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F-5E Tiger: A Stalwart of Air Combat Joins the Heritage Flight Foundation

Legendary is the F-5E Tiger fighter, considering it joins the Heritage Flight Foundation’s already esteemed collection. It is just a newfound addition to its ranks, which gives testimony to the longevity and remarkable position of F-5 in so many air combat training programs.

The Air Force Heritage Flight Foundation is a nonprofit organization famous for its Heritage Flights, showing different historical airframes from World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. Thus, it is just really proper for the F-5E Tiger to form part of this program, which belongs to this program since it is a historical airframe from extensive export and use in many armed forces around the world.

The life of the F-5 began right after World War II when NATO called for a lightweight tactical fighter. Powered by the General Electric J85 turbojet engine, the Northrop Grumman design was simply a marvel of its age, with a thrust-to-weight ratio that outclassed its competitors. It was light, had good handling characteristics, was inexpensive, supersonic up to Mach 1.63, could climb at 35,000 feet per minute, and carried two 20mm M39A2 Revolver cannons.

Originally conceived as a daylight air superiority fighter, the F-5 also turned out to have strong potential for ground-attack applications, thereby lending credibility to the multi-role vision. The F-5A entered production in the early-’60s, to date over 800 for US-leaning nations were achieved by the mid-’70s.

Evolution of the F-5 The second-generation variant, the F-5EII Tiger, was developed due to the mounting threat posed by the USSR in the guise of the Cold War. The huge improvements in it featured newer engines, a bigger wing area, more fuel capacity, and upgraded avionics. A lot of action was seen by the F-5E Tiger II in the Vietnam War. Over 1,400 units had been built until the late 1980s. 

The affordability and lower maintenance costs of the F-5 contributed to several nations wanting to opt for it in the international export market, thus contributing to its presence in numerous modern fighter fleets. Its use in training and combat scenarios has been very important, but its addition to the Heritage Flight program only helps with more feathers in the cap of the aircraft.

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