Technicians at the Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group at Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz., are on track to finish the final conversion of a retired F-4 fighter into a target drone around mid-February, according to a base release. This aircraft will be the 316th F-4 converted to a remotely controlled QF-4 full-scale aerial target since the AMARG began these regenerations in 2001, states the Jan. 25 release. The Air Force is transitioning from the QF-4 to the QF-16 as its full-scale aerial target drone. The last QF-4s will support Army ground-to-air training at Holloman AFB, N.M., and air-to-air combat training at Tyndall AFB, Fla., states the release. An F-4 conversion takes an average of 9,000 man hours—about 277 calendar days—to complete, according to the release. (Davis-Monthan report by A1C Josh Slavin) (See also Three-Hundredth QF-4 Delivered.)
When Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth addressed the Army War College last week, he mentioned changes to the way the military buys software alongside Golden Dome and the F-47 as key to his goal of “rebuilding the military.” And Lt. Gen. Luke C.G. Cropsey, who heads the Air Force’s most consequential…