IAI Kfir

1971

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IAI Kfir

Following the manufacture of the Nesher, IAI developed a more extensively modified and further improved version of the same airframe, powered by a General Electric J79 afterburning turbojet engine. A prototype of the Kfir was flown in 1973. The Kfir utilises a basic airframe similar to that of the Dassault Mirage 5, the main changes being a shorter but larger-diameter rear fuselage to accommodate the J79 engine; an enlarged and flattened undersurface to the forward portion of the fuselage; introduction of four small fuselage airscoops, plus a larger dorsal airscoop in place of the triangular dorsal fin, to provide cooling air for the afterburner; and a strengthened landing gear, with long-stroke oleos. Several internal changes have also been made. Intended for both air-defence and ground-attack roles, the Kfir retains the standard Mirage fixed armament of two 30mm DEFA cannon and can carry a variety of external weapons including the Rafael Shafrir 2 air-to-air and Luz-1 air-to-surface missiles. Two squadrons of the Israeli Air Force were equipped with this initial Kfir-C1 version.

In 1976 the first public demonstration took place of the modified Kfir-C2, by which time it was already in service with the Air Force. The most significant changes from the original Kfir are the addition of non-retractable, sweptback canard surfaces just aft of the engine air intakes, a small strake on each side of the extreme nose, and an extended wing leading edge created by increasing the chord on approximately the outer 40% of each half-span. The Kfir-C2 is the principal production version, both for the Israeli Air Force and for export. The modifications were designed to improve the aircraft's dogfighting manoeuvrability at the lower end of the speed range and to enhance take-off and landing performance.

A two-seat TC2 trainer version of the Kfir was flown for the first time in 1981. 71 Kfir C1 and 185 Kfir C2/TC2 were built.

3-View 
IAI KfirA three-view drawing (1668 x 1258)

Specification 
 CREW1
 ENGINE1 x General Electric J79-GE-17, 52.8kN
 WEIGHTS
  Take-off weight9072-14500 kg20000 - 31967 lb
 DIMENSIONS
  Wingspan8.2 m27 ft 11 in
  Length15.5 m51 ft 10 in
  Height4.3 m14 ft 1 in
  Wing area34.9 m2375.66 sq ft
 PERFORMANCE
  Max. speedM2.2 M2.2
  Ceiling15250 m50050 ft
 ARMAMENT1 x 30mm cannon, bombs and missiles

Comments1-20 21-40
John Pelchat, e-mail, 30.10.2008 04:14

My first reaction is not well. Not that thrust vectoring is a bad thing, but it comes with a cost in weight and complexity that it would seem would not be well tolerated in a small airframe such as the Kfir.

reply

S Mungoshi, e-mail, 28.08.2007 18:07

How would this aircraft fair with thrust vectoring ?

reply

1-20 21-40

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