Unconventional Weapon
What we learned about stealth technology from the combat career of the F-117.
- By Bill Sweetman
- Air & Space magazine, January 2008
Staff Sergeant Robin Walker (left) reports no foreign objects in the inlets to Staff Sergeant Greg Slavik piror to takeoff from Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada.
Tech. Sgt. Kevin J. Gruenwald/USAF
(Page 5 of 10)
The radar-absorbent material was improved across the 59-airplane production run—a mixed blessing for the overworked maintainers, because although the new aircraft were better, the Air Force ended up with four different stealth configurations, each needing different repair procedures.
Piccirillo now says, “1988 was when we started to get some real capability” in the F-117. So the jet that became the hero of the first Gulf War was not quite the same as the aircraft that had entered service.
The success of the campaign became an opportunity for Lockheed to plead for a second life for the fighter, but in the early 1990s, many weapons systems and philosophies competed for backing.
Within months of the 1992 election that put Bill Clinton into the White House, every new and prospective tactical aircraft program had been canceled in favor of a project called Joint Advanced Strike Technology (JAST)—the precursor of the Joint Strike Fighter program, and the resultant F-35 Lightning II. It was the end of the road for an advanced F-117.
The jets that were already in service continued to get upgrades. For example, the radar-absorbent material was stripped off, and new access panels were cut in the skin. The old linoleum-like stuff was replaced with sprayed-on material that incorporated “zip strips,” which the maintainer could remove to expose the edges of an access hatch. That and other changes brought the jet’s mission-ready rate to an excellent 89 percent.
But the Air Force had allowed its unique fighter to become separated from the rest of its combat units. For almost a decade, the F-117 force had operated in secrecy at Tonopah Test Range. Not until 1992—after its success in Operation Desert Storm—did the Air Force move the fighters to Holloman. The idea to integrate the stealth fighters with the “iron jets” in the rest of the force occurred too late and too slowly. A senior F-117 pilot, Colonel Thomas “Bulldog” Shoaf, commander of the F-117 Weapons School, said the Air Force was slow to tout the full capabilities of a stealth aircraft, even among its pilots.
“There were times when we weren’t cleared into how well we were stealthy against the threat,” he told participants of a military conference in London. The result was “a perception in the combat air forces that the F-117 was none of their business, a stand-alone
system.”
It was during those isolated years that the Nighthawk force suffered its first and only combat loss.
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Comments (6)
In my opinion, the original reporting that this story is based upon by Dani was a Russian deception. After careful analysis (back when it happened), I concluded that the Russians were using a bistatic radar system. You will notice in the Dani article that he stated that additional transmitters were turned on as a deception. These were more likely the various transmitters associated with a bistatic radar system. BiStatic radar poses a serious threat to stealth systems.
Posted by ron mcguire on April 5,2008 | 10:56 AM
I feel the f-117 was and still is a great aircraft for it time. The plane was built for one reason. and it did it very well. I just hope we have other aircraft that are as good or better than the f-117.
Posted by Philip on May 29,2008 | 04:52 PM
So now that they have been retired, why not sell some f-117 to the Israeles. I'm sure they could use them.
Posted by Jerome K. Embree on June 16,2008 | 02:57 PM
I'm highly suspicious of the "bistatic" claims, as I am of the claim that the F-117 was tracked using signals from mobile phone networks. The number of emitters and receivers required for an effective bistatic system is mind-boggling; in the absence of any evidence, I set stock by the conventional explanation.
Posted by FriendlyFred on July 14,2008 | 06:15 PM
No doubt that the Soviets improved radar and tracking after the Bosnian war. They obviously did not give the Iraqi's the improved radars and missiles. So how did they get radar profiles and data to develop the technology when the F-117 was only based in the US? I think the shoot down was caused more by using the same base and take-off times. It doesn't make attacking easier when the enemy knows your route and time. And it is highly probable the restrictions on the military by the Clinton administration could have been a factor also.
Posted by Sam on December 20,2008 | 09:46 PM
the Serbs figured out that the F-117's were flying the same track, at the same time; Time after time. from there it's easy to simple wait and shoot. Clinton was using the war to cover up his impeachment back in the states. The press did the rest.William Randolf Hearst said that he could start or end any war in the news paper. All he needed to do was make up the head lines. It still working today.
Posted by Michael A. McGaw on April 12,2013 | 01:57 AM