VAQ was EA-3Bs - electronic snoopers. They sent dets to various Carriers. VAP was heavy photo, with RA-3Bs. VAK was converted A-3Bs to KA-3Bs and later EKA-3Bs. Again, tailored dets to deployed Carriers were the standard ops method in those days, after the pure bombers went away as the A-6 came into the fleet.
God's truth there, LOL... same thing with the F-8's. John Massey, our Maintenance Master Chief in VFP-63, always carried one of those red shop rags in his pocket to wipe leaking hydraulic fluid off the jets as he traveled around the hangar and flight line. An A-3 "in the groove" would always cause the flight deck personnel to perk up and move away from the landing foul line, especially on the Essex class carriers. That was a big jet to be operating on those smaller decks.I flew with some spooks that had some time (previously) in the whales. They would say that if it wasn't leaking hydraulic fluid, don't get in it - that means it was empty.
You are correct, I miss-spoke (typed?) that it was an FE seat. My experience was in P-3s so my mind just sort of went there. When I was at Pt. Mugu, there was a VAQ? unit next to us flying A-3s Would that of been EA-3 of some sort?
Sean
I checked out in the KA-3B and RA-3B as a test pilot at Pax River in the 70's. I was pretty senior and experienced, and really learned to like the plane in general, but could well understand the problems it could have aboard ship - ESPECIALLY the small converted ESSEX Class that still populated the fleet up into the mid 70s. I also enjoyed flying with the small cadre of enlisted aircrewmen we had to fly in, and help maintain, them at NATC. We had a sort of "Whale Flying Club", and were pretty proud of it.
Although I had flown many types of planes with many different types of engines, I really liked the reliability, response, and yes - the sound - of the J-57 engine.
Now over in the USAF, the B-66 was what it was a medium bomber...considered the replacement for the B-45...
Ok the EA-3 was a signals intelligence gatherer, ESM (electronic support measures )in Navy terms. It had the ability to conduct defensive ECM. They were usually to fleet reconnaissance squadrons which were designated VQ. The USN had four of these squadrons VQ-1 to VQ- 4. They usually were stationed ashore and sent out to the carriers if their mission capabilities were needed.
Then you had the EKA-3, that was a duel role machine. These planes were usually assigned to VAQ squadrons aboard the carriers. They performed tanking duty, but they also were the ECM force for a strike package. They provided defensive and offensive ECM. Defensive they identified enemy radar and missiles launch areas, and then they conducted offensive ECM by jamming them. This role would later be taken on by the EA-6B Provider. It should be pointed out that the first designation for these squadrons were VAW as detachments. Once these detachments were re-classed as VAQ, VAW squadrons redirected to a total AEW role.
When the A-3B first entered the fleet they were deployed as VAH, heavy attack squadrons, but once the heavy attack role was removed from the carriers the VAH squadrons shifted the role to tanking with KA-3B and provided detachments to carriers in the late 60's.
The RA-3B, was the photo recon bird and it was attached to VAP, heavy photographic squadrons and were used to watch the trails in Vietnam with inferred cameras and low light video equipment, once they found a target they would call in strikes.
The TA-3 was used in the Fleet Readiness Squadrons to train the flight crews for the Whales.
Whatever program you were watching, it is mostly crap or your memory is a little fuzzy.In 1958 I was 14 years old, I was attending Junior High in Crescent city Florida, I was going out the
door after school when I looked up and saw PV2 Neptunes circleing near by helecopters were also
in number I walked down a dirt road near the school and came upon the fuselage of a Douglas
A3D sitting upright, I picked up a small piece of tubing that read "Douglas airplane company,
then I walked further until I reached an open field there was the nose and cockpit of the A3D
laying on its side with a parachute streaming out the cockpit it had blood on it. the pilot was
still in his seat the other two crewmen had baled out. The plane was from Sanford NAS.
I was watching a program on youtube where a EA3 attempted to land at night on a carrier,
at the controls was a very young Marine 2d Lt who was bringing back a crew of ECM Operators
after a night mission in the Med. I saw the tape of the landing as he aimed for the deck and
the plane seemed to squash onto the deck going though the barriers into the ocean. According
to the story the Navy did not attempt a recovery of the plane which shows it still floating and
helicopers over it. For some reason the incident was not made public for a number of years.
But also the pilot asked the CAG if they could bail out, he was told no.
Thank You
Casey
Mike! How would you rate Alphasim's/Virtavia's A-3 handling compared to the real thing?
Joel
I did a lot of tweaking in the aircraft.cfg file to make it more useable to me, but "out of the box" it was OK. However, I can tell you that very few FSX planes fly particularly like the real thing without some work on control sensitivities, trim effectiveness, and pitch stability.
Also, thrust/fuel consumption often has to be worked on to get realistic performance. However, The Alpha/Virtavia seemed in the ball park starting out.
In 1958 I was 14 years old, I was attending Junior High in Crescent city Florida, I was going out the
door after school when I looked up and saw PV2 Neptunes circleing near by helecopters were also
in number I walked down a dirt road near the school and came upon the fuselage of a Douglas
A3D sitting upright, I picked up a small piece of tubing that read "Douglas airplane company,
then I walked further until I reached an open field there was the nose and cockpit of the A3D
laying on its side with a parachute streaming out the cockpit it had blood on it. the pilot was
still in his seat the other two crewmen had baled out. The plane was from Sanford NAS.
I was watching a program on youtube where a EA3 attempted to land at night on a carrier,
at the controls was a very young Marine 2d Lt who was bringing back a crew of ECM Operators
after a night mission in the Med. I saw the tape of the landing as he aimed for the deck and
the plane seemed to squash onto the deck going though the barriers into the ocean. According
to the story the Navy did not attempt a recovery of the plane which shows it still floating and
helicopers over it. For some reason the incident was not made public for a number of years.
But also the pilot asked the CAG if they could bail out, he was told no.
Thank You
Casey
When i was talking about the various aircraft models, I forgot to mention the ERA-3B, this "Whale" was a massive improvement over the EKA-3 in the role of offensive ECM. so much to the point it was used as an aggressor aircraft against even enemy ships radars. For radar countermeasures it had no equal until the arrival of the EA-6B Prowler, but even then it still had an ECM suite that was viable well into the 1980's. It performed both defensive and offensive ECM....
Even though its defensive ECM package is immense for the aircraft, this "Whale" was designed to get into airspace that was heavily protected by radar surveillance and to go in and get electronic signal intelligence, photographic recon, and video surveillance of a target area. You can sort of consider an ERA-3, a cross between an EA-3 area surveillance aircraft (signal intelligence) and a RA-3 photo recon bird, with hopefully deep penetration ability using its ECM suite. Unlike, EKA-3, this machine was not meant to conduct offensive ECM in support of a aerial task force. Its jamming equipment was meant to be used against area radar coverage, while the EKA-3 was more or less used to jam enemy air defense radar.
The ERA-3 proved to be an excellent area surveillance aircraft!
All that said, the aircraft converted to the ERA-3 standard spent all their useful life as aggressor aircraft in war at sea exercises simulating Soviet ECM/ESM aircraft...and also emulating Soviet bombers on cruise missile attacks!!!