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Lockheed T-33

The Lockheed T-33 Shooting Star (or T-Bird) is an American subsonic jet trainer. It was produced by Lockheed and made its first flight in 1948. The T-33 was developed from the Lockheed P-80/F-80 starting as TP-80C/TF-80C in development, then designated T-33A. It was used by the U.S. Navy initially as TO-2, then TV-2, and after 1962, T-33B. The last operator of the T-33, the Bolivian Air Force, retired the type in July 2017, after 44 years of service.[1]

"T-33" redirects here. For other uses, see T-33 (disambiguation).

Design and development[edit]

The T-33 was developed from the Lockheed P-80/F-80 by lengthening the fuselage by slightly more than 3 feet (1 m) and adding a second seat, instrumentation, and flight controls. It was initially designated as a variant of the P-80/F-80, the TP-80C/TF-80C.[2]


Design work on the Lockheed P-80 began in 1943, with the first flight on 8 January 1944. Following on the Bell P-59, the P-80 became the first jet fighter to enter full squadron service in the United States Army Air Forces. As more advanced jets entered service, the F-80 took on another role—training jet pilots. The two-place T-33 jet was designed for training pilots already qualified to fly propeller-driven aircraft.


Originally designated the TF-80C, the T-33 made its first flight on 22 March 1948 with Lockheed test pilot Tony LeVier at the controls. Production at Lockheed ran from 1948 to 1959. The US Navy used the T-33 as a land-based trainer starting in 1949. It was designated the TV-2, but was redesignated the T-33B in 1962. The Navy operated some ex-USAF P-80Cs as the TO-1, changed to the TV-1 about a year later. A carrier-capable version of the P-80/T-33 family was subsequently developed by Lockheed, eventually leading to the late 1950s to 1970s T2V-1/T-1A SeaStar. The two TF-80C prototypes were modified as prototypes for an all-weather two-seater fighter variant, which became the F-94 Starfire. A total of 6,557 T-33s were produced: 5,691 of them by Lockheed, 210 by Kawasaki, and 656 by Canadair.

Operational history[edit]

U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy[edit]

The two-place T-33 proved suitable as an advanced trainer, and it has been used for such tasks as drone director and target towing. A reconnaissance version known as the RT-33A with a camera installed in the nose and additional equipment in the rear cockpit was also produced. Although primarily intended for export, the U.S. Air Force used a single example of the type for secret overflights of South Vietnam and Laos from 1961, with these flights codenamed FIELD GOAL. This lasted until the aircraft were replaced by the more capable McDonnell RF-101 Voodoo in this role.[3]


The USAF began phasing the T-33 out of front-line pilot training duties in the Air Training Command in the early 1960s, as the Cessna T-37 Tweet and Northrop T-38 Talon aircraft began replacing it for the Undergraduate Pilot Training (UPT) program. The T-33 was used to train cadets from the Air Force Academy at Peterson Field (now Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs). The T-37 replaced the T-33 for Academy training in 1975. The final T-33 used in advanced training was replaced 8 February 1967 at Craig AFB, Alabama.[4] Similar replacement also occurred in the U.S. Navy with the TV-1 (also renamed T-33 in 1962), as more advanced aircraft such as the North American T-2 Buckeye and Douglas TA-4 Skyhawk II came on line. USAF and USN versions of the T-33 soldiered on into the 1970s and 1980s with USAF and USN as utility aircraft and proficiency trainers, with some of the former USN aircraft being expended as full-scale aerial targets for air-to-air missile tests from naval aircraft and surface-to-air missile tests from naval vessels.


Several T-33s were assigned to USAF McDonnell F-101 Voodoo, Convair F-102 Delta Dagger, and Convair F-106 Delta Dart units, to include similarly equipped Air National Guard units, of the Aerospace Defense Command as proficiency trainers and practice "bogey" aircraft. Others later went to Tactical Air Command, and TAC gained Air National Guard F-106 and McDonnell-Douglas F-4 Phantom II units in a similar role until they were finally retired, with the last being an NT-33 variant retired in April 1997.

Military use by other nations[edit]

The T-33 has served with over 30 nations and continues to operate as a trainer in smaller air forces. Canadair built 656 T-33s on licence for service in the RCAF—Canadian Forces as the CT-133 Silver Star, while Kawasaki manufactured 210 in Japan. Other operators included Brazil, Turkey, and Thailand, which used the T-33 extensively.


Some T-33s retained two machine guns for gunnery training, and in some countries, the T-33 was even used in combat: the Cuban Air Force used them during the Bay of Pigs Invasion, scoring several kills including sinking two transport ships.


The RT-33A version, reconnaissance aircraft produced primarily for use by foreign countries, had a camera installed in the nose and additional equipment in the rear cockpit. T-33s continued to fly as currency trainers, drone towing, combat and tactical simulation training, "hack" aircraft, electronic countermeasures, and warfare training and test platforms right into the 1980s.

(1 × RT-33 operated from 1972. Leftover of Pakistan Air Force after Bangladesh Liberation War.)

Bangladesh Air Force

For operators of Canadian-built aircraft, refer to Canadair CT-133 Silver Star.

Crew: 2

Length: 37 ft 9 in (11.51 m)

Wingspan: 38 ft 10.5 in (11.849 m)

Height: 11 ft 8 in (3.56 m)

Wing area: 234.8 sq ft (21.81 m2)

: NACA 65-213[41]

Airfoil

Empty weight: 8,365 lb (3,794 kg)

Gross weight: 12,071 lb (5,475 kg)

Max takeoff weight: 15,061 lb (6,832 kg)

Powerplant: 1 × centrifugal flow turbojet engine, 5,400 lbf (24 kN) thrust for take-off with water injection

Allison J33-A-35

Data from Lockheed Aircraft since 1913[40]


General characteristics


Performance


Armament

Boeing Skyfox

Canadair CT-133 Silver Star

Lockheed F-94 Starfire

Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star

Lockheed T2V/T-1A Seastar

Related development


Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era


Related lists

Baugher, Joe. USAF Fighters. Retrieved: 11 June 2011.

"Lockheed P-80/F-80."

Cooper, Tom (2017). Hot Skies Over Yemen, Volume 1: Aerial Warfare Over the South Arabian Peninsula, 1962-1994. Solihull, UK: Helion & Company Publishing.  978-1-912174-23-2.

ISBN

Cooper, Tom; Grandolini, Albert; Delalande, Arnaud (2015). Libyan Air Wars, Part 1: 1973-1985. Helion & Company Publishing.  978-1-909982-39-0.

ISBN

Davis, Larry. P-80 Shooting Star. T-33/F-94 in action. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1980.  0-89747-099-0.

ISBN

Dorr, Robert F. "P-80 Shooting Star Variants". Wings of Fame Vol. 11. London: Aerospace Publishing Ltd., 1998.  1-86184-017-9.

ISBN

Francillon, René J. Lockheed Aircraft since 1913. London: Putnam, 1982.  0-370-30329-6.

ISBN

"Fuerza Aérea Boliviana". International Air Power Review. Volume 1, Summer 2001. pp. 28–31.  1473-9917.

ISSN

Gaillard, Pierre (1991). Les Avions Français 1965 a 1990. Paris: Editions EPA.  2-85120-392-4.

ISBN

Hallion, Richard P. (April–July 1980). "T-33 and F-94 ... More Stars in the Lockheed Galaxy". . No. 12. pp. 11–23. ISSN 0143-5450.

Air Enthusiast

Hiltermann, Gijs. Lockheed T-33 (Vliegend in Nederland 3) (in Dutch). Eindhoven, Netherlands: Flash Aviation, 1988.  978-90-71553-04-2.

ISBN

Hoyle, Craig. "World Air Forces 2015". , 8–14 December 2015, Vol. 188, No. 5517. pp. 26–53. ISSN 0015-3710.

Flight International

Pace, Steve. Lockheed Skunk Works. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbooks International, 1992.  0-87938-632-0.

ISBN

Pocock, Chris. "Singapore Sting". Air International, Vol. 31, No. 2. pp. 59–64, 90–92.

Siegrist, Martin. "Bolivian Air Power — Seventy Years On". , Vol. 33, No. 4, October 1987. pp. 170–176, 194. ISSN 0306-5634.

Air International

T-33 in Mexican Air Force

AeroWeb: T-33s on display list

Warbird Alley: T-33 page

Walkaround T-33 Shooting Star (Eskishehir, Turkey)

Pictures of the T-33 at Oak Meadow Park, (Los Gatos, CA)

Brief T-33 History on Air Mobility Command Museum Site with photo of display T-33 at Dover AFB, DE