Sunday, August 16, 2020

The F-117 fleet is alive and operational.


A handful of the roughly four dozen F-117s still stored at Tonopah Test Range Airport (TTR) have continued to take part in research and development efforts, largely in relation to low-observable testing, which includes trialing new radar-absorbent coatings and off-board sensors. They are a central player in what is emerging to be a low-observable integrated testing task force that largely emanates from TTR and includes access to a number of exotic testbed aircraft, sensors, and threat representative systems. But another part of the F-117's duties has blossomed into a more traditional role. 

In May of 2020, the F-117s did something unprecedented, they flew a number of red air missions out over Pacific against a Navy Carrier Strike Groupthat was undergoing its most deeply integrated and complex training just prior to deployment. Since then, they have been spotted often over the vast expanses of the Mojave Desert and the NTTR. They even landed at Edwards Air Force Base recently, another first since their retirement a dozen years ago, at least as far as we know. All of this has perpetuated a sense that the F-117s are creeping steadily out of the shadows once again. 

Between Aug. 10 and 14, no less than what appears to be six F-117s appear to have been parked in the open on TTR's northern ramp. This was a first as far as we know. Usually, no more than two F-117s go about their shy business from the base. These aircraft typically spend a brief time on the ramp and park in their own hangars after their missions are completed. Having six nighthawks consistently on the ramp during the last week of Red Flag seems very similar to the strip alert-like tactics that aggressors of the past have used at the secretive base. 


4 comments:

  1. these were used a lot at the military base I worked on. they always had an aluminum fighter escort so the RADAR knew where to point, because otherwise it would be all "which way did he go?"

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  2. Back when the F-117 first went into squadron service, the joke was that one of them called LAX Center for a clearance. "Los Angeles Center, Air Force One Niner Xray with you level at Flight Level 400."  LAX replied, "Roger Air Force One Niner Xray, radar contact."

    Yeah, I know, totally unlikely, but it's a joke.

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  3. LIkely they are there as a decoy while the AF flies the next version

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  4. Very interesting. I wonder if they are a show for China.

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