JohnB wrote:
The Air Force got want it asked for...and it did a good job. Titles were superfluous.
Agree on the first part. On the second...I'm not sure they could have gotten funding for the 105 as a "bomber." "We're buying B-52s and B-58s, what do we need this 'little' hot rod bomber for?" But it looked like a sexy fighter, so nobody argued with that.
Quote:
In many ways, the armament carried on a particular sortie define the aircraft and mission....
To some extent, true. You can hang bombs and rockets and whatever on a fighter and turn it into a fighter-bomber, or "jabo," or "strike fighter" or attack aircraft, or whatever you want to call it, but it's still a fighter, which is, by definition, designed and deployed to engage, attack, and destroy
other aircraft. If it's not designed and deployed to engage other aircraft, it's not a fighter.
Quote:
Still, it could protect itself...and was certainly more a fighter than the Air Force bombers of the time.
Agreed. But it was also less a fighter than other
real fighters of the time. Even Jack Broughton said he'd have rather been flying MiGs against 105s, than 105s against MiGs, especially under the silly-ass rules of engagement he was forced to work under.
Quote:
I'll also point out, that the 105 was designed for the deep strike mission...something the F-84, F-84F, F-100C/D, F-101A/C and F-104G (albeit not in USAF service) did along with the Phantom.
And no one ever makes the point you raised about THEM... 
Agreed, the 105 was designed for deep strike, not for fighter work. The F-84, F-100, F-101, and F-104 were all initially designed as pure fighters. It just worked out that by the time some of them were deployed, they were second-rate and found meaningful work as jabos/strike fighters, recon birds, etc. As for F-84F, I think that Republic originally intended it to be at least as good as the F-86, and then found another niche for it when that didn't work out. (The politics--literal politics--of funding and building and buying these things can never be discounted, either.)
The Navy seems to have always had a better handle on the whole fighter-vs-attack thing. That's why there was an AU-1 Corsair and not an F4U-6 Corsair.
