Sunday, November 2, 2025

A-12 Oxcarts at Palmdale

 


9 comments:

  1. Dunno when this photo was taken, but these are nine planes out of 13 built, with three lost to accidents and one configured with a second seat for training. Kelly Johnson’s biography about those days is well worth the read.

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  2. I wonder if this is the B-58 "Hustler"?

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  3. No, not Hustlers. They are A12's according to the caption, a design that preceded the well known SR71. I thought the A12's had a cutout in the chine for radar but am happy to bow to someone that knows more than I do. What I love is that they are made largely from titanium and the US had to import it from the USSR to make a spy aircraft that would be able to operate with impunity over the USSR.

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    1. The one with the truncated chine was the YF-12A interceptor. The nose was modified and lengthened to hold the fire control radar, and a 2nd seat added for weapons operator). The leading edge of the truncated chines on each side had infrared search and track sensors in them.

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  4. The A-12 Oxcarts were built for the CIA, the SR-71s for the Airforce. Both reconnaissance. Separate aircraft. Good summary here at https://worldwarwings.com/the-distinct-differences-between-the-a-12-and-sr-71/

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  5. look like knife blades

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  6. American ingenuity at its finest. - Nemo

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  7. They were relatively quickly and inexpensively compared to today’s boondoggles like the f35

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  8. one sits on the entrance sidewalk at the Huntsville, AL Spacecenter

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