Why the F-111 Aardvark was very tedious to maintain - Aviation Wings Why the F-111 Aardvark was very tedious to maintain - Aviation Wings

Why the F-111 Aardvark was very tedious to maintain

The F-111 Aardvark

The F-111 Aardvark was an all-weather attack aircraft capable of low-level penetration of enemy defenses to deliver ordnance on the target. Additionally, it was the first aircraft in production to use variable-sweep wings, sometimes referred to as swing wings. Following a difficult development, the F-111 joined the US Air Force in 1967. Before retiring in 1998, it flew in the first Gulf War, Operation El Dorado Canyon, and Vietnam. Up until 2010, when the aircraft was called “the pig,” the F-111 remained in service with the Royal Australian Air Force.

Maintaining the F-111 Aardvark

What was maintaining the F-111 like?

Royal Wesley, a former USAF F-111 environmental control systems specialist, explains on Quora;

A 20th Tactical Fighter Wing F-111E is serviced in a hangar

‘Very tedious. I worked the Environmental Control System (air conditioning, pressurization, oxygen, anti-g suit, radar cooling). Each aircraft has its own little pains, and this was no exception. Where modern aircraft were designed for ease of maintenance, the F-111 design engineers seemed to have never heard of that concept. Access to system components in many areas required extensive tear-down, which added to downtime.

‘While working on my own systems I couldn’t help but notice issues some others had. The engines really sucked, not from a performance standpoint but containment of turbine blades. In the three years that I worked that jet all of the engines in the Wing (my 111 service was done at Nellis AFB near Las Vegas) were completely disassembled and inspected 3 different times for turbine blade separation twice causing catastrophic damage to the rear of the aircraft.’

Noise pollution

Wesley continues;

‘It was very noisy. Way beyond the normal jet noise pollution.

‘No health issues at all that could be called service-related. [At Nellis] there is a mountain parallel to the runway that we called Sunrise Mountain. I believe this reflected some of the noise on takeoff. I have never heard an F-35 up close and personal, but if it is as loud as the F-111 was, there will be some serious hearing issues after service.

‘We had one crash on landing. Parts including a burning tire bounced onto the line and fell smoldering among two rows of mission-ready aircraft. The jet’s weapons bay was easily available to anyone who wanted to acquire a souvenir. We called it a triple threat. It bombed them, strafed them, or fell on them. But she looked so sexy.’

The F-111 didn’t have a name during its service

Wesley concludes;

‘Many have never heard the 111 called Aardvark. This aircraft was unique in that it didn’t have a name during its service. It was named at the time of its retirement.’

Photo by Sgt David S. Nolan / U.S. Air Force

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