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Lockheed F-117 Nighthawk

The Lockheed F-117 Nighthawk is a retired American single-seat, twin-engine stealth attack aircraft developed by Lockheed's secretive Skunk Works division and operated by the United States Air Force (USAF). It was the first operational aircraft to be designed with stealth technology.

F-117 Nighthawk
F-117 flying over mountains in Nevada in 2002
Role Stealth attack aircraft[1]
National origin United States
Manufacturer Lockheed Corporation
First flight June 18, 1981; 41 years ago (1981-06-18)
Introduction October 1983; 39 years ago (1983-10)[2]
Retired 22 April 2008[3] (Combat use)
Status Used as training aircraft as of 2022
Primary user United States Air Force
Number built 64 (5 YF-117As, 59 F-117As)
Developed from Lockheed Have Blue

The F-117 was based on the Have Blue technology demonstrator. The Nighthawk's maiden flight took place in 1981 at Groom Lake, Nevada, and the aircraft achieved initial operating capability status in 1983. The aircraft was shrouded in secrecy until it was revealed to the public in 1988. Of the 64 F-117s built, 59 were production versions, with the other five being prototypes.

The F-117 was widely publicized for its role in the Gulf War of 1991. Although it was commonly referred to as the "Stealth Fighter", it was strictly an attack aircraft. F-117s took part in the conflict in Yugoslavia, where one was shot down by a surface-to-air missile (SAM) in 1999. The U.S. Air Force retired the F-117 in April 2008, primarily due to the fielding of the F-22 Raptor.[4] Despite the type's official retirement, a portion of the fleet has been kept in airworthy condition, and Nighthawks have been observed flying since 2009.[5]

Development

Background and Have Blue

In 1964, Pyotr Ufimtsev, a Soviet mathematician, published a seminal paper titled Method of Edge Waves in the Physical Theory of Diffraction in the journal of the Moscow Institute for Radio Engineering, in which he showed that the strength of the radar return from an object is related to its edge configuration, not its size.[6] Ufimtsev was extending theoretical work published by the German physicist Arnold Sommerfeld.[7][8][9] Ufimtsev demonstrated that he could calculate the radar cross-section across a wing's surface and along its edge. The obvious and logical conclusion was that even a large aircraft could reduce its radar signature by exploiting this principle. However, the resulting design would make the aircraft aerodynamically unstable, and the state of computer technology in the early 1960s could not provide the kinds of flight computers which would later allow aircraft such as the F-117 and B-2 Spirit to stay airborne. By the 1970s, when Lockheed analyst Denys Overholser found Ufimtsev's paper, computers and software had advanced significantly, and the stage was set for the development of a stealth airplane.[10]

 
F-117A painted in "Gray Dragon" experimental camouflage scheme

The F-117 was born after the Vietnam War, where increasingly sophisticated Soviet surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) had downed heavy bombers.[11] The heavy losses inflicted by Soviet-made SAMs upon the Israeli air force in the 1973 Yom Kippur war also contributed to a 1974 Defense Science Board assessment that in case of a conflict in Central Europe, air defenses would likely prevent NATO air strikes on targets in Eastern Europe.[12]

It was a black project, an ultra-secret program for much of its life; very few people in the Pentagon knew the program even existed.[13][14] The project began in 1975 with a model called the "Hopeless Diamond"[15][16] (a wordplay on the Hope Diamond because of its appearance). The following year, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) issued Lockheed Skunk Works a contract to build and test two Stealth Strike Fighters, under the code name "Have Blue".[17] These subscale aircraft incorporated jet engines of the Northrop T-38A, fly-by-wire systems of the F-16, landing gear of the A-10, and environmental systems of the C-130.[17] By bringing together existing technology and components, Lockheed built two demonstrators under budget, at $35 million for both aircraft, and in record time.[17]

The maiden flight of the demonstrators occurred on 1 December 1977.[18] Although both aircraft crashed during the demonstration program, test data proved positive. The success of Have Blue led the government to increase funding for stealth technology. Much of that increase was allocated towards the production of an operational stealth aircraft, the Lockheed F-117A, under the program code name "Senior Trend".[19][20]

Senior Trend

The decision to produce the F-117A was made on 1 November 1978, and a contract was awarded to Lockheed Advanced Development Projects, popularly known as the Skunk Works, in Burbank, California.[21] The program was led by Ben Rich, with Alan Brown as manager of the project.[22] Rich called on Bill Schroeder, a Lockheed mathematician, and Overholser, a computer scientist, to exploit Ufimtsev's work. The three designed a computer program called "Echo", which made it possible to design an airplane with flat panels, called facets, which were arranged so as to scatter over 99% of a radar's signal energy "painting" the aircraft.[10][23][11]

The first YF-117A, serial number 79-10780, made its maiden flight from Groom Lake ("Area 51"), Nevada, on 18 June 1981,[24] only 31 months after the full-scale development decision. The first production F-117A was delivered in 1982, and operational capability was achieved in October 1983.[7][25] The 4450th Tactical Group stationed at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, were tasked with the operational development of the early F-117, and between 1981 (prior to the arrival of the first models) and 1989 they used LTV A-7 Corsair IIs for training, to bring all pilots to a common flight training baseline and later as chase planes for F-117A tests.[26]

The F-117 was secret for much of the 1980s. Many news articles discussed what they called a "F-19" stealth fighter, and the Testor Corporation produced a very inaccurate scale model. When an F-117 crashed in Sequoia National Forest in July 1986, killing the pilot and starting a fire, the Air Force established restricted airspace. Armed guards prohibited entry, including firefighters, and a helicopter gunship circled the site. All F-117 debris was replaced with remains of a F-101A Voodoo crash stored at Area 51. When another fatal crash in October 1987 occurred inside Nellis, the military again provided little information to the press.[27]

The Air Force denied the existence of the aircraft until 10 November 1988, when Assistant Secretary of Defense J. Daniel Howard displayed a grainy photograph at a Pentagon press conference, disproving the many inaccurate rumors about the shape of the "F-19". After the announcement pilots could fly the F-117 during daytime and no longer needed to be associated with the A-7, flying the T-38 supersonic trainer for travel and training instead.[28] In April 1990, two F-117 aircraft were flown into Nellis, arriving during daylight and publicly displayed to a crowd of tens of thousands.[29]

F-117 flight demonstration

Five Full Scale Development (FSD) aircraft were built, designated "YF-117A".[30] The last of 59 production F-117s were delivered on 3 July 1990.[25][31] As the Air Force has stated, "Streamlined management by Aeronautical Systems Center, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, combined breakthrough stealth technology with concurrent development and production to rapidly field the aircraft ... The F-117A program demonstrates that a stealth aircraft can be designed for reliability and maintainability."[2]

Designation

The operational aircraft was officially designated "F-117A".[32] Most modern U.S. military aircraft use post-1962 designations in which the designation "F" is usually an air-to-air fighter, "B" is usually a bomber, "A" is usually a ground-attack aircraft, etc. (Examples include the F-15, the B-2 and the A-6.) The F-117 is primarily an attack aircraft,[1] so its "F" designation is inconsistent with the DoD system. This is an inconsistency that has been repeatedly employed by the U.S. Air Force with several of its attack aircraft since the late 1950s, including the Republic F-105 Thunderchief and General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark. A televised documentary quoted project manager Alan Brown as saying that Robert J. Dixon, a four-star Air Force general who was the head of Tactical Air Command felt that the top-notch USAF fighter pilots required to fly the new aircraft were more easily attracted to an aircraft with an "F" designation for fighter, as opposed to a bomber ("B") or attack ("A") designation.[33][34]

The designation "F-117" seems to indicate that it was given an official designation prior to the 1962 U.S. Tri-Service Aircraft Designation System and could be considered numerically to be a part of the earlier "Century series" of fighters. The assumption prior to the revealing of the aircraft to the public was that it would likely receive the F-19 designation as that number had not been used. However, there were no other aircraft to receive a "100" series number following the F-111. Soviet fighters obtained by the U.S. via various means under the Constant Peg program[35] were given F-series numbers for their evaluation by U.S. pilots, and with the advent of the Teen Series fighters, most often Century Series designations.[36]

As with other exotic military aircraft types flying in the southern Nevada area, such as captured fighters, an arbitrary radio call of "117" was assigned. This same radio call had been used by the enigmatic 4477th Test and Evaluation Squadron, also known as the "Red Hats" or "Red Eagles", that often had flown expatriated MiG jet fighters in the area, but there was no relationship to the call and the formal F-19 designation then being considered by the Air Force. Apparently, use of the "117" radio call became commonplace and when Lockheed released its first flight manual (i.e., the Air Force "dash one" manual for the aircraft), F-117A was the designation printed on the cover.[37]

Design

 
Front view of an F-117

When the Air Force first approached Lockheed with the stealth concept, Skunk Works Director Kelly Johnson proposed a rounded design. He believed smoothly blended shapes offered the best combination of speed and stealth. However, his assistant, Ben Rich, showed that faceted-angle surfaces would provide a significant reduction in radar signature, and the necessary aerodynamic control could be provided with computer units. A May 1975 Skunk Works report, "Progress Report No. 2, High Stealth Conceptual Studies", showed the rounded concept that was rejected in favor of the flat-sided approach.[38] The resulting unusual design surprised and puzzled experienced pilots. A Royal Air Force (RAF) pilot who flew it as an exchange officer stated that when he first saw a photograph of the still-secret F-117, he "promptly giggled and thought [to himself] 'this clearly can't fly'".[39] Early stealth aircraft were designed with a focus on minimal radar cross-section (RCS) rather than aerodynamic performance. Highly stealthy aircraft like the F-117 Nighthawk are aerodynamically unstable in all three aircraft principal axes and require constant flight corrections from a fly-by-wire (FBW) flight system to maintain controlled flight.[40] It is shaped to deflect radar signals and is approximately the size of an F-15 Eagle.

The single-seat Nighthawk is powered by two non-afterburning General Electric F404 turbofan engines. It is air refuelable and features a V-tail. The maximum speed is 623 mph (1,003 km/h; 541 kn) at high altitude, the max rate of climb is 2,820 feet (860 m) per minute, and service ceiling is 43,000 to 45,000 feet (13,000 to 14,000 m).[41] The cockpit was quite spacious, with ergonomic displays and controls, but the field of view was somewhat obstructed with a large blind spot to the rear.[42]

Avionics

The F-117 has quadruple-redundant fly-by-wire flight controls. To lower development costs, the avionics, fly-by-wire systems, and other systems and parts were derived from the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon, Boeing B-52 Stratofortress, McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet, and McDonnell Douglas F-15E Strike Eagle. The parts were originally described as spares in budgets for these aircraft, to keep the F-117 project secret.[citation needed]

 
YF-117A cockpit

The aircraft is equipped with sophisticated navigation and attack systems integrated into a digital avionics suite. It navigates primarily by GPS and high-accuracy inertial navigation. Missions are coordinated by an automated planning system that can automatically perform all aspects of an attack mission, including weapons release.[43] Targets are acquired by a thermal imaging infrared system, paired with a laser rangefinder/laser designator that finds the range and designates targets for laser-guided bombs. The F-117A's split internal bay can carry 5,000 pounds (2,300 kg) of ordnance. Typical weapons are a pair of GBU-10, GBU-12, or GBU-27 laser-guided bombs, two BLU-109 penetration bombs, or two Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAM) GPS/INS guided stand-off bombs. To maintain its low observability, the aircraft was not fitted with its own radar; not only would an active radar be detectable through its emissions, but an inactive radar would also act as a reflector of radar energy.[44]

Stealth

The F-117 has a radar cross-section of about 0.001 m2 (0.0108 sq ft).[45] Among the penalties for stealth are lower engine thrust due to losses in the inlet and outlet, a very low wing aspect ratio, and a high sweep angle (50°) needed to deflect incoming radar waves to the sides.[12][failed verification] With these design considerations and no afterburner, the F-117 is limited to subsonic speeds.

The F-117A carries no radar, which lowers emissions and cross-section, and whether it carries any radar detection equipment remained classified as of 2008.[12] Its faceted shape (made from 2-dimensional flat surfaces) resulted from the limitations of the 1970s-era computer technology used to calculate its radar cross-section. Later supercomputers made it possible for subsequent aircraft like the B-2 bomber to use curved surfaces while maintaining stealth, through the use of far more computational resources to perform the additional calculations.[46]

The radar-absorbent flat sheets covering the F-117A weighed almost one ton, and were held in place by glue, with the gaps between the sheets filled with a kind of putty material called "butter".[12]

An exhaust plume contributes a significant infrared signature. The F-117 reduces IR signature with a non-circular tail pipe (a slit shape) to minimize the exhaust cross-section and maximize the mixing of hot exhaust with cool ambient air. The F-117 lacks afterburners, because the hot exhaust would increase the infrared signature, and breaking the sound barrier would produce an obvious sonic boom, as well as surface heating of the aircraft skin which also increases the infrared footprint. As a result, its performance in air combat maneuvering required in a dogfight would never match that of a dedicated fighter aircraft. This was unimportant in the case of this aircraft since it was designed to be an attack aircraft.

Passive (multistatic) radar, bistatic radar[47] and especially multistatic radar systems detect some stealth aircraft better than conventional monostatic radars, since first-generation stealth technology (such as the F-117) reflects energy away from the transmitter's line of sight, effectively increasing the radar cross section (RCS) in other directions, which the passive radars monitor.

Operational history

 
An F-117 conducts a live exercise bombing run using GBU-27 laser-guided bombs

During the program's early years, from 1984 to mid-1992, the F-117A fleet was based at Tonopah Test Range Airport, Nevada, where it served under the 4450th Tactical Group. Because the F-117 was classified during this time, the unit was officially located at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, and equipped with A-7 Corsair II aircraft. All military personnel were permanently assigned to Nellis AFB, and most personnel and their families lived in Las Vegas. This required commercial air and trucking to transport personnel between Las Vegas and Tonopah each week. The 4450th was absorbed by the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing in 1989. In 1992, the entire fleet was transferred to Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico, under the command of the 49th Fighter Wing. This move also eliminated the Key Air and American Trans Air contract flights to Tonopah, which flew 22,000 passenger trips on 300 flights from Nellis to Tonopah per month.

The F-117 reached initial operating capability status in 1983.[2] The Nighthawk's pilots called themselves "Bandits". Each of the 558 Air Force pilots who have flown the F-117 has a Bandit number, such as "Bandit 52", that indicates the sequential order of their first flight in the F-117.[48] Pilots told friends and families that they flew the Northrop F-5 in aggressor squadrons against Tactical Air Command.[27]

The F-117 has been used several times in war. Its first mission was during the United States invasion of Panama in 1989.[49] During that invasion two F-117A Nighthawks dropped two bombs on Rio Hato airfield.

During the Gulf War in 1991, the F-117 flew approximately 1,300 sorties and scored direct hits on what the U.S. called 1,600 high-value targets in Iraq[2] over 6,905 flight hours.[50] Leaflet drops on Iraqi forces displayed the F-117 destroying ground targets and warned "Escape now and save yourselves".[28] Only 229 Coalition tactical aircraft could drop and designate laser-guided bombs of which 36 F-117s represented 15.7%, and only the USAF had the I-2000 bombs intended for hardened targets. So the F-117 represented 32% of all coalition aircraft that could deliver such bombs.[51]: 73–74  Notably, F-117s were used in the Amiriyah shelter bombing killing at least 408 civilians.[52]

Early claims of the F-117's effectiveness were later found to be overstated.[53] Initial reports of F-117s hitting 80% of their targets were later scaled back to "41–60%".[51]: 132  On the first night, they failed to hit 40% of their assigned air-defense targets, including the Air Defense Operations Center in Baghdad, and 8 such targets remained functional out of 10 that could be assessed.[51]: 136–137  In their Desert Storm white paper, the USAF stated that "the F-117 was the only airplane that the planners dared risk over downtown Baghdad" and that this area was particularly well defended. (Dozens of F-16s were routinely tasked to attack Baghdad in the first few days of the war.)[51]: 137–138  In fact, most of the air defenses were on the outskirts of the city and many other aircraft hit targets in the downtown area, with minimal casualties when they attacked at night like the F-117;[51] they avoided the optically aimed anti-aircraft cannon and infrared SAMs which were the biggest threat to Coalition aircraft.[51]: 105 

The aircraft was operated in secret from Tonopah for almost a decade, but after the Gulf War the aircraft moved to Holloman in 1992—however, its integration with the USAF's non-stealth "iron jets" occurred slowly. As one senior F-117A pilot later said: Because of ongoing secrecy others continued to see the aircraft as "none of their business, a stand-alone system".[12] The F-117A and the men and women of the 49th Fighter Wing were deployed to Southwest Asia on multiple occasions. On their first deployment, with the aid of aerial refueling, pilots flew non-stop from Holloman to Kuwait, a flight of approximately 18.5 hours.[54]

Combat over Yugoslavia

 
Canopy of F-117 shot down in Serbia in March 1999 at the Museum of Aviation in Belgrade

One F-117 (AF ser. no. 82-0806) was lost to enemy action. It was downed during an Operation Allied Force mission against the Army of Yugoslavia on 27 March 1999.[55] The aircraft was acquired by a fire control radar at a distance of 8.1 mi (13 km) and an altitude of 5.0 mi (8 km). SA-3s were then launched by a Yugoslav version of the Soviet Isayev S-125 "Neva" (NATO name SA-3 "Goa") anti-aircraft missile system.[55][56][57] The launcher was run by the 3rd Battalion of the 250th Air Defence Missile Brigade under the command of Colonel Zoltán Dani.[58]

After the explosion, the aircraft became uncontrollable, forcing the pilot to eject.[55] The pilot was recovered six hours later by a United States Air Force Pararescue team.[55][59] The stealth technology from the downed F-117 may have been acquired by Russia and China,[60] but the U.S. did not attempt to destroy the wreckage because senior Pentagon officials argued that its technology was already dated and no longer important to protect.[27]

American sources state that a second F-117 was targeted and damaged during the campaign, allegedly on 30 April 1999.[61][62] The aircraft returned to Spangdahlem base,[62] but it supposedly never flew again.[63][64] The USAF continued using the F-117 during Operation Allied Force.[65]

Later service and retirement

 
A pair of F-117A Nighthawks

The F-117 was later used in the Operation Enduring Freedom in 2001 and Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003. It was only operated by the U.S. Air Force.

The loss in Serbia caused the USAF to create a subsection of their existing weapons school to improve tactics. More training was done with other units, and the F-117A began to participate in Red Flag exercises. Though advanced for its time, the F-117's stealthy faceted airframe required a large amount of maintenance and was eventually superseded by streamlined shapes produced with computer-aided design. Other weapon systems began to take on the F-117's roles, such as the F-22 Raptor gaining the ability to drop guided bombs.[4] By 2005, the aircraft was used only for certain missions, such as if a pilot needed to verify that the correct target had been hit, or when minimal collateral damage was vital.[12]

The USAF had once planned to retire the F-117 in 2011, but Program Budget Decision 720 (PBD 720), dated 28 December 2005, proposed retiring it by October 2008 to free up an estimated $1.07 billion[66] to buy more F-22s.[48] PBD 720 called for 10 F-117s to be retired in FY2007 and the remaining 42 in FY2008, stating that other USAF planes and missiles could stealthily deliver precision ordnance, including the B-2 Spirit, F-22 and JASSM.[67] The planned introduction of the multi-role F-35 Lightning II also contributed to the retirement decision.[68]

In late 2006, the USAF closed the F-117 formal training unit (FTU),[69] and announced the retirement of the F-117.[70] The first six aircraft to be retired took their last flight on 12 March 2007 after a ceremony at Holloman AFB to commemorate the aircraft's career. Brigadier General David L. Goldfein, commander of the 49th Fighter Wing, said at the ceremony, "With the launch of these great aircraft today, the circle comes to a close—their service to our nation's defense fulfilled, their mission accomplished and a job well done. We send them today to their final resting place—a home they are intimately familiar with—their first, and only, home outside of Holloman."[71]

 
A pair of specially painted F-117 Nighthawks sporting a United States flag theme on their bellies fly off from their last refueling by the Ohio Air National Guard's 121st Air Refueling Wing

Unlike most other USAF aircraft that are retired to Davis-Monthan AFB for scrapping, or dispersal to museums, most of the F-117s were placed in "Type 1000" storage[72] in their original hangars at the Tonopah Test Range Airport.[55] At Tonopah, their wings were removed and the aircraft are stored in their original climate-controlled hangars.[71] The decommissioning occurred in eight phases, with the operational aircraft retired to Tonopah in seven waves from 13 March 2007 until the last wave's arrival on 22 April 2008.[3][55] Four aircraft were kept flying beyond April by the 410th Flight Test Squadron at Palmdale for flight test. By August, two were remaining. The last F-117 (AF Serial No. 86-0831) left Palmdale to fly to Tonopah on 11 August 2008.[55][73] With the last aircraft retired, the 410th was inactivated in a ceremony on 1 August 2008.[74]

Five aircraft were placed in museums, including the first four YF-117As and some remains of the F-117 shot down over Serbia. Through 2009, one F-117 had been scrapped; AF Serial No. 79-0784 was scrapped at the Palmdale test facility on 26 April 2008. It was the last F-117 at Palmdale and was scrapped to test an effective method for destroying F-117 airframes.[55]

Congress had ordered that all F-117s mothballed from 30 September 2006 onwards were to be maintained "in a condition that would allow recall of that aircraft to future service" as part of the 2007 National Defense Authorization Act. By April 2016, lawmakers appeared ready to "remove the requirement that certain F-117 aircraft be maintained in a condition that would allow recall of those aircraft to future service", which would move them from storage to the aerospace maintenance and regeneration yard in Arizona to be scavenged for hard-to-find parts, or completely disassembled.[75] On 11 September 2017, it was reported that in accordance with the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017, signed into law on 23 December 2016, "the Air Force will remove four F-117s every year to fully divest them—a process known as demilitarizing aircraft".[76]

Post-retirement sightings

Although officially retired, the F-117 fleet remained intact as of 2009, with photos showing the aircraft carefully mothballed.[55] As of 2016, the retired fleet comprised over 50 airframes, with some of the aircraft being flown periodically.[77] F-117s were spotted flying periodically from 2014 to 2019.[78][79][80][81][82] In March 2019, it was reported that four F-117s had been secretly deployed to the Middle East in 2016 and that one had to make an emergency landing at Ali Al Salem (OKAS), Kuwait sometime late that year.[83][verification needed]

In February 2019, an F-117 was observed flying through the R-2508 Special Use Airspace Complex in the vicinity of Edwards Air Force Base, escorted by two F-16 Fighting Falcons that may have been providing top cover. Closer photographs of the aircraft revealed that the tail code had been scrubbed in an attempt to remove the paint. The partially-intact code identified it as a former aircraft of the 49th Operations Group.[81] An F-117 was also photographed in 2019 carrying unit markings previously unassociated with the aircraft—a band on the tail bearing the name Dark Knights, suggesting either an official or unofficial squadron is maintaining the Nighthawks.[84] In July 2019, one Nighthawk in a hybrid aggressor paint scheme was spotted flying above Death Valley, trailing behind a KC-135R Stratotanker.[85]

In March 2020, a spectator recorded an F-117 flying through the "Star Wars Canyon" in Death Valley, California.[5] On 20 May 2020, two more F-117s were sighted in a common aerial refueling area of Southern California trailing a NKC-135R Stratotanker from Edwards AFB, California.[82] In October 2020, at least two F-117s arrived at MCAS Miramar, featuring a tail code of TR which the Nighthawks based at Tonopah Range had previously used.[86][87]

On 13 September 2021, a pair of F-117s landed at Fresno Yosemite International Airport in California. They were scheduled to train with the California Air National Guard F-15C/D Eagles of the 144th Fighter Wing over the next few days.[88] One aircraft had red letters on its tail, and the other had white letters. One of the two was observed to not be fitted with radar reflectors.[89] That year USAF published photographs on DVIDS, the first acknowledgement by the service that the aircraft continued to fly after its official retirement.[90]

In January 2022, two F-117s were observed in flight in the Saline Military Operating Area. One had portions of its exterior covered in a "mirror-like coating" believed to be an experimental treatment to reduce the aircraft's infrared signature.[91] In September the Air Force Test Center published a Request for Information for a F-117 support contract at Tonopah, indicating that USAF wants to keep flying it until 2034. The service is using the aircraft in aggressor squadron and cruise missile training, and research and development. USAF has also slowed the retirement of its current inventory of about 45 F-117s to two to three units a year.[90]

Variants

F-117N "Seahawk"

The United States Navy tested the F-117 in 1984 but determined it was unsuitable for carrier use.[28] In the early 1990s, Lockheed proposed an upgraded carrier-capable F-117 variant dubbed the "Seahawk" to the Navy as an alternative to the canceled A/F-X program. The unsolicited proposal was received poorly by the Department of Defense, which lacked interest in the single mission capabilities on offer, particularly as it would take money away from the Joint Advanced Strike Technology program, which evolved into the Joint Strike Fighter. The F-117N would have differed from the land-based F-117 in several ways, such as the use of "elevators, a bubble canopy, a less sharply swept wing and reconfigured tail".[92][93] It would also be re-engined with General Electric F414 turbofans in place of the General Electric F404s. The aircraft would be optionally fitted with hardpoints, allowing for an additional 8,000 lb (3,600 kg) of payload, and a new ground-attack radar with air-to-air capability. In that role, the F-117N could carry AIM-120 AMRAAM air-to-air missiles.[92][94]

F-117B

After being rebuffed by the Navy, Lockheed submitted an updated proposal that included afterburning capability and a larger emphasis on the F-117N as a multi-mission aircraft, rather than just an attack aircraft.[94] To boost interest, Lockheed also proposed an F-117B land-based variant that shared most of the F-117N capabilities. This variant was proposed to the USAF and RAF.[95] Two RAF pilots formally evaluated the aircraft in 1986 as a reward for British help with the American bombing of Libya that year, RAF exchange officers began flying the F-117 in 1987,[28] and the British declined an offer during the Reagan administration to purchase the aircraft.[96] This renewed F-117N proposal was also known as the A/F-117X.[97] Neither the F-117N nor the F-117B were ordered.

Operators

 
22 F-117A aircraft from the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing at Langley AFB, Virginia, prior to being deployed to Saudi Arabia for Operation Desert Shield
United States

Aircraft on display

United States

YF-117A
F-117A
 
85-0817 'Shaba' under restoration
  • 80-0785 – Pole-mounted outside the Skunk Works facility at United States Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California. Hybrid airframe comprising the wreckage of 80–0785, the first production F-117A, and static test articles 778 and 779.[101]
  • 82-0799 Midnight RiderHill Aerospace Museum; Aircraft arrived at the museum on 5 August 2020; it is to be prepared and painted for display.[102]
  • 82-0803 Unexpected Guest – Displayed outside the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.[103]
  • 84-0810 Dark Angel – On 13 November 2022 it was reported on social media that the airframe was being delivered from Tonopah Test Range to the Pima Air & Space Museum.[citation needed]
  • 85-0813 The Toxic Avenger – Delivered to Castle Air Museum in Atwater, California on 29 July 2022 for restoration and then display. Restoration is expected to take about a year and cost around $75,000.[104]
  • 85-0817 Shaba[105] – Arrived at the Kalamazoo Air Zoo on 11 December 2020 to be partially restored and put on display.[citation needed]
  • 85-0819 Raven Beauty – Scheduled to be transported to the Stafford Air & Space Museum in early 2020 for preservation.[citation needed]
  • 84-0827 – Stripped fuselage listed as "scrap" on a government surplus website in early 2020. Fate unknown.[106]
  • 85-0831 – Located at the Strategic Air Command & Aerospace Museum in Ashland, Nebraska, where it is scheduled for restoration and display. It served as a test aircraft at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California from 1987 to 2008.[107]
  • 85-0833 Black Devil – Unveiled at Palm Springs Air Museum on 3 October 2020. Under restoration and scheduled for public display in Spring 2021.[108]

Serbia

F-117A

Nicknames

The aircraft's official name is "Night Hawk",[110] however the alternative form "Nighthawk" is frequently used.

As it prioritized stealth over aerodynamics, it earned the nickname "Wobblin' Goblin" due to its alleged instability at low speeds. However, F-117 pilots have stated the nickname is undeserved.[111] "Wobblin' (or Wobbly) Goblin" is likely a holdover from the early Have Blue / Senior Trend (FSD) days of the project when instability was a problem. In the USAF, "Goblin" (without wobbly) persists as a nickname because of the aircraft's appearance. During Operation Desert Storm, Saudis dubbed the aircraft "Shaba", which is Arabic for "Ghost".[112][additional citation(s) needed] Some pilots also called the airplane the "Stinkbug".[113]

During the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 it picked up the nickname "Invisible" (Serbian cyrillic "Невидљиви", latin "Nevidljivi") and it gained popularity after it was shot down over Serbian airspace near Buđanovci. The F-117 downing became a spot of Serbian pride with a phrase "We didn't know it was invisible" was coined.[114]

Specifications (F-117A)

 
Schematic diagram and size comparison of Lockheed F-117A

Data from U.S. Air Force National Museum, for the F-117A.[2]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 65 ft 11 in (20.09 m)
  • Wingspan: 43 ft 4 in (13.21 m)
  • Height: 12 ft 5 in (3.78 m)
  • Wing area: 780 sq ft (72 m2) [115]
  • Airfoil: Lozenge section, 3 flats Upper, 2 flats Lower[116]
  • Empty weight: 29,500 lb (13,381 kg) [115]
  • Max takeoff weight: 52,500 lb (23,814 kg)
  • Powerplant: 2 × General Electric F404-F1D2 turbofan engines, 9,040 lbf (40.2 kN) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 594 kn (684 mph, 1,100 km/h)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 0.92
  • Range: 930 nmi (1,070 mi, 1,720 km) ;[citation needed]
  • Service ceiling: 45,000 ft (14,000 m)
  • Wing loading: 67.3 lb/sq ft (329 kg/m2) calculated from[115]
  • Thrust/weight: 0.40

Armament

Notable appearances in media

The Omaha Nighthawks professional American football team used the F-117 Nighthawk as its logo.[118]

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Eden 2004, p. 240.
  2. ^ a b c d e Lockheed F-117A Nighthawk. National Museum of the United States Air Force. Retrieved 16 October 2016
  3. ^ a b Pae, Peter. "Stealth fighters fly off the radar". Los Angeles Times, 23 April 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2008.
  4. ^ a b Miller, Jay (2005). Lockheed Martin F/A-22 Raptor, Stealth Fighter, p. 44. Aerofax. ISBN 1-85780-158-X
  5. ^ a b "A Rare F-117A Stealth Fighter Flies Over 'Star Wars Canyon'". Popular Mechanics, 19 March 2020
  6. ^ Ufimtsev, P.Ya. . oai.dtic.mil. Retrieved 12 June 2010
  7. ^ a b Day, Dwayne A. "Stealth Technology". 18 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Centennial of Flight, 2003. Retrieved 13 November 2010
  8. ^ UCI Ufimtsev, Pyotr Ya. "Method of Edge Waves in the Physical Theory of Diffraction". Journal of the Moscow Institute for Radio Engineering, 1964
  9. ^ Ireton, Major Colin T. "Filling the Stealth Gap". Air and Space Power Journal, Fall 2006
  10. ^ a b Bartholomew Hott; George E. Pollock, , ics.purdue.edu, archived from the original on 16 February 2003, retrieved 12 June 2010
  11. ^ a b . Air-Attack.com. Archived from the original on 28 February 2010. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Sweetman, Bill (January 2008). "Unconventional Weapon". Air & Space Magazine. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  13. ^ Cunningham, Jim (Fall 1991). . Air & Space Power Journal. United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 6 March 2008. Retrieved 19 March 2008.
  14. ^ "Top Gun – the F-117 Stealth Fighter". BBC. Retrieved 10 May 2011
  15. ^ Rich 1994, pp. 26–27
  16. ^ "F-117 History" 27 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. F-117 Stealth Fighter Association. Retrieved 20 January 2007
  17. ^ a b c Goodall 1992, p. 19
  18. ^ Eden 2004, pp. 242–243
  19. ^ Goodall 1992, p. 24.
  20. ^ F-117A "Senior Trend". f-117a.com. Retrieved 12 June 2010
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  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 March 2014 – via YouTube.
  23. ^ "The Secrets of Stealth". 3 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Discovery Military Channel
  24. ^ Goodall 1992, p. 27
  25. ^ a b Goodall 1992, p. 29
  26. ^ Holder, Bill; Wallace, Mike (2000). Lockheed F-117 Nighthawk: An Illustrated History of the Stealth Fighter. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7643-0067-7.
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  63. ^ Riccioni, Col. Everest E. "Description of our Failing Defence Acquisition System". Project on government oversight, 8 March 2005. Quote: "This event, which occurred during the Kosovo conflict on 27 March, was a major blow to the US Air Force. The aircraft was special: an F-117 Nighthawk stealth bomber that should have been all but invisible to the Serbian air defences. And this certainly wasn't a fluke—a few nights later, Serb missiles damaged a second F-117."
  64. ^ Nixon, Mark. "Gallant Knights, MiG-29 in Action during Allied Force". AirForces Monthly magazine, January 2002
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  71. ^ a b Barrier, Terri. "F-117A retirement bittersweet occasion". Aerotech News and Review, 16 March 2007
  72. ^ According to a statement by the United States Air Force, "Aircraft in Type-1000 storage are to be maintained until recalled to active service, should the need arise. Type 1000 aircraft are termed inviolate, meaning they have a high potential to return to flying status and no parts may be removed from them. These aircraft are 're-preserved' every four years."
  73. ^ Radecki, Alan. "F-117's final formation fling". Flight International, 8 August 2008. Retrieved 11 March 2009
  74. ^ "410th FLTS 'Baja Scorpions' closes historic chapter". 3 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine U.S. Air Force, Edwards AFB, 5 August 2008
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Bibliography

  • Donald, David, ed. (2003). Black Jets: The Development and Operation of America's Most Secret Warplanes. Norwalk, CT: AIRtime Publishing Inc. ISBN 978-1-880588-67-3.
  • Eden, Paul, ed. (2004). The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft. London: Amber Books. ISBN 978-1-904687-84-9.
  • Goodall, James C. (1992). "The Lockheed F-117A Stealth Fighter". America's Stealth Fighters and Bombers: B-2, F-117, YF-22 and YF-23. St. Paul, MN: Motorbooks International. ISBN 978-0-87938-609-2.
  • Miller, Jay (1990). Lockheed F-117 Stealth Fighter. Arlington, TX: Aerofax Extra. ISBN 978-0-942548-48-8.
  • Rich, Ben (1994). Skunk Works. New York: Back Bay Books. ISBN 978-0-316-74330-3.
  • Richardson, Doug (2001). Stealth Warplanes. New York: Salamander Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7603-1051-9.

Further reading

  • Aronstein, David C. and Albert C. Piccirillo (1997). HAVE BLUE and the F-117A. Reston, VA: AIAA. ISBN 978-1-56347-245-9.
  • Fisk, Robert (2005). The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East. New York: Alfred Knopf. ISBN 978-1-84115-007-9.
  • Grant, R.G. and John R. Dailey (2007). Flight: 100 Years of Aviation. Harlow, Essex: DK Adult. ISBN 978-0-7566-1902-2.
  • Jenkins, Dennis R. and Tony R. Landis (2008). Experimental & Prototype U.S. Air Force Jet Fighters. North Branch, Minnesota: Specialty Press. ISBN 978-1-58007-111-6.
  • Sun, Andt (1990). F-117A Stealth Fighter. Hong Kong: Concord Publications Co. ISBN 978-962-361-017-9.
  • Winchester, Jim, ed. (2004). "Lockheed F-117". Modern Military Aircraft (Aviation Factfile). Rochester, Kent, UK: Grange Books plc. ISBN 978-1-84013-640-1.
  • The World's Great Stealth and Reconnaissance Aircraft. New York: Smithmark Publishing. 1991. ISBN 978-0-8317-9558-0.

External links

  • Lockheed F-117A Nighthawk. National Museum of the United States Air Force
  • The 49th Fighter Wing at Holloman Air Force Base
  • and
  • F-117A Nighthawk page on FAS.org 1 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Filling the Stealth Gap", in Air and Space Power Journal Fall 2006 28 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  • Austrian Radar Plots on acig.org
  • CNN – NATO air attack shifts, aims at violence inside Kosovo – 27 March 1999
  • Google Maps directory of all surviving F-117s on public display
  • (in German) Austrian article about interception of F-117
  • Russians admit testing F-117 lost in Yugoslavia, 2001 Flight Global article

lockheed, nighthawk, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, retired, american, single, seat, twin, engine, stealth, attack, aircraft, developed, lockheed, secretive, skunk, works, division, operated, united, states, force, usaf, first, operational, airc. F 117 redirects here For other uses see F 117 disambiguation The Lockheed F 117 Nighthawk is a retired American single seat twin engine stealth attack aircraft developed by Lockheed s secretive Skunk Works division and operated by the United States Air Force USAF It was the first operational aircraft to be designed with stealth technology F 117 NighthawkF 117 flying over mountains in Nevada in 2002Role Stealth attack aircraft 1 National origin United StatesManufacturer Lockheed CorporationFirst flight June 18 1981 41 years ago 1981 06 18 Introduction October 1983 39 years ago 1983 10 2 Retired 22 April 2008 3 Combat use Status Used as training aircraft as of 2022Primary user United States Air ForceNumber built 64 5 YF 117As 59 F 117As Developed from Lockheed Have BlueThe F 117 was based on the Have Blue technology demonstrator The Nighthawk s maiden flight took place in 1981 at Groom Lake Nevada and the aircraft achieved initial operating capability status in 1983 The aircraft was shrouded in secrecy until it was revealed to the public in 1988 Of the 64 F 117s built 59 were production versions with the other five being prototypes The F 117 was widely publicized for its role in the Gulf War of 1991 Although it was commonly referred to as the Stealth Fighter it was strictly an attack aircraft F 117s took part in the conflict in Yugoslavia where one was shot down by a surface to air missile SAM in 1999 The U S Air Force retired the F 117 in April 2008 primarily due to the fielding of the F 22 Raptor 4 Despite the type s official retirement a portion of the fleet has been kept in airworthy condition and Nighthawks have been observed flying since 2009 5 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background and Have Blue 1 2 Senior Trend 1 3 Designation 2 Design 2 1 Avionics 2 2 Stealth 3 Operational history 3 1 Combat over Yugoslavia 3 2 Later service and retirement 3 3 Post retirement sightings 4 Variants 4 1 F 117N Seahawk 4 2 F 117B 5 Operators 6 Aircraft on display 6 1 United States 6 2 Serbia 7 Nicknames 8 Specifications F 117A 9 Notable appearances in media 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Bibliography 11 3 Further reading 12 External linksDevelopment EditBackground and Have Blue Edit Main article Lockheed Have Blue In 1964 Pyotr Ufimtsev a Soviet mathematician published a seminal paper titled Method of Edge Waves in the Physical Theory of Diffraction in the journal of the Moscow Institute for Radio Engineering in which he showed that the strength of the radar return from an object is related to its edge configuration not its size 6 Ufimtsev was extending theoretical work published by the German physicist Arnold Sommerfeld 7 8 9 Ufimtsev demonstrated that he could calculate the radar cross section across a wing s surface and along its edge The obvious and logical conclusion was that even a large aircraft could reduce its radar signature by exploiting this principle However the resulting design would make the aircraft aerodynamically unstable and the state of computer technology in the early 1960s could not provide the kinds of flight computers which would later allow aircraft such as the F 117 and B 2 Spirit to stay airborne By the 1970s when Lockheed analyst Denys Overholser found Ufimtsev s paper computers and software had advanced significantly and the stage was set for the development of a stealth airplane 10 F 117A painted in Gray Dragon experimental camouflage scheme The F 117 was born after the Vietnam War where increasingly sophisticated Soviet surface to air missiles SAMs had downed heavy bombers 11 The heavy losses inflicted by Soviet made SAMs upon the Israeli air force in the 1973 Yom Kippur war also contributed to a 1974 Defense Science Board assessment that in case of a conflict in Central Europe air defenses would likely prevent NATO air strikes on targets in Eastern Europe 12 It was a black project an ultra secret program for much of its life very few people in the Pentagon knew the program even existed 13 14 The project began in 1975 with a model called the Hopeless Diamond 15 16 a wordplay on the Hope Diamond because of its appearance The following year the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency DARPA issued Lockheed Skunk Works a contract to build and test two Stealth Strike Fighters under the code name Have Blue 17 These subscale aircraft incorporated jet engines of the Northrop T 38A fly by wire systems of the F 16 landing gear of the A 10 and environmental systems of the C 130 17 By bringing together existing technology and components Lockheed built two demonstrators under budget at 35 million for both aircraft and in record time 17 The maiden flight of the demonstrators occurred on 1 December 1977 18 Although both aircraft crashed during the demonstration program test data proved positive The success of Have Blue led the government to increase funding for stealth technology Much of that increase was allocated towards the production of an operational stealth aircraft the Lockheed F 117A under the program code name Senior Trend 19 20 Senior Trend Edit The decision to produce the F 117A was made on 1 November 1978 and a contract was awarded to Lockheed Advanced Development Projects popularly known as the Skunk Works in Burbank California 21 The program was led by Ben Rich with Alan Brown as manager of the project 22 Rich called on Bill Schroeder a Lockheed mathematician and Overholser a computer scientist to exploit Ufimtsev s work The three designed a computer program called Echo which made it possible to design an airplane with flat panels called facets which were arranged so as to scatter over 99 of a radar s signal energy painting the aircraft 10 23 11 The first YF 117A serial number 79 10780 made its maiden flight from Groom Lake Area 51 Nevada on 18 June 1981 24 only 31 months after the full scale development decision The first production F 117A was delivered in 1982 and operational capability was achieved in October 1983 7 25 The 4450th Tactical Group stationed at Nellis Air Force Base Nevada were tasked with the operational development of the early F 117 and between 1981 prior to the arrival of the first models and 1989 they used LTV A 7 Corsair IIs for training to bring all pilots to a common flight training baseline and later as chase planes for F 117A tests 26 The F 117 was secret for much of the 1980s Many news articles discussed what they called a F 19 stealth fighter and the Testor Corporation produced a very inaccurate scale model When an F 117 crashed in Sequoia National Forest in July 1986 killing the pilot and starting a fire the Air Force established restricted airspace Armed guards prohibited entry including firefighters and a helicopter gunship circled the site All F 117 debris was replaced with remains of a F 101A Voodoo crash stored at Area 51 When another fatal crash in October 1987 occurred inside Nellis the military again provided little information to the press 27 The Air Force denied the existence of the aircraft until 10 November 1988 when Assistant Secretary of Defense J Daniel Howard displayed a grainy photograph at a Pentagon press conference disproving the many inaccurate rumors about the shape of the F 19 After the announcement pilots could fly the F 117 during daytime and no longer needed to be associated with the A 7 flying the T 38 supersonic trainer for travel and training instead 28 In April 1990 two F 117 aircraft were flown into Nellis arriving during daylight and publicly displayed to a crowd of tens of thousands 29 source source source source source source F 117 flight demonstration Five Full Scale Development FSD aircraft were built designated YF 117A 30 The last of 59 production F 117s were delivered on 3 July 1990 25 31 As the Air Force has stated Streamlined management by Aeronautical Systems Center Wright Patterson AFB Ohio combined breakthrough stealth technology with concurrent development and production to rapidly field the aircraft The F 117A program demonstrates that a stealth aircraft can be designed for reliability and maintainability 2 Designation Edit The operational aircraft was officially designated F 117A 32 Most modern U S military aircraft use post 1962 designations in which the designation F is usually an air to air fighter B is usually a bomber A is usually a ground attack aircraft etc Examples include the F 15 the B 2 and the A 6 The F 117 is primarily an attack aircraft 1 so its F designation is inconsistent with the DoD system This is an inconsistency that has been repeatedly employed by the U S Air Force with several of its attack aircraft since the late 1950s including the Republic F 105 Thunderchief and General Dynamics F 111 Aardvark A televised documentary quoted project manager Alan Brown as saying that Robert J Dixon a four star Air Force general who was the head of Tactical Air Command felt that the top notch USAF fighter pilots required to fly the new aircraft were more easily attracted to an aircraft with an F designation for fighter as opposed to a bomber B or attack A designation 33 34 The designation F 117 seems to indicate that it was given an official designation prior to the 1962 U S Tri Service Aircraft Designation System and could be considered numerically to be a part of the earlier Century series of fighters The assumption prior to the revealing of the aircraft to the public was that it would likely receive the F 19 designation as that number had not been used However there were no other aircraft to receive a 100 series number following the F 111 Soviet fighters obtained by the U S via various means under the Constant Peg program 35 were given F series numbers for their evaluation by U S pilots and with the advent of the Teen Series fighters most often Century Series designations 36 As with other exotic military aircraft types flying in the southern Nevada area such as captured fighters an arbitrary radio call of 117 was assigned This same radio call had been used by the enigmatic 4477th Test and Evaluation Squadron also known as the Red Hats or Red Eagles that often had flown expatriated MiG jet fighters in the area but there was no relationship to the call and the formal F 19 designation then being considered by the Air Force Apparently use of the 117 radio call became commonplace and when Lockheed released its first flight manual i e the Air Force dash one manual for the aircraft F 117A was the designation printed on the cover 37 Design Edit Front view of an F 117 When the Air Force first approached Lockheed with the stealth concept Skunk Works Director Kelly Johnson proposed a rounded design He believed smoothly blended shapes offered the best combination of speed and stealth However his assistant Ben Rich showed that faceted angle surfaces would provide a significant reduction in radar signature and the necessary aerodynamic control could be provided with computer units A May 1975 Skunk Works report Progress Report No 2 High Stealth Conceptual Studies showed the rounded concept that was rejected in favor of the flat sided approach 38 The resulting unusual design surprised and puzzled experienced pilots A Royal Air Force RAF pilot who flew it as an exchange officer stated that when he first saw a photograph of the still secret F 117 he promptly giggled and thought to himself this clearly can t fly 39 Early stealth aircraft were designed with a focus on minimal radar cross section RCS rather than aerodynamic performance Highly stealthy aircraft like the F 117 Nighthawk are aerodynamically unstable in all three aircraft principal axes and require constant flight corrections from a fly by wire FBW flight system to maintain controlled flight 40 It is shaped to deflect radar signals and is approximately the size of an F 15 Eagle The single seat Nighthawk is powered by two non afterburning General Electric F404 turbofan engines It is air refuelable and features a V tail The maximum speed is 623 mph 1 003 km h 541 kn at high altitude the max rate of climb is 2 820 feet 860 m per minute and service ceiling is 43 000 to 45 000 feet 13 000 to 14 000 m 41 The cockpit was quite spacious with ergonomic displays and controls but the field of view was somewhat obstructed with a large blind spot to the rear 42 Avionics Edit The F 117 has quadruple redundant fly by wire flight controls To lower development costs the avionics fly by wire systems and other systems and parts were derived from the General Dynamics F 16 Fighting Falcon Boeing B 52 Stratofortress McDonnell Douglas F A 18 Hornet and McDonnell Douglas F 15E Strike Eagle The parts were originally described as spares in budgets for these aircraft to keep the F 117 project secret citation needed YF 117A cockpit The aircraft is equipped with sophisticated navigation and attack systems integrated into a digital avionics suite It navigates primarily by GPS and high accuracy inertial navigation Missions are coordinated by an automated planning system that can automatically perform all aspects of an attack mission including weapons release 43 Targets are acquired by a thermal imaging infrared system paired with a laser rangefinder laser designator that finds the range and designates targets for laser guided bombs The F 117A s split internal bay can carry 5 000 pounds 2 300 kg of ordnance Typical weapons are a pair of GBU 10 GBU 12 or GBU 27 laser guided bombs two BLU 109 penetration bombs or two Joint Direct Attack Munitions JDAM GPS INS guided stand off bombs To maintain its low observability the aircraft was not fitted with its own radar not only would an active radar be detectable through its emissions but an inactive radar would also act as a reflector of radar energy 44 Stealth Edit Main article Stealth aircraft The F 117 has a radar cross section of about 0 001 m2 0 0108 sq ft 45 Among the penalties for stealth are lower engine thrust due to losses in the inlet and outlet a very low wing aspect ratio and a high sweep angle 50 needed to deflect incoming radar waves to the sides 12 failed verification With these design considerations and no afterburner the F 117 is limited to subsonic speeds The F 117A carries no radar which lowers emissions and cross section and whether it carries any radar detection equipment remained classified as of 2008 12 Its faceted shape made from 2 dimensional flat surfaces resulted from the limitations of the 1970s era computer technology used to calculate its radar cross section Later supercomputers made it possible for subsequent aircraft like the B 2 bomber to use curved surfaces while maintaining stealth through the use of far more computational resources to perform the additional calculations 46 The radar absorbent flat sheets covering the F 117A weighed almost one ton and were held in place by glue with the gaps between the sheets filled with a kind of putty material called butter 12 An exhaust plume contributes a significant infrared signature The F 117 reduces IR signature with a non circular tail pipe a slit shape to minimize the exhaust cross section and maximize the mixing of hot exhaust with cool ambient air The F 117 lacks afterburners because the hot exhaust would increase the infrared signature and breaking the sound barrier would produce an obvious sonic boom as well as surface heating of the aircraft skin which also increases the infrared footprint As a result its performance in air combat maneuvering required in a dogfight would never match that of a dedicated fighter aircraft This was unimportant in the case of this aircraft since it was designed to be an attack aircraft Passive multistatic radar bistatic radar 47 and especially multistatic radar systems detect some stealth aircraft better than conventional monostatic radars since first generation stealth technology such as the F 117 reflects energy away from the transmitter s line of sight effectively increasing the radar cross section RCS in other directions which the passive radars monitor Operational history Edit An F 117 conducts a live exercise bombing run using GBU 27 laser guided bombs During the program s early years from 1984 to mid 1992 the F 117A fleet was based at Tonopah Test Range Airport Nevada where it served under the 4450th Tactical Group Because the F 117 was classified during this time the unit was officially located at Nellis Air Force Base Nevada and equipped with A 7 Corsair II aircraft All military personnel were permanently assigned to Nellis AFB and most personnel and their families lived in Las Vegas This required commercial air and trucking to transport personnel between Las Vegas and Tonopah each week The 4450th was absorbed by the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing in 1989 In 1992 the entire fleet was transferred to Holloman Air Force Base New Mexico under the command of the 49th Fighter Wing This move also eliminated the Key Air and American Trans Air contract flights to Tonopah which flew 22 000 passenger trips on 300 flights from Nellis to Tonopah per month The F 117 reached initial operating capability status in 1983 2 The Nighthawk s pilots called themselves Bandits Each of the 558 Air Force pilots who have flown the F 117 has a Bandit number such as Bandit 52 that indicates the sequential order of their first flight in the F 117 48 Pilots told friends and families that they flew the Northrop F 5 in aggressor squadrons against Tactical Air Command 27 The F 117 has been used several times in war Its first mission was during the United States invasion of Panama in 1989 49 During that invasion two F 117A Nighthawks dropped two bombs on Rio Hato airfield During the Gulf War in 1991 the F 117 flew approximately 1 300 sorties and scored direct hits on what the U S called 1 600 high value targets in Iraq 2 over 6 905 flight hours 50 Leaflet drops on Iraqi forces displayed the F 117 destroying ground targets and warned Escape now and save yourselves 28 Only 229 Coalition tactical aircraft could drop and designate laser guided bombs of which 36 F 117s represented 15 7 and only the USAF had the I 2000 bombs intended for hardened targets So the F 117 represented 32 of all coalition aircraft that could deliver such bombs 51 73 74 Notably F 117s were used in the Amiriyah shelter bombing killing at least 408 civilians 52 Early claims of the F 117 s effectiveness were later found to be overstated 53 Initial reports of F 117s hitting 80 of their targets were later scaled back to 41 60 51 132 On the first night they failed to hit 40 of their assigned air defense targets including the Air Defense Operations Center in Baghdad and 8 such targets remained functional out of 10 that could be assessed 51 136 137 In their Desert Storm white paper the USAF stated that the F 117 was the only airplane that the planners dared risk over downtown Baghdad and that this area was particularly well defended Dozens of F 16s were routinely tasked to attack Baghdad in the first few days of the war 51 137 138 In fact most of the air defenses were on the outskirts of the city and many other aircraft hit targets in the downtown area with minimal casualties when they attacked at night like the F 117 51 they avoided the optically aimed anti aircraft cannon and infrared SAMs which were the biggest threat to Coalition aircraft 51 105 The aircraft was operated in secret from Tonopah for almost a decade but after the Gulf War the aircraft moved to Holloman in 1992 however its integration with the USAF s non stealth iron jets occurred slowly As one senior F 117A pilot later said Because of ongoing secrecy others continued to see the aircraft as none of their business a stand alone system 12 The F 117A and the men and women of the 49th Fighter Wing were deployed to Southwest Asia on multiple occasions On their first deployment with the aid of aerial refueling pilots flew non stop from Holloman to Kuwait a flight of approximately 18 5 hours 54 Combat over Yugoslavia Edit Main article 1999 F 117A shootdown Canopy of F 117 shot down in Serbia in March 1999 at the Museum of Aviation in Belgrade One F 117 AF ser no 82 0806 was lost to enemy action It was downed during an Operation Allied Force mission against the Army of Yugoslavia on 27 March 1999 55 The aircraft was acquired by a fire control radar at a distance of 8 1 mi 13 km and an altitude of 5 0 mi 8 km SA 3s were then launched by a Yugoslav version of the Soviet Isayev S 125 Neva NATO name SA 3 Goa anti aircraft missile system 55 56 57 The launcher was run by the 3rd Battalion of the 250th Air Defence Missile Brigade under the command of Colonel Zoltan Dani 58 After the explosion the aircraft became uncontrollable forcing the pilot to eject 55 The pilot was recovered six hours later by a United States Air Force Pararescue team 55 59 The stealth technology from the downed F 117 may have been acquired by Russia and China 60 but the U S did not attempt to destroy the wreckage because senior Pentagon officials argued that its technology was already dated and no longer important to protect 27 American sources state that a second F 117 was targeted and damaged during the campaign allegedly on 30 April 1999 61 62 The aircraft returned to Spangdahlem base 62 but it supposedly never flew again 63 64 The USAF continued using the F 117 during Operation Allied Force 65 Later service and retirement Edit A pair of F 117A Nighthawks The F 117 was later used in the Operation Enduring Freedom in 2001 and Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003 It was only operated by the U S Air Force The loss in Serbia caused the USAF to create a subsection of their existing weapons school to improve tactics More training was done with other units and the F 117A began to participate in Red Flag exercises Though advanced for its time the F 117 s stealthy faceted airframe required a large amount of maintenance and was eventually superseded by streamlined shapes produced with computer aided design Other weapon systems began to take on the F 117 s roles such as the F 22 Raptor gaining the ability to drop guided bombs 4 By 2005 the aircraft was used only for certain missions such as if a pilot needed to verify that the correct target had been hit or when minimal collateral damage was vital 12 The USAF had once planned to retire the F 117 in 2011 but Program Budget Decision 720 PBD 720 dated 28 December 2005 proposed retiring it by October 2008 to free up an estimated 1 07 billion 66 to buy more F 22s 48 PBD 720 called for 10 F 117s to be retired in FY2007 and the remaining 42 in FY2008 stating that other USAF planes and missiles could stealthily deliver precision ordnance including the B 2 Spirit F 22 and JASSM 67 The planned introduction of the multi role F 35 Lightning II also contributed to the retirement decision 68 In late 2006 the USAF closed the F 117 formal training unit FTU 69 and announced the retirement of the F 117 70 The first six aircraft to be retired took their last flight on 12 March 2007 after a ceremony at Holloman AFB to commemorate the aircraft s career Brigadier General David L Goldfein commander of the 49th Fighter Wing said at the ceremony With the launch of these great aircraft today the circle comes to a close their service to our nation s defense fulfilled their mission accomplished and a job well done We send them today to their final resting place a home they are intimately familiar with their first and only home outside of Holloman 71 A pair of specially painted F 117 Nighthawks sporting a United States flag theme on their bellies fly off from their last refueling by the Ohio Air National Guard s 121st Air Refueling Wing Unlike most other USAF aircraft that are retired to Davis Monthan AFB for scrapping or dispersal to museums most of the F 117s were placed in Type 1000 storage 72 in their original hangars at the Tonopah Test Range Airport 55 At Tonopah their wings were removed and the aircraft are stored in their original climate controlled hangars 71 The decommissioning occurred in eight phases with the operational aircraft retired to Tonopah in seven waves from 13 March 2007 until the last wave s arrival on 22 April 2008 3 55 Four aircraft were kept flying beyond April by the 410th Flight Test Squadron at Palmdale for flight test By August two were remaining The last F 117 AF Serial No 86 0831 left Palmdale to fly to Tonopah on 11 August 2008 55 73 With the last aircraft retired the 410th was inactivated in a ceremony on 1 August 2008 74 Five aircraft were placed in museums including the first four YF 117As and some remains of the F 117 shot down over Serbia Through 2009 one F 117 had been scrapped AF Serial No 79 0784 was scrapped at the Palmdale test facility on 26 April 2008 It was the last F 117 at Palmdale and was scrapped to test an effective method for destroying F 117 airframes 55 Congress had ordered that all F 117s mothballed from 30 September 2006 onwards were to be maintained in a condition that would allow recall of that aircraft to future service as part of the 2007 National Defense Authorization Act By April 2016 lawmakers appeared ready to remove the requirement that certain F 117 aircraft be maintained in a condition that would allow recall of those aircraft to future service which would move them from storage to the aerospace maintenance and regeneration yard in Arizona to be scavenged for hard to find parts or completely disassembled 75 On 11 September 2017 it was reported that in accordance with the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 signed into law on 23 December 2016 the Air Force will remove four F 117s every year to fully divest them a process known as demilitarizing aircraft 76 Post retirement sightings Edit Although officially retired the F 117 fleet remained intact as of 2009 with photos showing the aircraft carefully mothballed 55 As of 2016 the retired fleet comprised over 50 airframes with some of the aircraft being flown periodically 77 F 117s were spotted flying periodically from 2014 to 2019 78 79 80 81 82 In March 2019 it was reported that four F 117s had been secretly deployed to the Middle East in 2016 and that one had to make an emergency landing at Ali Al Salem OKAS Kuwait sometime late that year 83 verification needed In February 2019 an F 117 was observed flying through the R 2508 Special Use Airspace Complex in the vicinity of Edwards Air Force Base escorted by two F 16 Fighting Falcons that may have been providing top cover Closer photographs of the aircraft revealed that the tail code had been scrubbed in an attempt to remove the paint The partially intact code identified it as a former aircraft of the 49th Operations Group 81 An F 117 was also photographed in 2019 carrying unit markings previously unassociated with the aircraft a band on the tail bearing the name Dark Knights suggesting either an official or unofficial squadron is maintaining the Nighthawks 84 In July 2019 one Nighthawk in a hybrid aggressor paint scheme was spotted flying above Death Valley trailing behind a KC 135R Stratotanker 85 In March 2020 a spectator recorded an F 117 flying through the Star Wars Canyon in Death Valley California 5 On 20 May 2020 two more F 117s were sighted in a common aerial refueling area of Southern California trailing a NKC 135R Stratotanker from Edwards AFB California 82 In October 2020 at least two F 117s arrived at MCAS Miramar featuring a tail code of TR which the Nighthawks based at Tonopah Range had previously used 86 87 On 13 September 2021 a pair of F 117s landed at Fresno Yosemite International Airport in California They were scheduled to train with the California Air National Guard F 15C D Eagles of the 144th Fighter Wing over the next few days 88 One aircraft had red letters on its tail and the other had white letters One of the two was observed to not be fitted with radar reflectors 89 That year USAF published photographs on DVIDS the first acknowledgement by the service that the aircraft continued to fly after its official retirement 90 In January 2022 two F 117s were observed in flight in the Saline Military Operating Area One had portions of its exterior covered in a mirror like coating believed to be an experimental treatment to reduce the aircraft s infrared signature 91 In September the Air Force Test Center published a Request for Information for a F 117 support contract at Tonopah indicating that USAF wants to keep flying it until 2034 The service is using the aircraft in aggressor squadron and cruise missile training and research and development USAF has also slowed the retirement of its current inventory of about 45 F 117s to two to three units a year 90 Variants EditF 117N Seahawk Edit The United States Navy tested the F 117 in 1984 but determined it was unsuitable for carrier use 28 In the early 1990s Lockheed proposed an upgraded carrier capable F 117 variant dubbed the Seahawk to the Navy as an alternative to the canceled A F X program The unsolicited proposal was received poorly by the Department of Defense which lacked interest in the single mission capabilities on offer particularly as it would take money away from the Joint Advanced Strike Technology program which evolved into the Joint Strike Fighter The F 117N would have differed from the land based F 117 in several ways such as the use of elevators a bubble canopy a less sharply swept wing and reconfigured tail 92 93 It would also be re engined with General Electric F414 turbofans in place of the General Electric F404s The aircraft would be optionally fitted with hardpoints allowing for an additional 8 000 lb 3 600 kg of payload and a new ground attack radar with air to air capability In that role the F 117N could carry AIM 120 AMRAAM air to air missiles 92 94 F 117B Edit After being rebuffed by the Navy Lockheed submitted an updated proposal that included afterburning capability and a larger emphasis on the F 117N as a multi mission aircraft rather than just an attack aircraft 94 To boost interest Lockheed also proposed an F 117B land based variant that shared most of the F 117N capabilities This variant was proposed to the USAF and RAF 95 Two RAF pilots formally evaluated the aircraft in 1986 as a reward for British help with the American bombing of Libya that year RAF exchange officers began flying the F 117 in 1987 28 and the British declined an offer during the Reagan administration to purchase the aircraft 96 This renewed F 117N proposal was also known as the A F 117X 97 Neither the F 117N nor the F 117B were ordered Operators Edit 22 F 117A aircraft from the 37th Tactical Fighter Wing at Langley AFB Virginia prior to being deployed to Saudi Arabia for Operation Desert Shield United StatesUnited States Air Force 4450th Tactical Group Tonopah Test Range Nevada 4450th Tactical Squadron 1981 1989 4451st Tactical Squadron 1981 1989 4453rd Test and Evaluation Squadron 1985 1989 37th Tactical Fighter Wing Fighter Wing Tonopah Test Range 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron 1989 1992 416th Tactical Fighter Squadron 1989 1992 417th Tactical Fighter Training Squadron 1989 1992 49th Fighter Wing Holloman AFB New Mexico 7th Fighter Squadron 1992 2006 8th Fighter Squadron 1992 2008 9th Fighter Squadron 1993 2008 412th Test Wing Edwards AFB California 410th Flight Test Squadron 1993 2008 Aircraft on display EditUnited States Edit 79 10781 Scorpion 2 at the National Museum of the United States Air Force YF 117A79 10780 Scorpion 1 on pedestal display on Nellis Boulevard at the entrance to Nellis Air Force Base Nevada 36 13 38 00 N 115 3 33 28 W 36 2272222 N 115 0592444 W 36 2272222 115 0592444 It was put in place on 16 May 1992 the first F 117 to be made a gate guardian 98 79 10781 Scorpion 2 National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson Air Force Base outside Dayton Ohio It was delivered to the museum on 17 July 1991 99 79 10782 Scorpion 3 Holloman Air Force Base New Mexico It was repainted to resemble the first F 117A used to drop weapons in combat This aircraft was used for acoustics and navigation system testing While wearing a flag painted on its bottom surface this aircraft revealed the type s existence to high ranking officials at Groom Lake on 14 December 1983 the first semi public unveiling of the aircraft It was placed on display at Holloman AFB on 5 April 2008 citation needed 79 10783 Scorpion 4 It had been previously on display at the Blackbird Airpark Museum at Air Force Plant 42 Palmdale California In June 2012 Scorpion 4 was transported from Blackbird Airpark to Edwards AFB for restoration work it is planned for the aircraft to be displayed at the Air Force Flight Test Center Museum 100 F 117A 85 0817 Shaba under restoration 80 0785 Pole mounted outside the Skunk Works facility at United States Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale California Hybrid airframe comprising the wreckage of 80 0785 the first production F 117A and static test articles 778 and 779 101 82 0799 Midnight Rider Hill Aerospace Museum Aircraft arrived at the museum on 5 August 2020 it is to be prepared and painted for display 102 82 0803 Unexpected Guest Displayed outside the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley California 103 84 0810 Dark Angel On 13 November 2022 it was reported on social media that the airframe was being delivered from Tonopah Test Range to the Pima Air amp Space Museum citation needed 85 0813 The Toxic Avenger Delivered to Castle Air Museum in Atwater California on 29 July 2022 for restoration and then display Restoration is expected to take about a year and cost around 75 000 104 85 0817 Shaba 105 Arrived at the Kalamazoo Air Zoo on 11 December 2020 to be partially restored and put on display citation needed 85 0819 Raven Beauty Scheduled to be transported to the Stafford Air amp Space Museum in early 2020 for preservation citation needed 84 0827 Stripped fuselage listed as scrap on a government surplus website in early 2020 Fate unknown 106 85 0831 Located at the Strategic Air Command amp Aerospace Museum in Ashland Nebraska where it is scheduled for restoration and display It served as a test aircraft at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale California from 1987 to 2008 107 85 0833 Black Devil Unveiled at Palm Springs Air Museum on 3 October 2020 Under restoration and scheduled for public display in Spring 2021 108 Serbia Edit F 117A82 0806 Something Wicked shot down over Serbia the remains are displayed at the Museum of Aviation in Belgrade close to Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport 109 Nicknames EditThe aircraft s official name is Night Hawk 110 however the alternative form Nighthawk is frequently used As it prioritized stealth over aerodynamics it earned the nickname Wobblin Goblin due to its alleged instability at low speeds However F 117 pilots have stated the nickname is undeserved 111 Wobblin or Wobbly Goblin is likely a holdover from the early Have Blue Senior Trend FSD days of the project when instability was a problem In the USAF Goblin without wobbly persists as a nickname because of the aircraft s appearance During Operation Desert Storm Saudis dubbed the aircraft Shaba which is Arabic for Ghost 112 additional citation s needed Some pilots also called the airplane the Stinkbug 113 During the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 it picked up the nickname Invisible Serbian cyrillic Nevidљivi latin Nevidljivi and it gained popularity after it was shot down over Serbian airspace near Buđanovci The F 117 downing became a spot of Serbian pride with a phrase We didn t know it was invisible was coined 114 Specifications F 117A Edit Schematic diagram and size comparison of Lockheed F 117A Data from U S Air Force National Museum for the F 117A 2 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 65 ft 11 in 20 09 m Wingspan 43 ft 4 in 13 21 m Height 12 ft 5 in 3 78 m Wing area 780 sq ft 72 m2 115 Airfoil Lozenge section 3 flats Upper 2 flats Lower 116 Empty weight 29 500 lb 13 381 kg 115 Max takeoff weight 52 500 lb 23 814 kg Powerplant 2 General Electric F404 F1D2 turbofan engines 9 040 lbf 40 2 kN thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 594 kn 684 mph 1 100 km h Maximum speed Mach 0 92 Range 930 nmi 1 070 mi 1 720 km citation needed Service ceiling 45 000 ft 14 000 m Wing loading 67 3 lb sq ft 329 kg m2 calculated from 115 Thrust weight 0 40Armament 2 internal weapons bays with one hardpoint each total of two weapons equipped to carry Bombs GBU 10 Paveway II laser guided bomb with 2 000 lb 910 kg Mk84 blast fragmentation or BLU 109 or BLU 116 Penetrator warhead GBU 12 Paveway II laser guided bomb with 500 lb 230 kg Mk82 blast fragmentation warhead GBU 27 Paveway III laser guided bomb with 2 000 lb 910 kg Mk84 blast fragmentation or BLU 109 or BLU 116 Penetrator warhead GBU 31 JDAM INS GPS guided munition with 2 000 lb 910 kg Mk84 blast frag or BLU 109 Penetrator warhead B61 nuclear bomb 117 Notable appearances in media EditMain article Aircraft in fiction F 117 Nighthawk The Omaha Nighthawks professional American football team used the F 117 Nighthawk as its logo 118 See also Edit Aviation portal United States portal Military portalSea Shadow Wainfan FacetmobileRelated development Lockheed Have BlueAircraft of comparable role configuration and era BAE Replica MBB LampyridaeRelated lists List of Lockheed aircraft List of military aircraft of the United StatesReferences EditNotes Edit a b Eden 2004 p 240 a b c d e Lockheed F 117A Nighthawk National Museum of the United States Air Force Retrieved 16 October 2016 a b Pae Peter Stealth fighters fly off the radar Los Angeles Times 23 April 2008 Retrieved 27 April 2008 a b Miller Jay 2005 Lockheed Martin F A 22 Raptor Stealth Fighter p 44 Aerofax ISBN 1 85780 158 X a b A Rare F 117A Stealth Fighter Flies Over Star Wars Canyon Popular Mechanics 19 March 2020 Ufimtsev P Ya Method of Edge Waves in the Physical Theory of Diffraction oai dtic mil Retrieved 12 June 2010 a b Day Dwayne A Stealth Technology Archived 18 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Centennial of Flight 2003 Retrieved 13 November 2010 UCI Ufimtsev Pyotr Ya Method of Edge Waves in the Physical Theory of Diffraction Journal of the Moscow Institute for Radio Engineering 1964 Ireton Major Colin T Filling the Stealth Gap Air and Space Power Journal Fall 2006 a b Bartholomew Hott George E Pollock The Advent Evolution and New Horizons of United States Stealth Aircraft ics purdue edu archived from the original on 16 February 2003 retrieved 12 June 2010 a b F 117A Nighthawk Air Attack com Archived from the original on 28 February 2010 Retrieved 18 July 2017 a b c d e f Sweetman Bill January 2008 Unconventional Weapon Air amp Space Magazine Retrieved 22 November 2020 Cunningham Jim Fall 1991 Cracks in the Black Dike Secrecy the Media and the F 117A Air amp Space Power Journal United States Air Force Archived from the original on 6 March 2008 Retrieved 19 March 2008 Top Gun the F 117 Stealth Fighter BBC Retrieved 10 May 2011 Rich 1994 pp 26 27 F 117 History Archived 27 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine F 117 Stealth Fighter Association Retrieved 20 January 2007 a b c Goodall 1992 p 19 Eden 2004 pp 242 243 Goodall 1992 p 24 F 117A Senior Trend f 117a com Retrieved 12 June 2010 Rich 1994 p 71 YouTube Archived from the original on 13 March 2014 via YouTube The Secrets of Stealth Archived 3 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Discovery Military Channel Goodall 1992 p 27 a b Goodall 1992 p 29 Holder Bill Wallace Mike 2000 Lockheed F 117 Nighthawk An Illustrated History of the Stealth Fighter Atglen PA Schiffer Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7643 0067 7 a b c Jeffrey T Richelson July 2001 When Secrets Crash Air Force Magazine Retrieved 1 November 2019 a b c d Crickmore Paul 2003 Combat Legend F 117 Nighthawk Airlife pp 33 48 49 60 ISBN 1 84037 394 6 Gregos J First Public Display of the F 117 at Nellis AFB April 21 1990 dreamlandresort com Retrieved 27 April 2012 DOD 4120 15 L Addendum United States Department of Defense December 2007 Retrieved 12 June 2010 Donald 2003 p 98 DOD 4120 15 L Model Designation of Military Aerospace Vehicles PDF United States Department of Defense 12 May 2004 p 38 archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2004 retrieved 17 July 2017 Stealth and Beyond Air Stealth TV series Archived 11 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine The History Channel 2006 Retrieved 19 March 2008 Moderns 13 April 2017 Modern Marvels S11E62 F117 Archived from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 22 July 2018 via YouTube Grier Peter Constant Peg airforce magazine com Vol 90 no 4 April 2007 Retrieved 10 May 2011 Peter W Merlin 2011 Images of Aviation Area 51 Boston Arcadia Publishing p 32 ISBN 978 0 7385 7620 6 Miller 1990 Slattery Chad Secrets of the Skunk Works Little Harvey Concept B Air amp Space Smithsonian Crickmore Paul and Alison J 2003 1999 Nighthawk F 117 Stealth Fighter Zenith Imprint pp 85 86 ISBN 978 1 61060 737 7 Rich and Janos Skunk Works pp 30 31 46 Dorr Robert F 2016 Air Combat A History of Fighter Pilots Berkley p 315 ISBN 978 0 425 21170 0 Nijboer Donald 2016 Fighting Cockpits In the Pilot s Seat of Great Military Aircraft from World War I to Today p 210 Zenith Press ISBN 978 0 7603 4956 4 F 117A Nighthawk Federation of American Scientists Holloway Don March 1996 Stealth Secrets of the F 117 Nighthawk Historynet com HistoryNet Retrieved 19 January 2022 Richardson 2001 p 57 Rich 1994 p 21 Bistatic Radar Sets Radartutorial eu Retrieved 16 December 2010 a b Topolsky Joshua Air Force s stealth fighters making final flights CNN 11 March 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2009 Crocker H W III 2006 Don t Tread on Me New York Crown Forum ISBN 978 1 4000 5363 6 Weapons F 117A Stealth PBS Frontline Retrieved 12 June 2010 a b c d e f Operation Desert Storm Evaluation of the Air Campaign GAO NSIAD 97 134 PDF General Accounting Office 12 June 1997 Archived from the original PDF on 16 October 2012 Retrieved 28 January 2013 Clark Ramsey 1992 The Fire This Time U S War Crimes in the Gulf New York NY Thunder s Mouth Press p 70 ISBN 1 56025 047 X OCLC 26097107 Schmitt Eric Navy Looks On with Envy at Air Force Stealth Display The New York Times 17 June 1991 Retrieved 24 April 2010 Petrescu Florian Ion 2013 Lockheed Martin Color Germany Petrescu Relly Victoria Norderstedt p 55 ISBN 978 3 8482 3073 0 OCLC 863964531 a b c d e f g h i Logan Don 2009 Lockheed F 117 Nighthawks A Stealth Fighter Roll Call Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing ISBN 978 0 7643 3242 5 page needed How to Take Down an F 117 Strategy Page 21 November 2005 Retrieved 12 June 2010 Serb discusses 1999 downing of stealth USA Today 26 October 2005 Retrieved 1 July 2009 Dsouza Larkins Who shot down F 117 Defence Aviation 8 February 2007 Retrieved 1 August 2011 Whitcomb Darrel The Night They Saved Vega 31 airforcemag com Air Force Association Archived from the original on 22 April 2013 Retrieved 12 July 2014 Stojanovic Dusan 23 January 2011 China s new stealth fighter may use U S technology China Digital Times Damage said attributed to full moon Nl newsbank com 6 May 1999 Retrieved 19 February 2012 a b Yes Serbian Air Defenses Did Hit Another F 117 During Operation Allied Force In 1999 The Drive 1 December 2020 Riccioni Col Everest E Description of our Failing Defence Acquisition System Project on government oversight 8 March 2005 Quote This event which occurred during the Kosovo conflict on 27 March was a major blow to the US Air Force The aircraft was special an F 117 Nighthawk stealth bomber that should have been all but invisible to the Serbian air defences And this certainly wasn t a fluke a few nights later Serb missiles damaged a second F 117 Nixon Mark Gallant Knights MiG 29 in Action during Allied Force AirForces Monthly magazine January 2002 Donald 2003 p 119 Tiron Roxana New Mexico Air Force base at crossroads Archived 1 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Hill 22 February 2006 Retrieved 11 March 2009 Program Budget Decision 720 Department of Defense Shea Christopher Now you see it Boston Globe 4 February 2007 Retrieved 11 March 2009 F 117 pilot school closes Air Force Times Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Retrieved 20 January 2007 Bates Staff Sergeant Matthew F 117 A long storied history that is about to end US Air Force 28 October 2006 a b Barrier Terri F 117A retirement bittersweet occasion Aerotech News and Review 16 March 2007 According to a statement by the United States Air Force Aircraft in Type 1000 storage are to be maintained until recalled to active service should the need arise Type 1000 aircraft are termed inviolate meaning they have a high potential to return to flying status and no parts may be removed from them These aircraft are re preserved every four years Radecki Alan F 117 s final formation fling Flight International 8 August 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2009 410th FLTS Baja Scorpions closes historic chapter Archived 3 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine U S Air Force Edwards AFB 5 August 2008 Congress appears ready to let the Lockheed F 117A Nighthawk go FlightGlobal 27 April 2016 Pawlyk Oriana 11 September 2017 Retired but Still Flying Defensetech org Retrieved 23 September 2017 Hlad Jennifer 6 May 2016 A Real Retirement for the Nighthawk Air Force Magazine Retrieved 22 November 2020 Why Is The Retired F 117 Nighthawk Still Flying Foxtrotalpha jalopnik com 16 March 2014 Retrieved 21 April 2014 Axe David 23 August 2015 Yep F 117 Stealth Fighters Are Still Flying in 2015 War Is Boring Retrieved 24 August 2015 F 117 Flying 2013 1 May 2013 Retrieved 21 December 2013 a b F 117 Nighthawk still out there still flying clearest photos yet Combat Aircraft 2019 Retrieved 25 January 2020 a b Rogoway Tyler 20 May 2020 F 117 Stealth Jets Flew Directly Over Los Angeles on Another Mission Off The California Coast The Drive Retrieved 21 May 2020 Leone Dario 11 April 2019 One of the F 117s secretly deployed to the middle East to take part in OIR made emergency landing in Kuwait Scramble Magazine Says The Aviation Geek Club Retrieved 13 April 2019 Dark Knights a new F 117 squadron Air Forces Monthly 18 March 2019 Retrieved 21 April 2019 Agressor F117 Incredible new images revealed Combat Aircraft 14 July 2019 Retrieved 18 July 2019 Rogoway Tyler 20 October 2020 F 117s Make Surprise Visit To Marine Corps Air Station Miramar The Drive Retrieved 22 October 2020 Rogoway Tyler 22 October 2020 Check Out These Close Up Shots of F 117s Deployed To Miramar The Drive Retrieved 22 October 2020 Behold F 117s on Their Historic Deployment to Fresno in These Stunning Shots 16 September 2021 Rogoway Tyler 13 September 2021 F 117s Make Surprise Appearance At Fresno Airport To Train Against Local F 15s The Drive Retrieved 13 September 2021 a b D Urso Stefano 10 January 2023 The U S Air Force Wants The F 117 To Fly Until 2034 The Aviationist Retrieved 18 January 2023 Rogoway Tyler 23 January 2022 F 35 And F 117 Spotted Flying With Mysterious Mirror Like Skin The Drive Retrieved 19 February 2022 a b Navy still not interested in F 117N JAST plan due tomorrow Aerospace Daily Vol 167 No 52 1993 p 426 Variant Aircraft f 117a com 14 July 2003 Retrieved 7 November 2010 a b Morocco John D Lockheed Returns to Navy with new F 117N Design Aviation Week amp Space Technology Vol 140 No 10 1994 p 26 Lockheed Martin targets RAF and USN for F 117 Flight International 28 June 1995 Rogoway Tyler 3 January 2017 Reagan Invited Thatcher To Join The Top Secret F 117 Program The Drive Skunk Works official touts A F 117X as Navy stealth option Aerospace Daily Vol 171 No 56 1994 p 446 Holloman Restores F 117 Nighthawk Holloman Air Force Base Retrieved 31 March 2017 F 117 Nighthawk 79 10781 National Museum of the USAF Retrieved 19 September 2016 One of only four existing F 117s returns to Edwards Archived 22 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Edwards Air Force Base 13 June 2012 1 F 117A The Black Jet Retrieved 13 November 2020 2 The Drive Retrieved 10 August 2020 3 The Drive Retrieved 10 August 2020 4 Merced Sun Star Retrieved 8 August 2022 Project Get Shaba 817 Home Kalamazoo Air Zoo Retrieved 8 June 2020 Stripped F 117 Nighthawk Arrives At Hill Aerospace Museum Direct From Tonopah The Drive Retrieved 13 November 2020 5 Strategic Air Command amp Aerospace Museum Retrieved 18 June 2021 6 The Aviationist Retrieved 20 October 2020 Daly M Tape Reveals Stealth of Our Ukrainian Pal Daily News Retrieved 2 January 2008 Archived 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine DOD 4120 15 L Model Designation of Military Aerospace Vehicles p 18 United States Department of Defense 12 May 2004 Retrieved 20 January 2007 Rhodes Jeffrey P The Black Jet Air Force Magazine Air Force Association Volume 73 Issue 7 July 1990 Retrieved 20 January 2007 Gresham John D Gulf War 20th Emerging from the Shadows defensemedianetwork com 21 January 2011 Retrieved 1 August 2011 F 117A Frequently Asked Questions Archived from the original on 8 March 2001 Aronstein David C Piccirillo Albert C 1997 Have Blue and the F 117A Evolution of the Stealth Fighter AIAA ISBN 978 1 56347 245 9 a b c F 117 Nighthawk Fast Facts PDF Lockheed Martin November 2019 Archived PDF from the original on 20 January 2020 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 F 117A Nighthawk Archived 1 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Federation of American Scientists Retrieved 13 November 2010 Omaha Nighthawks official page Archived 5 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine ufl football com Retrieved 6 June 2010 Bibliography Edit Donald David ed 2003 Black Jets The Development and Operation of America s Most Secret Warplanes Norwalk CT AIRtime Publishing Inc ISBN 978 1 880588 67 3 Eden Paul ed 2004 The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft London Amber Books ISBN 978 1 904687 84 9 Goodall James C 1992 The Lockheed F 117A Stealth Fighter America s Stealth Fighters and Bombers B 2 F 117 YF 22 and YF 23 St Paul MN Motorbooks International ISBN 978 0 87938 609 2 Miller Jay 1990 Lockheed F 117 Stealth Fighter Arlington TX Aerofax Extra ISBN 978 0 942548 48 8 Rich Ben 1994 Skunk Works New York Back Bay Books ISBN 978 0 316 74330 3 Richardson Doug 2001 Stealth Warplanes New York Salamander Books Ltd ISBN 978 0 7603 1051 9 Further reading Edit Aronstein David C and Albert C Piccirillo 1997 HAVE BLUE and the F 117A Reston VA AIAA ISBN 978 1 56347 245 9 Fisk Robert 2005 The Great War for Civilisation The Conquest of the Middle East New York Alfred Knopf ISBN 978 1 84115 007 9 Grant R G and John R Dailey 2007 Flight 100 Years of Aviation Harlow Essex DK Adult ISBN 978 0 7566 1902 2 Jenkins Dennis R and Tony R Landis 2008 Experimental amp Prototype U S Air Force Jet Fighters North Branch Minnesota Specialty Press ISBN 978 1 58007 111 6 Sun Andt 1990 F 117A Stealth Fighter Hong Kong Concord Publications Co ISBN 978 962 361 017 9 Winchester Jim ed 2004 Lockheed F 117 Modern Military Aircraft Aviation Factfile Rochester Kent UK Grange Books plc ISBN 978 1 84013 640 1 The World s Great Stealth and Reconnaissance Aircraft New York Smithmark Publishing 1991 ISBN 978 0 8317 9558 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to F 117 Nighthawk Lockheed F 117A Nighthawk National Museum of the United States Air Force The 49th Fighter Wing at Holloman Air Force Base F 117A com The Black Jet website a comprehensive site F 117 article and Stealth article on Centennial of Flight web site F 117A Nighthawk page on AirAttack com F 117A Nighthawk page on FAS org Archived 1 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Filling the Stealth Gap in Air and Space Power Journal Fall 2006 Archived 28 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Advent Evolution and New Horizons of United States Stealth Aircraft The Secrets of Stealth on Discovery Military Channel Austrian Radar Plots on acig org CNN NATO air attack shifts aims at violence inside Kosovo 27 March 1999 Google Maps directory of all surviving F 117s on public display in German Austrian article about interception of F 117 Russians admit testing F 117 lost in Yugoslavia 2001 Flight Global article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lockheed F 117 Nighthawk amp oldid 1134872148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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