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JB in so cal
03-16-2007, 10:03 AM
Top News
First F-117s Head For Retirement
Fri, 16 Mar '07
Will Be Parked In Nevada
It's tough to believe that some of the most advanced aircraft in the US Air Force inventory are being put to pasture... but such is the case with the storied F-117A Nighthawk stealth fighter. This week, the first six F-117s based at New Mexico's Holloman Air Force Base took off for probably the last time, bound for retirement in Nevada.As Aero-News reported, the Bush administration announced last year the 52 Nighthawks based at Holloman would be retired. The Alamogordo Daily News reports the Pentagon plans to replace them with 36 F-22 Raptors, starting in 2009.
Ironically, the F-117As are returning to the place they were initially deployed. The Tonopah Test Range in Nevada, where the Nighthawks are destined to be parked, saw the first operational squadron delivered there in 1982.
That was six years before the Pentagon publicly confirmed the plane's existence; before then, sightings of the wedge-shaped F-117s provoked many UFO sightings in the most desolate parts of the Silver State.
"This has come full circle for this incredible airplane," said Brig. Gen. David Goldfein, commander of Holloman's 49th Fighter Wing, in a March 12 ceremony. He added the Nighthawk's story is "one of vision, guts, passion, heroism, defiance, incredible risk-taking, a story both uniquely American and, I believe, uniquely Air Force."
In the end, the F-117A fell victim to the very technology it helped pioneer -- as the Raptor incorporates many of the Nighthawk's advanced radar-evading tricks, while also delivering true air-to-air combat capability. Despite it's "fighter" moniker, the F-117A was in reality a ground-support aircraft.
"Holloman was chosen for the F-22," Goldfein said. "It makes sense to replace stealth with stealth."
The 49th Fighter Wing will continue to operate the F-117A for the next year-and-a-half. The wing has a squadron of the planes deployed in Korea.

Boatcop
03-16-2007, 01:46 PM
The 117 is a bad-ass plane.
http://www.ae.utexas.edu/~aiaa/oldsite/webgraphics/f117(2).gif
But then again, the raptor aint too shabby either.
http://www.aeronautics.ru/img002/f22large03.jpg

HocusPocus
03-16-2007, 01:48 PM
great aircraft for sneaking up and kicking the bad guys in the ass. :D

Starloans
03-16-2007, 02:12 PM
Music's not bad either.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbDPUmpsivw

Rexone
03-16-2007, 02:42 PM
Seems to me if the gov wants to save a little dough by not keeping 117's active until the Raptor takes over there's alot better areas of financial abuse to tap.
Maybe stick those 6 117's on the border to back up some troops to stop illegal immigration. Wonder how much that result would save US taxpayers in not having to pay for the services and upkeep of the bizillion illegals who will cross over and become a leach on US government spending (US taxpayer's money). :idea:
Of course no one has the balls to even approach that subject in government. Easier just to park em and put heads in sand a little deeper on the immigration problem (http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4094926727128068265&q=number).

RitcheyRch
03-16-2007, 04:10 PM
Still amazes me to see the F-117's take off from work everyday. And the Raptor is one bad mofo.

Trash
03-16-2007, 05:18 PM
I'm all for more border protection, but the F-117 would be a horrible aircraft to use.

JB in so cal
03-16-2007, 05:26 PM
I'm all for more border protection, but the F-117 would be a horrible aircraft to use.
Unless we'll be dropping 2000 lb guided munitions:)

Rexone
03-16-2007, 09:59 PM
Still amazes me to see the F-117's take off from work everyday. And the Raptor is one bad mofo.
My ref to 117's was kind of in jest. The gov grounds the 117's to save $ but continues to spend billions supporting illegal immigrants entering the country.
There are plenty of appropriate military assets if our weak suck leaders would wake up and use them as a deterrant.