F-111 & EF-111 Units in Combat
By (Author) Rolando Ugolini
By (author) Peter E. Davies
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
20th February 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Air forces and warfare
Military vehicles
358.43830973
Paperback
96
Width 184mm, Height 248mm, Spine 7mm
360g
The General Dynamics F-111 was one of the most technically innovative designs among military aircraft, introducing the variable-sweep wing, terrain-following radar, military-rated afterburning turbofan engines and a self-contained escape module among other features. Designed as a cost-saving, multi-role interceptor, naval fighter and strike bomber, its evolution prioritised the latter role and it became the USAFs most effective long-range strike aircraft during three decades of service. Rushed into combat in Vietnam before some of its structural issues were fully understood, the type suffered several early losses and gained an unfairly negative reputation that dogged it for the rest of its career, and restricted funding for more advanced versions of the design. However, in Operation Linebacker in 1972 the F-111 flew 4000 nocturnal under-the-radar missions, delivering, with unprecedented accuracy, many decisive blows that would have resulted in heavy losses for any other attack aircraft.
"I highly recommend this book for modern US jet fans." --Mike Van Schoonhoven, IPMS/USA
"...another excellent book from Osprey and a title that I know you will enjoy reading and using as reference. As always, highly recommended." --Scott Van Aken, www.modelingmadness.com
Peter E Davies has published 20 books and several magazine articles, concentrating on modern combat aircraft and the Vietnam War. He has written seven previous Osprey titles and co-authored two others. The F-4 Phantom II in all its variants has been a main topic in eight of his previous books and he has close connections with former members of the F-4 Phantom II community