Can a C-130 takeoff from an aircraft carrier?

Although the program didn't ultimately result in C-130s operating off of American carriers, it did prove it was possible. In testing, the C-130s completed 29 touch-and-go landings and an additional 21 unarrested full-stop landings aboard carriers.
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Could a 747 land on an aircraft carrier?

Large commercial aircraft like a Boeing 747 or an Airbus A-380 simply cannot fit on the deck without the wings clipping the island or other deck antennas, etc, not to mention requiring landing rolls of over 3000 ft even in the most extreme short field attempts.
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Could a Cessna land on an aircraft carrier?

Carrier landing is performed without flare: they just aim at a point and smash the aircraft there (with the navy aircraft having reinforced landing gear). A Cessna, even despite much lower approach speed, may not hold the impact if landed this way.
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Can an f16 take off from a carrier?

No, the F-16 cannot "carrier land", even with the tail hook. The Air Force jets (aside from any that are shared with the Navy) have tail hooks only for emergency purposes during landing, or securing the aircraft during engine run-up testing.
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Can a typhoon take off from an aircraft carrier?

There was no strategic or operational justification for this expenditure particularly as several studies have clearly shown that the Typhoon could not be operated from aircraft carriers without massive air frame and systems redesign.
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The Largest Plane to Ever Land on an Aircraft Carrier - C-130 Carrier Exercises



Can the Eurofighter take off from a carrier?

It also allows the aircraft to take off from a carrier using a “ski-jump”. Detailed simulations have shown that the aircraft will be able to take off in this way with a full weapon and fuel load – providing a nation with a truly potent naval aviation capability.
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Why are fighter jets scrambled?

RAMSTEIN, Germany - NATO fighter jets stationed around the Baltic and Black Seas have scrambled multiple times over the past four days to track and intercept Russian aircraft near Alliance airspace. This routine collective response demonstrates NATO's readiness, vigilance and responsiveness.
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Can an F-22 take off from a carrier?

The F-22 cannot be matched by any known or projected fighter aircraft. Nevertheless, despite its incredible capabilities, the F-22 could never do an emergency landing aboard an aircraft carrier, as Tim Hibbetts, former US Navy A-6 Intruder and F/A-18 Hornet pilot, explains on Quora.
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Can an F-22 Raptor land on an aircraft carrier?

F-22 Raptor. Image Credit: Lockheed Martin. The F-22 Raptor, while even starting to be retired, is still one of the best fighter jets on the planet today and is feared by Russia and China.
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Can a c130 land on a aircraft carrier?

From the accumulated test data, the Navy concluded that with the C-130 Hercules, it would be possible to lift 25,000 pounds of cargo 2,500 miles and land it on a carrier. Even so, the idea was considered a bit too risky for the C-130 and the Navy elected to use a smaller COD aircraft.
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Has a C-130 ever landed on an aircraft carrier?

The made 29 touch-and-go landings, 21 full stop landings, and 21 takeoffs. And to top it off, they didn't even have a tail hook or a catapult. The C-130 became the largest and heaviest aircraft be land on an aircraft carrier - and the record still stands today.
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Can a 747 land on autopilot?

The 747 can land itself. The 747 is certified to conduct autolands to CAT IIIB requirements. The 747 does have 'flare' and 'rollout guidance' – where the 747 will reduce the rate of descent just before touchdown, and rollout guidance allows the autopilot to maintain the runway centreline after touchdown.
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Do Air Force jets land on aircraft carriers?

Unlike Air Force pilots, Stickles said, Navy pilots train to land on aircraft carriers, whose runways are only about 300 feet long. By contrast, runways on land often have 7,000 or more feet to work with, nearly 23 times the length of a carrier runway.
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Is an airborne aircraft carrier possible?

It is, however, possible (though potentially impractical) to develop and deploy flying aircraft carriers for such a conflict–the United States has even experimented with the concept a number of times in the past, and is continuing to pursue the idea today.
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Why is the F-22 not carrier capable?

Had the U.S. Navy opted to pursue a carrier-capable variant of the F-22, there would have been a number of significant technical hurdles to overcome. Aircraft designed for carrier operations have to manage a very different set of take-off and landing challenges than their land-based counterparts.
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Is the F-35 carrier capable?

The F-35C can carry more than 5,000 lbs of internal weapons, or more than 18,000 lbs of combined internal and external weapons. This allows the Navy to operate in stealth when necessary, or increase lethality with additional weapons externally when the air space is permissive.
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Is the F-35 capable of vertical takeoff?

Designed to operate from conventional runways and is the most common variant. The United States Air Force and the majority of F-35 international allied customers operate the F-35A. Can land vertically like a helicopter and take-off in very short distances.
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Can a Raptor take off from a carrier?

But, as defense writer Dario Leone at the Aviation Geek Club notes, “despite its incredible capabilities, the F-22 could never do an emergency landing aboard an aircraft carrier.”
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Has an F-22 ever been shot down?

This was certainly proven to be true in 2009 when the famed F-22 was “shot down” by a much more inferior fourth-generation fighter jet—Dassault's Rafale. According to the EurAsian Times, “while remarkable in its own stead, in comparison to the Raptor, this French warplane doesn't appear to be as impressive.
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Does US Navy have F-22?

Instead of the F-22, the Navy years later ended up getting the stealthy F-35C Lighting II to be carrier-borne with folded wings. This summer marked the first deployment of the F-35C on the Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group. The F-35C has highly evolved sensors that can “manage” a battle in the air.
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Why do fighter jets fly next to planes?

The most common reason for sending, or "scrambling," fighter jets to follow a passenger plane is a loss of communication. On the small chance that ground controllers can't communicate with an aircraft despite repeated attempts, they will request that the military quickly send in fighters to communicate air to air.
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What does bogey mean in military terms?

Bogey, according to Eric Partridge's slang dictionary, is Royal Air Force usage from early in World War II meaning ''an aircraft suspected to be hostile. '' American aviators picked it up from the R.A.F. veterans; in 1945, Newsweek used the term to mean ''in radar code, an unidentified enemy aircraft.
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How fast can jets be scrambled?

The startup process in many military aircraft is, complicated, to say the least. It takes a lot longer than most would think. An F-16 from cold is required to be able to scramble within 5 minutes if on alert (armed, fueled, and pilot ready), 15 minutes if not.
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