Talk:Dassault Mirage 5: Difference between revisions
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== "Radarless" == |
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__TOC__ |
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{{discussion top}} |
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==Requested merger== |
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[[IAI Nesher]] → [[Dassault Mirage 5]] |
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In the Variants section the first model, the Mirage 5, the model that gives its name to the entire article and the whole family of fighters, is listed as "radarless". Yet it doesn't say anything in the article about the radar being removed to create the Mirage 5. It says "avionics were removed to create room for additional fuel tanks" and that it has a longer, more pointed nose cone. That works seem like a pretty major alteration and worth mentioning in the text if it's true. |
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===Survey=== |
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:''Add <tt><big><nowiki>* '''Support'''</nowiki></big></tt> or <tt><big><nowiki>* '''Oppose'''</nowiki></big></tt> on a new line followed by a brief explanation, then sign your opinion using <nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>. |
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====Survey - Support votes==== |
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<s>*'''Support''' - But with reservations. (see Discussion below.) - [[User:BillCJ|BillCJ]] 15:43, 15 January 2007 (UTC)</s> |
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If it was just just a few of the minor sub variants that had the radar deleted it would be one thing, but the main character itself is declared a day fighter. And even the Kfir has a ranging radar. [[User:Idumea47b|Idumea47b]] ([[User talk:Idumea47b|talk]]) 17:59, 9 January 2024 (UTC) |
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====Survey - Oppose votes==== |
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*'''Strongly Oppose''' - Nesher has his own history. [User:Jor70|Jor70]] 14:16, 15 January 2007 (UTC) (Moved from [[Talk:IAI Nesher]] by [[User:BillCJ|BillCJ]] 15:28, 15 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:Just the article s name is enough to merit a split: Dassault <-> IAI . I also intend to add more data about the Finger conversion in the future from this book [http://www.helis.com/magazines/books.php] --[[User:Jor70|Jor70]] 17:04, 15 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:I found a source that directly states that it was the radar that was deleted and not just unspecified avionics. Jackson states that later variants of the Mirage V were built with radar and notes that the 'Mirage V' designation became meaningless. The 'early development' header could be changed to something like 'concept' as my addition could be anachronistic. My understanding is that it was intended to be a cheap, easily maintainable, fair-weather combat aircraft but it became something else later. [[User:Nimbus227|Nimbus]] [[User talk:Nimbus227|<span style="color:#2F4F4F;">(Cumulus</span> <span style="color:#708090;">nimbus</span> <span style="color:#D3D3D3;">floats by)</span>]] 15:21, 11 January 2024 (UTC) |
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*'''Changed to Oppose''' - Upon further research, I see no evidence that it is an established, accepted fact. The only source availble online at www.ACIG.org cits no sources for its information. Unless Israel and/or IAI have expressly admitted to assembling Neshers from French-supplied kits, I think the issue is still a matter of debate, not accepted fact. - [[User:BillCJ|BillCJ]] 18:13, 15 January 2007 (UTC) |
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*'''Strongly Oppose''' Whether or not either one of the stories is true (see Nesher talk page), both are fascinating and more then warrant a seperate article to cover it. Either way, they are certainly not your standard Mirage 5 and need to be recognised as such. Furthermore, the general conception is that the Nesher is a seperate aircraft entirely and most visitors would expect to see it that way.[[User:SAWGunner89|SAWGunner89]] 01:26, 16 January 2007 (UTC) |
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*'''Weak Oppose''' – Either is fine to me since there was very little difference, but considering all the disputed material that has to be addressed with respect to the origins of the ''Nesher'', it would come to dominate the whole article for which it is only a subtopic. My recommendation would be to address the ''Nesher'' separately in its own article, and include a subsection here with a note to see the fuller discussion in its own article. [[User:Askari Mark|Askari Mark]] <small>[[User talk:Askari Mark|(Talk)]]</small> 01:10, 17 January 2007 (UTC) |
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===Discussion=== |
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Though the Nesher article lists references, it currently does not cite its sources. It makes claims that Dassault built the Neshers, and IAI assembled them, which is contrary to IAI claims that it built the Neshers from blueprints. While the articles claim is credilbe, it should state exactly which sources this is based on with cites. Except for the mention of the Nesher issue, the Mirage 5 article is also uncited. These need to be taken care of whether the articles are merged or not. - [[User:BillCJ|BillCJ]] 15:43, 15 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:Since I am once more having computer difficulties at home, I cannot significantly add to this article at this time other than to say I believe you are all on the right track as the article now stands. What follows is a quick-and-dirty overview of what I know or believe about the ''Nesher'' program. (I'll have to leave it to y'all to chase the sources for the time being.) |
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:My understanding of the more-or-less "official" story is this: Although the Israelis liked the aerodynamic performance of the Mirage III, they weren't so pleased with its engine or avionics. They worked with France to develop a configuration they felt would provide them with more suitable capabilities. This was the Mirage 5. However, Franco-Israeli relations were souring and eventually France decided to embargo the 50 aircraft Israel had ordered (which were diverted to the FAF instead as the Mirage 5F). Neither whole airplanes nor kits were supposedly ever supplied to Israel. In response, Israeli spies managed to steal the blueprints (possibly with the collusion of Dassault — it remains debated). IAI was tasked to build their own copies under a program dubbed "''Nesher''" (hence the name) and eventually built 51 Nesher A and 10 Nesher B, which were delivered 1971-74. Some of the avionics and systems used were non-French and the Israelis also certified it for some of their own weapons, like the Shafrir IR AAM; they also equipped it with Atar 9 engines taken from stocks they already had in-country. Greg Goebel, who has a good reputation as an aerospace history writer, outlines this version at Air-to-Air Combat [http://www.airtoaircombat.com/detail.asp?id=116]. (More can be found at his Vectors site [http://www.vectorsite.net/avdasso.html].) |
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:Personally and professionally, though, I consider the "semi-official" story to be pretty much hogwash (aside from the delivery history). When you consider that the French embargo was laid down following the Dec. 1968 Israeli commando raid against Palestinian terrorists at the Beirut IAP and that the prototype first flight was in Sep. 1969, there would have been only about six months to acquire the specs, assemble the scarce people with appropriate skills, reproduce the jigs, acquire or build the various systems and subsystems, and test it all. That would have been a challenge even during WWII with only much simpler non-jet aircraft. What was much more likely was that France — which had certain secret "accommodations" with Palestinian terrorist groups that were intended to keep them from acting against French property and people — secretly supplied knocked-down Mirages to Israel, probably delivered via the US, along the lines suggested by ACIG [http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_274.shtml]. In fact, it seems most likely to me that what was supplied were mostly Mirage IIIs along with Mirage 5 forward fuselages and wings built over time on Dassault's production line amidst orders for other countries and "spares" ostensibly built for the FAF's Mirage 5F fleet. |
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:The main reason I doubt that entire Mirage 5 kits were supplied is because the whole Mirage 5 production effort would have been closely monitored by Arab and Palestinian intelligence, who would have been interested in confirming the production rate, quantity, and the number supplied to the FAF. Since the Mirage III and 5 differ more in terms of internal equipment than external configuration with the only noteworthy external differences being the forward fuselage and wings, it would have been easier to have obscured the production of these as spares and/or scrap. In fact, ''Aeroflight'', a generally reliable source, states that the French supplied the wings and cockpit, while the Israelis produced the fuselage and fins — and that the two-seaters were actually conversions from Mirage IIIB [http://www.aeroflight.co.uk/waf/israel/types/iai1.htm]. |
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:The amount of time available between embargo and ''Nesher'' first flight would have been sufficient to test out the integration of the Shafrir as well as a new radio type known to have been introduced with it. Since the US was delivering large numbers of A-4s and F-4s to Israel during this timeframe, it would have been easy to have slipped in small numbers of Mirage III/5 at an average rate of effectively no more than one per month. The two-seaters may very well have been local conversions, as suggested by ''Aeroflight''. It is even possible that the aircraft supplied were FAF Mirage IIIs replaced by the confiscated Mirage 5s — nothing much ever gets written about them. Another point of suspicion is the fact that the last were removed from frontline IDF service in 1979 and altogether by 1981 — which would have been quite unseemly after having purportedly spent so much money reverse-engineering and then building them. Indeed, one has to wonder whether the ''Nesher'' was as successful an aircraft as the Israelis have long held. A quarter of them (up to 16) were apparently lost to combat, accidents, and possible spares cannibalization, but those provided to Argentina as "Daggers" received an extensive avionics upgrade according to some sources. |
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:The only confirmed espionage involved the Atar 9 engine, the plans for which were provided to the Israelis by a Swiss engineer. Some sources say the ''Nesher'' were equipped with the J79, but I think they're confusing this with the development of the ''Kfir''. The ''Kfir'' had a more normal development time — for a modified variant development — considering the experience IAI accrued from the ''Nesher'' program, and there's little doubt Israel had decided by 1968 to go with the US as a more reliable supplier of combat aircraft. [[User:Askari Mark|Askari Mark]] <small>[[User talk:Askari Mark|(Talk)]]</small> 20:44, 16 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:: Mark, I can assure you that the Daggers have the Atar 9C-5 [[User:Jor70|Jor70]] 23:50, 16 January 2007 (UTC) |
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:::Thanks, Jor ... I was pretty sure, but didn't have time to check! [[User:Askari Mark|Askari Mark]] <small>[[User talk:Askari Mark|(Talk)]]</small> |
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Thanks, Mark. That pretty much meshes with what I have been able to find. I think we have enough sources to include both views in the article, but I don't believe either are verified enough for the article to state a preference for one view over the other. - [[User:BillCJ|BillCJ]] 21:11, 16 January 2007 (UTC) |
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===Decision=== |
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One week later, the survey is 4 against, one for (implied, as proposer of merge did not participate in survey). Will remove tags. - [[User:BillCJ|BillCJ]] 14:00, 23 January 2007 (UTC) |
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{{discussion bottom}} |
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== Kfir is not a variant of Mirage 5 == |
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The development of Kfir based on Nesher, which is a variant of Mirage 5, but Kfir itself is not a variant of Mirage 5. [[User:Flayer|Flayer]] ([[User talk:Flayer|talk]]) 10:43, 3 February 2008 (UTC) |
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:Technically, the Nesher ''is'' a Mirage 5 built in Israel. However, I can see removing it from the Infobox list, but please leave it in the Related section at the bottom of the page. Btw, when someone asks for a discussion about something, it's poor form for you to just plop a reason down and then revert back, per [[WP:BRD]]. You've been on here long enough to know better than that. - [[User:BillCJ|BillCJ]] ([[User talk:BillCJ|talk]]) 10:56, 3 February 2008 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 11:02, 13 February 2024
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"Radarless"
[edit]In the Variants section the first model, the Mirage 5, the model that gives its name to the entire article and the whole family of fighters, is listed as "radarless". Yet it doesn't say anything in the article about the radar being removed to create the Mirage 5. It says "avionics were removed to create room for additional fuel tanks" and that it has a longer, more pointed nose cone. That works seem like a pretty major alteration and worth mentioning in the text if it's true.
If it was just just a few of the minor sub variants that had the radar deleted it would be one thing, but the main character itself is declared a day fighter. And even the Kfir has a ranging radar. Idumea47b (talk) 17:59, 9 January 2024 (UTC)
- I found a source that directly states that it was the radar that was deleted and not just unspecified avionics. Jackson states that later variants of the Mirage V were built with radar and notes that the 'Mirage V' designation became meaningless. The 'early development' header could be changed to something like 'concept' as my addition could be anachronistic. My understanding is that it was intended to be a cheap, easily maintainable, fair-weather combat aircraft but it became something else later. Nimbus (Cumulus nimbus floats by) 15:21, 11 January 2024 (UTC)
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