The
Ling-Temco-Vought A-7
Corsair II is a carrier-based subsonic light
attack aircraft introduced to replace the
United States Navy's
A-4 Skyhawk, initially entering service during
the
Vietnam War. The Corsair was later
adopted by the
United States Air
Force, to include the
Air
National Guard, to replace the
A-1
Skyraider,
F-100 Super Sabre
and
F-105 Thunderchief.
The
aircraft was also exported to Greece
in the
1970s, and Portugal
and Thailand
in the late
1980s. The A-7 airframe design was based on the successful
supersonic F-8
Crusader produced by
Chance Vought. It
was one of the first combat aircraft to feature a
head-up display (HUD), an
inertial navigation system (INS),
and a
turbofan engine.
Design and development

An A-7B Corsair II aircraft from Naval
Air Reserve Attack Squadron 305 (VA-305)
In 1962, the
United States Navy
began preliminary work on
VAX (Heavier-than-air, Attack,
Experimental), a replacement for the
A-4
Skyhawk with greater range and payload. A particular emphasis
was placed on accurate delivery of weapons to reduce the cost per
target. The requirements were finalized in 1963, announcing the
VAL (Heavier-than-air, Attack, Light) competition.
Contrary to USAF philosophy, which was to employ only supersonic
fighter bombers such as the F-105 Thunderchief and
F-100 Super Sabre, the Navy felt that a
subsonic design could carry the most payload the farthest distance.
Theoretically, a "slow fat duck" could fly nearly as fast as a
supersonic one, since carrying dozens of iron bombs also restricted
its entry speed, but a fast aircraft with small wings and an
afterburner would burn more fuel.
To minimize costs, all proposals had to be based on existing
designs.
Vought,
Douglas Aircraft,
Grumman and
North
American Aviation responded. The Vought proposal was based on
the successful
F-8 Crusader fighter,
having a similar configuration, but shorter and more stubby, with a
rounded nose. It was selected as the winner on 11 February 1964,
and on 19 March the company received a contract for the initial
batch of aircraft, designated
A-7. In 1965, the aircraft
received the popular name
Corsair II, after Vought's
highly successful
F4U Corsair of
World War II. (There was also a Vought
O2U Corsair biplane scout and
observation aircraft in 1920s.)
Compared to the F-8 fighter, the A-7 had a shorter, broader
fuselage. The wing had a longer span, and the unique variable
incidence wing of the F-8 was omitted. To achieve the required
range, the A-7 was powered by a
Pratt & Whitney TF30-P-6
turbofan producing 11,345 lbf
(50.5 kN) of thrust, the same innovative combat turbofan
produced for the
F-111 and
early
F-14 Tomcats, but without the
afterburner needed for supersonic speeds. Turbofans achieve greater
efficiency by moving a larger mass of air at a lower
velocity.
The aircraft was fitted with an
AN/APQ-116 radar, later followed by the
AN/APQ-126, which was integrated into the ILAAS
digital navigation system. The radar also fed a digital weapons
computer which made possible accurate delivery of bombs from a
greater stand-off distance, greatly improving survivability
compared with faster platforms such as the
F-4 Phantom II. It was the first U.S.
aircraft to have a modern
head-up
display, (made by
Marconi-Elliott), now a standard
instrument, which displayed information such as dive angle,
airspeed, altitude, drift and aiming reticle. The integrated
navigation system allowed for another innovation – the projected
map display system (PMDS) which accurately showed aircraft position
on two different map scales.
The A-7 enjoyed the fastest and most trouble free development
period of any American combat aircraft since
World War II. The
YA-7A made its first
flight on 27 September 1965, and began to enter Navy squadron
service late in 1966. The first Navy A-7 squadrons reached
operational status on 1 February 1967, and began combat operations
over
Vietnam in December of that
year.
Improved versions
Secretary of Defense
Robert McNamara
prodded the Air Force to adopt not only the hugely successful F-4,
but also the Navy's A-7 Corsair as a low-cost follow-on to F-105s
until the troubled
F-111 came online, and as a
close-air support replacement for
A-1
Skyraider. On 5 November 1965, the USAF announced that it would
purchase a version of the A-7, designated the
A-7D, for
Tactical Air Command. The Air
Force ordered the A-7D with a fixed high speed refueling receptacle
behind the pilot optimized for the
KC-135's flying boom rather than the
folding long
probe of the Navy
aircraft. The most important difference from the preceding Navy
versions was the adoption of the
Allison TF41-A-1 turbofan, a license-built
version of British Rolls-Royce Spey. With 14,500 lbf
(64.5 kN) of thrust, the engine offered a considerable boost
in performance. The
M61 Vulcan cannon was
selected in place of the twin single-barrel 20 mm cannon. In
addition, avionics were upgraded. The
YA-7D prototype with
TF30 flew on 6 April 1968, with the first TF41 aircraft taking to
the air on 26 September 1968. The aircraft were later updated to
carry the
Pave Penny laser spot tracker
to add the capability to drop guided bombs. A total of 459 were
built and assigned to tactical fighter wings of the
Tactical Air Command (TAC).
The Navy was so impressed with the performance gain of USAF A-7D
that they ordered their own version with the TF41 engine and M61
cannon, the
A-7E, to go along with the new continuous
solution weapon systems and sophisticated avionics that was
developed in the A-7C model that was highly advanced for that era.
The first prototype flew on 25 November 1968. A-7Es were built in
1970s with outstanding mission success in the fleet.
In 1979 the first
around-the-clock night-attack FLIR-capable aircraft were delivered
to VA-81 at NAS Cecil
Field
, Florida. During the 1980s, when defense
budgets finally allowed, funding for upgrades various system
upgrades and engineering change proposal mods were incorporated to
increase reliability, safety and mission effectiveness. In 1986,
231 A-7Es were equipped to carry the Low-Altitude Night Attack
(LANA) pod which projected amplified light image on the HUD and, in
conjunction with radar, provided terrain following down to
460 mph (740 km/h) at 200 ft (60 m). A total of 529
examples were built (not counting 67 A-7Cs).

YA-7F "Strikefighter" prototype in
1989
In 1985, the USAF requested proposals for a fast strike aircraft
because of concerns that
A-10
Thunderbolt II was too slow for interdiction. The design called
for a new engine, either the
Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-220 or
General Electric F110-GE 100.
LTV responded with the YA-7F, a supersonic version of A-7 powered
by an F100-PW-220 with 26,000 lbf (116 kN) thrust. To
accommodate the new engine, the fuselage was lengthened about
4 ft (1.22 m). New fuselage sections were inserted in both the
forward and aft fuselage - a 30 in (76 cm) section in front of
the wing and an 18 in (46 cm) section behind the wing. The
wing was strengthened and fitted with new augmented flaps, leading
edge extensions and automatic maneuvering flaps. The vertical
stabilizer height was increased about 10 in (25 cm), the unit
horizontal tail was flipped from dihedral to anhedral, and control
surfaces were flattened. Unsurprisingly, the end result resembled
the supersonic F-8 Crusader from which the original subsonic A-7
was derived.
The new supersonic A-7 could accelerate with a bomb load from 400
to in under 15 seconds and could sustain Mach 1.6 for longer times
with the extra fuel. The YA-7F modifications allowed 7-g turn and
burn capability that permitted high-speed sustained evasive
maneuvers plus great improvements in high angle of attack
performance. As a CAS/BAI platform to penetrate into enemy
territory and return safely, the "Strikefighter" moniker was most
fitting. Two A-7Ds were extensively modified, the first one flying
on 29 November 1989 and breaking the
sound
barrier on its second flight. The second prototype flew on 3
April 1990. The project was canceled due to improved relations with
former adversaries, lower defense budgets, and the
Air National Guard, by then the principal
USAF operator of the A-7 generally favoring the in-production
F-16 Fighting Falcon.
Production of Corsairs continued through 1984, yielding a total of
1,569 aircraft built. The A-7 Corsair has the distinction of being
the only United States single seat jet fighter-bomber of the 1960s
that was designed, built, and deployed directly into the Vietnam
War.
Operational history
Initial operational basing/homeporting for
U.S. Navy A-7 squadrons
was at NAS Cecil
Field
, Florida for Atlantic Fleet units and NAS Lemoore
, California for Pacific Fleet units. This
was in keeping with the role of these bases in already hosting the
A-4 Skyhawk attack squadrons that would
eventually transition to the A-7. From 1967 - 1971 a total of 27
Navy squadrons took delivery of four different A-7A/B/C/E models.
The Vought plant in Dallas, TX employed up to 35,000 workers turned
out one aircraft a day for several years to support the Navy
carrier-based needs for Vietnam and SE Asia and commitments to NATO
in Europe.
In 1974, when the USS
Midway (CV 41) became the first Forward Deployed Naval Force
(FDNF) aircraft carrier to be homeported in Yokosuka, Japan, two
A-7A squadrons assigned to Carrier Air Wing FIVE (CVW-5) were
concurrently homeported at NAF Atsugi
, Japan. In 1978, these squadrons (VA-93 and
VA-56) finally transitioned to the much more advanced A-7E model.
Six Naval
Reserve squadrons would also eventually transition to the A-7,
operating from NAS Cecil
Field
, Florida; NAS Atlanta/Dobbins ARB
, Georgia; NAS New Orleans
, Louisiana; NAS Alameda
, California and NAS Point Mugu
, California. An additional active duty squadron stood
up in the 1980s, Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron 34 (VAQ-34)
at NAS Point
Mugu
, which would operate twin-seat TA-7C and EA-7L
aircraft with both a pilot and a Naval Flight Officer in an adversary
electroic warfare role.
Initial
USAF basing of the A-7D was at Edwards AFB
, California
and Eglin
AFB
, Florida
in 1968 for
prototype testing. Initial lead-in pilot training squadrons were
established at Luke AFB, Arizona
, and
Nellis
AFB
, Nevada
in
1969. The first operational USAF basing was at
Myrtle Beach
AFB
, South
Carolina
(354 TFW) in
1970, with subsequent basing at Davis-Monthan AFB
, Arizona
(355 TFW) in
1971 and England
AFB
, Louisiana
(23 TFW) in 1972. The Luke-based A-7Ds were
reassigned to Davis-Monthan in 1971 along with the lead-in pilot
training mission.
A fourth operational A-7D wing was assigned
to Korat Royal Thai Air
Force Base, Thailand
(388 TFW) in early 1973 derived from deployed
Myrtle Beach aircraft.
Pilots of the early A-7s lauded the aircraft for general ease of
flying (with the exceptions of poor stability on cross-wind
landings and miserable stopping performance on wet runways with an
inoperative anti-skid braking system) and excellent forward
visibility but noted a lack of engine thrust. This was addressed
with A-7B and more thoroughly with A-7D/E. The turbofan engine
provided a dramatic increase in fuel efficiency compared with
earlier
turbojets – the A-7D was said to
have
specific fuel
consumption one sixth that of an
F-100 Super Sabre at equivalent thrust. An
A-7D carrying 12 x 500 lb (227 kg) bombs at 480 mph
(775 km/h) at 33,000 ft (10,000 m) used only
3,350 lb (1,500 kg) of fuel per hour. Typical fuel
consumption at mission retrograde during aircraft carrier recovery
was approximately 30 pounds per minute compared to 100+ pounds per
minute for the Phantom F-4J/N series. The A-7 Corsair II was tagged
with the nickname "SLUF" ("
Short
Little
Ugly
Fucker") by pilots.
The integrated weapons computer provided highly accurate bombing
with
CEP of 60 ft (20
m) regardless of pilot experience. When Vought technical
representatives were available to "tweak" the inertial systems, the
CEP was often less than five meters for experienced fleet aviators.
The inertial navigation system required a mere 2.5 minutes on the
ground for partial (coarse) alignment, a big improvement over 13
minutes required in
F-4 Phantom II.
For newly manufactured E models, the A-7 required only 11.5
man hours of maintenance per mission
resulting in quick turnaround and high number of combat-ready
aircraft. However, after several years of exposure to the harsh
marine conditions aboard aircraft carriers, the maintenance hours
per sortie were often twice this amount.
For its day, the A-7 offered a plethora of leading-edge avionics.
This included data link capabilities that, among other features,
provided fully "hands-off" carrier landing capability when used in
conjunction with its approach power compensator (APC) or auto
throttle. Other notable and highly advanced equipment was a
projected map display located just below the radar scope. The map
display was slaved to the inertial navigation system and provided a
high-resolution map image of the aircraft's position superimposed
over TPC/JNC charts. Moreover, when slaved to the all-axis auto
pilot, the inertial navigation system could fly the aircraft "hands
off" to up to nine individual way points. Typical inertial drift
was minimal for newly manufactured models and the inertial
measurement system accepted fly over, radar, and TACAN
updates.
Pilots quipped that the Corsair "is not very fast, but it sure is
slow." For
dissimilar air
combat training (DACT), and aerial demonstrations by the
Blue Angels, the Navy would choose the
more nimble
A-4 Skyhawk as a subsonic
maneuvering platform, as some considered the A-7 to be inadequate
in air combat, even though it was highly maneuverable and was more
fitting as a highly successful attack aircraft with a stable
bombing platform. The Marine Corps would also pass on the Corsair,
opting instead for the
V/STOL vertical
landing
AV-8 Harrier as their light
attack aircraft to replace their A-4F/M Skyhawks.
Naval Reserve and
Air National Guard units,
however, were often forced to operate the A-7E and D models in
rather challenging air-to-air duels with USAF
F-15 Eagles and USN
F-14
Tomcats. Several A-7 units adopted a technique pioneered by the
Puerto Rico Air National
Guard: if an F-15 approaches gun range, depart the A-7 from
controlled flight and deploy as much chaff and flares as possible.
Departing an A-7 from controlled
flight resulted in very high and simultaneous roll, yaw and
pitch rates. It also caused a near instantaneous airspeed loss of
100 to that made successful gun-tracking by an opponent nearly
impossible. Deploying chaff and flares during such an event spewed
these devices in all directions as the range between the two
aircraft rapidly diminished and consequently posed a chaff/flare
collision threat to the attacking aircraft, as documented by the
Puerto Rico ANG's former
156th
Fighter Wing, then flying the A-7, and the
Louisiana Air National Guard's
159th Fighter Wing flying the
F-15.
Southeast Asia

A VA-147 A-7A from the
USS
Ranger (CVA 61) over Vietnam in 1968
In Vietnam, the hot, humid air robbed even the upgraded A-7D and
A-7E of power. Takeoff rolls were lengthy and fully-armed aircraft
struggled to reach 800 km/h. For A-7A aircraft, high density
altitude and maximum weight runway takeoffs often necessitated a
"low transition," where the aircraft was intentionally held in
"ground effect" a few feet off the runway during gear retraction,
and as much as a departure at treetop altitude before reaching a
safe flap retraction speed.(Note: the A-7A wing flap systems were
either fully extended or fully retracted. The A-7A flap handle did
not have the microswitch feature of later models that permitted the
flaps to be slowly raised by several degrees per tap of the flap
handle as airspeed slowly increased during max-weight
takeoffs.)
Carrier catapult launches at maximum weight under these
performance-robbing conditions were not significantly better and
were characterized by the aircraft decelerating by as much as
immediately after launch. As a result, A-7A units operated their
aircraft 4 thousand pounds below the max-rated takeoff weight for
the A-7E.

A-7C of VA-82 Marauders operating in
SE Asia
The first U.S.
Navy A-7As were deployed to Vietnam in 1967
with VA-147 Argonauts aboard
USS
Ranger
. The aircraft made their first combat sortie
on
4 December 1967.
In the following months, VA-147 flew around 1,400 sorties losing
only one aircraft.
In January 1968, USS Ranger
participated in the incident surrounding the capture of USS
Pueblo
in the Sea of Japan
by North
Korea
. The Navy's improved A-7B model arrived in
Vietnam in early 1969, with the definitive A-7E following in 1971.
The U.S. Navy's first A-7 loss occurred on
22 December 1967, less than
three weeks after entering combat.
In late spring of 1971, VA-86 and VA-82 were forced to transition
to the A-7C due to unexpected problems with the A-7E's TF-41
engines. The Sidewinders and Marauders then deployed from Jun 1972
to Mar 1973 aboard USS America (CV-66) for a ten-month combat
cruise. On that deployment, VA-82 played a role in the attack that
destroyed the Thanh Hoa Bridge, a vital link in the North
Vietnamese Army supply lines and a target that seemed
indestructible during the Vietnam War.

A-7C of VA-82
Four A-7Cs from VA-82 successfully delivered 8,000 lbs of high
explosives with two planes carrying two 2,000 lb (910 kg)
Walleyes, while two other carried also 2,000 lbs in Mk 84 GP
bombs. In a simultaneous attack, the center piling on the bridge's
west side was hit and broke the span in half. After this, the Thanh
Hoa bridge was considered permanently destroyed and removed from
the target list. Approximately 98 USN A-7 Corsairs were lost during
the war.

A-7Bs of CVW-16 on the
USS
Ticonderoga in 1968
The USAF
A-7Ds were also widely used in Vietnam and Cambodia
with 354th Tactical
Fighter Wing, and the 388th
Tactical Fighter Wing, flying from Korat
RTAFB, Thailand. A-7s from the 354th TFW entered action
in October 1972 and attacked targets as far as 800 km from
airbases, extensively utilizing mid-air refueling. The A-7Ds were
quickly assigned the "Sandy mission" of providing air cover for
Combat Search and Rescue missions
of downed pilots. Taking over for
A-1
Skyraiders (and adopting their call sign of "Sandy"), the A-7's
higher speed was somewhat detrimental for escorting the helicopters
but the aircraft's high endurance and durability were an asset and
it performed admirably. On 18 November 1972, Major Colin A.
Clarke
led a successful CSAR mission near Thanh Hoa
to rescue a downed F-105 Wild Weasel crew. The
mission lasted a total of 8.8 hours during which Clarke and his
wingman took a number of hits from 0.51 cal (12.7 mm)
anti-aircraft fire. For his actions in coordinating the rescue,
Clarke was awarded the
Air Force Cross, the USAF's
second-highest decoration for valor, and his A-7D (AF Serial No.
70-0970)
was eventually placed on display on 31 January 1992 at the National Museum of the United States Air
Force
at Wright-Patterson AFB
, Ohio.
The USAF A-7D flew a total of 12,928 combat sorties during the war
with only six losses – the lowest of any U.S. fighter in the
theater.
The aircraft was second only to B-52 Stratofortress in the amount of
ordnance dropped on Hanoi
and dropped
more bombs per sortie with greater accuracy than any other U.S.
attack aircraft.
A-7Ds from Korat flew combat operations over Vietnam until
mid-January 1973, in Laos until 22 February 1973, and in Cambodia
until 15 August 1973. The last shot fired in anger by United States
military forces in Southeast Asia was fired by an A-7D of the
deployed 345th TFW / 353 TFS assigned to Korat RTAFB on 15 August
1973.

A-7D from the 3 TFS/388 TFW, Korat
RTAFB, 1973
During the war in Southeast Asia, U.S. Navy A-7 Corsairs were
painted gloss gray/white in color while USAF A-7s were normally
painted in full jungle camouflage paint schemes. The U.S. Navy did
experiment with
camouflage paint schemes
for some of their aircraft during the war, but during landing
operations, the flight deck crews found their duties complicated,
due to the inherent changing of the weather conditions aboard a
moving ship and the color coded uniforms of the flight deck crew;
with the added dangers involved to an already cluttered flight
deck, it was determined to keep naval aircraft readily visible for
the sake of safety.
On 15 May
1975, A-7E aircraft aboard the USS Coral Sea, in conjunction with
A-7D aircraft assigned to the 388 TFW / 3 TFS at Korat RTAFB,
provided air cover in what is considered the last battle of the
Vietnam war, the recovery of the SS Mayagüez
after it was hijacked by Cambodian
communists. By the time Operation Mayaguez was over, three
U.S. helicopters had been shot down, six received severe damage,
three others were heavily damaged and only one was still flyable.
Of the total force of 231 Marines, Airmen, and Sailors who landed
on Koh Tang Island during this operation, 18 men were KIA or
unaccounted for and at least three of these were later determined
to have been inadvertently left alive on the island.
Grenada

A-7Es on the
USS Independence
(CV 62) in 1983
Navy A-7E squadrons VA-15 and VA-87, from the USS
Independence, provided close air support during the
Invasion of Grenada, codenamed
Operation Urgent Fury, in October 1983.
Lebanon
Navy A-7s
also provided air support during the U.S. mission in Lebanon
in 1983. Along with an A-6
Intruder, one A-7 was shot down by Syrian
surface-to-air missiles (SAM) on 4
December 1983.
One of the A-6 pilots, Lt.
Mark Lange,
was killed; his Bombadier Navigator,
Robert Goodman, ejected and was captured by
the Syrians. From the A-7, LCDR Coughlin and his B/N, Hellman,
ejected and were rescued, though both suffered severe
injuries.
Libya
On 24
March 1986, during the Gulf of Sidra
dispute with Libya
, Libyan air
defense operators fired SA-5
missiles at two Fighter Squadron 102 (VF-102)
F-14s from USS
America that were orbiting in international air space
on a Combat Air Patrol (CAP)
station. The next day, a Navy A-7E aircraft accompanied the
fighters and responded to the SA-5 radar emissions by firing the
first
AGM-88 HARM missiles used in
combat and destroying the Libyan radar.
In April
1986, Navy Sixth Fleet A-7Es from VA-72 and VA-46 aboard USS
America (CV 66) also participated in Operation El Dorado Canyon, the
retaliatory attack on Libya
using HARM
and Shrike anti-radar missiles.
Operation Earnest Will/Operation Praying Mantis
During the
Iran–Iraq War of
the 1980s, continued Iranian and Iraqi attacks on shipping in the
Persian Gulf were becoming so frequent that by 1987 the Kuwaitis
requested U.S. assistance and
Operation Earnest Will, designed to
maintain freedom of navigation within that body of water, was
initiated. At the outset, 11 Kuwaiti tankers were “re-flagged,” the
Middle East Force escorting the
first ships through the Strait of Hormuz into the Persian Gulf to
Kuwait, and then returning outbound, beginning on 22 July
1987.
During escort duty while steaming northeast of Qatar on 14 April
1988, lookouts on board guided missile frigate
USS Samuel B.
Roberts
spotted three mines ahead. Going to general quarters, the ship soon
struck a fourth mine that exploded and blew a hole in her port side
near frame 276, injuring 10 sailors, and inflicting "considerable
damage to the hull, deckhouse and foundation structures,
essentially breaking the ship’s back." However, damage control
efforts made by the crew were successful and the ship was saved.
Over the next 10 days, coalition mine countermeasures vessels
located eight additional mines, examination of which left little
doubt as to their Iranian origins.
Operation Praying Mantis
was designed as a "measured response" to this incident, as well as
to repeated Iranian shipping harassment and provocations; A-7Es
from
VA-22 and
VA-94,
along with A-6E Intruders from
VA-95
participated in sinking the Iranian Frigate
Sahand, which had fired missiles at
two American A-6Es.
Panama
The
Ohio Air National
Guard's 180th Tactical Fighter Group (180 TFG) was deployed on
rotation in Panama when hostilities began in late December 1989 and
participated in
Operation Just
Cause.
They were among the ANG units that routinely
rotated to Howard
Air Force Base
to provide a presence in Panama Cornet
Cove deployment exercises.
Operation Desert Shield/Storm

A-7E from VA-72 flying over the Saudi
desert during Operation Desert Shield
While USAF A-7s stayed home in favor of A-10s, the US Navy deployed
two of their last A-7E squadrons to
Operation Desert Shield in
August 1990 aboard
USS John F.
Kennedy (CV 67), the only carrier of six deployed to
Desert Storm to operate the A-7.
VA-46 and
VA-72
made the last combat sorties of the A-7 in
Operation Desert Storm flying from
the Red Sea to targets throughout Iraq. The A-7 was used both day
and night to attack a wide range of heavily defended deep
interdiction targets in Iraq as well as "kill boxes"
(geographically defined kill zones) in Kuwait, employing a variety
of weapons including precision-guided munitions (PGM's), such as
the TV-guided Walleye glide bomb, unguided general purpose bombs,
and High Speed Anti-Radiation missiles (HARM). The A-7 was also
used as a tanker in numerous in-flight refueling missions.
Use in F-117 development
The
4450th Tactical Group
stationed at Nellis
AFB
, Nevada
had the
distinction of being the last active USAF unit to operate the A-7
Corsair II. The mission of the 4450th TG was the operational
development of the
F-117 Nighthawk,
and the unit needed a surrogate aircraft for pilot training and
practice. A-7Ds and A-7Ks were obtained from various active duty
and air national guard squadrons and were assigned initially to the
"(P)" or "Provisional" unit of the 4450th Tactical Group,
redesignated the 4451st Tactical Squadron in January 1983.
The A-7s were used as a deception and training aircraft by the
group between 1981 and 1989. It was selected because it demanded
about the correct amount of pilot workload expected in the F-117A,
was single seat, and many of the F-117A pilots had F-4 or F-111
backgrounds. A-7s were used for pilot training before any F-117As
had been delivered to bring all pilots to a common flight training
base line. Later, the A-7s were used to chase F-117A tests and
other weapon tests at the Nellis Range.
A-7 flight operations began in June 1981 concurrent with the very
first YF-117A flights. The A-7s wore a unique "LV" tailcode (for
Las Vegas) and had a dark purple/black paint motif.
The A-7s were based
officially at Nellis Air Force Base
and were maintained by the 4450th Maintenance
Squadron.
In addition to providing an excuse for the 4450th's existence and
activities, the A-7s were also used to maintain pilot currency,
particularly in the early stages when very few production F-117As
were available. The pilots learned to fly chase on F-117A test and
training flights, perform practice covert deployments, and practice
any other purpose that could not be accomplished using F-117As,
given the tight restrictions imposed on all F-117A
operations.
Some A-7s
operated from the Tonopah Test Range Airport
, about southeast of Tonopah, Nevada
where the F-117s were being operationally
tested. As a deception operation, care was taken to ensure
that F-117As were never left parked outside aircraft hangars during
daylight hours. However, A-7s were deliberately and routinely left
outside hangers for the benefit of any orbiting Soviet
spy satellites. Soviet intelligence agencies
examining spy satellite imagery of the base would undoubtedly
notice the A-7s parked on the Tonopah flight line, and would not be
particularly interested. The intention of this deception was to
convince the Soviets that Tonopah operated nothing more exciting
than some A-7 Corsairs.
As part
of the deception and to develop deployment procedures, the 4451st
TS deployed A-7s to Kunsan
AB
, South
Korea
in 1984 to participate in Team Spirit
1984. The word was purposely leaked that the 4450th
TG A-7Ds were carrying "super secret" atomic anti-radar devices
that would render the aircraft invisible. To maintain the
deception, each A-7D was outfitted with old napalm canisters
painted black with a flashing red danger light in the rear. The
canisters carried a radiation warning tag over an ominous-looking
slot on which was printed: "Reactor Cooling Fill Port." When the
4450th TG deployed carrying these bogus devices, the USAF Security
Police closed down the base and ringed the field with machine gun
toting vehicles. They forced all the runway personnel to turn their
backs to the A-7s as they taxied past, and actually had them
spreadeagled on the deck with their eyes closed until the 4450th TG
A-7s took off.
There were approximately 20 A-7D aircraft used in developing the
F-117, including several two-seat TA-7K trainers.
In January 1989, just
three months after the USAF admitted the F-117A existed, the A-7s
were retired to AMARC
and were replaced by AT-38B
Talons as training aircraft and the 4451st TS was
deactivated.
Retirement
Beginning in 1974, active duty U.S. Air Force wings began
transferring A-7Ds to
Air National
Guard (ANG) units. The Air Force had planned to end procurement
of the A-7D in 1974 as a result of the development of the
Fairchild-Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II, which was
programmed to replace the Corsair as the Air Force's close air
support aircraft. However, Congressional decisions added additional
funding to the DOD FY 1975 and FY 1976 budgets for the procurement
of additional A-7Ds, primarily to keep the LTV production line in
Dallas open and the workers employed in the wake of post-Vietnam
DOD procurement reductions. As a result of these unplanned
acquisitions, the Air Force assigned these new 1975 and 1976 built
aircraft, along with new twin seat A-7Ks trainers in 1979 directly
to the Air National Guard. In March 1976, A-10 production aircraft
began arriving at active-duty units (
355th TFW;
354th TFW) in 1977 and began replacing
the Corsairs of active duty squadrons. The A-7Ds were subsequently
transferred to Air National Guard units.
By 1981,
with the exception of the A-7Ds used in the F-117A program, the
last active-duty Corsairs were reassigned to ANG squadrons by the
23d Tactical Fighter Wing at England Air
Force Base
, Louisiana
. Many active duty pilots missed the
performance and sophistication of the Corsair. The A-7Ds used by
the 4450th Tactical Group in Nevada were either retired or sent to
ANG units in 1989.
F-16s began replacing the Air National Guard Corsairs beginning in
the late 1980s and the last were retired in 1993 by the ANG units
at Rickenbacker ANGB
, (Ohio
); Des Moines
International Airport
/ANGB, (Iowa
); Tulsa
International Airport
/ANGB, (Oklahoma
); and Springfield-Beckley Municipal
Airport
/ANGB, (Ohio).
U.S. Navy A-7 Corsairs began being phased out of the fleet during
the mid-1980s with the arrival of the McDonnell Douglas (now
Boeing)
F/A-18 Hornet. The last Navy
A-7s were retired by the last fleet operational squadrons (VA-46
and VA-72) in May 1991 shortly after their return from Operation
Desert Storm.
Some of
these surplus aircraft were passed to Greece
, Thailand
and Portugal
; however by the end of 1998, with the exception of
some airframes used as static displays, all US A-7s were disposed
of by the AMARC
at Davis-Monthan AFB
, Arizona.
The Hellenic Air Force purchased new A-7H aircraft in moderate
numbers. The last two squadrons that used the aircraft were the
335th and
336th. The A-7 remains still in
limited operational use by the latter, as the type is gradually
being retired, to be replaced by newly purchased F-16s.
The Portuguese Air Force selected the A-7P (modified A-7A/B models)
and flew them extensively from 1981 onward.
The reliability and
exceptional range allowing unrefueled routine flights to the Madera
Islands and Lajes
AB
in the Azores.
Variants

TA-7C of VA-174 in 1988

EA-7L of VAQ-34 in 1987

Greek Air Force TA-7H
.JPG/180px-A-7P(1).JPG)
A-7P of the Portuguese Air Force
- A-7A
- First production version. Early USN Corsair IIs had two 20 mm
Colt Mk 12 cannons with 250 rounds
per gun. Maximum ordnance, carried primarily on the wing pylons,
was theoretically 15,000 lb (6,804 kg), but was limited by maximum
takeoff weight, so the full weapon load could only be carried with
greatly reduced internal fuel; 199 built.
- A-7B
- Uprated TF30-P-8 engine with 12,190 lbf (54.2 kN) of thrust. In
1971, surviving A-7Bs were further upgraded to TF30-P-408 with
13,390 lbf (59.6 kN) of thrust; 196 built.
- A-7C
- First 67 production A-7E with TF30-P-408 engines.
- TA-7C
- Two-seat trainer version for U.S. Navy, 24 converted from A-7B,
36 from A-7C. In 1984, 49 airframes, including the 8 EA-7Ls, were
re-engined with the TF41-A-402 and upgraded to A-7E standard.
- A-7D
- Version built for the USAF, with one Allison TF41-A-1 turbofan, and a single 20
mm M61 Vulcan gatling cannon; 459
built.
- A-7E
- Naval carrier-capable equivalent of the A-7D; 529 built.
- YA-7F (A-7D Plus / A-7 Strikefighter)
- Stretched, supersonic version of A-7 powered by an F100,
optimized for interdiction role, but cancelled after only two were
built.
- A-7G
- Proposed version for Switzerland, none built.
- A-7H
- Modified A-7E for Greece without air-refuelling capability, 60
built.
- TA-7H
- Two-seat trainer version for Greece.
- EA-7L
- 8 TA-7C modified into electronic aggressor aircraft used by
VAQ-34, upgraded to A-7E standard while
retaining twin seats in 1984.
- TA-7K
- Two-seat trainer version for Air National Guard, 30 built.
- A-7P
- Ex-US Navy A-7A rebuilt for Portugal, 44 refurbished with
TF30-P-408 engines and an avionics fit similar to the A-7E.
- TA-7P
- Two-seat trainer version for Portugal; six converted from ex-US
Navy A-7A.
- YA-7E/YA-7H
- Two-seat prototypes built by Ling-Temco-Vought as a private
venture.
Operators
Aircraft on display

- An A-7p on display with the Portuguese Air Force (FAP)
Museum
- An
A-7D is on display at the National
Museum of the U.S.
Air
Force
, Wright-Patterson AFB
, Dayton, Ohio. The aircraft (AF Ser. No.
70-0970) was flown by Major Colin Clark on a nine hour rescue
mission in Southeast Asia, for which he received the Air Force Cross.
- An
A-7D is on display near Headquarters, 12th Air Force (12 AF) at Davis-Monthan AFB
, Arizona.
- An
A-7D and YA-7F are on display at the Hill
Aerospace Museum
at Hill
AFB
, Utah.
- An
A-7D on display at the Aerospace Museum of
California
in Sacramento
, California
on the former McClellan Air Force Base
.
- An A-7D is used for Aircraft Maintenance Technician training at
Tulsa Technology Center in Tulsa, OK. It is fired up every month or
so to show the Powerplant students how the engine performs in the
aircraft. Tulsa Tech also utilizes the TF-41 jet engine in its
indoor turbine test cell.[54131]
- An A-7D on display at the Evergreen Air & Space Museum in
McMinville, Oregon.
- An A-7D is on display on the NW Beaver Drive overlook at
Camp Dodge in Johnston, Iowa , an Iowa
Army National Guard base.

A-7D "Speedwell" at Wings Museum
- An A-7D (No. 73-0996, "Speedwell", from the Colo. Air Nat'l Guard) attack fighter on display
at the Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space
Museum
, Denver,
Colorado
- An A-7E in the markings of VA-174 is on display at the War
Eagles Air Museum, located at the Doña Ana County Airport, Santa
Teresa, New Mexico.
- An
A-7E in the markings of VA-46 on loan from the National
Museum of Naval Aviation
is on display at NAS Jacksonville
, Florida.
- An
A-7E on loan from the National Museum of Naval
Aviation
is on display aboard the USS
Midway (CV-41) Museum in San Diego, California.
- An
A-7E on loan from the National Museum of Naval
Aviation
is on display at NAS Lemoore
, California.
- An
A-7E on loan from the National Museum of Naval
Aviation
is on display at NAS Fallon
, Nevada.
- A
TA-A7C, Navy Bureau number 154-407 Corsair
II located at the National Atomic
Museum adjacent to Kirtland AFB
in Albuquerque, New Mexico
.
- An A-7E in the markings of VF-147 is on display at the USS KIDD
Veterans Memorial in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
- An
A-7E in the markings of VA-72 is on display at the National
Museum of Naval Aviation
at NAS
Pensacola
,
Florida.
- An
A-7 on loan from the National Museum of Naval
Aviation
at NAS
Pensacola
, Florida
is located on the east side of the Interstate 75, just south of
Lake City, Florida near Mile Marker 275.
- An
A-7 on loan from the National Museum of Naval
Aviation
is on display in the Tillamook
Air Museum
, a World War II blimp hangar in Oregon.
- Another A-7 is on display in Hickory, North Carolina, at the
Hickory Regional Airport's new Hickory Aviation Museum as of May
2007, operated by the Sabre Society of North Carolina (also based
there). The society has a small but very nice collection of
aircraft, most donated by the National Museum of Naval Aviation in
Pensacola.
- An
A-7 cross section is on display in a mock aircraft carrier hangar
at the Museum of Science and
Industry
in Chicago
, Illinois
.
- An A-7 is on display at the USS Kidd Memorial in Baton Rouge,
LA
- An A-7 is on display at the Virginia Aviation Museum in
Richmond, VA
- An
A-7, tail number 68-0290, is on loan from the National Museum of
the United States Air Force and is located on the corner of East
Jackson Street and South Maple Street in Cullom,
Illinois
.
- An A-7 with Gulf War markings is on static display at the
Rimini Aviation Museum in Italy, on the coast of the Adriatic
Sea.
- Two
A-7s are on static display at New Century AirCenter
, New Century, Kansas, which was formerly
Naval Air Station Olathe, near Kansas City.
One is a two-seat version.
- There
are several A-7s in both Navy and Air Force markings on display at
the Pima Air
Museum
adjacent to Davis-Monthan AFB
in Tucson, Arizona
.
- An
A-7E is on display on the flight deck of the , at the Patriot's
Point
Naval and Maritime Museum in Mount Pleasant,
SC.
Specifications

An Attack Squadron 72 (VA-72) A-7E
Corsair II aircraft aboard the USS Dwight D.
A-7D Corsair II
A-7E Corsair II
See also
References
Notes
- Swanborough and Bowers 1976, p.292.
-
http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1974/1974%20-%201837.html
- Dorr 1987, p.61.
- Swanborough and Bowers 1976, p.293.
- NAVAIR 01-45AAE-1, pp. 11–1 through 11-93.
- Brown, David F. SLUF A-7 Corsair II. Hong Kong:
Concord Publications Co., 1997. ISBN 978-9623617239.
- NAVAIR 01-45AAE-1, pp. 8–48, through 8-148.
- Higham 1978
- NAVAIR 01-45AAA-1, pp. 1–68.
- NAVAIR 01-45AAE-1, pp. 1–66.
- NAVAIR 01-45AAA-1, pp. 1–233.
- NAVAIR 01-45AAE-1, pp. 1–177.
- Hobson
- Image of A-7 by roadside
Bibliography
- NAVAIR 01-45AAA-1, A-7A/B Flight Manual. US Navy, 15 August
1973.
- NAVAIR 01-45AAE-1, A-7C/E Flight Manual. US Navy, 1 March
1973.
- Donald, David and Jon Lake, eds. Encyclopedia of World
Military Aircraft. London: AIRtime Publishing, 1996. ISBN
1-880588-24-2.
- Dorr, Robert F. "A Plus for the Corsair". Air International, August 1987, Vol
33 No. 2. Bromley, UK:Fine Scroll. ISSN 0306-5634. pp. 61—65,
84—87, 93.
- Higham, Robin and Carol Williams. Flying Combat Aircraft of
USAAF-USAF (Volume 2). Andrews AFB, Maryland: Air Force
Historical Foundation, 1978. ISBN 0-8138-0375-6.
- Hobson, Chris. Vietnam Air Losses, USAF/USN/USMC,
Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses in Southeast Asia, 1961-1973. North
Branch, Minnesota: Specialty Press, 2001. ISBN 1-85780-1156.
- Swanborough, Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States
Military Aircraft Since 1909. Washington, DC: Smithsonian
Books, 1989. ISBN 0-87474-880-1.
- Swanborough, Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States Navy
Aircraft Since 1911. London: Putnam, Second edition, 1976.
ISBN 0 370 10054 9.
- Swanborough, Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States Navy
Aircraft Since 1911. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute
Press, 1990. ISBN 0-87021-792-5.
- Wings of Eagles
External links