Katana VentraIP

Lockheed S-3 Viking

The Lockheed S-3 Viking is a four-crew, twin-engine turbofan-powered jet aircraft designed and produced by the American aerospace manufacturer Lockheed Corporation. Because of its characteristic sound, it was nicknamed the "War Hoover" after the vacuum cleaner brand.

The S-3 was developed in response to the VSX program conducted by the U.S. Navy (USN) to procure a successor anti-submarine warfare (ASW) aircraft to the Grumman S-2 Tracker. It was designed, with assistance from Ling-Temco-Vought (LTV), to be a carrier-based, subsonic, all-weather, long-range, multi-mission aircraft.


On 21 January 1972, the prototype YS-3A performed the type's maiden flight. Upon entering regular service during February 1974, it proved to be a reliable workhorse. In the ASW role, the S-3 carried automated weapons and in-flight refueling gear. Further variants, such as the ES-3A Shadow carrier-based electronic intelligence (ELINT) platform, and the US-3A carrier-based utility and cargo transport, arrived during the 1980s and 1990s. In the late 1990s, the S-3B's mission focus shifted to surface warfare and aerial refueling a carrier battle group. It saw combat during the Gulf War of the early 1990s, the Yugoslav Wars of the mid-to-late 1990s, and the War in Afghanistan during the 2000s.


The S-3 was removed from front-line fleet service aboard aircraft carriers in January 2009, its missions having been taken over by the P-3C Orion, P-8 Poseidon, SH-60 Seahawk, and F/A-18E/F Super Hornet. For more than a decade after that, some S-3s were flown by Air Test and Evaluation Squadron Thirty (VX-30) at Naval Base Ventura County / NAS Point Mugu, California, for range clearance and surveillance operations at the NAVAIR Point Mugu Range. These final examples in U.S. Navy service were retired in early 2016. The last operational S-3 was used by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) at its Glenn Research Center until NASA retired it in mid-2021. Most retired S-3s were placed into storage while options for their future were investigated. During the 2010s, Lockheed Martin proposed to refurbish them for carrier onboard delivery. The Republic of Korea Navy also had plans to operate revived S-3s for ASW; these plans were cancelled in 2017.

United States Navy

VS-21 Red Tails

(former)

NASA

157993 – NAS Jacksonville Aircraft Heritage Park, , Jacksonville, Florida.[55]

NAS Jacksonville

Crew: 4 (pilot, co-pilot, , sensor operator)

TACCO

Length: 53 ft 4 in (16.26 m)

Wingspan: 68 ft 8 in (20.93 m)

Width: 29 ft 6 in (8.99 m) folded

Height: 22 ft 9 in (6.93 m) * Height tail folded: 15 ft 3 in (5 m)

Wing area: 598 sq ft (55.6 m2)

: 7.73

Aspect ratio

Empty weight: 26,581 lb (12,057 kg)

Gross weight: 38,192 lb (17,324 kg)

Max takeoff weight: 52,539 lb (23,831 kg)

Fuel capacity: * Internal fuel capacity: 1,933 US gal (1,610 imp gal; 7,320 L) of fuel

JP-5

External fuel capacity: 2 × 300 US gal (250 imp gal; 1,100 L) drop tanks

Powerplant: 2 × turbofan engines, 9,275 lbf (41.26 kN) thrust each

General Electric TF34-GE-2

Data from Standard Aircraft Characteristics[68]


General characteristics


Performance


Armament



Avionics

CP-140 Aurora

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era


Related lists

Archived 28 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine and S-3 Viking history page on Navy.mil Archived 20 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine

S-3B Viking fact file

Naval Aviation News (July–August 2004)

S-3 Viking: War Hoover