The '
General Dynamics F-111' is a medium-range
strategic bomber,
reconnaissance, and
tactical strike aircraft designed in the 1960s. The
United States Air Force (USAF) variants were officially named "
Aardvark", their longtime nickname, at their ceremony of retirement from service in 1996. The only remaining operator of the F-111 is the
Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), and in
Australian service the F-111 is known as the "Pig."
The F-111 pioneered several technologies for production
military aircraft, including
variable geometry wings,
afterburning turbofan engines, and
terrain following radar for low-level, high-speed flight. Its design was highly influential, particularly for
Soviet engineers, and some of its advanced features have since become commonplace. In its inception, however, the F-111 suffered a variety of development problems, and several of its intended roles, such as naval
interception, failed to materialize.
In USAF service the F-111 has been effectively replaced by the
F-15E Strike Eagle for medium-range precision strike missions, while the supersonic bomber role has been assumed by the
B-1B Lancer. The RAAF will replace its F-111s with
F/A-18F Super Hornets in 2010.
Design and development
The beginnings of the F-111 were in the 'TFX' program, an ambitious early 1960s project to combine the
U.S. Air Force requirement for a
fighter-bomber with the
U.S. Navy's need for a long-range
carrier defense fighter to replace the
F-4 Phantom II and the
F-8 Crusader. The fighter design philosophy of the day concentrated on very high speed, raw power, and
air-to-air missiles.
Air Force specifications
The USAF's
Tactical Air Command (TAC) was largely concerned with the
fighter-bomber and deep strike/interdiction roles, which in the early 1960s still focused on the use of
nuclear weapons. The aircraft would be a follow-on to the
F-105 Thunderchief, which was designed to deliver nuclear weapons low, fast and far. Air combat would be an afterthought until encountering
MiGs over Vietnam in the mid 1960s. In June
1960 the USAF issued a specification for a long-range interdiction/strike aircraft able to penetrate
Soviet air defenses at very low altitudes and very high speeds to deliver tactical nuclear weapons against crucial Soviet targets like airfields and supply depots. Included in the specification were a low-level speed of
Mach 1.2, a high-altitude speed of
Mach 2.5, a combat radius of 890 mi (1,430 km), good short-field performance, and a ferry range long enough to reach Europe without refuelling.
Navy requirement
Meanwhile the US Navy had, since
1957, been searching for a long-range, high-endurance interceptor to defend its carrier groups against the new generation of
Soviet jet bombers, which by then were being armed with huge
anti-ship missiles with nuclear warheads. The Navy needed a Fleet Air Defense (FAD) aircraft with better loitering performance and load-carrying ability than the F-4 Phantom II, and one equipped with a powerful radar and a battery of long-range missiles to intercept both bombers and their missiles.
The Navy had studied, but rejected, a slow straight-winged missile carrier, the
F6D Missileer. In December
1960 the Navy had been reconsidering
variable geometry for the FAD requirement. The trend toward ever bigger, more powerful fighters posed a problem for the Navy: the current generation of naval fighters were already barely capable of landing on an
aircraft carrier deck, and a still larger and faster fighter would pose even greater problems. An airframe optimized for high-speed — most obviously with a high-angle
swept wing — is inefficient at cruising speeds, which reduces range, payload, and endurance, and leads to very high landing speeds. On the other hand, an airframe with a straight or modestly swept wing, while easier to handle and able to carry heavy loads over longer distances on a minimum of fuel, has lower ultimate performance. Variable geometry, which the Navy had tried and abandoned for the
XF10F Jaguar in
1953, offered the possibility of combining both in a single airframe.
Similar swing wing aircraft
The F-111 was the first production variable-geometry aircraft. The earlier subsonic Navy
XF10F Jaguar had been cancelled in
1953. It inspired a number of aircraft throughout the 1980s, and even fictional aircraft on the
Thunderbirds, but
swing wings are extinct in newer designs due to higher cost, and the extra weight imposed by the swing wing mechanism. Nevertheless, several other types have followed, including the
Soviet Sukhoi Su-17 "Fitter" (1966),
Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-23 "Flogger" (1967),
Tupolev Tu-22M "Backfire" (1969) and
Tupolev Tu-160 "Blackjack" (1981), the US
F-14 Tomcat naval fighter (
1970) and
B-1 Lancer bomber (1974), and the European
Panavia Tornado (1974). The
Sukhoi Su-24 "Fencer" (1970), which resembles the F-111, also has side-by-side seating.
Armament

F-111 cockpit prior to a night flight.
Although conceived as a multi-role fighter, the F-111 became a long-range
attack aircraft primarily armed with
air-to-surface ordnance.
Weapons bay
The F-111 has a small internal weapons bay under the fuselage for various weapons.
★ 'Cannon': All tactical combat versions (that is, not the EF-111A or FB-111A/F-111G) could carry a single
M61 Vulcan 20 mm cannon with a very large (2,084 round) ammunition tank, covered by an eyelid shutter when not in use. Although carried by some USAF aircraft, the cannon was never actually used in combat, and was removed by the early 1980s; provision for the cannon has also been deleted from Australian F-111Cs.
★ 'Bombs': The bay can alternately hold two conventional bombs, usually the
Mk 117 type of nominal 750 lb/340 kg weight, although weapons up to the Mk 118 (3,000 lb/1,400 kg) were cleared.
★ 'Nuclear weapons': All F-111 models except the EF-111A and the Australian F-111C were equipped to carry various free-fall
nuclear weapons: tactical models generally carried the
B43,
B57, or
B61, the FB-111A those weapons or the
B83. The FB-111A could also carry one or two
AGM-69 SRAM nuclear missiles in its weapons bay.
★ 'Sensor pod': The F-111C and F-111F were equipped to carry the
AN/AVQ-26 Pave Tack targeting system on a rotating carriage that kept the pod protected within the weapons bay when not in use. Pave Tack is a
FLIR and
laser rangefinder/designator that allows the F-111 to designate and drop
laser-guided bombs.
★ 'Reconnaissance pallet': Australian RF-111Cs carry a package of
reconnaissance sensors and
cameras for tactical
recce missions. It contains two video cameras, a Honeywell AN/AAD-5
infrared linescan (recorded on video or film), a
Fairchild KA-56E low-altitude and KA-93A4 high-altitude panoramic cameras, and a pair of CAI KS-87C split vertical cameras. It can also record photographs of the attack radar's display.
★ 'Missiles': The F-111B was intended to be capable of carrying two
AIM-54 Phoenix air-to-air missiles in the bay. General Dynamics proposed an arrangement that would allow two
AIM-9 Sidewinders to be carried on a trapeze mounting in the bay (at the expense of the M61 cannon), along with a single (usually nuclear) bomb. This was not adopted, with the USAF and RAAF opting for the cannon instead. The
AIM-7 Sparrow or
AIM-4 Falcon, standard on the
F-4, was never fitted, though later F-111 models had radars equipped to guide the Sparrow.
★ 'Other equipment': Auxiliary fuel tanks and baggage pods were sometimes carried.
External ordnance

F-111F aircraft releasing its load of Mark 82 high-drag bombs over the Bardenas Reales range.
The design of the F-111's fuselage prevents the carriage of external weapons under the fuselage (although there are two small stations, one on the weapon bay, the other on the rear fuselage between the engines, for
ECM pods and/or
datalink pods for guided weapons). All aircraft have provision for eight underwing pylons, four under each wing, with a capacity of 6,000 lb (2,700 kg) each. The inner pylons (3, 4, 5 and 6) pivot with the wing, but only one on each side can be loaded at maximum sweep. The outer pylons (1, 2, 7 and 8) are fixed, and can be loaded only if the wings are spread at less than 26°, causing drag at takeoff angle. The outermost pylons (1 and 8) have never been used operationally, and the second pair of fixed pylons (2 and 7) are fitted only rarely, for the carriage of fuel tanks. FB-111/F-111G models have provision to jettison their empty pylons in flight, reducing drag.
The limited number of fully swiveling pylons restricts the F-111's maximum practical weapons load, since the aircraft cannot use all pylons with the wings fully swept. By contrast, aircraft such as the F-14 and Tornado can carry their maximum bomb loads with fully swept wings.
The primary external armament of USAF tactical F-111s included:
★ Free-fall
GP bombs:
★
★
Mk 82 (500 lb/227 kg)
★
★
Mk 83 (1,000 lb/454 kg)
★
★
Mk 84 (2,000 lb/907 kg)
★
★
Mk 117 (750 lb/340 kg)
★
Cluster bombs
★
BLU-109 (2,000 lb/907 kg) hardened penetration bomb
★
Paveway laser-guided bombs, including:
★
★
GBU-10 (2,000 lb/907 kg)
★
★
GBU-12 (500 lb/227 kg)
★
★
GBU-28, a very specialized 4,800 lb (2,200 kg) penetration bomb
★
BLU-107 Durandal runway-cratering bomb
★
GBU-15 electro-optical bomb
★
AGM-130 stand-off bomb, with a range of 40 miles (64 km).
Although all F-111s can carry laser-guided munitions, only those with
Pave Tack (i.e., F-111F and Australian F-111C) are capable of self-designation. Others can drop laser-guided weapons only with the aid of another ground or air designator.
From the early 1980s onward, tactical F-111s were fitted with shoulder rails on the sides of the outboard swiveling pylon (designated stations 3A and 6A) for two AIM-9 Sidewinder
air-to-air missiles for self-defense. The standard Sidewinder fit was the AIM-9P, rather than the more modern AIM-9L or AIM-9M, whose larger fins were not compatible with the shoulder rail. The RAAF has considered replacing the Sidewinder with
ASRAAM.
FB-111As could carry the same conventional ordnance as their tactical brothers, but their wing pylons were more commonly used for either fuel tanks or strategic nuclear gravity bombs. Until the weapon was withdrawn in
1990, they could carry up to four
AGM-69 SRAM nuclear missiles on the wing pylons, although two was the more normal fit.
Australian F-111Cs have been equipped to launch the
AGM-84 Harpoon anti-ship missile,
AGM-88 HARM anti-radiation missile, and the
AGM-142 Popeye stand-off missile.
Operational history
The
Strategic Air Command had FB-111s in service from 1969 through 1990.
The F-111 was in service with the USAF from 1967 through 1998. It entered active service with the
Royal Australian Air Force in 1973 and is currently scheduled to remain with the RAAF until 2010. Concerns of the RAAF not having an aircraft to replace the F-111's role between retirement of the F-111 and the introduction of the
F-35 Lightning II were quashed with the announcement by the Australian Department of Defence on
7 March 2007, that the RAAF would procure 24
F/A-18F Block II Super Hornets, with the first being delivered in 2010, and the last scheduled for delivery in 2011.
Variants
F-111A
The 'F-111A' was the initial production version of the F-111. It had TF30-P-3 engines with 12,000 lbf (53 kN) dry and 18,500 lbf (82 kN) afterburning thrust and "Triple Plow I" variable intakes, providing a maximum speed of Mach 2.2 (1,450 mph / 2,300 km/h) at altitude.
The -A's Mark I
avionics suite included the
General Electric AN/APQ-113 attack
radar mated to a separate
Texas Instruments AN/APQ-110
terrain-following radar under the nose and a
Litton AJQ-20
inertial navigation and nav/attack system.
Total production of the F-111A was 158, including 17 preproduction aircraft that were later brought up to production standards.
The first production F-111s were delivered on
18 July,
1967 to the 428th, 429th and 430th Tactical Fighter Squadrons of the
474th Tactical Fighter Wing based at first out of
Cannon AFB,
New Mexico, which relocated in
1968 to
Nellis AFB.
After early testing a detachment of six aircraft were sent in March
1968 to Southeast Asia for Combat Lancer testing in real combat conditions in
Vietnam. In little over a month, three aircraft were lost and the combat tests were halted. It turned out that all three had been lost through malfunction (primarily with the terrain-following radar), not by enemy action. This caused a storm of political recrimination, with US senators denouncing Secretary of Defense
McNamara's judgment in procuring the aircraft.
Behind the scenes, lessons were being learned and fixes being applied, but it was not until July
1971 that the 474 TFW was fully operational. Testing in
1969 had revealed that a contractor had been paying off inspectors to approve sub-standard work on structural wing components, and all aircraft had to have the component replaced at significant cost (since most F-111As had been already completed). More failures were found and corrected in the wing pivot forgings.
September
1972 saw the F-111 back in Southeast Asia, participating in the final month of
Operation Linebacker and later the
Operation Linebacker II aerial offensive against the North. F-111 missions did not require tankers or ECM support, and they could operate in weather that grounded most other aircraft. One F-111 could carry the bomb load of four
F-4 Phantom IIs. The worth of the new planes was beginning to show, and over 4,000 combat F-111A missions were flown over Vietnam with only six combat losses.
In
1977 the remaining F-111As were transferred to the
366 TFW based at
Mountain Home AFB, equipping the 389th and 391st TFS.
In
1982, four surviving F-111As were converted to F-111C standard and provided to Australia as attrition replacements. They were fitted with the longer-span wings and reinforced landing gear of the -C, and subsequently were almost indistinguishable from new-build F-111Cs. Some of the -As delivered to the RAAF were Vietnam veterans, purportedly still bearing the scars of anti-aircraft fire.
A total of 42 F-111As were converted as the
EF-111A Raven for an
electronic warfare tactical electronic jamming role. They can be distinguished from other -As by the equipment bulge atop their tails, a featuring leading to the nickname "Fat Tail."
Three pre-production aircraft were provided to
NASA for various testing duties. One was fitted with a variable-camber wing as part of the Advanced Fighter Technology Integration program in the 1980s; it was retired to the
United States Air Force Museum at
Wright Patterson AFB in
1989.
Most of the unconverted surviving F-111As were retired in
1991 and mothballed at
AMARC,
Davis Monthan AFB.
F-111B
The 'F-111B' was to be a fleet-defense fighter for the US Navy, fulfilling a long-standing naval requirement for a fighter capable of carrying heavy, long-range missiles to defend carriers from Soviet
anti-ship missiles. The Navy had just cancelled the
F6D Missileer, a concept for a slow, straight-winged jet with the advanced Hughes
AN/AWG-9 pulse-Doppler radar, which could detect low flying targets among ground clutter, and lift eight new
AIM-54 Phoenix long range, air-to-air missiles, which could attack multiple aircraft simultaneously at ranges out to 100 miles. The concept was soon cancelled, but the F-111 offered a platform with the range, payload, and Mach 2 performance of a fighter to intercept targets quickly, but with swing wings and turbofan engines, it could also loiter on station for long periods. The F-111B would carry six Phoenix missiles, but have no gun or other short range armament. General Dynamics, having no experience with carrier-based aviation, partnered with
Grumman for this version.
The F-111B was a compromise that attempted to reconcile the Navy's very different needs with an aircraft whose basic configuration was largely set by the USAF need for a supersonic strike aircraft, and those compromises would harm both versions. The side-by-side seating was preferred by the Navy from the Missileer. The B was shorter than the F-111A, to enable it to fit on carrier lifts, but had a longer wingspan (70 ft/21.3 m compared to 63 ft/19.2 m) for increased range and cruising endurance. Although the Navy had wanted a 48-inch (122 cm) radar dish for long range, they were forced to accept a 36-inch (91.4 cm) dish for compatibility. The Navy had requested a maximum takeoff weight of 50,000 lb (22,686 kg), but Secretary of Defense McNamara forced them to compromise at 55,000 lb (24,955 kg). This weight goal proved to be overly optimistic, although later successful fighters such as the
F-14 Tomcat and
F/A-18E/F Super Hornet would also far exceed these target weights.
Excessive weight plagued the B throughout its development. Not only were prototypes far over the 55,000 lb (24,955 kg) limit, efforts to redesign the airframe only made matters worse. The excessive weight made the aircraft seriously underpowered. In landing configuration at carrier weights, the F-111B could not maintain level flight on one engine, which would be a major problem once committed to the approach. Worse, its visibility for carrier approach and landing were abysmal.
Requirements for the F-111B had been formulated before air combat over Vietnam in 1965 showed the Navy still had a need for an aircraft which could engage MiG fighters at close range. The Navy desired a fighter with more performance than the
F-4 Phantom II, yet in trials, the maneuverability and performance of the F-111B, especially in the crucial medium-altitude regimen, was decidedly inferior to the Phantom. During the congressional hearings for the aircraft, Vice Admiral
Thomas "Tom Cat" Connolly, then CNO (Air), famously responded to a Senator's question as to whether a more powerful engine would cure the aircraft's woes, "There isn't enough power in all Christendom to make that airplane what we want!"
[1]
By October 1967, the Navy was finally convinced that the F-111B program was a lost cause and recommended its cancellation, which occurred in 1968 after seven had been delivered
[2], two of which had crashed. The swing-wing configuration, TF-30 engines, Phoenix missiles and radar developed for this plane (and the earlier, cancelled
F6D Missileer) were used on its replacement, the
F-14 Tomcat, also designed by
Grumman. The Tomcat would be large enough to carry the AWG-9 and Phoenix weapons system while exceeding the agility of the F-4 Phantom.
F-111C

An Australian F-111C in 2006.
The 'F-111C' was an export version for
Australia, combining F-111A/E avionics with the long-span wings and heavier landing gear originally designed for the F-111B. Twenty-four were originally ordered in
1963, although development delays and structural problems kept them from entering service until 1973.
Four aircraft were modified to 'RF-111C' reconnaissance configuration, retaining their strike capability. The RF-111C carries a reconnaissance pack with four cameras and an infrared
linescan unit.
F-111C aircraft have been equipped to carry
Pave Tack FLIR/laser pods, and later underwent an extensive Avionics Upgrade Program, with AN/APQ-169 attack radar replacing the elderly AN/APQ-113, Texas Instruments AN/APQ-171 terrain-following radar, twin Honeywell H423 ring-laser gyro
INS,
GPS receiver, modern digital databus, mission computer, and stores-management system, and cockpit multi-function displays (MFDs). Their engines were updated to TF30-P-108/109RA standard, with 21,000 lbf (93 kN) thrust. Four ex-USAF F-111As were refitted to F-111C standard and delivered to Australia as attrition replacements.
In late 2001, wing fatigue problems were discovered with one of the F-111C fleet. As a result a decision was made in May 2002 to replace the wings with spares taken from ex-USAF F-111Fs stored at the
Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Center. The short span wings underwent a refurbishment in Australia which included extending the span in effect making the wings the same as the F-111C and F-111G models.
[2]
The F-111 is expected to remain in
RAAF service until
2010. In 2010, the F-111 fleet will be retired and replaced by 24 F/A-18F Block II Super Hornet in RAAF Service. Final deliveries of F/A-18Fs to the RAAF will be late 2011.
F-111D
The 'F-111D' was an upgraded F-111A equipped with newer Mark II avionics, more powerful engines, improved intake geometry, and an early "glass cockpit." First ordered in 1967, extensive development problems delayed service entry until 1974, and only 96 were built.
The F-111D used the new Triple Plow 2 intakes, which were located four inches (100 mm) further away from the airframe to prevent engine ingestion of the sluggish
boundary layer air that was known to cause stalls in the TF30 turbofans. It had more powerful TF30-P-3 engines with 12,000 lbf (53 kN) dry and 18,500 lbf (82 kN) afterburning thrust.
More significant– and problematic– were the Mark II avionics. These were digitally integrated microprocessor systems, some of the first used by the
USAF, offering tremendous capability, but substantial problems during introduction. The main radar was the General Electric AN/APQ-114, with Doppler beam-sharpening, moving target indicator (MTI), and continuous wave mode for guiding
semi-active radar homing missiles (which the standard AN/APQ-113 set lacked). This was matched with an
Autonetics inertial navigation/attack radar system,
Marconi Doppler radar for navigation, a horizontal situation display, an
IBM processor, and a
Norden integrated systems display, with modern multi-function displays (MFDs). These last proved to be a major source of trouble, serving to multiply the development problems experienced with the individual systems. Considerable acrimony between the contractors resulted, and it took years before the problems were solved. F-111 crews considered the -D the most capable (and user-friendly) version of the aircraft when everything functioned, but that was rare before the 1980s.
Incidentally, the F-111D was never equipped to carry what proved to be the "Aardvark's" most useful sensor system, the AN/AVQ-26 '
Pave Tack' pod.
The F-111D was withdrawn from service in 1992 for mothballing at AMARC.
F-111E
The 'F-111E' was a simplified, interim model ordered after the prolonged teething troubles of the F-111D. It used the -D's Triple Plow 2 intakes and more powerful TF30-P-3 engines, but retained the -A's Mark I avionics.
Although conceived after the -D, the F-111E was actually delivered before it. The first flight of an -E was
20 August 1969. A total of 94 were built.
Some F-111Es were based at
RAF Upper Heyford in
Oxfordshire (United Kingdom) until 1993, and the type saw service in
Operation Desert Storm. All F-111Es were withdrawn to storage in 1993 and 1994.
F-111F

Ground crew prepares a 48th Tactical Fighter Wing F-111F aircraft for a retaliatory air strike on Libya.
The 'F-111F' was the final F-111 variant produced for
Tactical Air Command, with more modern and advanced Mark IIB avionics that were more capable than the F-111E and much more reliable than the F-111D. A total of 106 were produced between
1971 and
1976. The aircraft were initially assigned to the
366 TFW at
Mountain Home AFB,
Idaho. In 1978, the F-111Fs were reassigned to the
48 TFW based at
RAF Lakenheath in the United Kingdom, with some assigned to the
57th Fighter Weapons Wing at Nellis AFB.
The F-111F's Mark IIB avionics suite used a simplified version of the FB-111A's radar, the AN/APQ-144, lacking some of the strategic bomber's operating modes but adding a new 2.5 mi (4.0 km) display ring. Although it was tested with digital moving-target indicator (MTI) capacity, it was not used in production sets. It used
Texas Instruments AN/APQ-146 terrain-following radar, Litton inertial navigation, and the F-111E's Weapon Control Panel. The internal weapons bay was normally occupied by a AVQ-26
Pave Tack FLIR and
laser designator system for the delivery of precision laser-guided munitions. The radar was subsequently upgraded to AN/APQ-161, with the AN/APQ-171 terrain-following set. The later Pacer Strike avionics update program added new digital electronics and databus.
The -F also used the Triple Plow 2 intakes, along with the substantially more powerful TF30-100 turbofan with 25,100 lbf (112 kN) afterburning thrust. This substantially improves the -F's performance, allowing a top speed of Mach 2.5 at altitude and enabling an unloaded F-111F to
supercruise (fly at supersonic speeds without afterburner). In 1985-86, engines were upgraded to the TF30-P-111 turbofan.
The F-111F made its combat debut in
Operation El Dorado Canyon against
Libya in 1986, and performed superbly in
Operation Desert Storm against Iraq, where it unexpectedly added the anti-armor ("
tank-plinking") role to its resume. In Desert Storm, F-111F completed 3.2 successful strike missions for every unsuccessful one, making it 47% more capable than the the next leading strike aircraft.
[3]
Various plans to upgrade the F-111F, including the adoption of the
General Electric F110 engine (used in the
F-14D Tomcat), were proposed, but not implemented because they might have interfered with the USAF's political efforts to build the
F-22 Raptor. As a result, the last USAF F-111s were withdrawn from service on
27 July 1996, replaced by the
F-15E Strike Eagle.
FB-111A/F-111G

An air-to-air front overhead view of two FB-111 aircraft in formation.
The 'FB-111A' was a
strategic bomber version of the F-111 developed as an interim aircraft for the
Strategic Air Command to replace the elegant but troublesome supersonic
B-58 Hustler and early models of the
B-52 Stratofortress. The planned replacement program, the
Advanced Manned Strategic Aircraft, was proceeding slowly, and the Air Force was concerned that fatigue failures in the B-52 fleet would leave the strategic bomber fleet dangerously under strength. Although 263 planes were planned originally, the total was finally cut to just 76. The first production aircraft was delivered in 1968. The FB-111A never had an official popular name, but it was commonly called the "Switchblade."
The FB-111A was 2 ft 1.5 in (650 mm) longer than the F-111A, allowing carriage of about 585 gallons (2,214 L) extra fuel, and was fitted with the longer wings of the abortive F-111B and F-111K for greater range and load-carrying ability. A stronger undercarriage and
landing gear compensated for the higher take-off weights (gross weight rose to 119,250 lb/54,105 kg). All but the first aircraft had the Triple Plow 2 intakes and the TF30-P-7 with 12,500 lbf (56 kN) dry and 20,350 lbf (90 kN) afterburning thrust.
The FB-111A had new electronics, known as the SAC Mk IIB suite. The Mk IIB retained the F-111A's Texas Instruments AN/ANPQ-134 terrain-following radar and Honeywell AN/APN-167 radar altimeter. Radar was the General Electric AN/APQ-114, with a new north-oriented display, a beacon tracking mode, and a photo recording mode. To those components, the FB-111A added a Rockwell AN/AJN-16 inertial navigation system,
Singer-Kearfott AN/APN-185 Doppler radar, and the Litton AN/ASQ-119 Astrotracker
astrocompass, which allowed navigation by stellar positioning (a similar system had been used on the
SR-71 Blackbird). A Horizontal Situation Display was added along with the AN/AYK-6 cockpit display. A unique feature of the FB-111A was that the TFR was integrated into the automatic flight control system, allowing "hands-off" flight at high speeds and low levels (down to 200 feet), even in adverse weather.
Armament for the strategic bombing role was the Boeing
AGM-69 SRAM (short-range attack missile) which had Mach 3 speed and 110 mile range. Two could be carried in the internal weapons bay and four more on the inner underwing pylons. Nuclear gravity bombs were also typical FB armament. Fuel tanks were often carried on the 3rd non-swivelling pylon of each wing. Promotional photos showed a conventional bombload to a theoretical total of 50, 750 lb (340 kg) M117 weapons on eight pylons and bomb bay, but it was never used in a conventional role. In 1990, the SRAM was withdrawn from service amid concerns about the integrity of its nuclear warhead in the case of fire, and subsequently only unpowered bombs were available.
The FB-111 became surplus to SAC's needs after the introduction of the Rockwell B-1B Lancer, and the remaining FB-111s were converted to a tactical configuration and renamed the 'F-111G'. They were used primarily for training.
The F-111G did undergo an avionics upgrade program that added a digital computer, dual AN/ASN-41 ring-laser gyro INS, AN/APN-218 Doppler navigation, and an updated terrain-following radar. The astrocompass system was deleted.
The G model did not remain in USAF service for long, being mothballed in 1993, but 15 were bought by Australia to supplement its F-111Cs.
Several "stretched" FB-111 variants (the 'FB-111B', with F101 engines and a longer fuselage, and the greatly enlarged 'FB-111H', intended as a possible replacement for the B-1A after that project's cancellation) were proposed in the late 1970s, but none were ever built.
EF-111A Raven
Main articles: EF-111 Raven
To replace the elderly and obsolescent
Douglas EB-66, in 1972 the USAF contracted Grumman to convert some existing F-111As into
electronic warfare/ECM aircraft. In May 1998, the USAF withdrew the final EF-111As from service, placing them in storage at AMARC. In the short term,
EA-6B Prowlers are fulfilling this function for both the US Navy and USAF.
Foreign sales
Australia

Four Australian F-111s in 2006.
The Australian government ordered 24 'F-111C' aircraft in 1963 to replace the
RAAF's
English Electric Canberra in the bombing and tactical strike role. While the first aircraft was officially handed over in 1968, structural integrity problems found in the USAF fleet delayed the service entry of the F-111C until 1973, USAF F-4 Phantom IIs being leased as an interim measure. Four aircraft were modified to 'RF-111C' reconnaissance configuration, retaining their strike capability.
A number of ex-USAF aircraft have been delivered to Australia, as attrition replacements and to enlarge the fleet. Four aircraft modified to F-111C status were delivered in 1982, while 18 F-111G aircraft were purchased in 1992 and delivered in 1994. Additional stored USAF airframes are reserved as a spares source.
Since their introduction Australia's F-111s have been operated by
No. 1 Squadron RAAF in the strike role with
No. 6 Squadron RAAF operating the aircraft as an
operational conversion unit. A temporary flight designated the
Washington Flying Unit ferried Australia's first 12 aircraft from the United States in 1973 and F-111s have been loaned to the RAAF's
Aircraft Research and Development Unit. The aircraft will be retired in 2010 with No. 1 and No. 6 Squadrons being reequipped with
F/A-18F Block II Super Hornets.
While the F-111 has not seen combat in Australian service, it is known that F-111 aircraft were placed on high alert during the initial phase of the Australian-lead intervention (
INTERFET) into
East Timor in 1999. During the first
Gulf War in 1991, the United States Government asked Australia to deploy RF-111 aircraft to the Persian Gulf. This request was denied as the Australian government judged that these aircraft were too important to Australia's security to risk in a distant war.

A RAAF F-111C with wings swept fully back doing a "torching" (dump and burn) routine.
The Royal Australian Air Force's F-111 fleet has at times been controversial. Controversies surrounding the F-111 include:
★ The long delay to the delivery of the aircraft was a significant political issue in the late 1960s and early 1970s. This occurred around the same time that massive delays and cost blowouts to the
Sydney Opera House were making headlines, prompting some commentators to dub the F-111 the "Flying Opera House."
[3]
★ Their use by the
Hawke federal government to take surveillance photos of the
Franklin Dam project in
Tasmania.
★ Poor work conditions for F-111 ground crew involved in sealing/de-sealing F-111 fuel tanks resulted in permanent brain damage to a number of ground crew before conditions were improved.
In Australian military and aviation circles, the F-111 Aardvark is affectionately known as the "Pig," because of its ability to hunt amongst the weeds like its namesake, referring to the F-111's
Terrain Following ability, which was unique at the time of its introduction. Another, less generous explanation of the source of the nickname refers to the colloquialism "Pigs Might Fly." A third origin can be posited from the word
Aardvark, which translates into English as ''"Earth Pig."''
United Kingdom
The British government cancelled the
BAC TSR-2 in 1965, citing the lower costs of the TFX and ordered 50 'F-111K' aircraft in 1967. The F-111K was based on the F-111A, modified for British equipment and weapons. This included weapons bay changes, compatibility with the
Martel anti-shipping missile, the addition of a retractable refuelling probe and the use of FB-111A landing gear for a higher gross take off weight. Prototypes of both the strike and TF-111K trainer aircraft were started and were in the final stages of build when the order was cancelled just over a year later. Updated estimates of performance indicated that range and speed at altitude would be worse than expected and fall short of the specification. Cost increase together with
devaluation of the pound meant that the cost would be around £3 million each and this was the reason cited for cancellation.
[4] As a substitute,
Blackburn Buccaneers and
F-4 Phantom IIs were purchased instead for the RAF.
Specifications (F-111D)

An orthographically projected diagram of the F-111.
Survivors
★ One is on display at
Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum,
Denver, Colorado.
[5]
See
Aviation Enthusiast's List of F-111 Survivors for a full list.
Popular culture
★ American artist
James Rosenquist immortalized the aircraft in his acclaimed 1965 room-sized
pop art painting entitled ''F-111'' that features an early natural-finish example of the plane in USAF markings. The painting hangs in the
Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
★ The Australian band
Cold Chisel has a song "F-111" reflecting the long-standing influence that the F-111 has occupied in the country's public psyche.
[6]
References
1. Knaack, Marcelle Size. ''Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems: Volume 1 Post-World War II Fighters 1945-1973''. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History, 1978. ISBN 0-912799-59-5.
2. Pittaway, Nigel. "21st Century Pigs: F-111 in RAAF Service." ''International Air Power Review, Vol. 6, 2002,'' p. 18-31.
3. http://www.gao.gov/archive/1997/ns97134.pdf
4. Buttler, Tony. ''British Secret Projects: Jet Bombers Since 1949''. London: Midland Publishing, 2003. ISBN 1-85780-130-X.
5. Wings Over the Rockies Air & Space Museum - FB-111A Denver, CO
6. The lyrics
★ Thornborough, Anthony M. ''F-111 Aardvark''. London: Arms and Armour, 1989. ISBN 0-85368-935-0.
★ Winchester, Jim, ed. "General Dynamics FB-111A." "Grumman/General Dynamics EF-111A Raven." ''Military Aircraft of the Cold War (The Aviation Factfile)''. London: Grange Books plc, 2006. ISBN 1-84013-929-3.
External links
★
Royal Australian Air Force F-111 page
★
F-111 profile on Aerospaceweb.org
★
F-111.net
★
F-111 page on CombatAircraft.com
★
F-111 on ausairpower.net
★
Are the F-111's Really Stuffed? by Don Middleton
ADA ''Defender'' Summer 2006/07
★
Report of the RAAF Evaluation Team for a replacement Strike/Reconaissance Aircraft for Air Staff Requirement (ASR) 36 from the National Archives of Australia
★
F-111 page on USAF National Museum web site
★
''F-111C Thunderstruck'': A music video containing rare RAAF footage set to ''AC/DC's ''Thunderstruck''
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