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North American F-100 Super Sabre

The North American F-100 Super Sabre is an American supersonic jet fighter aircraft designed and produced by the aircraft manufacturer North American Aviation. The first of the Century Series of American jet fighters, it was the first United States Air Force (USAF) fighter capable of supersonic speed in level flight.[3]

F-100 Super Sabre
An F-100 warbird over Airventure 2015
Role
Manufacturer North American Aviation
First flight 25 May 1953
Introduction 27 September 1954
Retired 1979, United States Air National Guard; 1988, Republic of China Air Force[1]
Primary users United States Air Force
Turkish Air Force
Republic of China Air Force
French Air Force
Produced 1953–1959
Number built 2,294[2]
Developed from North American F-86 Sabre
Developed into North American F-107

The F-100 was envisioned during late 1940s as a higher-performance successor to the F-86 Sabre air superiority fighter.[4] Initially referred to as the Sabre 45, it was delivered as an unsolicited proposal to the USAF in January 1951, leading to two prototypes being ordered one year later following modifications. The first YF-100A performed its maiden flight on 25 May 1953, seven months ahead of schedule. Flight testing demonstrated both the F-100's promising performance and several deficiencies, which included its tendency of yaw instability and inertia coupling that led to numerous fatal accidents. On 27 September 1954, the F-100A officially entered USAF service, however, as a result of six major accidents occurred by 10 November 1954, the type was grounded while investigations and remedial work were conducted. The F-100 returned to flight in February 1955.

In response to the Tactical Air Command's (TAC) request for a fighter-bomber, the F-100C was developed, followed by the more capable F-100D. Several other models would be developed, including the two-seat F-100F supersonic trainer. As early as 1958, the USAF began to withdraw its F-100As, but returned them to service during early 1962 amid escalating world tensions. Many F-100s saw combat use during the Vietnam War before being superseded by the high-speed Republic F-105 Thunderchief in the strike mission. The F-100 flew extensively over South Vietnam as the air force's primary close air support aircraft until being replaced by the more efficient subsonic LTV A-7 Corsair II.[5] 242 F-100s of various models were lost over Vietnam. Several F-100As were rebuilt into RF-100A aerial reconnaissance aircraft. Several F-100Fs were modified into electronic warfare platforms. Several proposed models and derivatives, such as the F-100B interceptor and the F-107, did not proceed through to production.

Amid a relatively high attrition rate and the arrival of more advanced fighters, the USAF opted to permanently withdraw its remaining F-100s during the early 1970s. The type was also operated by the Air National Guard (ANG) until 1979. The F‑100 was exported to several overseas operators, including NATO air forces and other U.S. allies, including the Turkish Air Force, Republic of China Air Force, and the French Air Force. The F-100 was deployed during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, performing close air support missions. French F-100s also saw action during the Algerian War. During its later life, the F-100 was often referred to as the "Hun", a shortened version of "one hundred".[6]

Development edit

Background edit

The F-100 can be traced back to an internal design study performed by North American Aviation as early as 1949.[7] It was named Sabre 45 in reference to its 45° wing sweep and essentially represented an evolution of the company's successful F-86 Sabre. In January 1951, the company delivered an unsolicited proposal for a supersonic day fighter to the United States Air Force (USAF).[7] On 7 July 1951, a mockup of the aircraft was presented for inspection; the USAF produced a general operational requirement that called for an air superiority weapon to be operational no later than 1957, preferably by 1955. During October 1951, the Air Force Council advocated for the development of a refined model of the Sabre 45; furthermore, it agreed with the Aircraft and Weapons Board's recommendation that it be purchased in quantity even prior to flight testing despite the risks involved in this approach.[7]

By mid-November 1951, in excess of 100 aircraft configuration change requests had been received, necessitating numerous modifications to the original design; several of these alterations were focused on its armaments and were intended to improve its lethality.[7] The new aircraft was accepted as the F-100 on 30 November 1951. On 3 January 1952, the USAF placed an order for two prototypes; one month later, a follow-on production order was issued for 23 F-100As while an additional 250 F-100As were ordered in August of that year as well.[8] Around this time, development work slowed considerably while North American focused on improving and ramping up production of the F-86 in response to urgent demands for more aircraft to participate in the Korean War.[7]

Into flight edit

On 25 May 1953, the YF-100A conducted its maiden flight, seven months ahead of schedule.[9] During one of its early test flights, the first prototype reached Mach 1.05 in spite of being fitted with a derated Pratt & Whitney XJ57-P-7 engine. By September, flight testing had confirmed the presence of three major deficiency in the design, all of which required correction ahead of it being considered as acceptable.[9] On 14 October 1953, the second prototype flew for the first time, followed by the first production F-100A on 29 October 1953. This first F-100A was put through extensive testing to help develop fixes for identified deficiencies. Progress on the project was setback by a three-month general strike by North American employees in late 1953.[9]

An operational evaluation of the F-100A was conducted by the USAF November 1953 and December 1955, it determined that the new aircraft possessed superior performance to existing USAF fighters, but declared that it was not ready for widescale deployment due to various deficiencies and functional difficulties in the design.[9] These findings were subsequently confirmed during operational suitability tests performed under "Project Hot Rod". During August 1954, six F-100s arrived at the Air Proving Ground Command (APGC), Eglin Air Force Base. The Air Force Operational Test Center (AFOTC) used four of the fighters for operational suitability tests while the other two aircraft underwent armament tests by the Air Force Armament Center. The Tactical Air Division of the AFOTC conducted the APGC testing under the direction of project office Lieutenant Colonel Henry W. Brown; initial testing was completed by APGC personnel at Edwards Air Force Base.[10][9]

Despite these shortcomings, the Tactical Air Command (TAC) advocated for the F-100 as a matter of urgency, particularly in light of delays experienced in the Republic F-84F Thunderstreak program; furthermore, TAC recommended the production of a day fighter with a secondary fighter-bomber capability that would be suitable not only for the USAF but also foreign nations covered by the Mutual Development Assistance Program.[11] Accordingly, during December 1953, the Air Council opted to alter the program, reducing the outstanding total orders for the F-100A by 70 aircraft in favor of a new fighter-bomber variant that would be capable of delivering nuclear bombs.[12] In February 1954, the USAF would issue the first production contract for this fighter-bomber model, the F-100C; equipped to carry additional munitions and fuel tanks, the prototype performed its maiden flight one month later while the first production aircraft followed in January 1955.[13]

In response to observed improvements in fighters deployed by the Soviet Union, the USAF directed production of the F-100 to be accelerated via the establishment of a second production line in Columbus in September 1954.[12] During November 1954, production of the F-100 was reduced to 24 aircraft per month in response to a spate of fatal accidents occurring; aircraft produced were stored ahead of corrective changes being made.[14] Following appropriate remedial work, the USAF opted to partially lift its restrictions on both production and flights of the F-100 in February 1955; deliveries resumed two months later.[15]

Further development edit

Various adaptions and derivatives of the F-100 were considered during its development. During mid-1954, an interceptor model of the aircraft was being studied; in July of that year, a mockup of the envisioned F-110B1 was completed, it was intended as a backup for the in-development Convair F-102 Delta Dagger interceptor. However, the difficulties experienced with the F-100A were viewed as evidence that the aircraft, even in the face of expected improvements, would be incapable of satisfying the operational requirement to a greater degree than that of the F-102.[16]

The definitive model would be the F-100D. During May 1954, the TAC had requested a more sophisticated fighter-bomber; the company aimed to address the offensive shortcomings of the F-100C by being primarily a ground-attack aircraft with secondary fighter capabilities.[17] To achieve this, the aircraft was fitted with autopilot, upgraded avionics, and starting with the 184th production aircraft, compatibility with the AIM-9 Sidewinder air-to-air missile. To further address the dangerous flight characteristics, the wingspan was extended by 26 in (66 cm) and the vertical tail area was increased by 27%.[18] In October 1954, an initial production contract was issued for the F-100D, follow-on contracts would be issued in March and December of the following year.[19] On 24 January 1956, the first F-100D (54–2121) flew, piloted by Daniel Darnell.[19]

In December 1954, a new General Operational Requirement, GOR 68, was issued by the USAF; it called for a tactical fighter-bomber that would also be effective as an aerial superiority fighter under both day and night conditions.[15] North American opted to respond with a heavily modified version of the F-100; the design was so substantially different that it was promptly decided to redesignate it as the F-107. Intended for speeds as high as Mach 2, the aircraft could be easily distinguished from the F-100 by the placement of the air intake above and behind the cockpit. It was not ultimately produced in quantity, having been passed over in favor of the competing Republic F-105 Thunderchief.[15]

On 8 September 1955, North American proposed modifying an F-100C into a two-seat trainer model at no expense to the USAF; two months later, the air council decided to produce the type, perceiving a need for a supersonic trainer.[20] During December 1955, an initial production contract for the F-100F trainer was placed. The prototype TF-100C, which lacked most operational equipment, made its first flight on 6 August 1956; it was followed by the first production aircraft on 7 March 1957.[20]

Design edit

 
The cockpit of an F-100D

The North American F-100 Super Sabre is a supersonic fighter aircraft. It was one of the first aircraft with a stabilator, or all-moving tailplane.[21] Unlike modern stabilators which use an anti-servo tab, springs were attached to the control stick to provide increasing resistance to pilot input.[citation needed] Unusually, the aircraft made extensive use of titanium throughout key areas of the airframe.[22]

The F-100 exhibited several concerning handling difficulties, especially early on in its flying career. Particularly troubling was the yaw instability in certain flight conditions, which produced inertia coupling. The aircraft could develop a sudden yaw and roll, occurring too rapidly for the pilot to correct and would quickly overstress the aircraft's structure, leading to disintegration. It was under these conditions that North American's chief test pilot, George Welch, was killed while dive testing an early-production F-100A (s/n 52-5764) on 12 October 1954. Several early modifications were made to address the issue, including the integration of black boxes with the yaw and pitch axis, the reshaping of the vertical tail surfaces, shortening of the tailfin, and increased chord of the rudder.[12] Another control problem suffered by the type stemmed from the handling characteristics of the swept wing at high angles of attack; as the aircraft approached stall speeds, loss of lift on the tips of the wings caused a violent pitch-up. This particular phenomenon (which could easily be fatal at low altitude with insufficient time to recover) became known as the "Sabre dance".[23]

The F-100 was the subject of many modification programs over the course of its service. Many of these were improvements to electronics, structural strengthening, and projects to improve ease of maintenance. One of these was the replacement of the original afterburners of the J-57 engines with the more advanced afterburners from retired Convair F-102 Delta Dagger interceptors. This modification changed the appearance of the aft end of the F-100, doing away with the original "petal-style" exhaust. The afterburner modification started in the 1970s and solved maintenance problems with the old type, as well as operational problems, including compressor stall issues.[citation needed]

Operational history edit

 
An F-100C Super Sabre over Rogers Dry Lake

On 27 September 1954, the F-100A officially entered USAF service with the 479th Fighter Wing, based at George AFB, California.[12] By 10 November 1954, the F-100As suffered six major accidents[a] due to a combination of factors, including flight instability, structural failures, and hydraulic failures, prompting the USAF to ground the entire fleet.[14] During February 1955, the F-100A resumed flight while the 479th was finally declared operational in September 1955. Due to ongoing problems with the type, the USAF opted to start phasing out the F-100A during 1958. Many of these aircraft were reallocated to Air National Guard (ANG) units while others were given to the Chinese Nationalist Air Force.[24]

During 1961, the withdrawal of all USAF F-100As had been completed; by that time, 47 aircraft had been lost in major accidents.[24] However, as a resulting of escalating world tensions in response to the construction of the Berlin Wall in August 1961, the USAF was compelled to recall the F-100As into active service. During early 1962, it was decided to extent the type's service life.[25] However, the F-100A was largely used for aircrew training during this time. Due to attrition, the ANG ceased operating the F-100A during 1967 while the USAF opted to permanently retired the model in early 1970.[13]

The F-100C fighter-bomber entered service on 14 July 1955 with the 450th Fighter Wing at Foster AFB, Texas.[26] Operational testing in 1955 revealed that the F-100C was at best an interim solution, sharing all the flaws of the F-100A. The uprated J57-P-21 engine boosted performance, but continued to suffer from compressor stalls, but the F-100C was considered an excellent platform for nuclear toss bombing because of its high top speed.[27] The inertia coupling problem was reasonably addressed with the installation of a yaw damper in the 146th F-100C, which was later retrofitted to earlier aircraft. A pitch damper was added, starting with the 301st F-100C, at a cost of US$10,000 per aircraft.[27]

The addition of "wet" hardpoints meant the F-100C could carry a pair of 275 U.S. gal (1,040 L) and a pair of 200 U.S. gal (770 L) drop tanks. However, the combination caused a loss of directional stability at high speeds, so the four tanks were soon replaced by a pair of 450 U.S. gal (1,730 L) drop tanks.[28] The 450s proved scarce and expensive and were often replaced by smaller 335 US gal (1,290 L) tanks. Most troubling to TAC was the fact that, as of 1965, only 125 F-100Cs were capable of using all non-nuclear weapons in the USAF inventory, particularly cluster bombs and AIM-9 Sidewinder air-to-air missiles.[29] By the time the F-100C was phased out in June 1970, 85 had been lost in major accidents.[30]

 
An F-100D showing its elliptical air intake

The F-100D entered service on 29 September 1956 with the 405th Fighter Wing at Langley AFB.[31] The model suffered from reliability problems from the onset, particularly with the constant-speed drive, which provides constant-frequency current to the electrical systems; in fact, the drive was so unreliable that the USAF required it to have its own oil system to minimize damage in case of failure.[32] Landing gear and brake parachute malfunctions claimed several aircraft while the refueling probes had a tendency to break away during high-speed maneuvers.[33] During 1959, 65 aircraft were modified to also fire the AGM-12 Bullpup air-to-ground missile. Numerous post-production fixes created such a diversity of capabilities between individual aircraft that by 1965, around 700 F-100Ds underwent High Wire modifications to standardize the weapon systems.[34]

 
F-100D in trial of zero-length-launch system

On 26 March 1958, an F-100D fitted with an Astrodyne booster rocket making 150,000 lbf (670,000 N) of thrust successfully performed a zero-length launch.[35][31] This was accomplished with the addition of a large canister to the underside of the aircraft, which contained a black powder compound and was ignited electromechanically, driving the jet engine to minimal ignition point.[36] The capability was incorporated into late-production aircraft.[31]

The F-100F two-seat trainer was accepted into USAF service in January 1958.[37] It received many of the same weapons and airframe upgrades as the F-100D, including the new afterburners. Various modifications, largely focused on the structure, were made during the F-100F's service life; several were adapted with special equipment for electronic warfare operations and saw use in this capacity in Vietnam.[38] By June 1970, 74 F-100Fs had been lost in major accidents. The model was phased out of USAF service in 1972.[39]

By 1961, England AFB, Louisiana, (401st Tactical Wing) had four fighter-bomber squadrons, the 612th, 613th, 614th, and the 615th (Fighting Tigers). During the Berlin crisis (approximately September 1961), the 614th was deployed to Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to support the West Germans. At the initial briefing, the 614th personnel were informed that due to the close proximity of the USSR, if an ICBM were to be launched, they would have only 30 minutes to launch the 614th's aircraft and retire to the nearest German bunker.

In 1966, the Combat Skyspot program fitted some F-100Ds with an X band radar transmitter to allow for ground-directed bombing in inclement weather or at night. In 1967, the USAF began a structural reinforcement program to extend the aircraft's service life from the designed 3,000 flying hours to 7,000. The USAF alone lost 500 F-100Ds, predominantly in accidents. After one aircraft suffered wing failure, particular attention was paid to lining the wings with external bracing strips. During the Vietnam War, combat losses constituted as many as 50 aircraft per year.[40] After a major accident, the USAF Thunderbirds reverted from F-105 Thunderchiefs to the F-100D, which they operated from 1964 until it was replaced by the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II in 1968.[b]

By 1972, the F-100 was mostly phased out of USAF active service and turned over to tactical fighter groups and squadrons in the ANG.[41] In ANG units, the F-100 was eventually replaced by the F-4 Phantom II, LTV A-7 Corsair II, and Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II, with the last F-100 retiring in 1979, with the introduction of the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon. In foreign service, the Royal Danish Air Force and Turkish Air Force F-100s soldiered on until 1982.

Over the lifetime of its USAF service, 889 F-100s were destroyed in accidents, resulting in the deaths of 324 pilots.[42] The deadliest year for F-100 accidents was 1958, which saw 116 aircraft destroyed and 47 pilots killed.[42]

After Super Sabres were withdrawn from service, a large number were converted into remote-controlled drones (QF-100) under the USAF Full Scale Aerial Target (FSAT) program for use as targets for various antiaircraft weapons, including missile-carrying fighters and fighter-interceptors, with FSAT operations being conducted primarily at Tyndall AFB, Florida. A few F-100s also found their way into civilian hands, primarily with defense contractors supporting USAF and NASA flight test activities at Edwards AFB, California.

Project Slick Chick edit

 
An RF-100A in flight, marked with the AF serial number of a Northrop F-89 Scorpion (53-2600)

North American received a contract to modify six F-100As to RF-100As carrying five cameras, three Fairchild K-17 cameras (see Fairchild K-20 camera) in a trimetrogon mounting for photo mapping and two Fairchild K-38 cameras in a split vertical mounting with the cameras mounted horizontally, shooting via a mirror angled at 45° to reduce the effects of airframe vibrations. All gun armament was removed, and the cameras installed in the gun and ammunition bays were covered by a bulged fairing under the forward fuselage.[43]

The selected pilots trained on the F-100A at Edwards Air Force Base and George Air Force Base in California and then at Palmdale Air Force Base for training with the actual RF-100As with which they would be deployed. Flight tests revealed that the RF-100A in its intended operational fit of four external tanks was lacking in directional and longitudinal stability, requiring careful handling and close attention to speed limitations for the drop tanks.

Once pilot training was completed in April 1955, three aircraft were deployed to Bitburg Air Base in Germany, flying to Brookley AFB in Mobile, Alabama, cocooned, loaded on an aircraft carrier and delivered to Short Brothers at Sydenham, Belfast, for reassembly and preparation for flight. At Bitburg, they were allocated to Detachment 1 of the 7407th Support Squadron, and commenced operations flying over Eastern Bloc countries at high altitude (over 50,000 ft) to acquire intelligence on military targets. Many attempts were made to intercept these aircraft to no avail, with some photos of fighter airfields clearly showing aircraft climbing for attempted intercepts. The European detachment probably only carried out six missions between mid-1955 and mid-1956 when the Lockheed U-2 took over as the deep-penetration aerial reconnaissance asset.

Three RF-100As were also deployed to the 6021st Reconnaissance Squadron at Yokota Air Base in Japan, but details of operations there are not available. Two RF-100As were lost in accidents, one due to probable overspeeding, which caused the separation of one of the drop tanks and resulted in complete loss of control, and the other due to an engine flame-out. In mid-1958, all four remaining RF-100As were returned to the US and later supplied to the Republic of China Air Force in Taiwan.

Project High Wire edit

 
F-100D Super Sabre delivering napalm during a military exercise

"High Wire" was a modernization program performed upon selected F-100Cs, F-100Ds and F-100Fs. It comprised two modifications - an electrical rewiring upgrade and a heavy maintenance and inspect-and-repair as necessary (IRAN) upgrade. Rewiring upgrade operations consisted of replacing old wiring and harnesses with improved maintainable designs. Heavy maintenance and IRAN included new kits, modifications, standardized configurations, repairs, replacements, and complete refurbishment.

This project required all new manuals and incremented (i.e. -85 to -86) block numbers. All later-production models, especially the F models, included earlier High Wire modifications. New manuals included colored illustrations and had the Roman numeral (I) added after the aircraft number (e.g. T.O. 1F-100D(I)-1S-120, 12 January 1970).[44][45] High Wire modifications took 60 days per aircraft at a cost for the entire project of US$150 million.[citation needed]

Vietnam War edit

Fighter and close air support missions edit

 
F-100Ds of the 416th Tactical Fighter Squadron at Bien Hoa Air Base, South Vietnam, in late June or early July 1965
 
A USAF F-100D firing rockets in South Vietnam, 1967
 
A USAF F-100F of the 352d TFS at Phu Cat Air Base, South Vietnam, 1971

On 16 April 1961, six Super Sabres were deployed from Clark Air Base in the Philippines to Don Muang Royal Thai Air Force Base in Thailand for air-defense purposes, the first F-100s to enter combat in Southeast Asia.[46][34] From that date until their redeployment in 1971, the F-100s were the longest serving U.S. jet fighter-bomber to fight in the Vietnam War. They served as MiG combat air patrol (CAP) escorts for F-105 Thunderchiefs, Misty forward air control (FAC), and Wild Weasel anti-air defense aircraft over North Vietnam, and were then relegated to close air support and ground attacks within South Vietnam.

On 18 August 1964, the first F-100D shot down by ground fire, piloted by 1st Lt Colin A. Clarke, of the 428th TFS; Clarke ejected and survived. On 4 April 1965, as escorts protecting F-105s attacking the Thanh Hoa Bridge, F-100 Super Sabres fought the USAF's first air-to-air jet combat duel in the Vietnam War, in which an F-100 piloted by Captain Donald W. Kilgus of the 416th Fighter Squadron shot down a North Vietnamese Air Force[47] MiG-17, using cannon fire, while another fired AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles.[48] The surviving North Vietnamese pilot confirmed three of the MiG-17s had been shot down.[49] Although recorded by the U.S. Air Force as a probable kill, this represented the first aerial victory by the U.S. Air Force in Vietnam.[50] The small force of four MiG-17s, though, had penetrated the escorting F-100s to claim two F-105s.

The F-100 was soon replaced by the F-4C Phantom II for MiG CAP, which pilots noted suffered for lacking built-in guns for dogfights.[51]

The United States military in the Vietnam War was not known for using activated Army National Guard, Air National Guard, or other U.S. Reserve units, but rather, relying on conscription during the course of the war. During a confirmation hearing before Congress in 1973, Air Force General George S. Brown, who had commanded the 7th Air Force during the war, stated that five of the best Super Sabre squadrons in Vietnam were from the Air National Guard.[52] This included the (120 TFS) of the Colorado Air National Guard, the 136 TFS of the New York Air National Guard TFS, the 174 TFS of the Iowa Air National Guard, and the 188 TFS of the New Mexico Air National Guard. The fifth unit was a regular AF squadron manned by mostly air national guardsmen.

The Air National Guard F-100 squadrons increased the regular USAF by nearly 100 Super Sabres in theater, averaging, for the Colorado ANG F-100s, 24 missions a day, delivering ordnance and munitions with a 99.5% reliability rate.[53] From May 1968 to April 1969, the ANG Super Sabres flew more than 38,000 combat hours and more than 24,000 sorties. Between them, at the cost of seven F-100 Air Guard pilots killed (plus one staff officer) and the loss of 14 Super Sabres to enemy action, the squadrons expended over four million rounds of 20 mm shells, 30 million pounds of bombs and over 10 million pounds of napalm against their enemy.[54]

The Hun was also deployed as a two-seat F-100F model, which served as a "fast FAC" or Misty FAC in North Vietnam and Laos, spotting targets for other fighter-bomber aircraft, performing road reconnaissance, and conducting search-and-rescue missions as part of the top-secret Commando Sabre project, based out of Phu Cat and Tuy Hoa air bases.

By the conflict's end, 242 F-100s of various models had been lost in Vietnam, as the F-100 was progressively replaced by the F-4 Phantom II and the F-105 Thunderchief.[55] The Hun had logged 360,283 combat sorties during the war and its wartime operations came to end on 31 July 1971.[56] The four fighter wings with F-100s flew more combat sorties in Vietnam than over 15,000 North American P-51 Mustangs had flown during World War II. After 1967, they did not fly into North Vietnam as much and mainly performed close air-support missions for American units in the South. Despite the April 1965 dogfight, which the USAF classified as resulting in a "probable" kill, and no F-100 was ever officially credited with any aerial victories. No F-100 in Vietnam was lost to enemy fighters, but 186 were shot down by antiaircraft fire, seven were destroyed in Vietcong attacks on airbases, and 45 crashed in operational incidents.[57]

Wild Weasel edit

The F-100 was also the first Wild Weasel air defense suppression aircraft, whose specially trained crews were tasked with locating and destroying enemy missile defenses. Four F-100F Wild Weasel Is were fitted with APR-25 vector radar homing and warning receivers, IR-133 panoramic receivers with greater detection range, and KA-60 panoramic cameras. The APR-25 could detect early-warning radars and emissions from SA-2 Guideline tracking and guidance systems.[58] These aircraft deployed to Korat Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand, in November 1965, began flying combat missions with the 388th Tactical Fighter Wing in December. They were joined by three more aircraft in February 1966. All Wild Weasel F-100Fs were eventually modified to fire the AGM-45 Shrike anti-radiation missile.

Algerian war edit

 
F-100D 54-2122 (the second receipt by the French Air Force) with the colors of the 3/11 "Corsica" at Toul-Rosières Air Base in June 1970

French Air Force Super Sabres of the EC 1/3 Navarre flew combat missions, striking from bases within France against targets in French Algeria. The planes were based at Reims, refueling at Istres on the return flight from Algeria.[59] The F-100 was the main fighter-bomber operated by the French Air Force during the 1960s until the type was replaced by the SEPECAT Jaguar.

Turkey edit

Turkish Air Force F-100 units were used during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974. Together with Lockheed F-104G Starfighters, they provided close air support to Turkish ground troops and bombed targets around Nicosia.[60] In March 1987, Turkish Super Sabres bombed Kurdish bases in northern Iraq.[61] On 14 September 1983, a pair of Turkish Air Force F-100F Super Sabres of 182 Filo “Atmaca” penetrated Iraqi airspace. A Mirage F1EQ of the Iraqi Air Force intercepted the flight and fired a Super 530F-1 missile at them. One of the Turkish fighter jets (s/n 56-3903) was shot down and crashed in Zakho valley near the Turkish-Iraqi border. The plane's pilots reportedly survived the crash and were returned to Turkey. The incident was not made public by either side, although some details surfaced in later years. The incident was revealed in 2012 by Turkish Defence Minister İsmet Yılmaz, in response to a parliamentary question by Republican People's Party (CHP) MP Metin Lütfi Baydar in the aftermath of the downing of a Turkish F-4 Phantom II in Syria, in 2012.[62]

Taiwan edit

 
Taiwanese F-100As in flight

Taiwan took delivery of 119 F-100As, 4 RF-100As, and 14 F-100Fs, and lost a number of F-100As and Fs in the course of service, but never lost a single RF-100A in either combat or accident. Those four RF-100As had never been sent on a reconnaissance mission over mainland China, as they could only produce photographic images of mediocre quality at best. Moreover, after each flying hour, the ground personnel had to spend over 100 hours on the aircraft maintenance. All of the RF-100As were returned to the US after one year and 11 months (1 January 1959 – 1 December 1960) in ROCAF service.

Achievements edit

 
F-100D of the 417th TFS, 50th TFW post January 1965 ("buzz number" painted over)
  • The first operational aircraft in United States Air Force inventory capable of exceeding the speed of sound in level flight.[13]
  • On 29 October 1953, the first YF-100A prototype set a world speed record of 755.149 mph (656.207 kn, 1,215.295 km/h) at low altitude.[13]
  • On 20 August 1955, an F-100C set a supersonic world speed record of 822.135 mph (714.416 kn, 1,323.098 km/h).[30]
  • On 4 September 1955, an F-100C won the Bendix Trophy, covering 2,235 mi (2,020 nmi, 3,745 km) at an average speed of 610.726 mph (530.706 kn, 982.868 km/h).[30]
  • On 26 December 1956, two F-100Ds became the first-ever aircraft to successfully perform buddy refueling.[41]
  • On 13 May 1957, three F-100Cs set a new world distance record for single-engine aircraft by covering the 6,710 mi (5,835 nmi, 10,805 km) distance from London to Los Angeles in 14 hours and four minutes. The flight was accomplished using inflight refueling.[30]
  • On 7 August 1959, two F-100Fs became the first-ever jet fighters to fly over the North Pole.
  • On 16 April 1961, the first USAF combat jets to enter the Vietnam War.
  • On 4 April 1965, the first USAF aircraft to engage in aerial jet combat during the Vietnam War, while escorting F-105 Thunderchiefs to target.
  • The United States Air Force Thunderbirds operated the F-100C from 1956 until 1964. After briefly converting to the F-105 Thunderchief, the team flew F-100Ds from July 1964 until November 1968, before converting to the F-4E Phantom II.[41]

Costs edit

The costs are in contemporary United States dollars and have not been adjusted for inflation.[63]

F-100A F-100C F-100D F-100F
R&D 23.2 million for the program or 10,134 prorated per aircraft
Airframe 748,259 439,323 448,216 577,023
Engine 217,390 178,554 162,995 143,527
Electronics 8,549 12,050 10,904 13,667
Armament 19,905 21,125 66,230 66,332
Ordnance 20,807 12,125 8,684 3,885
Flyaway cost 1,014,910 663,181 697,029 804,445
Additional modification costs 224,048 110,559 105,604
Cost per flying hour 583 583
Maintenance cost per flying hour 215 249 249 249

Variants edit

 
Prototype YF-100A (s/n 52-5754)
 
F-100As different tail fins, 1955
 
An F-100D of the United States Air Force Thunderbirds on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force
 
A QF-100D pilotless drone near Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida, in 1986.
YF-100A
Prototype, model NA-180 two built, s/n 52-5754 and 5755.[64]
YQF-100
Nine test unmanned drone version: two D-models, one YQF-100F F-model,see DF-100F and six other test versions.[65]
F-100A
Single-seat day fighter; 203 built, model NA-192.[64]
RF-100A ("Slick Chick")
Six F-100A aircraft modified for photo reconnaissance in 1954. Unarmed, with camera installations in lower fuselage bay. Used for overflights of Soviet Bloc countries in Europe and the Far-East. Retired from USAF service in 1958, the surviving four aircraft were transferred to the Republic of China Air Force and retired in 1960.
F-100B
See North American F-107
F-100BI
Proposed interceptor version of F-100B, did not advance beyond mock-up.
F-100C
Seventy Model NA-214 and 381 Model NA-217.[64] Additional fuel tanks in the wings, fighter-bomber capability, probe-and-drogue refueling capability, uprated J57-P-21 engine on late production aircraft. First flight: March 1954; 476 built.
TF-100C
One F-100C converted into a two-seat training aircraft.
F-100D
Single-seat fighter-bomber, more advanced avionics, larger wing and tail fin, landing flaps. First flight: 24 January 1956; 1,274 built.
F-100F
Two-seat training version, armament decreased from four to two cannon. Also converted for use as a Wild Weasel variant.[58] First flight: 7 March 1957; 339 built.
DF-100F
This designation was given to one F-100F that was used as drone director.[65]
NF-100F
Three F-100Fs used for test purposes, the prefix "N" indicates that modifications prevented return to regular operational service.
TF-100F
Specific Danish designation given to 14 F-100Fs exported to Denmark in 1974 in order to distinguish these from the 10 F-100Fs delivered 1959–1961.
QF-100
Another 209 D and F models were ordered and converted to unmanned radio-controlled Full Scale Aerial Target[66] drones and drone directors for testing and destruction by modern air-to-air missiles used by current U.S. Air Force fighter jets.[65]
F-100J
Unbuilt all-weather export version for Japan
F-100K
Unbuilt design study for a two-seat F-100F powered by a J57-P-55 engine
F-100L
Unbuilt design study for a single-seat F-100D powered by a J57-P-55 engine
F-100N
Unbuilt version with simplified avionics for NATO customers
F-100S
Proposed French-built F-100F with Rolls-Royce Spey turbofan engine

Operators edit

 
Operational Danish AF F-100D Super Sabre in 1965
  Denmark
Flyvevåbnet operated a total of 72 aircraft. 48 F-100Ds and 10 Fs were delivered to Denmark from 1959 to 1961 as MDAP equipment. The F-100 replaced the Republic F-84G Thunderjet as a strike fighter in three squadrons; 725, 727 and 730. The F-100s of Eskadrille 725 were replaced by Saab F-35 Draken in 1970 and in 1974 14 two-seated ex-USAF TF-100F were bought. The last Danish F-100s were retired from service in 1982, replaced by F-16s. The surviving MDAP F-100s were transferred to Turkey (21 F-100Ds and two F-100Fs), while six TF-100Fs were sold for target towing.[67][68]
  France
The Armée de l'Air was the first non-US air force to receive the F-100 Super Sabre. The first aircraft arrived in France on 1 May 1958. A total of 100 aircraft (85 F-100Ds and 15 F-100Fs) were supplied to France and assigned to the NATO 4th Allied Tactical Air Force. They were stationed at German-French bases. French F-100s were used on combat missions flying from bases in France against targets in Algeria. In 1967, France withdrew from NATO's military command structure, and German-based F-100s were transferred to bases in France vacated by the USAF. The last unit using the F100D/F was the Escadron 4/11 Jura, based at Djibouti, which kept the Super Sabre until 1978.
  Taiwan (Republic of China)
The only non-US air force to operate the F-100A model. The first F-100 was delivered in October 1958. It was followed by 15 F-100As in 1959, and by 65 more F-100As in 1960. In 1961, four unarmed RF-100As were delivered.[69] Additionally, 38 ex-USAF/Air National Guard F-100As were delivered later, to bring the total strength to 118 F-100As and four RF-100As. F-100As were retrofitted with the F-100D vertical tail with its AN/APS-54 tail-warning radar and equipped to launch Sidewinder air-to-air missiles. Several were lost in intelligence missions over the People's Republic of China.
  Turkey
 
Turkish Air Force F-100 Super Sabre's during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus
The Turk Hava Kuvvetleri received 206 F-100C, D and F Super Sabres. Most came from USAF stocks, and 21 F-100Ds and two F-100Fs were supplied by Denmark. Turkish F-100s saw extensive action during the 1974 military operation against Cyprus.
  United States
List of F-100 units of the United States Air Force

Surviving aircraft edit

Denmark edit

 
Retired RDAF F-100F Super Sabre
F-100F
  • 56-3927/GT-927 – Denmark Flying Museum, Stauning

France edit

F-100D

Germany edit

F-100D
F-100F

Italy edit

F-100D
  • 54-2290 – Aviano Air Base gate guardian; marked as 56-2927 "Thor's Hammer" used in Vietnam, wrong colors though.

Netherlands edit

F-100D
  • 54-2265 – (painted as 54–1871, 32nd FIS) – On display at the Nationaal Militair Museum, Soesterberg. After service with the French Air Force it was returned to USAF, repainted in USAF markings and in 1976 to gate guardian at RAF Wethersfield, England. It was then removed 20 January 1988 and reported at the time to be destined for AMARC, to be held in storage on behalf of USAFM (now NMUSAF).[74]

Taiwan edit

F-100A
  • 53-1550 – Taiwan International (Chiang Kai Shek).[75]
  • 53-1571 – Tamkang University.[76]
  • 53-1577 – National Tainan Industrial Vocational High School Aircraft Maintenance Department.[77]
  • 53-1589 – National Taiwan University.[78]
  • 53-1696 – Chung Cheng Armed Forces Preparatory School, CCAFPS.[79]

Turkey edit

 
F-100C "3-089" at Istanbul Aviation Museum, Turkey
F-100C
F-100D
  • 54-2245/E-245 – Istanbul Aviation Museum, Istanbul.[81]
F-100F
  • 56-3788/8-788 – Istanbul Aviation Museum, Istanbul.[82]

United Kingdom edit

F-100D
F-100F

United States edit

 
A Sikorsky CH-54 Tarhe lifting an F-100A to Hill Air Force Base, Utah for static display, 1979
 
F-100D delivered to Carolinas Aviation Museum
 
Hun at Castle Air Museum, California

Airworthy edit

F-100F

On display edit

YF-100A edit
F-100A edit
F-100C edit
F-100D edit
 
An F-100D Super Sabre at the Udvar-Hazy Center.
F-100F edit
 
F-100F at the USAF Museum

Specifications (F-100D) edit

 
3-view line drawing of the North American F-100 Super Sabre
 
3-view line drawing of the North American F-100F Super Sabre
 
D-model cockpit, instrument panel

Data from Quest for Performance,[188] Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems[189]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 50 ft (15 m)
  • Wingspan: 38 ft 9 in (11.81 m)
  • Height: 16 ft 2.75 in (4.9467 m)
  • Wing area: 400 sq ft (37 m2)
  • Aspect ratio: 3.76
  • Airfoil: NACA 64A007[190]
  • Zero-lift drag coefficient: CD0.0130
  • Drag area: 5.0 sq ft (0.46 m2)
  • Empty weight: 21,000 lb (9,525 kg)
  • Gross weight: 28,847 lb (13,085 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 34,832 lb (15,800 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Pratt & Whitney J57-P-21/21A afterburning turbojet engine, 10,200 lbf (45 kN) thrust dry, 16,000 lbf (71 kN) with afterburner

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 924 mph (1,487 km/h, 803 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.4
  • Range: 1,995 mi (3,211 km, 1,734 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 50,000 ft (15,000 m)
  • Rate of climb: 22,400 ft/min (114 m/s)
  • Lift-to-drag: 13.9
  • Wing loading: 72.1 lb/sq ft (352 kg/m2)
  • Thrust/weight: 0.55

Armament

Avionics

  • Minneapolis-Honeywell MB-3 automatic pilot[193]
  • AN/AJB-1B low-altitude bombing system[193]
  • AN/APR-26 rearward radar warning[193]

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

Notes edit

  1. ^ Including the death of British Air Commodore Geoffrey D. Stephenson while on an exchange tour[citation needed]
  2. ^ Martin Caidin's book Thunderbirds was written while the team flew F-100s, he was the only journalist to ever fly with them.[citation needed]

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Anderton, David A. (1987). North American F-100 Super Sabre. London: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0-85045-662-2.
  • Başara, Levent. F-100 Super Sabre in Turkish Air Force – Türk Hava Kuvvetlerinde F-100 Super Sabre. Hobbytime, Ankara,Turkey, 2011. EAN 8680157170010 (in Turkish and English)
  • Davies, Peter E. (2003). North American F-100 Super Sabre. Ramsbury, Wiltshire, UK: Crowood Press. ISBN 1-86126-577-8.
  • Davies, Peter E.; Menard, David W. (2011). F-100 Super Sabre Units of the Vietnam War (Osprey Combat Aircraft, No. 89). Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84908-446-8.
  • Donald, David (June 2004). "North American F-100 Super Sabre". Century Jets: USAF Frontline Fighters of the Cold War. London: AIRtime Publishing Inc., 2003. ISBN 1-880588-68-4.
  • Drendel, Lou (1980). Century Series in Color (Fighting Colors). Carrollton, Texas, US: Squadron/Signal Publications. ISBN 0-89747-097-4.
  • Flintham, Victor (1989). Air Wars and Aircraft: A Detailed Record of Air Combat, 1945 to the Present. Arms and Armour Press. ISBN 0-85368-779-X.
  • Gordon, Doug (December 2009). "Through the Curtain". Flypast. ISSN 0262-6950.
  • Gordon, Doug (March–April 2001). "Turbulent Times: The USAF's 20th TFW in the 1950s, Part Two - Super Sabres". Air Enthusiast (92): 2–8. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Goodrum, Alastair (January–February 2004). "Down Range: Losses over the Wash in the 1960s and 1970s". Air Enthusiast (109): 12–17. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Gunston, Bill (1981). Fighters of the Fifties. Minneapolis, Minnesota, US: Specialty Press Publishers & Wholesalers, Inc. ISBN 0-933424-32-9.
  • Hobson, Chris (2001). Vietnam Air Losses: United States Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses in Southeast Asia, 1961–1973. North Branch, Minnesota, US: Specialty Press. ISBN 1-85780-115-6.
  • Jenkins, Dennis R.; Landis, Tony R. (2008). Experimental & Prototype U.S. Air Force Jet Fighters. North Branch, Minnesota, US: Specialty Press. ISBN 978-1-58007-111-6.
  • Knaack, Marcelle Size (1978). (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-59-5. OCLC 834250508. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Pace, Steve (1991). X-Fighters: USAF Experimental and Prototype Fighters, XP-59 to YF-23. St. Paul, Minnesota, US: Motorbooks International. ISBN 0-87938-540-5.
  • Thompson, Kevin F. (1999). North American NA-180>NA-262 YF-100A/F-100A/C/D/F Super Sabre North American: Aircraft 1934–1999 – Volume 2. Santa Ana, California, US: Johnathan Thompson, Greens, Inc. ISBN 0-913322-06-7.
  • Thompson, Warren E. (June–July 2008). "Centuries Series: F-100 Super Sabre". Combat Aircraft. London: Ian Allan. 9 (3).
  • Weaver, Michael E. (Spring 2020). "The F-100 Super Sabre as an Air Superiority Fighter". Air Power History. 67 (1): 8–15.

External links edit

  • JoeBaugher: F-100 Super Sabre Index
  • JoeBaugher: Foreign Air Forces with F-100s
  • F-100 Photo Database
  • Warbird Alley: F-100 page – Information about privately owned F-100s
  • a 1955 Flight article on the F-100 Super Sabre by Bill Gunston (missing pages)
  • Video of an F-100 (s/n 56-2904) Zero Length Launch at British Pathe (1958, silent, b/w)
  • The Intake – The Journal of the Super Sabre Society – full archives dating back to 2006
Bibliography for further reading
  • F-100.org: Bibliography

north, american, super, sabre, super, sabre, redirects, here, comic, book, character, super, sabre, comics, american, supersonic, fighter, aircraft, designed, produced, aircraft, manufacturer, north, american, aviation, first, century, series, american, fighte. Super Sabre redirects here For the comic book character see Super Sabre comics The North American F 100 Super Sabre is an American supersonic jet fighter aircraft designed and produced by the aircraft manufacturer North American Aviation The first of the Century Series of American jet fighters it was the first United States Air Force USAF fighter capable of supersonic speed in level flight 3 F 100 Super SabreAn F 100 warbird over Airventure 2015Role Fighter Fighter bomberManufacturer North American AviationFirst flight 25 May 1953Introduction 27 September 1954Retired 1979 United States Air National Guard 1988 Republic of China Air Force 1 Primary users United States Air ForceTurkish Air Force Republic of China Air Force French Air ForceProduced 1953 1959Number built 2 294 2 Developed from North American F 86 SabreDeveloped into North American F 107The F 100 was envisioned during late 1940s as a higher performance successor to the F 86 Sabre air superiority fighter 4 Initially referred to as the Sabre 45 it was delivered as an unsolicited proposal to the USAF in January 1951 leading to two prototypes being ordered one year later following modifications The first YF 100A performed its maiden flight on 25 May 1953 seven months ahead of schedule Flight testing demonstrated both the F 100 s promising performance and several deficiencies which included its tendency of yaw instability and inertia coupling that led to numerous fatal accidents On 27 September 1954 the F 100A officially entered USAF service however as a result of six major accidents occurred by 10 November 1954 the type was grounded while investigations and remedial work were conducted The F 100 returned to flight in February 1955 In response to the Tactical Air Command s TAC request for a fighter bomber the F 100C was developed followed by the more capable F 100D Several other models would be developed including the two seat F 100F supersonic trainer As early as 1958 the USAF began to withdraw its F 100As but returned them to service during early 1962 amid escalating world tensions Many F 100s saw combat use during the Vietnam War before being superseded by the high speed Republic F 105 Thunderchief in the strike mission The F 100 flew extensively over South Vietnam as the air force s primary close air support aircraft until being replaced by the more efficient subsonic LTV A 7 Corsair II 5 242 F 100s of various models were lost over Vietnam Several F 100As were rebuilt into RF 100A aerial reconnaissance aircraft Several F 100Fs were modified into electronic warfare platforms Several proposed models and derivatives such as the F 100B interceptor and the F 107 did not proceed through to production Amid a relatively high attrition rate and the arrival of more advanced fighters the USAF opted to permanently withdraw its remaining F 100s during the early 1970s The type was also operated by the Air National Guard ANG until 1979 The F 100 was exported to several overseas operators including NATO air forces and other U S allies including the Turkish Air Force Republic of China Air Force and the French Air Force The F 100 was deployed during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus performing close air support missions French F 100s also saw action during the Algerian War During its later life the F 100 was often referred to as the Hun a shortened version of one hundred 6 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Into flight 1 3 Further development 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 Project Slick Chick 3 2 Project High Wire 3 3 Vietnam War 3 3 1 Fighter and close air support missions 3 3 2 Wild Weasel 3 4 Algerian war 3 5 Turkey 3 6 Taiwan 3 7 Achievements 3 8 Costs 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Surviving aircraft 6 1 Denmark 6 2 France 6 3 Germany 6 4 Italy 6 5 Netherlands 6 6 Taiwan 6 7 Turkey 6 8 United Kingdom 6 9 United States 6 9 1 Airworthy 6 9 2 On display 6 9 2 1 YF 100A 6 9 2 2 F 100A 6 9 2 3 F 100C 6 9 2 4 F 100D 6 9 2 5 F 100F 7 Specifications F 100D 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksDevelopment editBackground edit The F 100 can be traced back to an internal design study performed by North American Aviation as early as 1949 7 It was named Sabre 45 in reference to its 45 wing sweep and essentially represented an evolution of the company s successful F 86 Sabre In January 1951 the company delivered an unsolicited proposal for a supersonic day fighter to the United States Air Force USAF 7 On 7 July 1951 a mockup of the aircraft was presented for inspection the USAF produced a general operational requirement that called for an air superiority weapon to be operational no later than 1957 preferably by 1955 During October 1951 the Air Force Council advocated for the development of a refined model of the Sabre 45 furthermore it agreed with the Aircraft and Weapons Board s recommendation that it be purchased in quantity even prior to flight testing despite the risks involved in this approach 7 By mid November 1951 in excess of 100 aircraft configuration change requests had been received necessitating numerous modifications to the original design several of these alterations were focused on its armaments and were intended to improve its lethality 7 The new aircraft was accepted as the F 100 on 30 November 1951 On 3 January 1952 the USAF placed an order for two prototypes one month later a follow on production order was issued for 23 F 100As while an additional 250 F 100As were ordered in August of that year as well 8 Around this time development work slowed considerably while North American focused on improving and ramping up production of the F 86 in response to urgent demands for more aircraft to participate in the Korean War 7 Into flight edit On 25 May 1953 the YF 100A conducted its maiden flight seven months ahead of schedule 9 During one of its early test flights the first prototype reached Mach 1 05 in spite of being fitted with a derated Pratt amp Whitney XJ57 P 7 engine By September flight testing had confirmed the presence of three major deficiency in the design all of which required correction ahead of it being considered as acceptable 9 On 14 October 1953 the second prototype flew for the first time followed by the first production F 100A on 29 October 1953 This first F 100A was put through extensive testing to help develop fixes for identified deficiencies Progress on the project was setback by a three month general strike by North American employees in late 1953 9 An operational evaluation of the F 100A was conducted by the USAF November 1953 and December 1955 it determined that the new aircraft possessed superior performance to existing USAF fighters but declared that it was not ready for widescale deployment due to various deficiencies and functional difficulties in the design 9 These findings were subsequently confirmed during operational suitability tests performed under Project Hot Rod During August 1954 six F 100s arrived at the Air Proving Ground Command APGC Eglin Air Force Base The Air Force Operational Test Center AFOTC used four of the fighters for operational suitability tests while the other two aircraft underwent armament tests by the Air Force Armament Center The Tactical Air Division of the AFOTC conducted the APGC testing under the direction of project office Lieutenant Colonel Henry W Brown initial testing was completed by APGC personnel at Edwards Air Force Base 10 9 Despite these shortcomings the Tactical Air Command TAC advocated for the F 100 as a matter of urgency particularly in light of delays experienced in the Republic F 84F Thunderstreak program furthermore TAC recommended the production of a day fighter with a secondary fighter bomber capability that would be suitable not only for the USAF but also foreign nations covered by the Mutual Development Assistance Program 11 Accordingly during December 1953 the Air Council opted to alter the program reducing the outstanding total orders for the F 100A by 70 aircraft in favor of a new fighter bomber variant that would be capable of delivering nuclear bombs 12 In February 1954 the USAF would issue the first production contract for this fighter bomber model the F 100C equipped to carry additional munitions and fuel tanks the prototype performed its maiden flight one month later while the first production aircraft followed in January 1955 13 In response to observed improvements in fighters deployed by the Soviet Union the USAF directed production of the F 100 to be accelerated via the establishment of a second production line in Columbus in September 1954 12 During November 1954 production of the F 100 was reduced to 24 aircraft per month in response to a spate of fatal accidents occurring aircraft produced were stored ahead of corrective changes being made 14 Following appropriate remedial work the USAF opted to partially lift its restrictions on both production and flights of the F 100 in February 1955 deliveries resumed two months later 15 Further development edit Various adaptions and derivatives of the F 100 were considered during its development During mid 1954 an interceptor model of the aircraft was being studied in July of that year a mockup of the envisioned F 110B1 was completed it was intended as a backup for the in development Convair F 102 Delta Dagger interceptor However the difficulties experienced with the F 100A were viewed as evidence that the aircraft even in the face of expected improvements would be incapable of satisfying the operational requirement to a greater degree than that of the F 102 16 The definitive model would be the F 100D During May 1954 the TAC had requested a more sophisticated fighter bomber the company aimed to address the offensive shortcomings of the F 100C by being primarily a ground attack aircraft with secondary fighter capabilities 17 To achieve this the aircraft was fitted with autopilot upgraded avionics and starting with the 184th production aircraft compatibility with the AIM 9 Sidewinder air to air missile To further address the dangerous flight characteristics the wingspan was extended by 26 in 66 cm and the vertical tail area was increased by 27 18 In October 1954 an initial production contract was issued for the F 100D follow on contracts would be issued in March and December of the following year 19 On 24 January 1956 the first F 100D 54 2121 flew piloted by Daniel Darnell 19 In December 1954 a new General Operational Requirement GOR 68 was issued by the USAF it called for a tactical fighter bomber that would also be effective as an aerial superiority fighter under both day and night conditions 15 North American opted to respond with a heavily modified version of the F 100 the design was so substantially different that it was promptly decided to redesignate it as the F 107 Intended for speeds as high as Mach 2 the aircraft could be easily distinguished from the F 100 by the placement of the air intake above and behind the cockpit It was not ultimately produced in quantity having been passed over in favor of the competing Republic F 105 Thunderchief 15 On 8 September 1955 North American proposed modifying an F 100C into a two seat trainer model at no expense to the USAF two months later the air council decided to produce the type perceiving a need for a supersonic trainer 20 During December 1955 an initial production contract for the F 100F trainer was placed The prototype TF 100C which lacked most operational equipment made its first flight on 6 August 1956 it was followed by the first production aircraft on 7 March 1957 20 Design edit nbsp The cockpit of an F 100DThe North American F 100 Super Sabre is a supersonic fighter aircraft It was one of the first aircraft with a stabilator or all moving tailplane 21 Unlike modern stabilators which use an anti servo tab springs were attached to the control stick to provide increasing resistance to pilot input citation needed Unusually the aircraft made extensive use of titanium throughout key areas of the airframe 22 The F 100 exhibited several concerning handling difficulties especially early on in its flying career Particularly troubling was the yaw instability in certain flight conditions which produced inertia coupling The aircraft could develop a sudden yaw and roll occurring too rapidly for the pilot to correct and would quickly overstress the aircraft s structure leading to disintegration It was under these conditions that North American s chief test pilot George Welch was killed while dive testing an early production F 100A s n 52 5764 on 12 October 1954 Several early modifications were made to address the issue including the integration of black boxes with the yaw and pitch axis the reshaping of the vertical tail surfaces shortening of the tailfin and increased chord of the rudder 12 Another control problem suffered by the type stemmed from the handling characteristics of the swept wing at high angles of attack as the aircraft approached stall speeds loss of lift on the tips of the wings caused a violent pitch up This particular phenomenon which could easily be fatal at low altitude with insufficient time to recover became known as the Sabre dance 23 The F 100 was the subject of many modification programs over the course of its service Many of these were improvements to electronics structural strengthening and projects to improve ease of maintenance One of these was the replacement of the original afterburners of the J 57 engines with the more advanced afterburners from retired Convair F 102 Delta Dagger interceptors This modification changed the appearance of the aft end of the F 100 doing away with the original petal style exhaust The afterburner modification started in the 1970s and solved maintenance problems with the old type as well as operational problems including compressor stall issues citation needed Operational history edit nbsp An F 100C Super Sabre over Rogers Dry LakeOn 27 September 1954 the F 100A officially entered USAF service with the 479th Fighter Wing based at George AFB California 12 By 10 November 1954 the F 100As suffered six major accidents a due to a combination of factors including flight instability structural failures and hydraulic failures prompting the USAF to ground the entire fleet 14 During February 1955 the F 100A resumed flight while the 479th was finally declared operational in September 1955 Due to ongoing problems with the type the USAF opted to start phasing out the F 100A during 1958 Many of these aircraft were reallocated to Air National Guard ANG units while others were given to the Chinese Nationalist Air Force 24 During 1961 the withdrawal of all USAF F 100As had been completed by that time 47 aircraft had been lost in major accidents 24 However as a resulting of escalating world tensions in response to the construction of the Berlin Wall in August 1961 the USAF was compelled to recall the F 100As into active service During early 1962 it was decided to extent the type s service life 25 However the F 100A was largely used for aircrew training during this time Due to attrition the ANG ceased operating the F 100A during 1967 while the USAF opted to permanently retired the model in early 1970 13 The F 100C fighter bomber entered service on 14 July 1955 with the 450th Fighter Wing at Foster AFB Texas 26 Operational testing in 1955 revealed that the F 100C was at best an interim solution sharing all the flaws of the F 100A The uprated J57 P 21 engine boosted performance but continued to suffer from compressor stalls but the F 100C was considered an excellent platform for nuclear toss bombing because of its high top speed 27 The inertia coupling problem was reasonably addressed with the installation of a yaw damper in the 146th F 100C which was later retrofitted to earlier aircraft A pitch damper was added starting with the 301st F 100C at a cost of US 10 000 per aircraft 27 The addition of wet hardpoints meant the F 100C could carry a pair of 275 U S gal 1 040 L and a pair of 200 U S gal 770 L drop tanks However the combination caused a loss of directional stability at high speeds so the four tanks were soon replaced by a pair of 450 U S gal 1 730 L drop tanks 28 The 450s proved scarce and expensive and were often replaced by smaller 335 US gal 1 290 L tanks Most troubling to TAC was the fact that as of 1965 only 125 F 100Cs were capable of using all non nuclear weapons in the USAF inventory particularly cluster bombs and AIM 9 Sidewinder air to air missiles 29 By the time the F 100C was phased out in June 1970 85 had been lost in major accidents 30 nbsp An F 100D showing its elliptical air intakeThe F 100D entered service on 29 September 1956 with the 405th Fighter Wing at Langley AFB 31 The model suffered from reliability problems from the onset particularly with the constant speed drive which provides constant frequency current to the electrical systems in fact the drive was so unreliable that the USAF required it to have its own oil system to minimize damage in case of failure 32 Landing gear and brake parachute malfunctions claimed several aircraft while the refueling probes had a tendency to break away during high speed maneuvers 33 During 1959 65 aircraft were modified to also fire the AGM 12 Bullpup air to ground missile Numerous post production fixes created such a diversity of capabilities between individual aircraft that by 1965 around 700 F 100Ds underwent High Wire modifications to standardize the weapon systems 34 nbsp F 100D in trial of zero length launch systemOn 26 March 1958 an F 100D fitted with an Astrodyne booster rocket making 150 000 lbf 670 000 N of thrust successfully performed a zero length launch 35 31 This was accomplished with the addition of a large canister to the underside of the aircraft which contained a black powder compound and was ignited electromechanically driving the jet engine to minimal ignition point 36 The capability was incorporated into late production aircraft 31 The F 100F two seat trainer was accepted into USAF service in January 1958 37 It received many of the same weapons and airframe upgrades as the F 100D including the new afterburners Various modifications largely focused on the structure were made during the F 100F s service life several were adapted with special equipment for electronic warfare operations and saw use in this capacity in Vietnam 38 By June 1970 74 F 100Fs had been lost in major accidents The model was phased out of USAF service in 1972 39 By 1961 England AFB Louisiana 401st Tactical Wing had four fighter bomber squadrons the 612th 613th 614th and the 615th Fighting Tigers During the Berlin crisis approximately September 1961 the 614th was deployed to Ramstein Air Base Germany to support the West Germans At the initial briefing the 614th personnel were informed that due to the close proximity of the USSR if an ICBM were to be launched they would have only 30 minutes to launch the 614th s aircraft and retire to the nearest German bunker In 1966 the Combat Skyspot program fitted some F 100Ds with an X band radar transmitter to allow for ground directed bombing in inclement weather or at night In 1967 the USAF began a structural reinforcement program to extend the aircraft s service life from the designed 3 000 flying hours to 7 000 The USAF alone lost 500 F 100Ds predominantly in accidents After one aircraft suffered wing failure particular attention was paid to lining the wings with external bracing strips During the Vietnam War combat losses constituted as many as 50 aircraft per year 40 After a major accident the USAF Thunderbirds reverted from F 105 Thunderchiefs to the F 100D which they operated from 1964 until it was replaced by the McDonnell Douglas F 4 Phantom II in 1968 b By 1972 the F 100 was mostly phased out of USAF active service and turned over to tactical fighter groups and squadrons in the ANG 41 In ANG units the F 100 was eventually replaced by the F 4 Phantom II LTV A 7 Corsair II and Fairchild Republic A 10 Thunderbolt II with the last F 100 retiring in 1979 with the introduction of the General Dynamics F 16 Fighting Falcon In foreign service the Royal Danish Air Force and Turkish Air Force F 100s soldiered on until 1982 Over the lifetime of its USAF service 889 F 100s were destroyed in accidents resulting in the deaths of 324 pilots 42 The deadliest year for F 100 accidents was 1958 which saw 116 aircraft destroyed and 47 pilots killed 42 After Super Sabres were withdrawn from service a large number were converted into remote controlled drones QF 100 under the USAF Full Scale Aerial Target FSAT program for use as targets for various antiaircraft weapons including missile carrying fighters and fighter interceptors with FSAT operations being conducted primarily at Tyndall AFB Florida A few F 100s also found their way into civilian hands primarily with defense contractors supporting USAF and NASA flight test activities at Edwards AFB California Project Slick Chick edit nbsp An RF 100A in flight marked with the AF serial number of a Northrop F 89 Scorpion 53 2600 North American received a contract to modify six F 100As to RF 100As carrying five cameras three Fairchild K 17 cameras see Fairchild K 20 camera in a trimetrogon mounting for photo mapping and two Fairchild K 38 cameras in a split vertical mounting with the cameras mounted horizontally shooting via a mirror angled at 45 to reduce the effects of airframe vibrations All gun armament was removed and the cameras installed in the gun and ammunition bays were covered by a bulged fairing under the forward fuselage 43 The selected pilots trained on the F 100A at Edwards Air Force Base and George Air Force Base in California and then at Palmdale Air Force Base for training with the actual RF 100As with which they would be deployed Flight tests revealed that the RF 100A in its intended operational fit of four external tanks was lacking in directional and longitudinal stability requiring careful handling and close attention to speed limitations for the drop tanks Once pilot training was completed in April 1955 three aircraft were deployed to Bitburg Air Base in Germany flying to Brookley AFB in Mobile Alabama cocooned loaded on an aircraft carrier and delivered to Short Brothers at Sydenham Belfast for reassembly and preparation for flight At Bitburg they were allocated to Detachment 1 of the 7407th Support Squadron and commenced operations flying over Eastern Bloc countries at high altitude over 50 000 ft to acquire intelligence on military targets Many attempts were made to intercept these aircraft to no avail with some photos of fighter airfields clearly showing aircraft climbing for attempted intercepts The European detachment probably only carried out six missions between mid 1955 and mid 1956 when the Lockheed U 2 took over as the deep penetration aerial reconnaissance asset Three RF 100As were also deployed to the 6021st Reconnaissance Squadron at Yokota Air Base in Japan but details of operations there are not available Two RF 100As were lost in accidents one due to probable overspeeding which caused the separation of one of the drop tanks and resulted in complete loss of control and the other due to an engine flame out In mid 1958 all four remaining RF 100As were returned to the US and later supplied to the Republic of China Air Force in Taiwan Project High Wire edit nbsp F 100D Super Sabre delivering napalm during a military exerciseMain article Project High Wire High Wire was a modernization program performed upon selected F 100Cs F 100Ds and F 100Fs It comprised two modifications an electrical rewiring upgrade and a heavy maintenance and inspect and repair as necessary IRAN upgrade Rewiring upgrade operations consisted of replacing old wiring and harnesses with improved maintainable designs Heavy maintenance and IRAN included new kits modifications standardized configurations repairs replacements and complete refurbishment This project required all new manuals and incremented i e 85 to 86 block numbers All later production models especially the F models included earlier High Wire modifications New manuals included colored illustrations and had the Roman numeral I added after the aircraft number e g T O 1F 100D I 1S 120 12 January 1970 44 45 High Wire modifications took 60 days per aircraft at a cost for the entire project of US 150 million citation needed Vietnam War edit Fighter and close air support missions edit nbsp F 100Ds of the 416th Tactical Fighter Squadron at Bien Hoa Air Base South Vietnam in late June or early July 1965 nbsp A USAF F 100D firing rockets in South Vietnam 1967 nbsp A USAF F 100F of the 352d TFS at Phu Cat Air Base South Vietnam 1971On 16 April 1961 six Super Sabres were deployed from Clark Air Base in the Philippines to Don Muang Royal Thai Air Force Base in Thailand for air defense purposes the first F 100s to enter combat in Southeast Asia 46 34 From that date until their redeployment in 1971 the F 100s were the longest serving U S jet fighter bomber to fight in the Vietnam War They served as MiG combat air patrol CAP escorts for F 105 Thunderchiefs Misty forward air control FAC and Wild Weasel anti air defense aircraft over North Vietnam and were then relegated to close air support and ground attacks within South Vietnam On 18 August 1964 the first F 100D shot down by ground fire piloted by 1st Lt Colin A Clarke of the 428th TFS Clarke ejected and survived On 4 April 1965 as escorts protecting F 105s attacking the Thanh Hoa Bridge F 100 Super Sabres fought the USAF s first air to air jet combat duel in the Vietnam War in which an F 100 piloted by Captain Donald W Kilgus of the 416th Fighter Squadron shot down a North Vietnamese Air Force 47 MiG 17 using cannon fire while another fired AIM 9 Sidewinder missiles 48 The surviving North Vietnamese pilot confirmed three of the MiG 17s had been shot down 49 Although recorded by the U S Air Force as a probable kill this represented the first aerial victory by the U S Air Force in Vietnam 50 The small force of four MiG 17s though had penetrated the escorting F 100s to claim two F 105s The F 100 was soon replaced by the F 4C Phantom II for MiG CAP which pilots noted suffered for lacking built in guns for dogfights 51 The United States military in the Vietnam War was not known for using activated Army National Guard Air National Guard or other U S Reserve units but rather relying on conscription during the course of the war During a confirmation hearing before Congress in 1973 Air Force General George S Brown who had commanded the 7th Air Force during the war stated that five of the best Super Sabre squadrons in Vietnam were from the Air National Guard 52 This included the 120 TFS of the Colorado Air National Guard the 136 TFS of the New York Air National Guard TFS the 174 TFS of the Iowa Air National Guard and the 188 TFS of the New Mexico Air National Guard The fifth unit was a regular AF squadron manned by mostly air national guardsmen The Air National Guard F 100 squadrons increased the regular USAF by nearly 100 Super Sabres in theater averaging for the Colorado ANG F 100s 24 missions a day delivering ordnance and munitions with a 99 5 reliability rate 53 From May 1968 to April 1969 the ANG Super Sabres flew more than 38 000 combat hours and more than 24 000 sorties Between them at the cost of seven F 100 Air Guard pilots killed plus one staff officer and the loss of 14 Super Sabres to enemy action the squadrons expended over four million rounds of 20 mm shells 30 million pounds of bombs and over 10 million pounds of napalm against their enemy 54 The Hun was also deployed as a two seat F 100F model which served as a fast FAC or Misty FAC in North Vietnam and Laos spotting targets for other fighter bomber aircraft performing road reconnaissance and conducting search and rescue missions as part of the top secret Commando Sabre project based out of Phu Cat and Tuy Hoa air bases By the conflict s end 242 F 100s of various models had been lost in Vietnam as the F 100 was progressively replaced by the F 4 Phantom II and the F 105 Thunderchief 55 The Hun had logged 360 283 combat sorties during the war and its wartime operations came to end on 31 July 1971 56 The four fighter wings with F 100s flew more combat sorties in Vietnam than over 15 000 North American P 51 Mustangs had flown during World War II After 1967 they did not fly into North Vietnam as much and mainly performed close air support missions for American units in the South Despite the April 1965 dogfight which the USAF classified as resulting in a probable kill and no F 100 was ever officially credited with any aerial victories No F 100 in Vietnam was lost to enemy fighters but 186 were shot down by antiaircraft fire seven were destroyed in Vietcong attacks on airbases and 45 crashed in operational incidents 57 Wild Weasel edit The F 100 was also the first Wild Weasel air defense suppression aircraft whose specially trained crews were tasked with locating and destroying enemy missile defenses Four F 100F Wild Weasel Is were fitted with APR 25 vector radar homing and warning receivers IR 133 panoramic receivers with greater detection range and KA 60 panoramic cameras The APR 25 could detect early warning radars and emissions from SA 2 Guideline tracking and guidance systems 58 These aircraft deployed to Korat Royal Thai Air Force Base Thailand in November 1965 began flying combat missions with the 388th Tactical Fighter Wing in December They were joined by three more aircraft in February 1966 All Wild Weasel F 100Fs were eventually modified to fire the AGM 45 Shrike anti radiation missile Algerian war edit nbsp F 100D 54 2122 the second receipt by the French Air Force with the colors of the 3 11 Corsica at Toul Rosieres Air Base in June 1970French Air Force Super Sabres of the EC 1 3 Navarre flew combat missions striking from bases within France against targets in French Algeria The planes were based at Reims refueling at Istres on the return flight from Algeria 59 The F 100 was the main fighter bomber operated by the French Air Force during the 1960s until the type was replaced by the SEPECAT Jaguar Turkey edit Turkish Air Force F 100 units were used during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974 Together with Lockheed F 104G Starfighters they provided close air support to Turkish ground troops and bombed targets around Nicosia 60 In March 1987 Turkish Super Sabres bombed Kurdish bases in northern Iraq 61 On 14 September 1983 a pair of Turkish Air Force F 100F Super Sabres of 182 Filo Atmaca penetrated Iraqi airspace A Mirage F1EQ of the Iraqi Air Force intercepted the flight and fired a Super 530F 1 missile at them One of the Turkish fighter jets s n 56 3903 was shot down and crashed in Zakho valley near the Turkish Iraqi border The plane s pilots reportedly survived the crash and were returned to Turkey The incident was not made public by either side although some details surfaced in later years The incident was revealed in 2012 by Turkish Defence Minister Ismet Yilmaz in response to a parliamentary question by Republican People s Party CHP MP Metin Lutfi Baydar in the aftermath of the downing of a Turkish F 4 Phantom II in Syria in 2012 62 Taiwan edit nbsp Taiwanese F 100As in flightTaiwan took delivery of 119 F 100As 4 RF 100As and 14 F 100Fs and lost a number of F 100As and Fs in the course of service but never lost a single RF 100A in either combat or accident Those four RF 100As had never been sent on a reconnaissance mission over mainland China as they could only produce photographic images of mediocre quality at best Moreover after each flying hour the ground personnel had to spend over 100 hours on the aircraft maintenance All of the RF 100As were returned to the US after one year and 11 months 1 January 1959 1 December 1960 in ROCAF service Achievements edit nbsp F 100D of the 417th TFS 50th TFW post January 1965 buzz number painted over The first operational aircraft in United States Air Force inventory capable of exceeding the speed of sound in level flight 13 On 29 October 1953 the first YF 100A prototype set a world speed record of 755 149 mph 656 207 kn 1 215 295 km h at low altitude 13 On 20 August 1955 an F 100C set a supersonic world speed record of 822 135 mph 714 416 kn 1 323 098 km h 30 On 4 September 1955 an F 100C won the Bendix Trophy covering 2 235 mi 2 020 nmi 3 745 km at an average speed of 610 726 mph 530 706 kn 982 868 km h 30 On 26 December 1956 two F 100Ds became the first ever aircraft to successfully perform buddy refueling 41 On 13 May 1957 three F 100Cs set a new world distance record for single engine aircraft by covering the 6 710 mi 5 835 nmi 10 805 km distance from London to Los Angeles in 14 hours and four minutes The flight was accomplished using inflight refueling 30 On 7 August 1959 two F 100Fs became the first ever jet fighters to fly over the North Pole On 16 April 1961 the first USAF combat jets to enter the Vietnam War On 4 April 1965 the first USAF aircraft to engage in aerial jet combat during the Vietnam War while escorting F 105 Thunderchiefs to target The United States Air Force Thunderbirds operated the F 100C from 1956 until 1964 After briefly converting to the F 105 Thunderchief the team flew F 100Ds from July 1964 until November 1968 before converting to the F 4E Phantom II 41 Costs edit The costs are in contemporary United States dollars and have not been adjusted for inflation 63 F 100A F 100C F 100D F 100FR amp D 23 2 million for the program or 10 134 prorated per aircraftAirframe 748 259 439 323 448 216 577 023Engine 217 390 178 554 162 995 143 527Electronics 8 549 12 050 10 904 13 667Armament 19 905 21 125 66 230 66 332Ordnance 20 807 12 125 8 684 3 885Flyaway cost 1 014 910 663 181 697 029 804 445Additional modification costs 224 048 110 559 105 604Cost per flying hour 583 583Maintenance cost per flying hour 215 249 249 249Variants edit nbsp Prototype YF 100A s n 52 5754 nbsp F 100As different tail fins 1955 nbsp An F 100D of the United States Air Force Thunderbirds on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force nbsp A QF 100D pilotless drone near Tyndall Air Force Base Florida in 1986 YF 100A Prototype model NA 180 two built s n 52 5754 and 5755 64 YQF 100 Nine test unmanned drone version two D models one YQF 100F F model see DF 100F and six other test versions 65 F 100A Single seat day fighter 203 built model NA 192 64 RF 100A Slick Chick Six F 100A aircraft modified for photo reconnaissance in 1954 Unarmed with camera installations in lower fuselage bay Used for overflights of Soviet Bloc countries in Europe and the Far East Retired from USAF service in 1958 the surviving four aircraft were transferred to the Republic of China Air Force and retired in 1960 F 100B See North American F 107 F 100BI Proposed interceptor version of F 100B did not advance beyond mock up F 100C Seventy Model NA 214 and 381 Model NA 217 64 Additional fuel tanks in the wings fighter bomber capability probe and drogue refueling capability uprated J57 P 21 engine on late production aircraft First flight March 1954 476 built TF 100C One F 100C converted into a two seat training aircraft F 100D Single seat fighter bomber more advanced avionics larger wing and tail fin landing flaps First flight 24 January 1956 1 274 built F 100F Two seat training version armament decreased from four to two cannon Also converted for use as a Wild Weasel variant 58 First flight 7 March 1957 339 built DF 100F This designation was given to one F 100F that was used as drone director 65 NF 100F Three F 100Fs used for test purposes the prefix N indicates that modifications prevented return to regular operational service TF 100F Specific Danish designation given to 14 F 100Fs exported to Denmark in 1974 in order to distinguish these from the 10 F 100Fs delivered 1959 1961 QF 100 Another 209 D and F models were ordered and converted to unmanned radio controlled Full Scale Aerial Target 66 drones and drone directors for testing and destruction by modern air to air missiles used by current U S Air Force fighter jets 65 F 100J Unbuilt all weather export version for Japan F 100K Unbuilt design study for a two seat F 100F powered by a J57 P 55 engine F 100L Unbuilt design study for a single seat F 100D powered by a J57 P 55 engine F 100N Unbuilt version with simplified avionics for NATO customers F 100S Proposed French built F 100F with Rolls Royce Spey turbofan engineOperators edit nbsp Operational Danish AF F 100D Super Sabre in 1965 nbsp DenmarkRoyal Danish Air ForceFlyvevabnet operated a total of 72 aircraft 48 F 100Ds and 10 Fs were delivered to Denmark from 1959 to 1961 as MDAP equipment The F 100 replaced the Republic F 84G Thunderjet as a strike fighter in three squadrons 725 727 and 730 The F 100s of Eskadrille 725 were replaced by Saab F 35 Draken in 1970 and in 1974 14 two seated ex USAF TF 100F were bought The last Danish F 100s were retired from service in 1982 replaced by F 16s The surviving MDAP F 100s were transferred to Turkey 21 F 100Ds and two F 100Fs while six TF 100Fs were sold for target towing 67 68 nbsp FranceFrench Air ForceThe Armee de l Air was the first non US air force to receive the F 100 Super Sabre The first aircraft arrived in France on 1 May 1958 A total of 100 aircraft 85 F 100Ds and 15 F 100Fs were supplied to France and assigned to the NATO 4th Allied Tactical Air Force They were stationed at German French bases French F 100s were used on combat missions flying from bases in France against targets in Algeria In 1967 France withdrew from NATO s military command structure and German based F 100s were transferred to bases in France vacated by the USAF The last unit using the F100D F was the Escadron 4 11 Jura based at Djibouti which kept the Super Sabre until 1978 nbsp Taiwan Republic of China Republic of China Air ForceThe only non US air force to operate the F 100A model The first F 100 was delivered in October 1958 It was followed by 15 F 100As in 1959 and by 65 more F 100As in 1960 In 1961 four unarmed RF 100As were delivered 69 Additionally 38 ex USAF Air National Guard F 100As were delivered later to bring the total strength to 118 F 100As and four RF 100As F 100As were retrofitted with the F 100D vertical tail with its AN APS 54 tail warning radar and equipped to launch Sidewinder air to air missiles Several were lost in intelligence missions over the People s Republic of China nbsp TurkeyTurkish Air Force nbsp Turkish Air Force F 100 Super Sabre s during the Turkish invasion of CyprusThe Turk Hava Kuvvetleri received 206 F 100C D and F Super Sabres Most came from USAF stocks and 21 F 100Ds and two F 100Fs were supplied by Denmark Turkish F 100s saw extensive action during the 1974 military operation against Cyprus nbsp United StatesUnited States Air Force United States Air Force ThunderbirdsList of F 100 units of the United States Air ForceSurviving aircraft editDenmark edit nbsp Retired RDAF F 100F Super SabreF 100F56 3927 GT 927 Denmark Flying Museum StauningFrance edit F 100D55 2736 Musee de l Air et de l Espace Paris Le Bourget 70 Germany edit F 100D54 2136 French Air Force Schwabisches Bauern Technical Museum Eschach Seifertshofen 71 54 2185 French Air Force Schwabisches Bauern Technical Museum Eschach Seifertshofen 72 F 100F56 3944 United States Air Force Flugausstellung Leo Junior Hermeskeil 73 Italy edit F 100D54 2290 Aviano Air Base gate guardian marked as 56 2927 Thor s Hammer used in Vietnam wrong colors though Netherlands edit F 100D54 2265 painted as 54 1871 32nd FIS On display at the Nationaal Militair Museum Soesterberg After service with the French Air Force it was returned to USAF repainted in USAF markings and in 1976 to gate guardian at RAF Wethersfield England It was then removed 20 January 1988 and reported at the time to be destined for AMARC to be held in storage on behalf of USAFM now NMUSAF 74 Taiwan edit F 100A53 1550 Taiwan International Chiang Kai Shek 75 53 1571 Tamkang University 76 53 1577 National Tainan Industrial Vocational High School Aircraft Maintenance Department 77 53 1589 National Taiwan University 78 53 1696 Chung Cheng Armed Forces Preparatory School CCAFPS 79 Turkey edit nbsp F 100C 3 089 at Istanbul Aviation Museum TurkeyF 100C54 2009 3 089 Istanbul Aviation Museum Istanbul 80 F 100D54 2245 E 245 Istanbul Aviation Museum Istanbul 81 F 100F56 3788 8 788 Istanbul Aviation Museum Istanbul 82 United Kingdom edit F 100D54 2157 North East Aircraft Museum Sunderland 83 54 2165 Imperial War Museum Duxford 84 54 2174 Midland Air Museum Coventry 85 54 2196 Norfolk and Suffolk Aviation Museum Bungay 86 54 2223 Newark Air Museum Newark on Trent 87 54 2613 Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum Dumfries 88 F 100F56 3938 French Air Force Lashenden Air Warfare Museum Ashford where an aircraft accident at the museum damaged 938 and the remains were shipped to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson AFB in Dayton Ohio United States 89 United States edit nbsp A Sikorsky CH 54 Tarhe lifting an F 100A to Hill Air Force Base Utah for static display 1979 nbsp F 100D delivered to Carolinas Aviation Museum nbsp Hun at Castle Air Museum CaliforniaAirworthy edit F 100F56 3844 Collings Foundation in Stow Massachusetts 90 91 56 3916 privately owned in Belgrade Montana 92 56 3948 privately owned in Fort Wayne Indiana 93 56 3971 privately owned in Belgrade Montana 94 On display edit YF 100A edit 52 5755 Century Circle West Gate at Air Force Flight Test Center Museum Edwards AFB California 95 F 100A edit 52 5759 USAF Airman Heritage Museum Lackland AFB Texas 96 52 5760 Museum Desert Storate Air Force Flight Test Center Museum Edwards AFB California 97 52 5761 New England Air Museum Bradley International Airport Connecticut 98 52 5762 Grand Haven Memorial Airpark Grand Haven Michigan 99 52 5770 Travis AFB Heritage Center Vacaville California 100 52 5773 Commemorative Air Force Headquarters Midland Texas 101 52 5777 Hill Aerospace Museum Hill AFB Utah 102 53 1532 150th Special Operations Wing New Mexico Air National Guard area Kirtland AFB Albuquerque New Mexico 103 53 1533 Baxter Memorial Park Melrose New Mexico 104 53 1553 South Dakota Air and Space Museum Rapid City South Dakota 105 53 1559 178th Fighter Wing Springfield Beckley Municipal Airport Springfield Ohio 106 53 1573 Seymour Johnson AFB North Carolina 107 53 1578 140th Fighter Wing Colorado Air National Guard compound Buckley Space Force Base Aurora Colorado 108 53 1600 Tucumcari Historical Museum Tucumcari New Mexico 109 53 1629 Ebing Air National Guard Base 188th Fighter Wing Fort Smith Arkansas 110 53 1684 Historic Aviation Memorial Museum Tyler Texas 111 53 1688 stored for Raytheon at the Mojave Airport Mojave California 112 F 100C edit 53 1709 painted as F 100D 55 2879 Castle Air Museum former Castle AFB Atwater California 113 53 1712 Grissom Air Museum Grissom ARB former Grissom AFB Peru Indiana 114 53 1716 Luke Air Force Base Air Park Luke AFB Phoenix Arizona 115 54 1748 Holt Heritage Airpark Mountain Home AFB Boise Idaho 116 54 1752 Dyess Linear Air Park Dyess AFB Texas 117 54 1753 Southern Museum of Flight Birmingham Alabama 118 54 1784 Prairie Aviation Museum Bloomington Illinois Formerly at Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum former Chanute AFB Rantoul Illinois 119 120 54 1785 Yankee Air Museum Belleville Michigan 121 54 1786 March Field Air Museum March ARB former March AFB Riverside California 122 54 1823 Pima Air amp Space Museum adjacent to Davis Monthan AFB Tucson Arizona 123 54 1986 painted as F 100C 54 1954 as flown by former northwest Florida resident and Medal of Honor recipient Colonel George Bud Day USAF Ret Dec Air Force Armament Museum Eglin AFB Florida 124 54 1993 Freedom Historical Air Park McConnell AFB Wichita Kansas 125 54 2005 185th Air Refueling Wing Sioux City Air National Guard Base Sioux Gateway Airport Sioux City Iowa 126 54 2091 Yanks Air Museum Chino California 127 128 54 2106 Volk Field Air National Guard Base Wisconsin 129 F 100D edit nbsp F 100D on display at Sheppard AFB 54 2145 Air Power Park near Langley AFB in Hampton Virginia 130 54 2151 Sheppard AFB Air Park Sheppard AFB Texas 131 54 2281 Harry Bonsall Park Glendale Arizona 132 54 2299 Joe Davies Heritage Airpark Air Force Plant 42 Palmdale California 133 55 2855 Toledo ANGB Toledo Express Airport Toledo Ohio 134 55 2884 121st Air Refueling Wing Rickenbacker ANGB Columbus Ohio 135 55 3503 Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum Pueblo Colorado 136 55 3595 Nellis AFB Nevada 137 55 3650 180th Fighter Wing Toledo Air National Guard Base Swanton Ohio 138 55 3667 Missouri Air National Guard Whiteman Air Force Base Knob Noster Missouri 139 55 3678 Maxwell AFB Air Park Maxwell AFB Alabama 140 55 3754 National Museum of the United States Air Force Wright Patterson AFB Ohio 141 55 3805 Connecticut ANGB 103d Airlift Wing area Windsor Locks Connecticut 142 56 2928 Dobbins ARB Marietta Georgia 143 56 2940 Cannon AFB New Mexico 144 56 2967 Myrtle Beach South Carolina 145 56 2993 New York ANGB 107th Airlift Wing area Niagara Falls New York 146 56 2995 Massachusetts ANGB 102nd Intelligence Wing compound Otis ANGB Falmouth Massachusetts 147 56 3000 Lackland AFB Kelly Field Annex former Kelly AFB 149th Fighter Wing area San Antonio Texas 148 56 3008 Massachusetts ANGB 104th Fighter Wing complex Westfield Massachusetts 149 56 3020 NAS JRB New Orleans 159th Fighter Wing area New Orleans Louisiana 150 56 3022 Mansfield Lahm ANGB 179th Airlift Wing area Mansfield Ohio 151 56 3025 Selfridge Military Air Museum Mount Clemens Michigan 152 56 3046 Randall County Veterans Park Amarillo Texas 153 56 3055 Tucson Air National Guard Base 162nd Fighter Wing complex Tucson Arizona 154 56 3081 MAPS Air Museum Akron Canton Airport Ohio 155 56 3141 Planes of Fame Chino California 156 56 3154 Lone Star Flight Museum Houston Texas 157 56 3187 Sioux Falls ANGB 114th FG Sioux Falls South Dakota 158 nbsp An F 100D Super Sabre at the Udvar Hazy Center 56 3208 Fessenden North Dakota 159 56 3220 Holloman AFB New Mexico 160 56 3288 Aerospace Museum of California Sacramento California 161 56 3299 Buckley Space Force Base 140th Fighter Wing area Aurora Colorado 162 56 3320 Terre Haute ANGB 181st Fighter Wing area Terre Haute Indiana 163 56 3417 Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum former Lowry AFB Denver Colorado 164 56 3426 Des Moines ANGB 132nd Fighter Wing area Des Moines Iowa 165 56 3434 Previously at Arkansas National Guard HQ Little Rock Arkansas 166 relocated to Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum Space Coast Regional Airport Titusville Florida in 2015 for restoration 167 56 3440 Steven F Udvar Hazy Center Fairfax County Virginia 168 F 100F edit nbsp F 100F at the USAF Museum56 3727 Warrior Park Davis Monthan AFB Arizona 169 56 3730 USAF Academy Colorado 170 56 3812 Veterans Park Duncan Arizona 171 56 3813 Riverside Park Independence Kansas 172 56 3814 Bay Street Park Texas City Texas 173 56 3819 Saint Maries Municipal Airport Saint Maries Idaho 174 56 3822 Clay County Veterans Memorial Park Lineville Alabama 175 56 3825 Aurora Municipal Airport Aurora Nebraska 176 56 3832 Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum McMinnville Oregon 177 56 3837 National Museum of the United States Air Force Wright Patterson AFB Ohio 178 56 3855 Las Cruces Municipal Airport Las Cruces New Mexico 179 56 3897 Atlantic City ANGB 177th Fighter Wing complex Atlantic City New Jersey 180 56 3894 Selfridge Military Air Museum Selfridge Air National Guard Base Mount Clemens Michigan 181 56 3899 Glenn L Martin Aviation Museum Middle River Maryland 182 56 3904 Aviation Cadet Museum Silver Wings Field Eureka Springs Arkansas 183 56 3905 Glenn L Martin Aviation Museum Middle River Maryland 184 56 3929 Fayette Regional Air Center Airport La Grange Texas 185 56 3982 Hangar 25 Air Museum Big Spring Texas 186 56 3990 Commemorative Air Force Highland Lakes Squadron Burnet Texas 187 58 1232 Museum of Aviation Robins AFB Warner Robins Georgia relocated from the now closed Brooks AFB TX citation needed Specifications F 100D edit nbsp 3 view line drawing of the North American F 100 Super Sabre nbsp 3 view line drawing of the North American F 100F Super Sabre nbsp D model cockpit instrument panelData from Quest for Performance 188 Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems 189 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 50 ft 15 m Wingspan 38 ft 9 in 11 81 m Height 16 ft 2 75 in 4 9467 m Wing area 400 sq ft 37 m2 Aspect ratio 3 76 Airfoil NACA 64A007 190 Zero lift drag coefficient CD0 0130 Drag area 5 0 sq ft 0 46 m2 Empty weight 21 000 lb 9 525 kg Gross weight 28 847 lb 13 085 kg Max takeoff weight 34 832 lb 15 800 kg Powerplant 1 Pratt amp Whitney J57 P 21 21A afterburning turbojet engine 10 200 lbf 45 kN thrust dry 16 000 lbf 71 kN with afterburnerPerformance Maximum speed 924 mph 1 487 km h 803 kn Maximum speed Mach 1 4 Range 1 995 mi 3 211 km 1 734 nmi Service ceiling 50 000 ft 15 000 m Rate of climb 22 400 ft min 114 m s Lift to drag 13 9 Wing loading 72 1 lb sq ft 352 kg m2 Thrust weight 0 55Armament Guns 4 20 mm 0 787 in M39A1 revolver cannon each with 200 rounds per gun Hardpoints 6 with a capacity of 7 040 lb 3 190 kg with provisions to carry combinations of Missiles 4 AIM 9 Sidewinder or 2 AGM 12 Bullpup or 2 or 4 LAU 3 A 2 75 70 mm unguided rocket dispenser 191 Bombs Conventional bombs or Mark 7 Mk 28 Mk 38 or Mk 43 nuclear bombs 192 Avionics Minneapolis Honeywell MB 3 automatic pilot 193 AN AJB 1B low altitude bombing system 193 AN APR 26 rearward radar warning 193 See also edit nbsp Aviation portalFlight airspeed record 1959 Kadena Air Base F 100 crashRelated development North American F 86 Sabre North American FJ 4 Fury North American F 107Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Dassault Super Mystere Dassault Etendard IV Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 19 Vought F 8 CrusaderRelated lists List of military aircraft of the United States List of fighter aircraftNotes edit Including the death of British Air Commodore Geoffrey D Stephenson while on an exchange tour citation needed Martin Caidin s book Thunderbirds was written while the team flew F 100s he was the only journalist to ever fly with them citation needed References editCitations edit Historical Listings China Nationalist Taiwan NCH Archived 10 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine World Air Forces Retrieved 19 May 2011 Knaack 1978 p 132 Rendall Ivan 1999 Rolling Thunder jet combat from World War II to the Gulf War First U S ed New York Simon amp Schuster Inc p 110 ISBN 0 684 85780 4 North American F 100C Super Sabre fas org 29 June 1999 Retrieved 23 July 2017 A 7 Corsair II globalsecurity org Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre Historical Snapshot Boeing Retrieved 23 July 2017 a b c d e Knaack 1978 p 113 Knaack 1978 pp 113 114 a b c d e Knaack 1978 p 114 Playground News 26 August 1954 6 F 100s At Eglin For Test Knaack 1978 pp 114 115 a b c d Knaack 1978 p 115 a b c d Knaack 1978 p 118 a b Knaack 1978 pp 115 116 a b c Knaack 1978 p 116 Knaack 1978 pp 116 117 Knaack 1978 pp 122 123 Knaack 1978 pp 122 124 a b Knaack 1978 p 123 a b Knaack 1978 p 129 Abzug Malcolm J Larrabee E Eugene 23 September 2002 Airplane Stability and Control A History of the Technologies that Made Aviation Possible Cambridge University Press p 78 ISBN 978 1 107 32019 2 Retrieved 17 October 2022 One of the first all moving tail applications was the North American F 100 Super Sabre Production Fighter Tops Speed of Sound Popular Mechanics December 1953 p 81 Ives Burl Burl Ives Song Book Ballantine Books Inc New York November 1953 p 240 a b Knaack 1978 p 117 Knaack 1978 pp 117 118 Knaack 1978 pp 118 119 a b Knaack 1978 p 119 Knaack 1978 p 120 Knaack 1978 pp 121 122 a b c d Knaack 1978 p 122 a b c Knaack 1978 p 124 Knaack 1978 pp 123 124 Knaack 1978 pp 125 126 a b Knaack 1978 p 126 North American Aviation NF 100D 56 2904 thexhunters com Retrieved 23 July 2017 Davis Jim 20 May 2008 1958 F 100 Uses Short Runway YouTube Archived from the original on 13 November 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2017 Knaack 1978 pp 129 130 Knaack 1978 pp 129 131 Knaack 1978 p 131 Knaack 1978 p 127 a b c Knaack 1978 p 128 a b Official USAF F 100 accident rate table PDF Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine afsc af mil Retrieved 12 April 2011 Gordon Doug Through the Curtain Flypast December 2009 Key Publishing Stamford ISSN 0262 6950 USAF F 100 Super Sabre Flight Manual Technical Order 1F 100D I 1S 120 12 January 1970 USAF F 100 Super Sabre Flight Manual Technical Order 1F 100C I 1S 65 2 February 1971 Anderton 1987 p 57 Starry Donn A General Mounted Combat in Vietnam Vietnam Studies Department of the Army Washington D C 1978 p 248 Davies and Menard 2011 cover image of F 100 attacking MiG 17 p 21 photo of Kilgus s F 100 Toperczer Dr Istvan Air War Over North Viet Nam The Vietnamese People s Air Force 1949 1977 Carrollton Texas Squadron Signal Publications 1998 ISBN 0 89747 390 6 Dorr Robert F 18 April 2014 F 100 Versus MiG 17 The Air Battle Nobody Told You About defensemedianetwork com Retrieved 23 July 2017 Anderton 1987 p 71 Anderton 1987 p 136 Anderton 1987 p 144 Anderton 1987 pp 136 145 Hobson 2001 p 269 Thompson 2008 pp 73 74 Dorr Robert F 12 September 2013 F 100 Super Sabre Flew Most Missions in Vietnam defensemedianetwork com Retrieved 23 July 2017 a b Project CHECO Southeast Asia Report Air Tactics Against NVN Air Ground Defenses 18 19 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Flintham 1989 p 82 Flintham 1989 pp 16 17 Flintham 1989 p 180 The Aviationist 30 years later Ankara admits Turkish Air Force jet was shot down by Iraq The Aviationist 6 September 2012 Retrieved 23 December 2014 Knaack 1978 page needed a b c Thompson 1999 p 64 a b c Baugher Joe QF 100 Drone USAAC USAAF USAF Fighters 30 January 2010 Retrieved 12 April 2011 Gustin Emmanuel Acronyms and Codenames FAQ FSAT hazegray org Retrieved 23 July 2017 pp 46 amp 54 in Jan Jorgensen Flyvevabnet Scenes from Danish military aviation history 2010 Nordic Airpower ISBN 978 87 993688 0 8 in English Schroder Hans 1991 Royal Danish Airforce Ed Kay S Nielsen Tojhusmuseet 1991 pp 1 64 ISBN 87 89022 24 6 North American RF 100A Super Sabre joebaugher com 27 November 1999 Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 55 2736 Archived 25 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Virtual Aviation Museum Retrieved 7 March 2013 F 100F on Display Archived 25 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Virtual Aviation Museum Retrieved 4 September 2009 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2185 Archived 25 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Virtual Aviation Museum Retrieved 7 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3944 Archived 25 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Virtual Aviation Museum Retrieved 4 September 2009 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2265 Archived 15 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine nmm nl Retrieved 14 October 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1550 airliners net Retrieved 7 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1571 airliners net Retrieved 7 March 2013 Register Retrieved 24 September 2023 via Facebook F 100 Super Sabre 53 1589 airliners net Retrieved 7 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1696 airliners net Retrieved 7 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2009 3 089 tayyareci com Retrieved 12 March 2011 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2245 E 245 tayyareci com Retrieved 12 March 2011 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3788 8 788 tayyareci com Retrieved 12 March 2011 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2157 North East Aircraft Museum Retrieved 16 June 2013 North American F100D Super Sabre Imperial War Museum Duxford Retrieved 23 July 2017 Aircraft Listing Midland Air Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 Our Aircraft Norfolk and Suffolk Aviation Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 Aircraft List Newark Air Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 North American F 100 Super Sabre Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum Retrieved 30 June 2023 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3938 Lashendene Air Warfare Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 FAA Registry N26AZ faa gov Retrieved 27 July 2021 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3844 Collings Foundation Retrieved 12 June 2015 FAA Registry N416FS faa gov Retrieved 27 July 2021 FAA Registry N2011V faa gov Retrieved 27 July 2021 FAA Registry N419FS faa gov Retrieved 27 July 2021 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5755 Air Force Flight Test Museum Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5759 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5760 Archived 2 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Flight Test Museum Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5761 New England Air Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5762 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5770 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5773 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 52 5777 Hill Aerospace Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1532 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1533 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1553 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1559 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1573 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1578 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1600 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1629 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1684 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1688 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1709 Castle AFB Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1712 Grissom Air Museum Retrieved 5 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 53 1716 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 1748 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 1752 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 1753 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 USAF Serial Number Search 54 1784 Retrieved 14 February 2018 Prairie Aviation Museum F 100 Retrieved 1 March 2018 USAF Serial Number Search 54 1785 Retrieved 14 February 2018 F 100 Super Sabre 54 1786 March Field Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 54 1823 Pima Air amp Space Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 54 1986 Archived 30 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Armament Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 54 1993 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2005 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2091 Yanks Air Museum Retrieved 5 March 2013 FAA Registry N2011M faa gov Retrieved 27 July 2021 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2106 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2145 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2151 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2281 City of Glendale Arizona Retrieved 2 November 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 54 2299 Archived 29 October 2015 at Archive It City of Palmdale California Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 55 2855 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 55 2884 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 55 3503 Archived 30 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum Retrieved 6 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 55 3595 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 55 3650 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 55 3667 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 55 3678 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 55 3754 National Museum of the USAF Retrieved 16 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 55 3805 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 2928 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 2940 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 2967 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 2993 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 2995 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3000 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3008 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3020 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3022 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3025 Archived 14 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Selfridge Military Air Museum Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3046 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3055 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3081 MAPS Air Museum Retrieved 6 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3141 Archived 6 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Planes of Fame Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3154 Archived 30 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Lone Star Flight Museum Retrieved 6 March 2013 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3187 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3208 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3220 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100D Super Sabre 56 3288 Aerospace Museum of California Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3299 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3320 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3417 Wings Over the Rockies Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3426 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3434 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 https www nbbd com godo vac un scramble 1610 unscramble pdf bare URL PDF F 100 Super Sabre 56 3440 Archived 7 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Steven F Udvar Hazy Center Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3727 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3730 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3812 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3813 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3814 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3819 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3825 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3825 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3832 Archived 30 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 North American F 100F Super Sabre National Museum of the USAF Retrieved 12 September 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3855 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3897 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3894 Archived 14 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Selfridge Military Air Museum Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3899 Archived 1 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine Glenn L Martin Aviation Museum Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3904 Aviation Cadet Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3905 Archived 1 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine Glenn L Martin Aviation Museum Retrieved 1 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3929 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 12 June 2015 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3982 Hangar 25 Air Museum Retrieved 23 July 2017 F 100 Super Sabre 56 3990 Archived 26 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine CAF Highland Lakes Squadron Retrieved 12 June 2015 Loftin L K Jr Quest for Performance The Evolution of Modern Aircraft NASA SP 468 Retrieved 22 April 2006 Knaack 1978 p 133 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Rhodes Jeffrey P Fighters USAF Magazine Archives 20 February 1997 p 15 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 November 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c Collections airandspace si edu Bibliography edit Anderton David A 1987 North American F 100 Super Sabre London Osprey Publishing ISBN 0 85045 662 2 Basara Levent F 100 Super Sabre in Turkish Air Force Turk Hava Kuvvetlerinde F 100 Super Sabre Hobbytime Ankara Turkey 2011 EAN 8680157170010 in Turkish and English Davies Peter E 2003 North American F 100 Super Sabre Ramsbury Wiltshire UK Crowood Press ISBN 1 86126 577 8 Davies Peter E Menard David W 2011 F 100 Super Sabre Units of the Vietnam War Osprey Combat Aircraft No 89 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 84908 446 8 Donald David June 2004 North American F 100 Super Sabre Century Jets USAF Frontline Fighters of the Cold War London AIRtime Publishing Inc 2003 ISBN 1 880588 68 4 Drendel Lou 1980 Century Series in Color Fighting Colors Carrollton Texas US Squadron Signal Publications ISBN 0 89747 097 4 Flintham Victor 1989 Air Wars and Aircraft A Detailed Record of Air Combat 1945 to the Present Arms and Armour Press ISBN 0 85368 779 X Gordon Doug December 2009 Through the Curtain Flypast ISSN 0262 6950 Gordon Doug March April 2001 Turbulent Times The USAF s 20th TFW in the 1950s Part Two Super Sabres Air Enthusiast 92 2 8 ISSN 0143 5450 Goodrum Alastair January February 2004 Down Range Losses over the Wash in the 1960s and 1970s Air Enthusiast 109 12 17 ISSN 0143 5450 Gunston Bill 1981 Fighters of the Fifties Minneapolis Minnesota US Specialty Press Publishers amp Wholesalers Inc ISBN 0 933424 32 9 Hobson Chris 2001 Vietnam Air Losses United States Air Force Navy and Marine Corps Fixed Wing Aircraft Losses in Southeast Asia 1961 1973 North Branch Minnesota US Specialty Press ISBN 1 85780 115 6 Jenkins Dennis R Landis Tony R 2008 Experimental amp Prototype U S Air Force Jet Fighters North Branch Minnesota US Specialty Press ISBN 978 1 58007 111 6 Knaack Marcelle Size 1978 Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems Volume 1 Post World War II Fighters 1945 1973 PDF Washington D C Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 912799 59 5 OCLC 834250508 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Pace Steve 1991 X Fighters USAF Experimental and Prototype Fighters XP 59 to YF 23 St Paul Minnesota US Motorbooks International ISBN 0 87938 540 5 Thompson Kevin F 1999 North American NA 180 gt NA 262 YF 100A F 100A C D F Super SabreNorth American Aircraft 1934 1999 Volume 2 Santa Ana California US Johnathan Thompson Greens Inc ISBN 0 913322 06 7 Thompson Warren E June July 2008 Centuries Series F 100 Super Sabre Combat Aircraft London Ian Allan 9 3 Weaver Michael E Spring 2020 The F 100 Super Sabre as an Air Superiority Fighter Air Power History 67 1 8 15 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to North American F 100 Super Sabre nbsp Wikisource has several original texts related to Audio recordings and transcripts with comments of actual Wild Weasel combat missions over Vietnam JoeBaugher F 100 Super Sabre Index JoeBaugher Foreign Air Forces with F 100s F 100 Photo Database Warbird Alley F 100 page Information about privately owned F 100s F 100 Super Sabre Survivors Static displays locations serial numbers and links Supersonic Fighter a 1955 Flight article on the F 100 Super Sabre by Bill Gunston missing pages Video of an F 100 s n 56 2904 Zero Length Launch at British Pathe 1958 silent b w The Intake The Journal of the Super Sabre Society full archives dating back to 2006Bibliography for further readingF 100 org Bibliography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North American F 100 Super Sabre amp oldid 1182164923, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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