
F-14 Tomcat
Description:
The F-14 Tomcat is a supersonic,
twin-engine, variable sweep wing, two-place
fighter designed to attack and destroy enemy
aircraft at night and in all weather conditions.
Features: The F-14 can
track up to 24 targets simultaneously with its
advanced weapons control system and attack six
with Phoenix AIM-54A missiles while continuing to
scan the airspace. Armament also includes a mix
of other air intercept missiles, rockets and
bombs.
Background: The Grumman
F-14, the world's premier air defense fighter,
was designed to replace the F-4 Phantom II
fighter (phased out in 1986). F-14s provided air
cover for the joint strike on Libyan terrorist
targets in 1986. The F-14A was introduced in the
mid-1970s. The upgraded F-14A+ version, with new
General Electric F-110 engines, now widespread
throughout the fleet, is more than a match for
enemy fighters in close-in, air combat.
Point of Contact:
Public Affairs Office
Naval Air Systems Command (AIR 07D2)
Washington, DC 20361-0701
(703) 604-2822
General Characteristics
Function: Carrier-based
multi-role strike fighter
Contractor: Grumman Aerospace Corporation
Unit Cost: $38 million
Propulsion:
F-14: two Pratt & Whitney TF-30P-414A
turbofan engines with afterburners;
F-14B and F-14D: two General Electric
F-110-GE-400 augmented turbofan engines with
afterburners
Thrust:
F-14A: 20,900 pounds (9,405 kg) static thrust per
engine;
F-14B and F-14D: 27,000 pounds (12,150 kg) per
engine
Length: 61 feet 9 inches (18.6 meters)
Height: 16 feet (4.8 meters)
Maximum Takeoff Weight: 72,900 pounds
(32,805 kg)
Wingspan: 64 feet (19 meters) unswept, 38
feet (11.4 meters) swept
Ceiling: Above 50,000 feet
Speed: Mach 2+
Crew: Two: pilot and radar intercept
officer
Armament: Up to 13,000 pounds of AIM-54
Phoenix missile, AIM-7 Sparrow missile, AIM-9
Sidewinder missile, air-to-ground ordnance, and
one MK-61A1 Vulcan 20mm cannon
Date Deployed: First flight: December 1970
Visit the original Navy page by clicking on the
anchor.
|