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      North American A3J-A-5 
      VigilanteOctober 
      9th, 2007 
      By: 
      rcolonfrias@yahoo.com 
      Raul Colon 
      PO Box 29754 
      Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico 00929 
      
        
      
      Just hours after the United States Army Air 
      Forces massive B-29 bombers had delivered the atom bomb to the Japanese 
      cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki; the US Navy began to realize that its 
      position as the forefront of America’s defense and first strike capability 
      could be in jeopardy. The continued development of the long distance 
      bomber as a first strike platform and its perceived efficiency in bringing 
      both Germany and Japan to their knees, made the Navy’s top brass worried 
      about losing the service’s primary position within the US Armed Forces. 
      Things were more concerning when the newly formed US Department of Defense 
      separated the air force section from the Army; creating a brand new 
      service: the US Air Force. Within months after its creation, the Air Force 
      assumed the primary role of the use of the country’s nuclear arsenal. This 
      development, added with the perception that with the coming of the 
      aircraft’s jet age, the navy would be relegated to a more littoral duty; 
      forced the Navy’s leaders to find a weapon platform capable of providing 
      the service with a nuclear option of its own. The Navy’s first attempt to 
      field this concept was to equip its main strike force, the aircraft 
      carriers; with aircraft capable of delivering nuclear weapons. The 
      acquisition of North American’s AJ Savage and the Douglass Company A3 
      Skywarrior bombers in the late 1940s and early 50s, both subsonic 
      aircrafts; represented a first step toward nuclear strike independency. 
      But due to the increasing pace of aircraft developments, each type became 
      obsolete after a just a few years of front line service. The Navy needed a 
      new aircraft, and North American Corporation was once again ready to 
      provide the service with its requirement.  
       
      In mid November 1953, a group of North American engineers commenced 
      preliminary work on the development of a new type of aircraft. An aircraft 
      more similar to the Air Force’s medium bomber concept than with the Navy’s 
      types of carrier based bomber planes. North American designers proposed a 
      radical departure from the current carrier aircraft situation. An 
      all-weather, long range carrier based bomber capable of reaching speeds up 
      to Mach 2 was envisioned at North American and that vision was eagerly 
      expected to become a reality by the Navy. To meet the Navy’s and their own 
      company expectations, the designers, lead by a brilliant engineer named 
      Frank G. Compton; began work promptly on what was referred to as North 
      American General Purpose Attack Weapon System or designated project 
      NA-233. After months of close consultation with Navy engineers, North 
      American decided to base its new airplane on a twin engine concept. The 
      idea behind the dual propulsion system was the aircraft’s survivability in 
      case of one of the power plants failing. Another requirement for the 
      concept was the ability to reach Mach 2 speed. To achieve this parameter, 
      the aircraft was fitted with two of the most powerful engine systems 
      available at the time: the General Electric J79-2 afterburning jet engine, 
      capable of providing the aircraft with 15,150lb of thrust. To ensure the 
      airframe’s integrity at high fly speeds and the aerodynamic conditions 
      encountered by the frame at those speeds, some heat sensitive areas of the 
      fuselage were covered by titanium plates.  
      
        
      
      The wing surfaces were machined as one 
      complete piece from a combination of aluminum/lithium alloys. Nitrogen, 
      not conventional hydraulic fluids, was used by the 233 in some of the 
      hottest areas of the airframe. Even gold was utilized as heat reflectors 
      on the engine’s bays. In order to capture high aerodynamics angles, the 
      233 was fitted with a small high-loaded swept wing configuration with a 
      powerful flap system and a one piece powered vertical tail. The wingtips 
      folded up to allow the aircraft to be housed on an aircraft carrier 
      hangar. The single, vertical tail structure also bent for hangar deck 
      operations. The NA was one of the first aircraft to use a fully variable 
      engine inlet system installed to reduce supersonic air to subsonic levels 
      before it reached the engine main chamber, thus providing the engines with 
      ultimate performance at any speed level. Apart from the innovations on the 
      airframe, the latest technology was implemented on the 233 avionics 
      package. A state-of-the-art Versatile Digital Analyzer or VERDAN computer, 
      one of the first solid state computer systems ever utilized on an 
      aircraft; was fitted under the pilot’s seat. But the real technology 
      breakthrough was the North American Autonetics System. The AN-ASB 12 
      System, as the package was referred as, included a multiple mode radar 
      system housed on the aircraft’s nose cone. The radar was fitted with the 
      Pilot’s Projected Display Indicator or PPDI, an early generation 
      head-ups-display. A close captioned TV camera mechanism was installed 
      under the nose for daylight targeting operations. Its image transferred 
      directly to the pilot’s HUD and the rear seated navigator radar display. A 
      first of its kind, terrain avoidance radar system, similar to that on the 
      Navaho Cruise Missile, was used to guide the plane while on night 
      operations. The aircraft also had the distinction of being one of the 
      first designs to be fitted with a partial fly-by-wire system. The 233 was 
      manned by a crew of two. A pilot and a bombardier/navigator. The pilot was 
      seated in the front of the pressurized cabin and the navigator on the 
      rear, atop the advance electronic package assigned to the aircraft. 
      Originally, the navigator canopy did not posses any view windows or 
      reflective mirrors because company’s engineers estimated that the 
      navigator’s instruments would be easy to ready in darkness and to protect 
      them from the anticipated EM emissions expected from a detonated nuclear 
      bomb. The whole cabin was housed on a structure fitted with an HS-1 rocket 
      design to boost the ejection seats in case of an emergency. The final 233 
      aircraft’s specifications were as follow: 
       
      Size & Weight Characteristics 
       
      Wingspan Wing Area Length Height 
       
      53’-0” 754sq ft 75’-10” 19’-5”  
      Empty Fully Loaded 
       
      38,000lb 80,000lb 
      Overall Profile 
       
      Maximum Speed Operational Ceiling Range Climb Rate 
       
      1,385mph 67,000’ 3,200nm 8,000’/min 
       
      The first 233 prototype rolled out from North American’s Columbus, Ohio 
      factory on the afternoon of May 16th, 1958; when it was officially named 
      the Vigilante. The first flight took place on August 31st, 1958. The 
      aircraft performed as good as advertised by the North American design 
      team. It achieved supersonic speed for the first time on September 5th of 
      that year. Carrier trials began on the USS Saratoga on the morning of July 
      1960 with fourteen take-off and landing test flights performed by the 
      sixth Vigilante prototype built. On the afternoon of December 13th, 1960, 
      with Commander Leroy Heath at the controls and Lieutenant Larry Monroe on 
      the backseat, the Vigilante, flying at Mach 2.1, set a new world altitude 
      record for a bomber type aircraft when it climbed above 91,451ft while 
      carrying a payload of 2,403lb. The Vigilante’s payload was stored in an 
      unorthodox internal bomb bay without external doors located in the 
      airframe underbelly. This unique system was installed on the Vigilante 
      because the aircraft main purpose: the deliverance of nuclear ordinance. 
      The engineers at North American figured that the aircraft had an enhanced 
      percentage of escaping a blast from the new thermonuclear weapons if the 
      ordinance was ejected to the rear instead of a direct level drop. This was 
      achieved with the assistance of a complex long duct system that extended 
      back between the two engines. The duct would house the nuclear ordinance 
      until the order of release was given. The aircraft was built to carry one 
      of the MK27, MK28, or MK43; free fall nuclear bombs in its internal bomb 
      bay. Additionally, a pair of smaller, MK83 or MK84 nuclear bombs could be 
      fitted on pylons underneath each wing structure. 
      
        
      
      Deliveries of the A3J Vigilante commenced in 
      the spring of 1961 and lasted until the summer of 1963, when the US Navy 
      shifted its main nuclear deterrent platform from its carrier fleet to the 
      new Polaris augmented submarine force. When the production line was 
      terminated in 1963, fifty nine examples had been delivered to the navy. 
      The Vigilante first carrier deployment occurred when they were assigned to 
      the USS Enterprise on its maiden cruise in August 1962. In September of 
      that year, the US Defense Department changed the aircraft designation to 
      A-5A due to the decision of standardizing all US Armed Forces aircraft. 
      Once the Vigilante entered front line service, the aircraft was not well 
      received by carrier air commanders who, although impressed with the 
      aircraft payload capacity and airframe structure; felt that an aircraft 
      had such advanced technologies that they could become a problem. They were 
      right. Constant shutdowns by the VERDAN system meant that the aircraft’s 
      turn-around capabilities were severely curtailed. Problems also arose with 
      the use of its fly-by-wire system that required many man hours to prepare 
      to full operational mode. Also the aircraft’s size made it difficult for 
      airmen to operate during take off and landing situations. With the shift 
      of the US Navy’s nuclear deterrence platform, the days of the Vigilante as 
      an offensive aircraft were numbered. Rather than scrapping the examples 
      they already possessed, the Navy devised a new role for the Vigilante, a 
      role that would make the aircraft’s name “fit the bill”. The Navy’s deep 
      reconnaissance mission had been neglected partially by the lack of a long 
      range aircraft; this role was tailor-made for the A-5A. All of the Navy’s 
      Vigilantes were returned to North American for conversion to the standard 
      RA platforms. Eventually, fifty three examples were converted between 
      early 1963 and the spring of 1963. They were augmented by a batch of fifty 
      five newly produced aircraft and given the RA-5C designation. The RA-5C 
      retained the A-5A performance capabilities as well as its avionics 
      package. The main upgrade to the system was the installation of optical, 
      electronic, and electromagnetic sensors stored in the aircraft’s once 
      exposed bomb bay. They included an AN-ASS21 infrared sensor for the 
      continued filming of thermal targets images at angles of 140 degrees, a 
      Westinghouse Side Looking Airborne Radar or SLAR for all side-by-side 
      imagine mapping; a AN-ALQ61 Electronic Intelligence Unit System that would 
      pick-up radar emissions and triangulate their origination coordinates, 
      frequencies, and electronic signal patterns. A vast array of optical 
      camera systems such as panoramic, oblique or vertical; were fitted around 
      the airframe. The complete reconnaissance system was under the control of 
      the Recon Officer seated were the bombardier/navigator use to be. The new 
      RA version had a slightly different specification spectrum from the 
      original A-5A. 
       
      Size & Weight Characteristics 
       
      Wingspan Wing Area Length Height 
       
      53’-2” 760sq ft 75’-7” 19’-5”  
       
      Empty Fully Loaded 
       
      37,500lb 79,600lb 
      Overall Profile 
       
      Maximum Speed Operational Ceiling Range Climb Rate 
       
      1,320mph 52,100’ 2,050nm 7,860’/min 
       
      The first RA-5A example entered carrier service in1964. It went on to see 
      duty in the Vietnam War. The RA version proved to be more successful than 
      its predecessor. Usually, the Vigilante was the last aircraft launched 
      from the carrier during the operation envelop deployment since its speed 
      allowed it to catch up quickly with the mission package. Eventually, the 
      US Navy ordered the Vigilante production line to restart and the first of 
      a new batch of Vigilantes were delivered to the Navy. Forty four examples 
      were ordered, but only thirty six units were completed by the time the 
      line was closed again in August 1970. The last operational RA-5C Vigilante 
      squadron was disbanded in September 1979. A short lifespan for such a 
      revolutionary aircraft design. In the end, it was a magnificent aircraft, 
      but without a clear mission, it was an unsupported plane. 
       
  
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