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Aeritalia F-104S Starfighter

The Aeritalia F-104S Starfighter was a licensed production Italian version of the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, which served in the Italian Air Force, and was its mainstay from the late 1960s until the beginning of the 21st century. The F-104S also served in the Turkish Air Force until the mid-1990s. The F-104S was the final development of the Starfighter line.

F-104S Starfighter
Role Interceptor aircraft
Manufacturer Aeritalia
Designer Lockheed
First flight 22 December 1966
Introduction 1969
Retired October 2004
Primary users Italian Air Force
Turkish Air Force
Produced 1966–1979
Number built 246
Developed from Lockheed F-104 Starfighter

Derived from Lockheed's design studies on a "Super Starfighter", the F-104S was one of the most capable of the F-104 series, and destined to be the last in service worldwide. The F-104S (upgraded to ASA/M standard) was retired from service in October 2004.

Design and development edit

 
F-104S in original camouflage scheme with Sparrow missiles mounted under the wings, around 1969.

The F-104 series had entered a second development phase with the F-104G (for Germany, lead country for this version). While the USAF had no more interest in the F-104, Lockheed proposed the Model CL-901 featuring the new J79-GE-19 engine and the improved Sparrow III.[1] Further proposed developments included the CL-958 with larger wings, the CL-981 with retractable canard wings behind the cockpit, and the CL-984 optimised for low-level strike missions. An RF-104G was modified and flew in December 1966 as the prototype CL-901 "Super Starfighter". Externally, the new type had slightly larger air intakes and steel inlet guide vanes that allowed an increase in operating temperature from 121 to 175 °C (250 to 347 °F), enabling a maximum speed of Mach 2.2.

During the first five years in Italian service, 23 F-104G aircraft were lost; as only 80 to 90 F-104s (of 149 acquired) were operational at best, it was decided to purchase a new interceptor and fighter-bomber to reinforce front-line units.

The AMI mid-1960s "AW-X" (All-Weather-eXperimental) requirement for a new all-weather fighter aircraft led to an evaluation of many available types: the McDonnell Douglas F-4B/C Phantom, Dassault Mirage IIIC-1, BAC Lightning, and North American F-100S Super Sabre among others. The eventual choice was the Lockheed CL-980 (a simplified version with the same wings of the projected Model CL-901). On 26 January 1966, the AMI chose the definitive F-104S as their future fighter. The first F-104S was actually a modified Fiat-built F-104G, MM6658, that acted as an aerodynamic prototype and first flew on 22 December 1966,[2] while a second prototype, MM6660, fitted with new avionics systems closer to the final configuration, flew on 28 February 1967.[3] MM.6701, the first production F-104S built by Aeritalia flew on 30 December 1968.[2]

The F-104S was designed to carry AIM-7 Sparrow missiles (while deleting the Vulcan gun). In the attack role, the F-104S had nine hardpoints, and could carry up to seven 227 kg (500 lb) or 340 kg (750 lb) bombs, an improvement over the F-104G, which could lift only half that on five hardpoints, two of which were needed for auxiliary tanks. Theoretically, an F-104S could be equipped with four or five bombs, two droptanks, and two AIM-9s, becoming a dual-role aircraft.

The new type entered service in mid-1969, with 22° Gruppo (51° Stormo);[4] and in that year, the F-104S accumulated 460 flying hours.

The AMI bought 205 examples, all delivered from 1969 to 1979,[5] with the 100th aircraft delivered in January 1973, and the 200th in May 1976.[2] In late 1973, Lockheed signed an agreement with Aeritalia to market the F-104S along with the Aeritalia G.222, while also agreeing to joint engineering work on Lockheed CL-1200 Lancer prototypes. [6] The model was built in two versions; as an interceptor armed with AIM-7 Sparrow missiles (the M61 Vulcan being removed); and as a fighter bomber, with the gun retained and bombs and other air-to-surface ordnance. The models were interchangeable, making it unclear how many were built or rebuilt to these specifications.

Operational history edit

Italian service edit

AMI squadrons equipped with the F-104G and S versions were: 9, 10, 12, 18 (initially for reconnaissance, then dual-role), 20 (training), 21, 22, 23, 28 (reconnaissance), 132 (reconnaissance) 102, 154, 155, and 156 (bombers).

 
MM6945, the first F-104S-ASA with low-visibility colours

The J79-GE-19 allowed a faster climb, comparable with contemporary fighters (up to 277 m/s (909 ft/s), with a time-to-climb 10,600 m (34,777 ft) of 80 seconds claimed; ten seconds less than the F-104G), with the capability of reaching Mach 2 at 12,000 m (39,370 ft) in around five minutes.

Napoleone Bragagnolo, a test pilot for Aeritalia, was able to land at Ciampino, Rome, 19 minutes and 30 seconds after taking off from Turin in northern Italy. During this flight with two wingtip auxiliary tanks, he climbed 15 km (49,213 ft) and accelerated to Mach 2. The aircraft still had 1,300 L (290 imp gal; 340 US gal) of fuel on board when it landed; enough to reach Palermo, Sicily at subsonic speeds. The average speed for the flight was Mach 1.5.

Even with these new Starfighters, the loss rate remained high, with peaks in 1973 and 1975 (ten F-104s of all versions were lost in AMI service during this period). Up to 1997, Italy had lost 137 (38%) of its F-104s in 928,000 flying hours (14.7 aircraft every 100,000 hours). Despite a drop in the loss rate in the 1980s (with 33 losses between 1981 and 1990 included), the debate about the reliability of this aircraft was often fierce in the mass media, which gave it the nickname bara volante (meaning "flying casket" in Italian, a translation of the similar German nickname Fliegender Sarg[7]). In the 1980s the loss rate dropped, even more so in the 1990s, when all the old versions (except TF-104s) were scrapped.

The last Italian F-104 was withdrawn from front line in 2004, after the type had flown around a million flying hours in a total of over 40 years of service. Four F-104s (2 TF-104M and 2 F-104ASAM) were flown by the Italian Air Force Test Center until July 2005. The last F-104's military flight was in Pratica di Mare on July 27.

Turkish service edit

Turkey was the only other customer for the Aeritalia F-104S. The initial order was placed in 1974, with the first of 18 examples entering service by December 1974. These first aircraft were a gift from Libya to Turkey during US embargo against 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus. These may have been a reward for good relations and Turkish technical assistance to improve the capabilities of the Libyan Air Force.[8] Another 18 were ordered in May 1975, which eventually increased to 40 aircraft, but another batch (for 20 aircraft) was dropped, probably because F-4Es were delivered as well. They served with 142 and 182 Filo from the 1970s, and around a dozen were still in service until the mid-1990s. While 200 Selenia AIM-7 missiles were delivered, Turkish F-104Ss were seldom seen carrying them, thus F-4Es were probably the main users of those missiles.

Mid-life updates edit

 
F-104S on display at Lignano Sabbiadoro, in north-eastern Italy

Two further update programs were carried out prior to the introduction into AMI service of the Eurofighter Typhoon, resulting in the F-104S-ASA and F-104S-ASA/M.

F-104S-ASA edit

The F-104ASA (Aggiornamento Sistemi d'Arma, Weapon Systems Update), developed in 1986, introduced a FIAR R21G/M1 Setter radar,[9] with 'look-down' capability and compatibility with the Selenia Aspide missile. AIM-9Ls were then used as the main armament, replacing the previous "B" and "F" version of this missile, while the older AIM-7s were retained. One AIM-7 was usually carried under each wing. In total, 147 of the F-104S airframes were converted to ASA standard at an expense of around 600 billion lire, the last ASA model was delivered in the early 1990s.

F-104S-ASA/M edit

The ASA/M upgrade (initially known as the 'ECO' (Estensione Capacità Operative) upgrade) focused on improving reliability rather than combat enhancements, and involved 49 ASA aircraft. 15 TF-104Gs were also involved in this program .

Variants edit

 
A formation of Italian F-104Ss
F-104S (Lockheed Model CL-901)
246 aircraft produced mainly by Fiat and Aeritalia (one aircraft was lost before delivery), upgraded for the interception role having NASARR R-21G/H radar with moving target indicator and continuous wave illuminator for semi-active radar homing missiles (initially AIM-7 Sparrow), two additional wing and two underbelly hardpoints (to give a total of nine), uprated J79-GE-19 engine with 52.8 kN (11,870 lbf) thrust (79.6 kN/17,900 lbf with afterburner), and two additional ventral fins for increased stability at high Mach numbers. The 20 mm (.79 in) M61 cannon was sacrificed to make room for the missile avionics, the cannon was always fitted to fighter-bomber variants. Up to two Sparrow; and two, theoretically four or six, Sidewinder missiles were carried on all the hardpoints except the central (underbelly), or seven 340 kg (750 lb) bombs (normally, two-four 227–340 kg/500-750 lb).
F-104S-ASA
(Aggiornamento Sistemi d'Arma - "Weapon Systems Update") - An upgraded Italian version, with 147 modified from existing airframes, upgraded with FIAR R21G/M1 radar with frequency hopping, look-down/shoot-down capability, new IFF and weapons delivery computer, and provision for AIM-9L all-aspect Sidewinder and Selenia Aspide missiles. Due to the delays of Aspide integration, it was also called the ASA-1 with Sparrows, and ASA-2 when the Aspide became available, and eventually all F-104Ss were upgraded to ASA-2 standard. The fighter-bombers had no substantial improvements in the "ASA" version, and were later modified to interceptor standards (CI) without the M61.
F-104S-ASA/M
(Aggiornamento Sistemi d'Arma/Modificato - "Weapon Systems Update/Modified") - 49 F-104S-ASA and 15 two-seat TF-104G aircraft were upgraded from 1998 to ASA/M standard with GPS, new TACAN and Litton LN-30A2 inertial navigation system, refurbished airframe, and improved cockpit displays. All strike-related equipment was removed, and the IRST as well (the small unit known as 'IR-Sight', forward the windshield). The last Starfighters in combat service, they were withdrawn in October 2004 (the last unit was 10° Gruppo/9° Stormo, Grazzanise), and temporarily replaced by the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon, while awaiting Eurofighter Typhoon deliveries.

Operators edit

  Italy
  Turkey

Surviving aircraft edit

Italy edit

  • F-104S ASA, Italian Air Force MM6941 - Istituto Tecnico Industriale, Pisa
  • F-104S ASA-M, Italian Air Force MM6887 - as a gate guardian at Decimomannu Air Base, Sardinia

Poland edit

United States edit

Specifications (F-104S) edit

 

Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft, 1976-1977.[2]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 16.69 m (54 ft 9 in)
  • Wingspan: 6.68 m (21 ft 11 in) without wing-tip stores / tanks
  • Height: 4.11 m (13 ft 6 in)
  • Wing area: 18.22 m2 (196.1 sq ft)
  • Aspect ratio: 2.45:1
  • Airfoil: Biconvex 3.36%
  • Empty weight: 6,750 kg (14,881 lb)
  • Gross weight: 9,840 kg (21,693 lb) clean
  • Max takeoff weight: 14,060 kg (30,997 lb)
  • Fuel capacity: 3,392 L (896 US gal; 746 imp gal) in 5 fuselage bag tanks, with provision for 2x 740 L (200 US gal; 160 imp gal) under-wing drop tanks and 2x 645 L (170 US gal; 142 imp gal) wing-tip tanks
  • Powerplant: 1 × General Electric J79-GE-19 afterburning turbojet engine, 52.8 kN (11,900 lbf) thrust dry, 79.62 kN (17,900 lbf) with afterburner

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 2,330 km/h (1,450 mph, 1,260 kn) , Mach 2.2 at 11,000 m (36,000 ft) (clean), 1,464 km/h (910 mph; 790 kn), Mach 1.2 at sea level
  • Cruise speed: 981 km/h (610 mph, 530 kn) max at 11,000 m (36,000 ft) (clean)
M0.85 economical
  • Combat range: 1,247 km (775 mi, 673 nmi) with max fuel (radius)
  • Ferry range: 2,920 km (1,810 mi, 1,580 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 18,000 m (58,000 ft)
  • Zoom altitude: 27,400 m (89,900 ft) +
  • Time to altitude:
    • 11,000 m (35,000 ft) in 1 minute 20 seconds
    • 17,000 m (56,000 ft) in 2 minute 40 seconds

Armament

  • Guns: 20 mm (0.79 in) M61A1 Vulcan autocannon with 725 rounds
  • Hardpoints: 9 , with provisions to carry combinations of:
    • Rockets: a variety of rocket pods
    • Missiles: 2x Raytheon AIM-7 Sparrow III radar-guided missiles on under-wing pylons or 4x AIM-9L Sidewinder IR-guided missiles on wing-tip launchers and under-fuselage pylons (AIM-9s could be carried on all except centre-line, AIM-7s on outboard pylons only)
    • Bombs: a variety of bombs or napalm

Avionics
NASARR R21G/F15G radar

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

  1. ^ Niccoli 2005, p. 4.
  2. ^ a b c d Taylor 1976, p.103.
  3. ^ Pace 1992, p. 88.
  4. ^ "F-104 ASA-M, Il Portale dell'Aeronautica Militare Italiana (in Italian)." August 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine aeronautica. Retrieved: 6 October 2007.
  5. ^ Michell 1994, p. 118.
  6. ^ "Lockheed agreed to a joint aircraft development project with Aeritalia". Los Angeles Times. December 14, 1973. p. 16. The Burbank-based company said it signed an agreement with Aeritalia S.P.A. of Italy to market two Italian-produced aircraft and to develop the new high performance Lancer jet fighter. Lockheed Aircraft Corp. said the companies will market the Italian-built G-222 twin turbine military transport and the F-104S supersonic starfighter.
  7. ^ Bashow 1986, p. 16.
  8. ^ Fricker and Jackson 1996, p. 98.
  9. ^ Bowman 2000, p. 95.
  10. ^ "Lockheed F-104G". Aeronautica Militare. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  11. ^ "N-Number Inquiry Results Registration N993SF Serial number MM6734." Federal Aviation Administration, Retrieved: 27 July 2021.
  • Bowman, Martin W. Lockheed F-104 Starfighter. Ramsbury, Marlborough, Wiltshire, UK: Crowood Press Ltd., 2000. ISBN 1-86126-314-7.
  • Fricker, John and Paul Jackson. "Lockheed F-104 Starfighter". Wings of Fame. Volume 2 1996. London: Aerospace Publishing, p. 38 - 99. ISBN 1-874023-69-7.
  • Michell, Simon, ed. Jane's Civil and Military Aircraft Upgrades 1994-95. Coulsdon, Surrey, UK: Jane's Information Group, 1994. ISBN 0-7106-1208-7.
  • Niccoli, Ricardo. "'S' is for 'Sparrow'." Air Enthusiast Issue 117, May–June 2005.
  • Sgarlato, Nico. "F-104 Starfighter". Delta editions, Great Planes Monograph series, February 2004.(in Italian)
  • Taylor, John W.R., ed. Jane's All the World's Aircraft, 1976-1977. London: Macdonald and Jane's. 1976. ISBN 0-531-03278-7.

aeritalia, 104s, starfighter, licensed, production, italian, version, lockheed, starfighter, which, served, italian, force, mainstay, from, late, 1960s, until, beginning, 21st, century, 104s, also, served, turkish, force, until, 1990s, 104s, final, development. The Aeritalia F 104S Starfighter was a licensed production Italian version of the Lockheed F 104 Starfighter which served in the Italian Air Force and was its mainstay from the late 1960s until the beginning of the 21st century The F 104S also served in the Turkish Air Force until the mid 1990s The F 104S was the final development of the Starfighter line F 104S Starfighter Role Interceptor aircraft Manufacturer Aeritalia Designer Lockheed First flight 22 December 1966 Introduction 1969 Retired October 2004 Primary users Italian Air ForceTurkish Air Force Produced 1966 1979 Number built 246 Developed from Lockheed F 104 Starfighter Derived from Lockheed s design studies on a Super Starfighter the F 104S was one of the most capable of the F 104 series and destined to be the last in service worldwide The F 104S upgraded to ASA M standard was retired from service in October 2004 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 2 1 Italian service 2 2 Turkish service 2 3 Mid life updates 2 3 1 F 104S ASA 2 3 2 F 104S ASA M 3 Variants 4 Operators 5 Surviving aircraft 5 1 Italy 5 2 Poland 5 3 United States 6 Specifications F 104S 7 See also 8 ReferencesDesign and development edit nbsp F 104S in original camouflage scheme with Sparrow missiles mounted under the wings around 1969 The F 104 series had entered a second development phase with the F 104G for Germany lead country for this version While the USAF had no more interest in the F 104 Lockheed proposed the Model CL 901 featuring the new J79 GE 19 engine and the improved Sparrow III 1 Further proposed developments included the CL 958 with larger wings the CL 981 with retractable canard wings behind the cockpit and the CL 984 optimised for low level strike missions An RF 104G was modified and flew in December 1966 as the prototype CL 901 Super Starfighter Externally the new type had slightly larger air intakes and steel inlet guide vanes that allowed an increase in operating temperature from 121 to 175 C 250 to 347 F enabling a maximum speed of Mach 2 2 During the first five years in Italian service 23 F 104G aircraft were lost as only 80 to 90 F 104s of 149 acquired were operational at best it was decided to purchase a new interceptor and fighter bomber to reinforce front line units The AMI mid 1960s AW X All Weather eXperimental requirement for a new all weather fighter aircraft led to an evaluation of many available types the McDonnell Douglas F 4B C Phantom Dassault Mirage IIIC 1 BAC Lightning and North American F 100S Super Sabre among others The eventual choice was the Lockheed CL 980 a simplified version with the same wings of the projected Model CL 901 On 26 January 1966 the AMI chose the definitive F 104S as their future fighter The first F 104S was actually a modified Fiat built F 104G MM6658 that acted as an aerodynamic prototype and first flew on 22 December 1966 2 while a second prototype MM6660 fitted with new avionics systems closer to the final configuration flew on 28 February 1967 3 MM 6701 the first production F 104S built by Aeritalia flew on 30 December 1968 2 The F 104S was designed to carry AIM 7 Sparrow missiles while deleting the Vulcan gun In the attack role the F 104S had nine hardpoints and could carry up to seven 227 kg 500 lb or 340 kg 750 lb bombs an improvement over the F 104G which could lift only half that on five hardpoints two of which were needed for auxiliary tanks Theoretically an F 104S could be equipped with four or five bombs two droptanks and two AIM 9s becoming a dual role aircraft The new type entered service in mid 1969 with 22 Gruppo 51 Stormo 4 and in that year the F 104S accumulated 460 flying hours The AMI bought 205 examples all delivered from 1969 to 1979 5 with the 100th aircraft delivered in January 1973 and the 200th in May 1976 2 In late 1973 Lockheed signed an agreement with Aeritalia to market the F 104S along with the Aeritalia G 222 while also agreeing to joint engineering work on Lockheed CL 1200 Lancer prototypes 6 The model was built in two versions as an interceptor armed with AIM 7 Sparrow missiles the M61 Vulcan being removed and as a fighter bomber with the gun retained and bombs and other air to surface ordnance The models were interchangeable making it unclear how many were built or rebuilt to these specifications Operational history editItalian service edit AMI squadrons equipped with the F 104G and S versions were 9 10 12 18 initially for reconnaissance then dual role 20 training 21 22 23 28 reconnaissance 132 reconnaissance 102 154 155 and 156 bombers nbsp MM6945 the first F 104S ASA with low visibility colours The J79 GE 19 allowed a faster climb comparable with contemporary fighters up to 277 m s 909 ft s with a time to climb 10 600 m 34 777 ft of 80 seconds claimed ten seconds less than the F 104G with the capability of reaching Mach 2 at 12 000 m 39 370 ft in around five minutes Napoleone Bragagnolo a test pilot for Aeritalia was able to land at Ciampino Rome 19 minutes and 30 seconds after taking off from Turin in northern Italy During this flight with two wingtip auxiliary tanks he climbed 15 km 49 213 ft and accelerated to Mach 2 The aircraft still had 1 300 L 290 imp gal 340 US gal of fuel on board when it landed enough to reach Palermo Sicily at subsonic speeds The average speed for the flight was Mach 1 5 Even with these new Starfighters the loss rate remained high with peaks in 1973 and 1975 ten F 104s of all versions were lost in AMI service during this period Up to 1997 Italy had lost 137 38 of its F 104s in 928 000 flying hours 14 7 aircraft every 100 000 hours Despite a drop in the loss rate in the 1980s with 33 losses between 1981 and 1990 included the debate about the reliability of this aircraft was often fierce in the mass media which gave it the nickname bara volante meaning flying casket in Italian a translation of the similar German nickname Fliegender Sarg 7 In the 1980s the loss rate dropped even more so in the 1990s when all the old versions except TF 104s were scrapped The last Italian F 104 was withdrawn from front line in 2004 after the type had flown around a million flying hours in a total of over 40 years of service Four F 104s 2 TF 104M and 2 F 104ASAM were flown by the Italian Air Force Test Center until July 2005 The last F 104 s military flight was in Pratica di Mare on July 27 Turkish service edit Turkey was the only other customer for the Aeritalia F 104S The initial order was placed in 1974 with the first of 18 examples entering service by December 1974 These first aircraft were a gift from Libya to Turkey during US embargo against 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus These may have been a reward for good relations and Turkish technical assistance to improve the capabilities of the Libyan Air Force 8 Another 18 were ordered in May 1975 which eventually increased to 40 aircraft but another batch for 20 aircraft was dropped probably because F 4Es were delivered as well They served with 142 and 182 Filo from the 1970s and around a dozen were still in service until the mid 1990s While 200 Selenia AIM 7 missiles were delivered Turkish F 104Ss were seldom seen carrying them thus F 4Es were probably the main users of those missiles Mid life updates edit nbsp F 104S on display at Lignano Sabbiadoro in north eastern Italy Two further update programs were carried out prior to the introduction into AMI service of the Eurofighter Typhoon resulting in the F 104S ASA and F 104S ASA M F 104S ASA edit The F 104ASA Aggiornamento Sistemi d Arma Weapon Systems Update developed in 1986 introduced a FIAR R21G M1 Setter radar 9 with look down capability and compatibility with the Selenia Aspide missile AIM 9Ls were then used as the main armament replacing the previous B and F version of this missile while the older AIM 7s were retained One AIM 7 was usually carried under each wing In total 147 of the F 104S airframes were converted to ASA standard at an expense of around 600 billion lire the last ASA model was delivered in the early 1990s F 104S ASA M edit The ASA M upgrade initially known as the ECO Estensione Capacita Operative upgrade focused on improving reliability rather than combat enhancements and involved 49 ASA aircraft 15 TF 104Gs were also involved in this program Variants edit nbsp A formation of Italian F 104Ss F 104S Lockheed Model CL 901 246 aircraft produced mainly by Fiat and Aeritalia one aircraft was lost before delivery upgraded for the interception role having NASARR R 21G H radar with moving target indicator and continuous wave illuminator for semi active radar homing missiles initially AIM 7 Sparrow two additional wing and two underbelly hardpoints to give a total of nine uprated J79 GE 19 engine with 52 8 kN 11 870 lbf thrust 79 6 kN 17 900 lbf with afterburner and two additional ventral fins for increased stability at high Mach numbers The 20 mm 79 in M61 cannon was sacrificed to make room for the missile avionics the cannon was always fitted to fighter bomber variants Up to two Sparrow and two theoretically four or six Sidewinder missiles were carried on all the hardpoints except the central underbelly or seven 340 kg 750 lb bombs normally two four 227 340 kg 500 750 lb F 104S ASA Aggiornamento Sistemi d Arma Weapon Systems Update An upgraded Italian version with 147 modified from existing airframes upgraded with FIAR R21G M1 radar with frequency hopping look down shoot down capability new IFF and weapons delivery computer and provision for AIM 9L all aspect Sidewinder and Selenia Aspide missiles Due to the delays of Aspide integration it was also called the ASA 1 with Sparrows and ASA 2 when the Aspide became available and eventually all F 104Ss were upgraded to ASA 2 standard The fighter bombers had no substantial improvements in the ASA version and were later modified to interceptor standards CI without the M61 F 104S ASA M Aggiornamento Sistemi d Arma Modificato Weapon Systems Update Modified 49 F 104S ASA and 15 two seat TF 104G aircraft were upgraded from 1998 to ASA M standard with GPS new TACAN and Litton LN 30A2 inertial navigation system refurbished airframe and improved cockpit displays All strike related equipment was removed and the IRST as well the small unit known as IR Sight forward the windshield The last Starfighters in combat service they were withdrawn in October 2004 the last unit was 10 Gruppo 9 Stormo Grazzanise and temporarily replaced by the General Dynamics F 16 Fighting Falcon while awaiting Eurofighter Typhoon deliveries Operators editMain article List of F 104 Starfighter operators nbsp Italy Italian Air Force 10 nbsp Turkey Turkish Air ForceSurviving aircraft editItaly edit F 104S ASA Italian Air Force MM6941 Istituto Tecnico Industriale Pisa F 104S ASA M Italian Air Force MM6887 as a gate guardian at Decimomannu Air Base Sardinia Poland edit F 104S Italian Air Forces MM6876 Polish Aviation Museum United States edit F 104S Italian Air Forces MM6734 based at Starfighters Inc in Cape Canaveral Florida 11 Specifications F 104S edit nbsp Data from Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1976 1977 2 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 16 69 m 54 ft 9 in Wingspan 6 68 m 21 ft 11 in without wing tip stores tanks Height 4 11 m 13 ft 6 in Wing area 18 22 m2 196 1 sq ft Aspect ratio 2 45 1 Airfoil Biconvex 3 36 Empty weight 6 750 kg 14 881 lb Gross weight 9 840 kg 21 693 lb clean Max takeoff weight 14 060 kg 30 997 lb Fuel capacity 3 392 L 896 US gal 746 imp gal in 5 fuselage bag tanks with provision for 2x 740 L 200 US gal 160 imp gal under wing drop tanks and 2x 645 L 170 US gal 142 imp gal wing tip tanks Powerplant 1 General Electric J79 GE 19 afterburning turbojet engine 52 8 kN 11 900 lbf thrust dry 79 62 kN 17 900 lbf with afterburner Performance Maximum speed 2 330 km h 1 450 mph 1 260 kn Mach 2 2 at 11 000 m 36 000 ft clean 1 464 km h 910 mph 790 kn Mach 1 2 at sea level Cruise speed 981 km h 610 mph 530 kn max at 11 000 m 36 000 ft clean M0 85 economical dd dd dd Combat range 1 247 km 775 mi 673 nmi with max fuel radius Ferry range 2 920 km 1 810 mi 1 580 nmi Service ceiling 18 000 m 58 000 ft Zoom altitude 27 400 m 89 900 ft Time to altitude 11 000 m 35 000 ft in 1 minute 20 seconds 17 000 m 56 000 ft in 2 minute 40 seconds Armament Guns 20 mm 0 79 in M61A1 Vulcan autocannon with 725 rounds Hardpoints 9 with provisions to carry combinations of Rockets a variety of rocket pods Missiles 2x Raytheon AIM 7 Sparrow III radar guided missiles on under wing pylons or 4x AIM 9L Sidewinder IR guided missiles on wing tip launchers and under fuselage pylons AIM 9s could be carried on all except centre line AIM 7s on outboard pylons only Bombs a variety of bombs or napalm Avionics NASARR R21G F15G radarSee also editRelated development Lockheed F 104 Starfighter Canadair CF 104 Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era English Electric Lightning Sukhoi Su 15 Related lists List of fighter aircraft List of F 104 Starfighter operatorsReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aeritalia F 104S Starfighter Niccoli 2005 p 4 a b c d Taylor 1976 p 103 Pace 1992 p 88 F 104 ASA M Il Portale dell Aeronautica Militare Italiana in Italian Archived August 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine aeronautica Retrieved 6 October 2007 Michell 1994 p 118 Lockheed agreed to a joint aircraft development project with Aeritalia Los Angeles Times December 14 1973 p 16 The Burbank based company said it signed an agreement with Aeritalia S P A of Italy to market two Italian produced aircraft and to develop the new high performance Lancer jet fighter Lockheed Aircraft Corp said the companies will market the Italian built G 222 twin turbine military transport and the F 104S supersonic starfighter Bashow 1986 p 16 Fricker and Jackson 1996 p 98 Bowman 2000 p 95 Lockheed F 104G Aeronautica Militare Retrieved 3 June 2019 N Number Inquiry Results Registration N993SF Serial number MM6734 Federal Aviation Administration Retrieved 27 July 2021 Bowman Martin W Lockheed F 104 Starfighter Ramsbury Marlborough Wiltshire UK Crowood Press Ltd 2000 ISBN 1 86126 314 7 Fricker John and Paul Jackson Lockheed F 104 Starfighter Wings of Fame Volume 2 1996 London Aerospace Publishing p 38 99 ISBN 1 874023 69 7 Michell Simon ed Jane s Civil and Military Aircraft Upgrades 1994 95 Coulsdon Surrey UK Jane s Information Group 1994 ISBN 0 7106 1208 7 Niccoli Ricardo S is for Sparrow Air Enthusiast Issue 117 May June 2005 Sgarlato Nico F 104 Starfighter Delta editions Great Planes Monograph series February 2004 in Italian Taylor John W R ed Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1976 1977 London Macdonald and Jane s 1976 ISBN 0 531 03278 7 Portals nbsp Italy nbsp Companies nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aeritalia F 104S Starfighter amp oldid 1194558847, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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