|
|
Fairchild Republic A-10A Thunderbolt II
|
|
Well, beauty may be in the eye of the beholder, but fear is in the eye of enemy ground
forces when the Warthog appears over a burm.
The A-10A first flew on May 10, 1972. Best described as a flying gatling gun. The
airframe is such that it is essentially designed around the gun itself. High battlefield
survivability is built into the A-10 with heavy titanium platen around the pilot and vital
control components. Landing gear is spaced to provide optimum placement of ordinance. The
large General Electric turbofans are placed high on the rear fuselage exhausting above the
tailplanes to partially mask the infra red signature to ground based missiles.
|
|
The General Electric GAU-8/A Avenger seven barreled 30 mm Gatling rotary cannon is 6.71
m (22') long and weighs 1,858 kg. (4,091 lbs.) The shells each weigh 0.91 kg. (2 lbs.) The
ammunition drum can accommodate 1,174 rounds (high explosive or armour piercing.) There
are two rates of fire, either 2,100 rpm. or 4,200 rpm. Two hydraulic motors are used to
feed the ammunition belt at the higher rate of fire, one at the lower rpm. The design fire
duration is ten two second bursts with a sixty second cooling off period between each
burst.
There are eight underwing and three under fuselage hard points for a variety of
ordinance/fuel configurations.
|
|
Specifications; Engines (two) General Electric TF-34-GE-100 high bypass ratio
turbofans 40.3 kN. (9,065 lbs. st.), Wing span; 17.53 m. (56' 7"), Length; 16.26 m.
(53' 4"), Maximum take-off weight; 21,500 kg. (47,400 lbs.), Maximum speed; 722 km/h.
(449 mph.), Combat radius; 1,000 km. (620 miles.)
It just proves you don't have to be beautiful to pack a punch |
|