Sunday, August 19, 2018

Blue Angels To Get New Super Hornets By The End Of 2021

Warzone/The Drive: It's Official! Blue Angels To Receive Full Squadron Of Super Hornets By End Of 2021

Blue Angels will be relinquishing their Legacy Hornets for Super Hornets in the not so distant future according to DoD contract announcement.

Well, it's actually happening. The Navy's Flight Demonstration Team, better known as the Blue Angels, is set to be fully equipped with Super Hornets by the end of 2021. The news was released with little fanfare via the daily contract announcements posted on the DoD's website, but it is very exciting news for the team and its huge global fanbase.

The contract includes the procurement of 11 kits that are based on a recent engineering study that will allow 9 F/A-18Es and 2 F/A-18Fs to be modified to suit the team's unique needs. This includes the removal of certain items, such as the jet's nose-mounted M61A2 cannon, and the installation of others, including air show smoke systems that help onlookers trace the team's path through the sky. Other modifications include a heavy spring in the control column that provides constant forward force. This helps the Blue Angel pilots pull off their especially tight formation aerobatics. There are some avionics modifications as well and, of course, the iconic blue and gold paint job.

Read more ....

Update #1: U.S. Navy Blue Angels to Get Super Hornets By The End of 2021 (Aviationist)
Update #2: The Blue Angels Are Getting 'New' Jets (Popular Mechanics)

WNU Editor: No F-35s?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

"WNU Editor: No F-35s?"
Nice catch.

Anon #87 said...

Nope.

The Blue Angels used the F-4 while the Tomcat was top fighter, the F-18a after the Phantom went out of service.

The Air Force Thunderbirds use the F16, not the F15 or the F22.


Cheaper and simpler is where it's at for tight air show schedules.

RussInSoCal said...

Blue Angels get retired aircraft which are deemed to be in good enough condition to refurb into their specification. They've been flying the A and C models for some 30+ years.

Now they'll get a jet that's 25% bigger and at least that much MAOR powerful.

RHINO,
TIME,

R,

Stephen Davenport said...

F35's are not established yet, the Super Hornet is, give it time, maybe a decade, then maybe the switch to the F-35.