The American Legion
F-84F Information & History
History of our F-84F, S/N 52-6455
July 23, 1954
Delivered to the USAF by manufacturer Republic Aviation, Farmingdale, New York
July 1954
Assigned to 405th Fighter-Bomber Wing (Tactical Air Command), Langley AFB, California, and RAF, Burtonwood, UK
December 1956
Assigned to 3600th Combat Crew Training Wing (Air Training Command), Luke AFB, Arizona
September 1957
Moved to Mobile Air Material Area, Alabama
February 1958
Assigned to 113th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (Air National Guard), Hulman Field, Indiana
December 1958
Unit became 113th Tactical Fighter Squadron
October 1961
Unit assigned to Tactical Air Command
July 1962
Assigned to 122nd Tactical Fighter Wing (Tactical Air Command), Hulman Field, Indiana
September 1962
Assigned to 12th Tactical Wing (Tactical Air Command), MacDill AFB, Florida
December 1963
Assigned 366th Tactical Fighter Wing (Tactical Air Command), Holloman AFB, New Mexico
November 1964
Moved to Mobile Air Material Area, Alabama
May 1965
Assigned to 102nd Tactical Fighter Group (Air National Guard), Logan Air Field, Massachusetts
August 1968
Unit moved to Otis AFB, Massachusetts (Deployed to Baer Field, Indiana)
October 1971
Dropped from inventory by transfer to museum status.
SPECIFICATIONS
Span: 33 ft. 7 in.
Length: 43 ft. 5 in.
Height: 15 ft. 0 in.
Weight: 27,000 lbs. max.
Armament: Six .50-cal. machine guns and 24 five inch rockets;
6,000 lbs. of bombs externally
Engine: Wright J65-W-3 of 7,220 lbs. thrust
Crew: One
Cost: $769,000
Number Built: 2,711
PERFORMANCE
Maximum speed: 685 mph
Cruising speed: 535 mph
Range: 1,900 miles
Service Ceiling: 44,450 ft.
This page was contributed greatly by the hard work of Legionnaire Jerry Blaylock
Discovery Channel - Great Planes -
Republic F-84 Thunderjet (49 Minute Video)
Republic F-84F "Thunderstreak"
S/N: 52-6455 (F-84F-35-RE)
The swept-wing F-84F evolved from the straight-wing F-84. The prototype first flew
on June 3, 1950 and deliveries began in 1954, primarily to the Tactical Air Command
as a ground support fighter bomber. It was the first USAF jet fighter able to carry
atomic weapons, and was used by the Strategic Air Command to escort their heavy
weapons.
Republic built 2,112 F-84Fs while General Motors fabricated an additional
599. Of these, 1,301 were delivered to NATO air forces. Production of a
reconnaissance version, the RF-84F, totaled 715 aircraft, including 386 for allied
countries. The RF-84F featured engine air intakes at the wing roots plus cameras in
the nose.
F-84Fs gradually were replaced by supersonic F-100s in the late 1950s and
were turned over to Air National Guard units. However, some F-84Fs were called
back to temporary USAF service in the early 1960s due to the Berlin Crisis.
Written by Mike Cole, Houston, Texas, January 21, 2005:
The F-84 that Jerry Blaylock spoke of number 52-6455 located at the
American Legion post in front of Ellington field has a special meaning to me. I was
stationed at Ellington when the # 6455 was flown in. I was assigned the duty of
getting it ready for display at the American Legion. When it arrived all the
armament was already removed, but while searching the nose section for any
foreign objects I found two live 50 caliber rounds and a number of spent cartridge
hulls, and several of the clips that hold them together. Also when the engine was
removed I retrieved the engine ID plate and still have it in my possession to this day.
Thunderbirds
The F-84F Thunderstreak was flown by the U.S. Air Force aerial demonstration team,
the Thunderbirds, during 1955-1956.
The straight-wing configuration of the F-84G was considered well suited for
aerobatic and demonstration maneuvers, though the aircraft could not exceed the
speed of sound. A series of formation aerobatics, lasting a total of 15 minutes,
comprised the original demonstration. The “solo” was not originally incorporated
into the demonstration, however, as the season progressed, the team took
opportunities to perform “solo” maneuvers with a spare aircraft. Always trying to
display the most advanced fighters of the age, the swept-wing F-84F Thunderstreak
became the team’s new aircraft in 1955.
Wikimedia Foundation, 25 Mar. 2017. Web. 28 Mar. 2017.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_F-84F_Thunderstreak>.