The QF-4 Phantom targeting drone visited Hill AFB, Utah, for the last time Tuesday as the aircraft moves steadily toward its retirement. Hill has been home of the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center’s F/QF-4 System Program Office since the 1990s, according to a Hill news release. QF-4s are standard F-4s that have been reconfigured as unmanned aircraft for use in full-scale aerial target missions. The last unmanned QF-4 was shot down Aug. 17 at White Sands Missile Range, N.M. The aircraft is also flown on manned missions, however, as Lt. Col Ron King and Jim Harkins from Holloman AFB, N.M., demonstrated Tuesday in their flybys before they landed at Hill. “I felt like we had an opportunity and an obligation to get this aircraft on the road one more time because so many people have this connection with it,” King said, according to the release. “It’s just been absolutely amazing for me to do this.” The last manned QF-4 flight is scheduled for Dec. 21. The aircraft is being replaced by the QF-16, which achieved initial operational capacity on Sept. 23. The Air Force currently has 13 QF-4s, which will eventually be used as ground targets.
Air Force Munitions Gets Big Boost from Reconciliation
June 28, 2025
Thanks to reconciliation, the fiscal 2026 Air Force budget would get a surge of munitions procurement, but it's not yet clear if the production increase will be sustained. The Air Force revealed the secret AIM-260 air-to-air missile's funding for the first time.