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Naval Historical Center F-14 fact file 

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY --
NAVAL HISTORICAL CENTER
901 M STREET SE -- WASHINGTON NAVY YARD
WASHINGTON DC 20374-5060
F-14 TOMCAT
Wing
span: 64 feet unswept; 38 feet swept
Length: 62 feet 7 inches
Height: 16 feet
Weight: Empty: 40,104 pounds
Maximum take-off: 74,348 pounds
Speed: Maximum: 1,544 mph, Cruise: 576 mph
Ceiling: More than 56,000 feet
Power plant: Two Pratt and Whitney
TF-30-P412A turbofan engines with afterburners;
F-14B and F-14D: F-110-GE-400 augmented turbofan
engines with afterburner
Crew: two
Contractor: Grumman Aerospace
Overall, the Navy's Grumman F-14 Tomcat is
without equal among today's Free World fighters.
Six long-range AIM-54A Phoenix missiles can be
guided against six separate threat aircraft at
long range by the F-14's AWG-9 weapons control
system. For medium-range combat, Sparrow missiles
are carried; Sidewinders and a 20mm are available
for dogfighting. In the latter role, the Tomcat's
variable-sweep wings give the F-14 a combat
maneuvering capability that could not have been
achieved with a "standard" fixed
planform wing.
Designed in 1968 to take the place of the
controversial F-111B, then under development for
the Navy's carrier fighter inventory, the F-14A
used the P&W TF30 engines and AWG-9 system
and carried the six Phoenix missiles that had
been intended for the F-111B. A completely new
fighter system was designed around these with
emphasis on close-in fighting "claws"
along with standoff missile fighting. From its
first flight on 21 December 1970, the F-14A has
come through five years of development,
evaluation, squadron training and initial carrier
deployments to become the carrier air wings' most
potent fighter. Technical and financial problems
that received a great deal of publicity have been
overcome in achieving this goal.
Originally it was planned that the F-14B with the
advanced P&W F401 would be the major
production version. However, performance of the
TF30-P-412 exceeded expectations while
development of the F401 was delayed. One F-14B
was flight tested, showing that an F401-powered
Tomcat would be a potential future option.
The Tomcat caps a long line of Grumman Cats. In
the hands of Navy pilot/NFO teams, it provides
the carrier task force with its first-line
offense and defense against any enemy air threat
in the tradition of its predecessors. The current
inventory includes F-14As, F-14Bs and F-14Ds.
In addition to its outstanding fighter
capabilities, the Tomcat is now being configured
as a potent, adverse weather, medium-range strike
aircraft that is being fielded through
cost-effective upgrades to F-14A/Bs. With the
ability to launch Joint Direct Attack Munitions
(JDAM), coupled with an INS/GPS integration and
off-the-shelf electronic countermeasure
improvements, the Tomcat will provide a
multi-mission strike/escort capability which will
be part of the inventory until at least 2010.
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Fact Files
31 March 1997
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