Originally posted by MMC
A decent pilot in a Harrier could probably take on most of these planes (assuming it was fitted with modern radar and missiles), and Harriers aren't even supersonic. All the pilot would need to do, would be to let the opponent reach maximum firing range (from behind), and then slam the Harrier into reverse... Most US pilots would fly a standard jet at top speed, let off a missile or several, fly past, then turn around for another run... with the Harrier in reverse, the missile would fly straight past before arming, giving the Harrier time to a) launch defences, and b) launch a missile up the tailpipe of the opponent's jet as it flies past.
A decent pilot in a Harrier could probably take on most of these planes (assuming it was fitted with modern radar and missiles), and Harriers aren't even supersonic. All the pilot would need to do, would be to let the opponent reach maximum firing range (from behind), and then slam the Harrier into reverse... Most US pilots would fly a standard jet at top speed, let off a missile or several, fly past, then turn around for another run... with the Harrier in reverse, the missile would fly straight past before arming, giving the Harrier time to a) launch defences, and b) launch a missile up the tailpipe of the opponent's jet as it flies past.
For instance, in the Malvinas Harriers would have been destroyed by Mirage III if the argentnian pilots had no accepted low speed- low altitude combat. The Mirage was much faster, and better handled at high altitude than the Harrier and it could use Matra Super with much larger range than Sidewinder. However Mirages in the Malvinas war never used these cabalities, they were used to do some dogfight at short range, low altitude and low speed, where harrier were superior. OTOH Harrier never went above some thounsands of meters above sea level becuase his work was to protect land and sea units of argentinian attack planes and because Britanic pilots were much better trained and Britain planned the war much better.
Another example of a theoretically superior plane doing poorly against lesser oponents (Vince is not going to like this one ). In the Iran-Iraq war Iranian F-14s ratio in air to air combat was really poor. While Iraqi sources claim 14 or 15 F-14 shot down and Iranian sources only one or two, most reliable sources agree that 5 F-14s were shot down by iraqi mig-21s and Mirage F-1s agaisnt 4 iraqi fighters shot down by Iranian F-14.
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