Dette flotte flyet er det mange hundre norske flygere som har hatt gleden av å fly, inklusive undertegnede. (Red.)
T-38 endures as stellar training aircraft 60 years after maiden
flight
A scanned image from the Wingspread published in
1961 with a photo of the first T-38 to arrive at Randolph Air Force Base,
Texas.
JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-RANDOLPH, Texas -- The T-38 Talon
prototype embarked on its maiden flight as the Air Force's first supersonic
trainer on April 10, 1959.
Sixty years later, the sleek aircraft
developed by the Northrop Corp. continues to meet the service's training
needs.
Used primarily by Air Education and Training Command for
undergraduate pilot and pilot instructor training, the T-38 endures because of
its initial design, a thorough maintenance regimen and a sustainment program
known as Pacer Classic that has been responsible for essential modifications to
the aircraft.
"It had to be a great product for starters," said Lt. Col.
William Borron, 560th Flying Training Squadron director of operations. "But
we've had great people working on the plane for years, and that's kept it
going.
"We've also had amazing updates to the jet. All avionics have been
updated, and it received an engine modification. While the outside of the jet
looks the same, the inside is completely different and meets the needs of
today's student pilots."
The T-38 made its first appearance at Randolph
Air Force Base March 17, 1961. The aircraft was met with "applause and
exclamations of admiration from the hundreds of persons who witnessed its
delivery," according to the March 22 edition of the Wingspread
newspaper.
On the 50th anniversary of the T-38, Lane Bourgeois, 12th
Flying Training Wing historian, focused on the aircraft's development and
innovations. He cited the lightweight J-85 engine, the afterburner version of an
engine developed by General Electric for a drone that fit into the bomb bay of a
B-36.
"Northrop realized the higher thrust-to-weight ratio of two J-85s
together would be greater than the thrust-to-weight ratios of other engines,"
Bourgeois said. "For example, two J-85s together produced just as much thrust as
one J-57 engine, but the two J-85s weighed about 500 pounds less. Lighter
engines meant designers didn't need as much wing area, less wing area meant less
engine thrust required to push the airplane, and so on."
Northrop
designed a lightweight frame around two J-85s weighing about 10,000 pounds,
which was half the weight of an F-100F and with better performance, Bourgeois
noted.
Another innovation was Northrop's development of a fuselage based
on the "Whitcomb theory" attributed to Richard Whitcomb, an American
aeronautical engineer known for his contributions to the science of
aerodynamics.
"Richard Whitcomb had calculated that necking the fuselage
just before the wings reduces drag at supersonic speeds," Bourgeois said. "The
next time you see a T-38 up close, take note of the tapering hourglass shape of
the fuselage. That's Whitcomb's theory at work, and it helps to make the T-38
supersonic."
More than 1,100 T-38s were delivered to the Air Force before
production ended in 1972; more than 500 are still in service. Now known as the
T-38C, the aircraft boasts a variety of Pacer Classic
modifications.
"Engine updates improved our takeoff and landing
performance, and the ejection seats have been updated, giving us a larger
safe-ejection envelope," Borron said, "but the most important update to the T-38
was the transition to the C-model, which improved avionics and allowed for the
use of GPS. GPS is the future in terms of navigation, and it was crucial to
train all future pilots to navigate utilizing GPS."
Borron called the
T-38 "the toughest plane" he's ever flown, which could be advantageous for new
pilots.
"The best thing about the T-38 is, after learning to fly it well,
you feel like you have the ability to fly anything in the Air Force fleet," he
said.
But it is also a "great fun plane to fly," Borron said.
"It
rolls faster than any plane I've ever flown and climbs great," he said. "I've
flown many planes and this one can change parameters on you faster than any of
them. It is a challenge to fly, like I've said, but once you learn to fly it
well, you feel like you've achieved something."
The T-38 maintains its
relevance with the newest generation of Air Force pilots.
Second Lt.
Kevin Yalung, 435th Fighter Training Squadron Introduction to Fighter
Fundamentals student pilot, said his first exposure to the T-38 was at the U.S.
Air Force Academy.
"Now I have more than 130 hours in the T-38, but I had
not flown any aircraft at the academy except gliders," said the 2018 USAFA
graduate. "At the academy, instructors would talk about the T-38 and they would
do flyovers there, which was a blast."
Yalung's comments on flying the
T-38 mirrored those of Borron.
"It's just a great aircraft to fly," he
said. "It's a challenge, but exciting. There's a lot we can do with the new
updates. It allows us to get exposure to a lot of different training
types."
Even though the aircraft has been in use since before his parents
were born, Yalung sees the value of the T-38.
"They train us to know so
much about this airframe and its upgrades," he said. "I have a lot of trust in
it. It works quite well."
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