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YF-23 Black Widow II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

YF-23 Black Widow II

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

YF-23 Black Widow II
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YF-23 Black Widow II

The Northrop/McDonnell Douglas YF-23 Black Widow II — named after the P-61 Black Widow — was a prototype fighter aircraft designed for the United States Air Force. It was passed over in favor of the YF-22 that has entered production as the F-22 Raptor.

[edit] Design and development

The YF-22 and YF-23 were competing in the USAF's Advanced Tactical Fighter program. Conceived in the early 1980s, to specify a replacement for the F-15 Eagle, contracts for the two most promising designs were awarded in 1986, with the YF-23 delivered in 1989 and the evaluation concluded in 1991. Many levels of subcontractors were lined up on each side of the decision, and some on the losing side did not survive long afterwards.

The YF-23 was designed with stealth as a high priority and was a highly unconventional-looking aircraft with diamond-shaped wings blended with the fuselage and a V-tail. The YF-23A met USAF requirements for survivability, supersonic cruise, stealth and ease of maintenance. However, the YF-22A was more maneuverable than the YF-23A and won the competition in April 1991. Another factor was that the YF-22A was also seen as more adaptable to the Navy's Navalized Advanced Tactical Fighter (NATF), though as it turned out the Navy abandoned NATF a few months later. [1] Although the precise results of the evaluation are not yet public knowledge, it is often claimed that the YF-23 was faster and stealthier than its competitor, but the USAF chose the YF-22 due to simply being more conventional, higher subsonic maneuverability, longer range, and better warning systems. Others point out the YF-23's comparatively flawed weapons release mechanism wherein missiles are stacked on racks, and a weapons jam of a lower-positioned missile could prevent the firing of the missile above it. In any case, the decision is still widely debated.

[edit] Testing

Two aircraft were built. After losing the competition, both YF-23 prototypes were transferred from Norththrop to NASA's Dryden Flight Center, at Edwards AFB, California. The engines were removed; NASA had no plans to perform flight tests with the airframes, but did plan to use one of the two aircraft to study strain gage loads calibration techniques.

In the end, however, both aircraft remained in storage until the summer of 1996, when the aircraft were transferred to museums. Aircraft PAV-2 was in exhibit at the Western Museum of Flight in Hawthorne, California and PAV-1 was recently moved to the National Museum of the United States Air Force near Dayton, Ohio, where it sits along side the Boeing X-32. Currently one of the two is now on display in an outdoor parking area at Northrup-Grumman's production facility in El Segundo, California.

In late 2004, Northrop Grumman proposed a YF-23 based design for the USAF's interim bomber requirement, a role for which the FB-22 and B-1R are also competing. The interim bomber requirement has since been cancelled in favor of a more long-term, permament bomber replacement requirement; however, the same YF-23-derived design will likely be adapted to fulfill this role as well.[2]

[edit] Popular culture

  • The YF-23 was featured in the games Jetfighter II (1991), Aircombat II (1991), Strike Commander (1993), "ID4: Independence Day") (1996), Super Aircombat (1997), Super Air Combat II (1997), Airforce Delta(1997), Lethal Skies (2002), Destroy Mover (2003), Over G Fighters (2006)

[edit] Specifications (YF-23, as designed)

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

[edit] External links

  • GlobalSecurity.org: YF-23 Black Widow II. Very good additoinal background re: some of the design decisions.

[edit] Related content

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:


Related development

F-22 Raptor

 

Designation sequence

F-20 - F-21 - F-22 Raptor - YF-23 - X-29* - X-31* - X-32* - F-35
*X- series designations were historically separate from the F- series. However, the X-35 was adopted as the F-35, using its X- series number rather than the next open F- series number (F-24). This created a gap in sequences from F-24 to F-34, but there were three experimental fighters in X- series that might have used them if they had been adopted and named in the same manner as the F-35.

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