PilotPhotog Podcast

PilotPhotog

A podcast all about fighter planes, military aircraft, and aviation history. We will take a look at the pilots, designers, engineers, and maintainers who have flown or worked on some of the most iconic aircraft in history.    Available on all podcast steaming platforms, you can find a full directory here: https://pilotphotog.buzzsprout.comWant even more content? You can subscribe to my free newsletter here:  hangarflyingwithtog.comFollow me on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter @pilotphotogNow you know! 

  1. 1D AGO

    The Super Hornet Endgame

    Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message: The Navy’s do-everything fighter is heading toward the end of the production line, and the question behind the headlines is bigger than one airplane: what replaces a carrier workhorse when budgets, engineering capacity, and strategy all collide? We dig into the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet story from the moment the Navy needed a lifeline after the Cold War drawdown, the A-12 “Flying Dorito” fiasco, and an aging flight deck that was burning through airframes and maintenance dollars. We walk through the procurement sleight of hand that got the Rhino approved as a “derivative,” then break down what made it a different beast in practice: more internal fuel, more payload flexibility, and the bring-back performance that saves real money and preserves options on the carrier. We also get into the compromises that come with a jack-of-all-trades Navy fighter, including the canted pylons that fix dangerous weapon separation and the early wing-drop problem that nearly killed the program before software and aerodynamic fixes turned it into a low-speed carrier monster. From there, the focus shifts to electronic warfare and modern upgrades. We revisit the ES-3A Shadow and why it disappears despite strong performance, then explain how the EA-18G Growler evolves the carrier air wing from passive listening to integrated electronic attack. Finally, we look at Block III modernization, DTP-N processing power, open architecture “app-like” upgrades, RST-21 passive counter-stealth sensing, and the AIM-174B’s long reach, all while F/A-XX funding stalls and service life modification programs keep 1990s airframes alive into the 2040s. Subscribe, share this with a friend who follows naval aviation, and leave a review with your take: is the Super Hornet the last manned Navy fighter, or just the bridge to what comes next? Support the show To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:  PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com) Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:  https://hangarflyingwithtog.com   You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here: https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog   If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog   And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

    17 min
  2. MAY 5

    Why The A-10 Still Wins Over The Strait Of Hormuz

    Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message: The A-10 Warthog was supposed to be done. Too slow, too old, and too exposed for modern wars. Then Operation Epic Fury kicks off and suddenly the most advanced stealth jets run into a problem they can’t solve cleanly: small, fast attack boats weaving through commercial traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, plus high-pressure missions that demand hours of persistent overwatch and instant, precise firepower. We walk through how the A-10 Thunderbolt II earns a new nickname, “boat buster,” and why its “weaknesses” become advantages in a medium-threat environment. From AGM-65 Maverick strikes to APKWS rockets and the bone-rattling GAU-8 Avenger cannon, the Warthog’s close air support mindset translates into maritime interdiction. We also dig into the most dramatic moment of the operation, the rescue of Dude 44, where A-10s reprise the “Sandy” mission by suppressing enemy forces and coordinating recovery under fire. From there, we get technical: the titanium bathtub, self-sealing fuel tanks, manual reversion, and the engineering realities of firing a cannon so powerful it can threaten your own engines. We explain the refueling challenge created by the KC-46 transition and the rapid fix that adds probe-and-drogue capability, unlocking agile combat employment with C-130 style tankers and lower-altitude refueling below the radar horizon. Finally, we weigh the looming 2030 retirement and the proposed replacements, including what changes when you compare gun time, cost per flight hour, and situational awareness. Subscribe, share this with the aviation nerd in your life, and leave a review if you want more deep dives like this. After listening, what aircraft should we break down next? Support the show To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:  PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com) Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:  https://hangarflyingwithtog.com   You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here: https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog   If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog   And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

    14 min
  3. APR 22

    Operation Epic Fury And The F-35’s Real Combat Test

    Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message: A stealth fighter gets hit by a surface-to-air missile deep inside enemy territory and still makes it home. That single moment in Operation Epic Fury forces a hard reset on everything we think we “know” about fifth-generation airpower and it puts the F-35 Lightning II under the brightest possible spotlight: real combat, real damage, real outcomes. We walk through what Epic Fury reveals after more than 13,000 sorties, starting with the March 19, 2026 milestone when an Air Force F-35A takes the first known combat damage ever recorded on a fifth-generation stealth fighter. From redundant flight controls to the AN/AAQ-37 Distributed Aperture System and the split-second choices that keep a wounded pilot alive, we dig into what survivability actually looks like when stealth is no longer theoretical. Then we map the broader fight, including how each variant earns its keep: the F-35A as the deep-strike hammer, the Marine Corps F-35B enabling “Lightning carrier” operations and unpredictable basing, and the F-35C using massive internal fuel for long-range persistence and even early drone defense near the carrier force. But the story is not just victories. We also confront the modernization bottlenecks that could decide the next war: the radar transition from AN/APG-81 to the gallium nitride AN/APG-85, production delays that leave some new jets without an organic radar, and the TR3 software stability problems that slow the path to Block 4. Along the way, we spotlight sensor fusion, helmet-based tactics, the Dude 44 combat search and rescue mission, and the maintainers battling heat, salt, UV, and dust to keep sortie rates alive. If you found this breakdown useful, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: did Epic Fury silence the critics, or are radar and software issues a ticking time bomb? Support the show To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:  PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com) Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:  https://hangarflyingwithtog.com   You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here: https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog   If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog   And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

    11 min
  4. APR 6

    A $300 Million Combat Rescue Behind Enemy Lines

    Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message: A single ejection over Iran turns into a 48-hour nightmare: one airman recovered fast, the other wedged into a mountain crevice while patrols sweep the ridgelines and a bounty spreads across the highlands. We walk through how that kind of isolation becomes a strategic crisis, not just a rescue problem, especially after years of assuming near-total aerial invulnerability. When a nation is hunting one person, every radio burst, every footstep, and every minute of daylight matters. We dig into the survival side of modern SEAR training, including the brutal tradeoff between staying silent and staying findable. Then we shift to the behind-the-scenes play that buys time, with a deception campaign that pushes enemy forces toward phantom targets. It’s a reminder that combat search and rescue (CSAR) isn’t one team doing one thing, it’s intelligence, misdirection, timing, and aviation all interlocked under pressure. From there, the story goes technical and tactical. The MC-130J Commando and its Silent Knight terrain-following radar show what special operations aviation looks like in contested airspace: ultra-low flying, terrain masking, and a forward arming and refueling point deep in denied territory. On the ground, Guardian Angels and Air Force Pararescue (PJs) own the “last mile” with medical capability and small-unit tactics, while MQ-9 Reaper drones shape the battlespace overhead. And when the extraction plan breaks and aircraft bog down in desert sand, we confront the hardest decision of all: destroy sensitive technology with thermite or risk it falling into enemy hands. If you’re into military aviation, special operations, electronic warfare, and the real-world cost of “leave no one behind,” this one delivers. Subscribe, share this with a friend who follows CSAR and SOF, and leave a review with the next rescue or aircraft deep dive you want to hear. Support the show To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:  PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com) Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:  https://hangarflyingwithtog.com   You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here: https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog   If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog   And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

    15 min
  5. APR 1

    How The Navy Built A Digital Submarine Hunter

    Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message: The ocean is the perfect place to hide a weapon you never want seen, and nuclear submarines proved it. We follow the moment the US Navy realizes its World War II era anti-submarine warfare playbook can’t protect billion-dollar supercarriers anymore, then track the unlikely solution: a compact jet that sounds like a vacuum cleaner and thinks like a computer. The Lockheed S-3 Viking, nicknamed the “Hoover,” isn’t built for speed or glamour. It’s built to stay out for hours, digest a flood of signals, and keep a carrier battle group alive. We unpack what made the S-3 a leap in carrier-based ASW: the UNIVAC 1832 digital brain, a sensor suite designed for detection and classification, and the tactics that turn chaos into geometry with sonobuoy grids and triangulation. Then we get into the eerie “sixth sense” that closes the loop, the Magnetic Anomaly Detector boom that can confirm a submarine by sensing tiny changes in Earth’s magnetic field. If you’ve ever wondered how naval aviation makes an opaque ocean feel transparent, this is the roadmap. The story doesn’t end with the Cold War. We dig into how the Viking mutates into a surface hunter, tanker, COD aircraft, and intelligence platform, plus the wild footnote of “Navy 1” and a presidential carrier landing. Finally, we wrestle with the hard trade that retires a specialist predator in favor of cheaper generalist logistics and what that decision means now that quiet submarines are back in contested seas. Subscribe, share this with an aviation or naval history fan, and leave a review with your take: should a dedicated carrier-based sub hunter return? Support the show To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:  PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com) Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:  https://hangarflyingwithtog.com   You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here: https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog   If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog   And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

    26 min
  6. MAR 13

    The Four Jets That Win Carrier Wars

    Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message: An aircraft carrier can look like a steel monument to power, but the real story is what happens when it stops being a symbol and becomes a system. We walk through Operation Epic Fury as a blueprint for modern carrier warfare: two carriers in two seas creating a shield and sword, dividing the battlespace, and forcing an enemy to defend against multiple launch points, multiple tempos, and overlapping layers of surveillance and strike. If you care about naval aviation, carrier strike groups, and how airpower actually scales under pressure, this is the connective tissue. We break down the four Navy aircraft that make the machine work and why none of them is optional. The F/A-18 Super Hornet provides mass, flexibility, and persistence as the backbone of strike and defense. The F-35C Lightning II isn’t just a stealth strike fighter, it’s a forward sensor fusion and targeting node that penetrates denied airspace and shares a clean tactical picture. The EA-18G Growler turns electronic warfare into battlefield leverage by jamming, degrading, and disrupting the enemy’s integrated air defense system and communications. And the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye brings command and control, timing, and coherence so the sky doesn’t collapse into confusion when everything is happening at once. Then we land on the part that rarely gets the spotlight: the flight deck. EMALS, advanced systems, and precision weapons don’t matter if the deck crews, maintainers, and ordnancemen can’t sustain the rhythm of launch, recover, refuel, rearm, and repeat in the dark, on a pitching deck, under stress. If this kind of military aviation deep dive helps you see beyond specs and headlines, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. Support the show To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:  PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com) Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:  https://hangarflyingwithtog.com   You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here: https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog   If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog   And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

    19 min
  7. MAR 9

    Bone At The Gates

    Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message: A freezing South Dakota night, wrenches crusted in frost, and a bomber built to bend physics and distance to its will. We take you from the flight line to the target area to unpack how the B‑1B Lancer—once a controversial Cold War project—became America’s relentless conventional strike hammer during Operation Epic Fury. We break down the numbers that matter: thrust‑to‑weight at max takeoff, wing loading versus runway length, and why variable‑sweep geometry lets a half‑million‑pound aircraft leap from ice‑cold concrete, climb, and then sprint supersonic. You’ll hear how GE’s F101 engines survive turbine inlet temperatures above 2,500°F, why the KC‑135 and KC‑46 tanker bridge is the real backbone of global reach, and how a fly‑by‑wire boom delivering 1,200 gallons per minute turns fuel into firepower. Then we dive into penetration tactics: sweeping to 67.5 degrees for dash, riding the deck at near‑Mach to hide in terrain, and using S‑ducts and internal design to slash radar returns. The secret sauce? A Structural Mode Control System that actively damps brutal low‑level vibrations so crews can fight and the airframe can live. Inside the bays, it gets even more serious. Three rotary launchers upgraded with BRU‑56 ejectors let the Lancer carry an astonishing 24 JASSM‑ER cruise missiles, each a stealthy, 600‑plus‑mile punch against hardened targets. We trace the targeting workflow from Link‑16 tasking to programmed coordinates to that violent door snap and clean eject that sends missiles sliding into the slipstream—over and over—until command nodes and launch sites go dark. Along the way, we honor the human element: maintainers from the 28th Bomb Wing turning jets in subzero wind, crews sitting ejection seats for 34 hours, and tanker teams flying in radio silence to hold the bridge across oceans. If you care about airpower, engineering, and the hard math of global strike, this deep dive connects history, physics, and logistics into a single, razor‑sharp picture of how modern bombing actually works. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend who loves aviation, and leave a review with the one moment that shocked you most. Support the show To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:  PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com) Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:  https://hangarflyingwithtog.com   You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here: https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog   If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog   And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

    20 min
4.9
out of 5
15 Ratings

About

A podcast all about fighter planes, military aircraft, and aviation history. We will take a look at the pilots, designers, engineers, and maintainers who have flown or worked on some of the most iconic aircraft in history.    Available on all podcast steaming platforms, you can find a full directory here: https://pilotphotog.buzzsprout.comWant even more content? You can subscribe to my free newsletter here:  hangarflyingwithtog.comFollow me on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter @pilotphotogNow you know! 

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