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Home Base:
Boise, ID
Operation: Western and Central USA
Model: Alpha Jet
Wing Span: 29' 11"
Length: 43' 5"
Height: 13' 9"
Max Speed: 621 mph
Gross Weight: 16,535 lbs
Power Plant: 2 × SNECMA Turbomeca Larzac
04-C6 turbofans
Thrust: 2 x 3,000 lbs
Fuel Capacity:
704 gallons
Armament: Guns: 1 × 27 mm (1.06 in) Mauser
BK-27 cannon, 2 × Matra rocket pods with 18 × SNEB
68 mm rockets each, 2 × AIM-9 Sidewinders; 2 × Matra Magic IIs; 2 × AGM-65 Maverick, 2,500 kg
(5,500 lb) of payload on five external hardpoints. |
Mark
Peterson's Dornier GMBH Alpha Jet

Mark Peterson is the owner and operator of this
beautifull Dornier GMBH Alpha Jet (S/N 120), which is available for airshows, flybys
and film.
In the early 1960s, European air forces began to
consider their requirements for the coming decades. One
of the results was the emergence of a new generation of
jet trainers to replace such classic aircraft as the
Lockheed T-33 and Fouga Magister. The two main rivals in
this exercise turned out to be the BAe Hawk and the
Franco-German Dassault-Dornier Alpha Jet.
At the outset, the Alpha Jet had a lead, but the BAe
Hawk would prove to be the winner in the race. However,
the Alpha Jet has been built in good numbers and served
with a number of air forces for several decades.
In the early 1960s, the British and French began a
collaboration on development of what was supposed to be
a supersonic jet trainer/light attack aircraft. The
result of this collaboration, the SEPECAT Jaguar, proved
to be an excellent aircraft, but its definition had
evolved in the interim, and the type emerged as a
full-sized strike fighter, with two-seat variants used
for operational conversion to the type.
This left the original requirement unfulfilled and so
the French began discussions with West Germany for
collaboration. A joint specification was produced in
1968. The trainer was now subsonic, supersonic trainers
having proven something of a dead end. A joint
development and production agreement was signed in July
1969 which indicated that the two nations would buy 200
machines, each assembled in their own country.
Proposals were generated by three groups of
manufacturers:
* Dassault, Breguet and Dornier submitted the
"TA501", which had been developed through a merger of
the Breguet 126 and Dornier P.375 concepts. * SNIAS/MBB
submitted the "E.650 Eurotrainer". * VFW-Fokker
submitted the "VFT-291".
All the proposals were to be powered by twin SNECMA
Turbomeca Larzac turbofans. The Luftwaffe had insisted
that the trainer have two engines after suffering severe
attrition from accidents with their single-engine
Lockheed F-104 Starfighter.
The Breguet-Dassault-Dornier TA501 was declared the
winner of the competition in July 1970, with full
development approved in February 1972. Two prototypes
were to be built by Dassault in France (that company
having bought out Breguet in the meantime) and two were
to be built by Dornier in Germany. The first French
prototype performed its first flight at Istres on 26
October 1973, with the first German prototype following
from Oberpfaffenhofen on January 9 1974. The remaining
two prototypes were in the air before the end of 1974.
The French Air Force decided to use the Alpha Jet
primarily as a trainer, and the first production Alpha
Jet for the French performed its first flight on 4
November 1978. The French variant was known as the Alpha
Jet E (the "E" standing for Ecole, French for "School")
or Alpha Jet Advanced Trainer/Light Attack aircraft.
Initial deliveries to France for service trials were in
1978, leading to introduction to line service in May
1979, replacing the Canadair T-33 in jet training and
the Dassault Mystere IVA in weapons training. The
Patrouille de France, air demonstration team of the
French Air Force, fly the Alpha Jet. 176 production
Alpha Jet E machines were delivered up to 1985, not the
200 that had been planned.
The Luftwaffe decided to use the Alpha Jet in the
light strike role, preferring to continue flight
training in the sunny United States southwest on
American trainer types instead of performing training in
cloudy Germany. The first production German Alpha Jet
performed its first flight on 12 April 1978. It was
designated the Alpha Jet A (the "A" standing for Appui
Tactique or "Tactical Strike") or Alpha Jet Close
Support variant. The Luftwaffe obtained 175 machines up
to 1983, with the type replacing the Fiat G91R/3.
Manufacture of Alpha Jet subassemblies was divided
between France and Germany, with plants in each country
performing final assembly and checkout. The four
prototypes remained in service as testbeds, for example
evaluating a composite graphite-epoxy wing and improved
Larzac engine variants.
The different avionics fit makes French and German
Alpha Jets easy to tell apart, with French machines
featuring a rounded-off nose and German machines
featuring a sharp, pointed nose.
Photo
Gallery
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