Alan Brooks wrote:
Randy, I am going to ask you this question. Not to put you on the spot, but because, you have the knowledge to expertly answer. Between the F-14 and F/A-18 (can be any version or generic), which of these fighters (if you were facing them) just made your work load go up tremendously. Another way of saying it would be "which airplane gets more of your respect" (pilots are equal, any ACM scenario). Probably not going to the answer I'm looking for, but I am looking for the Pro Fighter Pilot opinion. Alan
As with anything, "it depends".
When I was a brand-new F-15E pilot, I had the opportuity to fly against an F-14A in a 1 v 1. I was surprisingly able to kick the snot out of him. Three years later, I had a similar 1 v 1 opportunity against an F-14D -- this time I was the one getting the crap beat out of him. IMHO, the D Model Tomcat is a pretty good fighter -- good engines and good radar -- that still suffers from some of the limitations of the Tomcat airframe (like numbers of places to hang ordnance, where the targeting pod is mounted, overall G limit, etc). It didn't carry the AMRAAM (the A model), so it suffered in the medium range BVR arena significantly (don't let the Phoenix fanboys convince you otherwise...).
The F-18, on the other hand, is a phenomenal dogfighter in the slow speed regime. Get that guy slow and he can point his nose (and thus his weapons) anywhere he pleases, which is pretty unique among currently active fighters. It doesn't have the power of the Tomkitty, as it's considered a "lightweight" fighter. I consider the F-18D and F-18F "Mini Strike Eagles".
Which one would I worry more about? Both of 'em, heh heh. I would NEVER underestimate anyone I was fighting, including an F-14A, because you can get the tar beat outta you by darn near any piece of equipment, depending on what the scenario is and who is flying it....
When I flew AT-38s, you would not believe the number of times I "killed" F-16s and F-15s in air-to-air engagements, even though I had no radar and no medium-range missile capability. Why? The T-38 is small visually and has a small radar cross section. If you can slip in un-noticed and turn the battle into a gunfight at close range, the odds change significantly. Even better, if you can get into a shot position WITHOUT BEING SEEN, you're in REALLY good shape, and that's what happened most times with the AT-38.