Was playing the F-14A a while back and noticed this weird thing and decided to forget about it, after couple months I’ve decided to revisit the F-14A and this modelling error is still occurrent. Can someone please tell me whether this is a in-game modelling error or its just the fact I’m going insane?
IRIAF F-14A Pylons
The AIM-9P and Sedjeel are touching one another lmao
It was definitely done, the issue is that this technically occurred later than the arbitrary cutoff ('77 SAC) that Gaijin are using for the “Early” F-14A, in order to give it access to the AIM-9D & -9H (see '74 SAC). We know that the TCS specs at very least predate 1982 (the -A attached to the code indicates that it is the second revision of the document, though I can’t find a date for the initial publication) The ALR-23 IRSTS was optionally able to be mounted so it should have it.
I’m aware that it was deployed in the fleet and began to be specified in the NAVAIR flight manual in the 1980s but, If we can find some docs proving that TCS was tested/installed by April 1977, maybe They can add TCS to the F-14A Early. At least in terms of tested weaponry and functionality, they are somewhat lenient, just like VTAS for Navy Phantoms and the SRAAMs for Hunter F.6.
It is shame that they didn’t add ALR-23 for F-14A Early even if they are completely useless.
It’s not useless, it would make the radar (when within IRSTS’s gimbal limits [?+/- 65 degrees?, seems a little high]) immune to chaff and Notching meaning that you would trade some limitations on tracking geometry for much more reliable Radar missiles (Within 10 Nmi [~18km]), and the ability to passively track off bore targets for Sidewinder usage without relying on the radar.
Good to know I guess, I think that that may have been when it went out to tender, since Government furnished Technical data, requires competitive bidding processes in an attempt to avoid single source contracts.
I’m pretty sure that also predates the production of “F-14A+” airframes as well (?'84?).
Seems Smithsonian has NAVAIR 01-F14AAA-1 from 1986.
Probably, since it mentions “no restrictions on access,” it is probably the only flight manual from the late 1980s that is not under export restrictions.
And the first comment i see (in a serious video not to mention , i mean it’s an attack on an airfield…)
“this plane used to terrorize 12.7” …
Imagine the butthurt!!
This guy is a legend!