a bat out of hell heading for space.
    I will never forget it.

  • @dingus153
    @dingus153 Před 18 dny +1

    I was lucky enough to spend some time around these as a cadet here in Australia and they were just awe inspiring to witness

  • @RobSchofield
    @RobSchofield Před 18 dny +2

    Nice one - great documentary, nicely researched and presented.

  • @jdl.1234
    @jdl.1234 Před 14 dny

    During Desert Storm on the first night of the War. Two FB-111, not from our base one had an IFE (In flight emergency) A 500 lb GBU didn't disengage and was hanging. The pilot landed without incident, but the FB-111 had holes from Anti Aircraft weapons. It was a cool Bomber....I served during the 80's and 90's. Loved every minute! And Please thank a troop in uniform, it makes a difference, we are humble, but really appreciate it....

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks4395 Před 15 dny +1

    A plane that was iconic for the time period it was developed. The history and aerodynamics of the swing wing are fascinating. It was an intermediate solution that was later rectified in delta plus canard designs and blended-body/leading edge extension designs.

  • @johnclayton2101
    @johnclayton2101 Před 19 dny +4

    I am continually impressed by the information videos you produce. Nothing short of what I expect from professional broadcast channels. I am a subscriber for at least a year and now that I've retired and can afford it, I'll be a financial supporter as well. Also, LOVE THOSE COOL SHIRTS!

  • @paulholmes672
    @paulholmes672 Před 18 dny +3

    Worked the airplane from 1975 to 1993, all around the world. Safest production airplane the USAF has ever had, although we still lost a few aircraft and, unfortunately some 115 pilots and WSO's along the way, all memorialized on "The Rock" memorial near it's last US operational base, Clovis, NM, and an additional memorial at the United States Museum of the Air Force, in Dayton, Ohio. The F-111 was the plane neither the USAF or the Navy really wanted, but it turned out to be the aircraft we needed. After a shaky start in Combat Lancer, it shined in Vietnam, Libya and Desert Storm, and stood alert in England its entire length of service. Desert Storm proved the guided weapon concept through killing more armor than all the other aircraft combined (Highway of Death), stopped the Saddam Hussein Gulf Oil Spill, and took out enough buried command bunkers (GBU-28) to scare the Iraqi government into pulling out of Kuwait. Needless to say, I love the airplane, wish I could see it fly again.

  • @MicahTischler
    @MicahTischler Před 19 dny +3

    I'm mildly surprised that the fuel dump trick didn't get covered. Granted, this video seemed to be a rather high-level overview, but I would have thought it fascinating enough to include for that reason alone.

  • @rollinwithunclepete824
    @rollinwithunclepete824 Před 18 dny +2

    Thanks, Paul! A very interesting video on a awesome plane.

  • @troubleq80
    @troubleq80 Před 18 dny +2

    The EF-111 scored a maneuvering kill against a Mirage F-1 in Operation Desert Storm 16:56

  • @darrenprince5435
    @darrenprince5435 Před 10 dny

    I'll never forget ar the age of 11 or 12 an Aussie F-111A pulling a left hand turn over my house an punching the thrust while doing a dump and burn. Amazing! The ground shook, the windows rattled and i think it loosened a couple tooth fillings. Damn impressive. ❤️

  • @stephenpage-murray7226
    @stephenpage-murray7226 Před 19 dny +167

    Range, payload, speed and unmatched capability. The only western aircraft the Russians have ever truly feared. Destroyed 70% of the hard targets during Desert Storm. Much missed here in Australia..

    • @BunnyUK
      @BunnyUK Před 19 dny +9

      I saw one at an airshow, you could feel the ground vibrate when it was still miles away. Amazing aircraft.

    • @longboardfella5306
      @longboardfella5306 Před 19 dny +12

      Very true. The crew capsule ejection system was an issue in the end. Quite a few lives lost. And revealing the fuel tank liners caused huge health issues for the poor guys doing that. But unmatched in performance for sure

    • @Donuthan
      @Donuthan Před 19 dny +7

      Though serving a fairly similar role and originally, only at a strategic nuclear level the Russians hated the Bone, and caused such a ruckus over it that the sneaky, low flying B-1 isn't capable of carrying a nuclear payload anymore, only conventional iirc.

    • @Legitpenguins99
      @Legitpenguins99 Před 19 dny +3

      @longboardfella5306 I have the displeasure of living near a air Force Base and I'm CONSTANTLY hearing jets all day. It makes me realize how far away that you can hear a jet from. In a war you'd probably be able to hear it coming for miles

    • @stephenpage-murray7226
      @stephenpage-murray7226 Před 19 dny +13

      @@Legitpenguins99
      You’d hear it after it’s left, not coming

  • @ThePholder30
    @ThePholder30 Před 18 dny

    Very similar to the RAF Tornado MRCA program - Fab video thanks Paul ❤ equally fab shirt! Keep up the fantastic content - much appreciated 👏🏼

  • @AtheistOrphan
    @AtheistOrphan Před 19 dny +6

    In the early 80s I served with the Royal Observer Corps and we paid a visit to the 48th Tactical Fighter Wing at RAF Lakenheath. The yanks showed us all around this impressive aircraft, explaining all about the Pave Tack pod.
    I remember in the corner of the hangar was a vending machine for what they referred to as ‘Mountain Doo’.

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 Před 19 dny

      ✝️✝️✝️

  • @davidtaflan941
    @davidtaflan941 Před 18 dny +2

    Thank you for producing a fair video about the F-111. So much said about this aircraft is negative. It truly was remarkable for its time.

  • @matthewnewnham-runner-writer

    As a former F-111 fighter jock (including RAF Lakenheath), I enjoyed this. Thanks, @CuriousDroid.

  • @johndemeritt3460
    @johndemeritt3460 Před 15 dny

    I was stationed at Nellis AFB, Nevada with the 474th Tactical Fighter Wing (TFW) from July 1976 until August 1977. I had the privilege of watching the last of the 474th's Aardvarks line up on the runway, light the afterburners, and trundle down the strip to fly off into the sunset. It was a wonderful thing to watch since, in the year I'd been there, they'd proven to be maintenance hogs! I learned that the TF-30 engines were WAAAAAY too finicky and more than one aircraft had to abort missions because of them.
    And, of course, the wing pivots were a maintenance nightmare as well. But the lessons learned led to the F-14 (STILL powered by TF-30s in "the old days") and the BONE, the latter of which is STILL in service.
    But I might offer a different insight into how the Aardvark acquired it moniker. At the time, a cartoon called "B.C." appeared in the daily newspapers, and it featured an aardvark. Whenever I walked around the different shops in the Avionics Maintenance Squadron, I'd see the aardvark from B.C. depicted with a "bone dome" fighter crew helmet with its ears sticking up through the top of the helmet. Looking at the character's typical configuration, you could see a clear resemblance between the cartoon creature and the aircraft sitting on our flight line.
    And sit, they did! Our maintenance folks didn't have the parts needed to keep them flying -- though with F-111Ds at Cannon AFB, F-111Fs at Mountain Home AFB, and F-111Es at RAF Upper Heyford in the UK and nothing going on but deterring the Soviet Union from rolling through Western Europe, the As weren't needed as much as they would be once they'd been converted into EF-111As.

  • @miketype1each
    @miketype1each Před 12 dny

    Upper Heyford's E models had the TF-30 engines, with Lakenheath having the 100s. In the dark, LN's afterburners were a sight to behold! By the way, the combination forward landing gear door/speedbrake was recessed on the inside to make room for the landing gear tyres, and was a good place to nestle into for a nap. Also, the rear elevators were good sliding boards.

  • @frankgulla2335
    @frankgulla2335 Před 14 dny

    Paul thank you for that detailed history of the F111, its trials and tribulations, and its successes later in life.

  • @EricPranausk
    @EricPranausk Před 19 dny +2

    So nice to see a video without fake AI imagery. Keep it up, and I'll definitely resubscribe.

  • @kunzite21
    @kunzite21 Před 18 dny +1

    was in the 429th ECS and we closed out the last of the f-111 in US service. such a great plane you will be missed

  • @pahtar7189
    @pahtar7189 Před 18 dny +3

    The Aardvark carried 7% more ordnance (with a weapons bay), 50% farther than the F-15EX, which makes me wonder what kind of performance a modern F-111 would have. With basically the same fuselage, but with a modern AESA radar, engines, avionics, some stealth features, and materials, it could end up with the best features of the F-111 and the F-15EX, plus more.

  • @Thenonsocial
    @Thenonsocial Před 10 dny

    My uncle was one of the lead GE engineers working on the F111. I was a kid back then but always remember him calling it the fast swine.

  • @chrislong3938
    @chrislong3938 Před 14 dny

    The F-111 was always one of my absolute favorites!
    Then it stepped up in my eyes when they made it into a Wild Weasel!
    I used to play a strategy computer game called Harpoon, which I really liked. The F-111 was the only plane that could penetrate Iran's airspace with relative ease due to its terrain-following radar.
    It's such a beautiful jet!

  • @spacecat7247
    @spacecat7247 Před 17 dny

    Always loved the swing wings. Some were stationed near my home in so cal. I miss them. Just like the f 14s

  • @davidrmcmahon
    @davidrmcmahon Před 19 dny +1

    I sat in one of these as a child, tried to start it! Always remember that.

  • @SwanOnChips
    @SwanOnChips Před 17 dny

    Growing up I always liked the F-111 because it looked so cool in any of its wing configurations.

  • @micsunday14
    @micsunday14 Před 13 dny

    You're an excellent writer Curious, love your work!

  • @arthurcrime
    @arthurcrime Před 15 dny

    This was well worth the watch, these used to do a dump & burn for festive occasions, and the cabby I was with dived out of the car and rolled underneath. He had been in Vietnam and had had a close encounter with napalm. Poor bugger. This in Australia.

  • @Tfish8080
    @Tfish8080 Před 15 dny +1

    I think f111a is one of the few modern aircraft that was awarded a dogfight kill without having any weapon stores

  • @Alftura
    @Alftura Před 17 dny

    When i was a kid in the midd 90's, my grade went on a school camping trip on the South Coast of New South Wales. This was 3 or 4 hours south of Sydney. On the 2nd or 3rd day, as we were all walking down a beach, i very, VERY low flying F-111 roared over our heads. It was following the coast line using its radar or auto pilot avionics or whatever. We were told by the camp operaters that the Australian Air force did the training alone the NSW south coast as it was near their base but also due to how rugged that coast line was? That sound right? Someone correct me. Anyway, it has always stuck with me as a kid. I was blown away to how loud, how fast and how low it was. Pops into my head a few times a year. Very strong memory. :-)

  • @Simonize41
    @Simonize41 Před 16 dny

    Fantastic, Paul.👍🏻

  • @bully056
    @bully056 Před 18 dny +4

    Honestly, if it wasn’t for the F-111, we wouldn’t have likely seen the development of the F-14 Tomcat

  • @badrinair
    @badrinair Před 18 dny

    thank you very much for this story

  • @carlbusque1856
    @carlbusque1856 Před 17 dny

    Love your work, thanks!😊

  • @tiitsaul9036
    @tiitsaul9036 Před 19 dny +3

    I saw them flying before they retired in Australia.

  • @johnb7757
    @johnb7757 Před 14 dny

    My dad's final flight (3 hours before the retirement ceremony) was in a 111 flying chase at Edwards for a B-1B. Nice way to close out 29 years.

  • @VolkanTaninmis
    @VolkanTaninmis Před 18 dny

    Paul has such a naive and neat expression that even the sponsor promotion does not feels like bad. In a garbage dump like CZcams, this channel and its work is like a paradise in the middle of the desert.

  • @HM2SGT
    @HM2SGT Před 19 dny +5

    *Ah, yes... the F One a-lemon. Maintenance and reliability nightmare! I remember well the news magazine articles about the issue back in the early 80s. Had a cousin that was a maintainer at Pease- he confirmed and verified everything.*

  • @stianh6164
    @stianh6164 Před 15 dny

    Good short doc 😊

  • @b1646717
    @b1646717 Před 19 dny +2

    We used to sit on the porch and watch them practice bombing at the Melrose bombing range. Over the years, we saw two accidents.

  • @markdunstan1031
    @markdunstan1031 Před 18 dny +1

    And us Aussies kept using the Pig up until 2010. And we had the best 'party trick' ever, something the Yanks didn't do - the 'Dump & Burn', the most spectacular display of duping raw fuel from the back of the aircraft and lighting it with the afterburners..... (You could feel the heat on the ground as it sped past.......) And, as is always forgotten, we had 4 RF111s! I think they were used in East Timor peace keeping mission in 1999.

    • @mountvernon5267
      @mountvernon5267 Před 18 dny

      I saw a dump-and-burn over Lake Champlain when I was stationed at Plattsburgh, NY. The 'vark had taken off and had a problem, but was fuel-heavy and needed to lighten the load for landing. Beautiful sight! (Made a safe landing and everyone was OK.) I loved how you guys did the Sydney Olympics closing ceremony when the F-111 'picked up' the Olympic flame (they extinguished the flame as the plane flew over and did the dump-and-burn). There are several videos of it here on YT.

    • @paulholmes672
      @paulholmes672 Před 18 dny

      Our pilots would use it sparingly but they would use it for brief "here I am" moments, only on the training range, never in combat OR on display. Our leaders would allow the F-15/F-16 to do airshow demos, but they always wanted to keep the Vark on the ground, static, so as to keep it a curiosity. It was never a 'White Scarf" 30,000 ft fighter, but a Mud Moving, Mach 1.2 "on the deck" Monster, and that was considered 'not sexy'. :-)

  • @curtisbryce5096
    @curtisbryce5096 Před 18 dny

    I really like the way you present your videos. Very watchable.

  • @beornthebear.8220
    @beornthebear.8220 Před 16 dny +1

    The F-111 was terrain following, and I read that many pilots would iInstinctively try to control the aircraft as it head edtoward a mountain. However, the F-111 would follow the terrain up and down the mountain automatically.

  • @abialo2010
    @abialo2010 Před 19 dny

    my favorite plane! great video. thanks

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 Před 19 dny +6

    I think this has better performance in ground attwck than the A10, and it didn't get hit in the tank-plinking missions.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT Před 19 dny +3

      iirc the correct term is 'mud moving', but tank plinking has a similarly pleasing alliterative rhythm

    • @ailouros6669
      @ailouros6669 Před 19 dny +1

      All possible thanks to fighter, jamming and SEAD cover.

  • @PeterPan-uu5vu
    @PeterPan-uu5vu Před 17 dny

    Great channel - thanks- keep it up.

  • @Razzy1312
    @Razzy1312 Před 11 dny

    Most underrated aircraft of the 20th century.

  • @cleonwallace2267
    @cleonwallace2267 Před 19 dny

    nice vid i've always loved this aircraft

  • @dannyv.6358
    @dannyv.6358 Před 19 dny

    Love me a new Curious Driod upload!

  • @GiBBO5700
    @GiBBO5700 Před 4 dny

    I got to touch an F1 11 at an air show in Adelaide about 30 years ago when I was about 10 years old. My step dad at the time worked at Edinburgh in SA lol I got to sit in a Blackhawk too