Is a flight in the F-4 through the Collings Foundation going to "feel" like flying with the Blue Angels? Taking out the "oh my God, I'm flying with the Blue Angels" factor. Also taking out the factor that the F-4 may have to stay higher up in the air for most of their maneuvers than the airshow has clearance for. (Thinking an air show, especially the blue Angels, gets approval to go way beyond 250 knots below 10,000, but maybe not.)
On paper, they look quite similar. Actually, the F-4 looks better in some specifications that just have to do with thrill of the ride - not combat ability. Max speed 1472mph (F-4) vs 1190mph (F/A-18). (Can't hit Mach 1 over US anyway.) Service ceiling 60k ft vs 50k ft. Rate of climb 41.3k ft/min vs 50k ft/min.
Or, is heading to Russia for a flight in a MiG-29 going to be in a whole other class? (Since there's no way to get a ride in a F/A-18.)
Obviously a big part of this is whether the pilot of each plane pushes to the same limits of the plane and the people inside it.
I am talking about from a typical person's perspective. Even a non-jet pilot's perspective. Obviously someone with a lot of high-speed pilot experience is going to notice things others won't.
On paper, they look quite similar. Actually, the F-4 looks better in some specifications that just have to do with thrill of the ride - not combat ability. Max speed 1472mph (F-4) vs 1190mph (F/A-18). (Can't hit Mach 1 over US anyway.) Service ceiling 60k ft vs 50k ft. Rate of climb 41.3k ft/min vs 50k ft/min.
Or, is heading to Russia for a flight in a MiG-29 going to be in a whole other class? (Since there's no way to get a ride in a F/A-18.)
Obviously a big part of this is whether the pilot of each plane pushes to the same limits of the plane and the people inside it.
I am talking about from a typical person's perspective. Even a non-jet pilot's perspective. Obviously someone with a lot of high-speed pilot experience is going to notice things others won't.