World War II saw the development of the heavy bomber as a decisive
weapon which, in sufficient numbers, could overcome defensive fighters
and guns and lay waste to strategic targets. The addition of nuclear
weapons to the bomber's armament made it even more formidable, and by
the late 1940s, US planners saw the growth of a Soviet nuclear-armed
bomber fleet as a terrifying threat to North American security.
Conventional subsonic fighters with guns and free-flight air-to-air
rockets would be incapable of reaching these incoming bombers in time
to prevent even one from delivering a devastating nuclear attack. As a
result, supersonic speed, long-range guided missiles and precise
radar-based control of an interception became prerequisites for a new
breed of fighters, beginning with the F-102. A massive research and
development effort produced the F-102A '1954 Fighter', the J57
afterburning turbojet, its Hughes MX-1554 fire control system and, in
due course, the Semi-Active Ground Environment (SAGE) radar and
communications network that covered North America to guide its
airborne defences. In service, F-102As also provided air defence in
Europe with USAFE, in the Far East and in Southeast Asia, where they
protected US airbases in South Vietnam and Thailand from air attack by
North Vietnamese fighters and bombers and escorted B-52s and
fighter-bombers on their attack sorties. This illustrated study from
leading expert Peter E. Davis details the design, development, and
deployment of the futuristic F-102, including its complex research
program and role in Vietnam.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472840684
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Osprey Publishing
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter