Top 10 Fighter Aircraft
Over the past century, dozens of
aircraft have been designed and built to fight in the sky. But now based
on expert opinion, audience polls and technical comparison, we've
constructed a five-point matrix, that will rank the Top Ten Fighter
aircraft of all time.
jet |
9: F/A-22 Raptor
- Manufacturer: Lockheed Martin
- Power Plant: Pratt & Whitney F-119 PW-100
- Top Speed: Mach 2.5
- Armament: One 20mm cannon, six AMRAAM and two AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles
However, the aircraft's prowess is compromised by its astronomical production costs and the fact it has some way to go to match the combat records of the F-15 and F-16. Therefore, in the kill ratio, production and service length categories, the Raptor scores zip, placing it firmly in 10th place on our list.
F/A-22_Raptor |
8: Sea Harrier FA2
- Manufacturer: British Aerospace
- Power Plant: Rolls Royce Pegasus mk 104 or 106 turbofan
- Top Speed: 736 mph
- Armament: Two 30-mm Aden cannon, plus two AMRAAM and four Sidewinder missiles, two Harpoon or Sea Eagle anti-ship missiles
Sea_Harrier_FA2 |
7: Sopwith Camel
- Manufacturer: Sopwith Aviation Company
- Power Plant: Clerget rotary engine
- Top Speed: 112 mph
- Armament: Two Vickers .303 machine guns
Sopwith_Camel |
6: Me 262 Schwalbe
- Manufacturer: Messerschmitt
- Power Plant: Two Junkers Juno 004s
- Top Speed: 540 mph
- Armament: Four 30mm MK-108 cannons
However, because the aircraft was difficult to build and it had notoriously unreliable engines, the aircraft's production rating is low - so too is its service record, having only been active for a little over two years. Nevertheless, the Me 262 will forever be in the record books as being the world's first fully operational jet fighter - a legend of the skies and the seventh greatest fighter of all time.
Me_262_Schwalbe |
5: Supermarine Spitfire
- Manufacturer: Supermarine Aviation Works
- Power Plant: Rolls-Royce Merlin V-12 piston engine
- Top Speed: 369 mph
- Armament: Eight Browning .303 machine guns; later version, four 20mm cannon
On July 17, 1944, in the north of France, a Canadian pilot named Charlie Fox shot at the car carrying the German military mastermind and knocked it off the road, putting Germany's "Desert Fox" out of commission.
Supermarine_Spitfire |
4: A Tie! MiG 15 & F-86 Sabre
MiG 15
- Manufacturer: Mikoyan Gurevich Design Bureau
- Power Plant: Klimov VK-1 turbojet
- Top Speed: 668 mph
- Armament: One 37mm N-37 cannon and two 23mm NR-23 cannon
F-86 Sabre
- Manufacturer: North American
- Power Plant: General Electric J47 engine
- Top Speed: 685 mph
- Armament: Six .50-caliber machine guns and eight 5-inch rockets
Both designs relied heavily on captured German swept-wing technology and British engine design, so for innovation the MiG and Sabre are equally matched. Both fighters were produced in large numbers, but the MiG edges in front of the Sabre in the production category because of its renowned simplicity.
Both jets have similar service records. The result? They are inseparable in the rankings: the MiG 15 and F-86 Sabre tie for fourth place.
A_Tie!_MiG_15_(top)_F-86_Sabre_(bottom) |
3: F-4 Phantom
- Manufacturer: McDonnell Douglass
- Power Plant: Two J79 Spey turbojet afterburning engines
- Top Speed: 1,485 mph
- Armament: Four AIM 7 Sparrow and four AIM 9 Sidewinder missiles.
Phantoms were the test bed for missile technology - and the aircraft held five speed records for an impressive 13 years before being beaten by the aircraft featured in the No. 2 spot on our list of the top 10 fighters of all time.
F-4_Phantom |
2: F-15C Eagle
- Manufacturer: McDonnell Douglass
- Power Plant: Two Pratt & Whitney F-100-PW-100 after-burning turbofans
- Top Speed: Mach 2.5
- Armament: One 20-mm cannon, four AIM-7F Sparrow and four AIM-9L Sidewinder missiles
In fact, such is the reputation of the F-15 that during the opening phase of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Saddam Hussein's air force simply refused to get in the air. They knew the F-15 would just knock them out of the sky.
F-15C_Eagle |
1: P-51D Mustang
- Manufacturer: North American Aviation
- Power Plant: 1600 hp Packard-built Merlin 61 piston engine
- Top Speed: 437 mph
- Armament: Six wing-mounted .50-caliber machine guns
The Mustang performed its job so well that after its introduction in 1944, casualty rates for bomber crews were reduced by 75 percent. In fact, American P51s destroyed almost 5,000 enemy aircraft in Europe - making it the highest scoring U. S. fighter in the European theater of operations.
P-51D_Mustang |
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