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Corsair A7 II model airplane
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A-7 Corsair II
History:
The A-7
Corsair II is an attack aircraft
manufactured by Ling-Temco-
Vought and was introduced to
replace the A-4 Skyhawk in US Naval
service. The primary users
and operators of the A-7 are the
United States Navy, United States Air
Force, Portuguese Air Force and the
Royal Thai Navy. Corsair
production continued through 1984
and has been distinctively the onlt
United States single jet fighter-
bomber of the 1960s that was
designed, built and deployed directly
into the Vietnam War.
The A-7 Corsair II was the result
of a May 17, 1963 Navy design
competition named VAL (Heavier-
than-air, Attack, Light). Pilots
tagged the A-7 Corsair as SLUF
(short Little Ugly Fucker) and they
lauded the aircraft for
maneuverability and excellent
forward visibility but noted a lack of
engine thrust. The A-7 had a
shorter, broader fuselage. It
is powered by a Pratt & Whitney
TF30-P-6 turbofan with 11,345 lbf of
thrust. The A-7 was fitted with
an AN/APQ-116 radar, which was
integrated into the ILAAS digital
navigation system and the radar
also fed a digital weapons computer
which made accurate delivery of
bombs from a greater stand-off
distance and improved
survivability. The A-7 was the
first US aircraft to have a modern
head-up display, now a standard
instrument, which displayed
information such as dive angle,
airspeed, altitude, drift and aiming
reticle. The integrated
navigation system allowed it for
another innovation, the projected
map display system
(PMDS).
*Alteration on the design such as change of paint schemes and markings or embodied features on our models occurs at any time. Detachable stand is included with the model which may vary from the photo.
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