Tomcat Tribute
The Navy's fearsome fighter retires.
- Air & Space magazine, September 2006
Feathers ruffled, a "Turkey" rests on the deck of the Harry S. Truman while a Sikorsky MH-60S Knighthawk hoists in supplies for the carrier population.
PHA Gregory A. Pierot, USN
(Page 2 of 6)
Second Shift to VP
For five years, I was going to school during the day at Brooklyn's Polytechnic University and working as a second-shift electrician at Grumman's Calverton plant. Being second shift, we didn't get to see the airplane fly that often, but we'd get a few glimpses now and then, and that's all it took to keep us pumped up about it.
I remember George Skurla coming onto the factory floor in 1973. [Skurla, later president of Grumman, headed a management shake-up of the F-14 assembly process.] He really wanted to get 54 airplanes out by the holidays, and he'd show up once or twice a week. At first it was intimidating, and I wondered, 'Am I doing something wrong?' But I ended up looking forward to his visits. I never forgot the factory floor.>>> Scott Seymour, President, Northrop Grumman Integrated Systems, and corporate vice President
[Radar Intercept Officers]
"Do You Have It?"
Coming out of the training command, where you learn self-reliance as a pilot, I struggled with this notion of the F-14 RIO. I especially disliked the idea that the RIO could fire both ejections seats when operating off a carrier. My plan was that if a RIO ever asked me "Do you have it?" I would either fly us out or eject us both.
That lasted until my first squadron tour with VF-32 in 1976. Launching from the USS John F. Kennedy, working on my cool clearing turn off the catapult (always a challenge in a 64-foot-wingspan, 30-ton jet): Rotate, gear up, snap right, change heading, snap left...uh oh. No snap left. No stick movement past center. We stay in our right turn, nose slowly falling through the horizon around 100 feet. There's lots of screaming help coming from the Air Boss over the radio, but his words aren't clear. What I do hear clearly is the voice coming from the back seat: "Do you have it?" To my surprise I answer, "No." The stick will just not go left. To his everlasting credit, while watching the water streak by just under our right wingtip and with his hands on the lower handle, Jerry "Mountain" Argenzio-West gave me a couple more seconds to get the airplane going where it was supposed to with rudder and afterburner. Despite jammed flight controls, we recovered and got the aircraft back aboard ship. With that test, and after 3,000 hours in the F-14, I am convinced it was the pilot-RIO team that made the Tomcat the great classic fighter it was.>>> Steve "Spoon" Weatherspoon, VF-32
Besides operating the radar, F-14 RIOs also operated the inertial navigation system; monitored the hundreds of circuit breakers surrounding the back seat that controlled the airplane's electronics, including control surfaces and avionics; did virtually all the talking on the radios; and commanded both ejection seats (in carrier operations). The RIO operated the mission systems and could fire both the Sparrow and Phoenix missiles. Only the RIO could set up and operate the cameras and targeting system.
[Pilots]
The Real Top Gun
When Dale Snodgrass retired from the Navy in 1999 as the world's highest-time F-14 pilot, with more than 4,800 hours and 12 years as an F-14 demo pilot, he was famous for his finesse, his aggression, his relentless pursuit of the unexpected, and even, sometimes, the not-yet-approved-such as formation aerobatics on the wing of old Grumman fighters. But in 1985, at the Pratt & Whitney celebration in Hartford, Connecticut, he was a new demo pilot and few people had seen him fly.
That Saturday was the kind of day when nobody expected much. Cloud base was barely 1,000 feet, the visibility was a misty three miles, and a number of the pilots had already decided not to perform. Snodgrass said, "I'll fly." He was just back from the north Atlantic, where rain, fog, salt spray, and low clouds were the norm.
With the burners lit, the F-14 roared to life, accelerated down the pavement, and lifted just high enough for wing clearance. Then Snodgrass rolled the fighter into a turn so low, so steep, and so tight that anyone who expected minimum weather to produce minimum performance was instantly on alert.
The F-14, which is big, loud, fast, and powerful enough to climb straight up for 15,000 feet doing vertical rolls, is also agile and versatile enough to entertain a sophisticated audience on a minimum weather day, especially in the hands of a maestro. Snodgrass rolled past the crowd gear up, gear down, wings sweeping through a kaleidoscope of designs, from forward like a wide embrace to backward like a plummeting hawk, afterburners lit, speed brakes out, in knife-edge turns, and hard pulls. A tight, low, fast-paced F-14 would have been entertaining on any day, but in Hartford that day, under clouds the color of cardboard, in air dripping with moisture, the demo was something the crowd won't forget. Snodgrass says, "When we cranked around the corner, on the break and in the turns, the airplane would disappear in vapor, encased in a cloud. All you could see was flames coming out of one end and the nose at the other.">>> Debbie Gary, Aerobatic Pilot
A Crazed Little Kamikaze
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Comments (9)
Oh, how I miss that big, beautiful Tomcat. Thank goodness we can still see the greatest, Snort Snodgrass, still flying demos in Mustangs, Corsairs, and Sabres but sure would love to once again witness his artistry in the "Big Jet". Oceanfront weekends at Virginia Beach just aren't the same with Hornets and no Tomcats. The unmistakeable sound of those engines as the pilot plays with the power settings on approach shall always remain in my memory.
Posted by Jim Deans on August 5,2008 | 08:07 PM
Oh what fun maintaining that magnicent swept-winged wonder, so far away from families, friends and our homes! The Wolfpack will be another great chapter in my life. Westpac 82 on board the USS Ranger with Cmdr. Jacks Puppy-pack!!
A Proud Member,
J. Ortiz AZ2
Posted by Jay Ortiz on August 15,2008 | 06:51 PM
I have been searching for a picture that was in this article. It was Tomcat flying by the deck of a carrier, sideways, and close. This was one of the best photos I've ever seen. Would love to find a way to get a framed print. Thanks for any info you can provide. EDITORS' REPLY: This photo was supplied by the US Navy. It shows VF-33 Commander Dale Snodgrass making an entry pass next to the carrier USS America on Dependents Day Cruise, Summer 1988. If you go to the US Navy website, there is likely a way to request a print of this photo. Be sure to provide all of the details above so your request can be processed.
Posted by Jeff Wetherbee on July 4,2009 | 12:49 PM
admiral.......i know ya dont remember me........i was your your plane captain when you were an lt.!!!! remember yuma????? you were a bright spot in my life!!!! ive worked for boeing...northrop lockheed and all of them im a contract worker making the skies same for you and yours.....you changed my life ......thank you!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by john hauser on November 7,2009 | 10:35 PM
I was a plane captain when thomas sobeick was a RIO, lieutenant. I'm soooo proud and need to thank him for changing my life. He was there for me any time i needed him to talk to we were young. He was a young lieut. and I was a young third class. I've been working for BAE on the fore and aft sensors so you don't get yer ass shot off! Thanks, Call sign "sob"
Posted by john hauser on February 7,2010 | 08:50 AM
Ok guys, you may not remember me simply because I was an AQ safely tucked away in AIMD, Shop 63A. I was on that '82 cruise with ya, and Happy Jack and I had a "moment" or two that I'm trying to forget about forever! The joy of the whole time in VF-1 was getting to be around the F-14. What a plane!? I still have my collection of Heater's 8X10 glossy photos that he sold on the ship. They are matted, framed, and hanging proudly on display.
Hey guys, if I've stirred a memory as to who I am, get in touch with me.
Jay Littleton
Jay.Littleton@Kellogg.com
Posted by Jay Littleton on May 26,2010 | 02:01 PM
Ladies and Gentleman, the Tomcat...
What else needs to be said? This airplane was more than a machine it was an ICON. It was a living breathing embodiment of what was America. I was 5 years old when I, like many others decided I wanted to be a pilot. Many of my friends and I build plastic model airplanes and I remember to this day the plane EVERYONE wanted. It was the mighty F-14 Tomcat. It for some reason always caught you off guard. It was one of the few aircraft in history that was "Alive" in some way. Now many years later I still love that ugly, haze gray painted predator.
I will never grace any publications with my name nor will I be remembered for any daring do. But, rest assured I will long remember the Turkey and all those that flew this awesome piece of AMERICA.
Anytime Baby!
Posted by Mike Gray on October 29,2010 | 03:51 PM
Gee, I am an old salt. When I reported to NAS Oceana
to attack squadron 86 in the fall of 57 we were just
receiving the A4 Skyhawks, a very reliable little jet, and
it had a long career in the Navy. And tho I was long gone
before Tom Cats came into being, no plane has ecited me as much as the Tom Cat. We attended a lot of the September
Oceana Air Shows,but regret missing the final Tom Cats in
2006. It doesn't seem the same without that Cat in the air.
Posted by M.Cook Jr AD3 on August 19,2012 | 10:44 PM