McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet — History, Specs & Stories

McDonnell Douglas F/A-18C Hornet aboard USS Carl Vinson
Aircraft MuseumMultirole FighterF/A-18 Hornet

McDonnell Douglas F/A-18
“Hornet”

The world’s first true carrier multirole fighter — born from a jet that lost the contest the F-16 won, it merged fighter and attack into one airframe, proved it in a single 40-second Desert Storm sortie, and armed seven allied air forces. This is the original “legacy” Hornet (A/B/C/D), not the larger Super Hornet.

~1,480Legacy A/B/C/D built — totals vary by source
Mach 1.8+Top speed
1983Entered US Navy & Marine service
F/AFighter and attack in one jet
Photo: U.S. Navy · Public domain
RoleCarrier-capable multirole fighterEra1978 – presentMotor2 × GE F404 turbofansOriginUSA · McDonnell Douglas / NorthropStatusActive / being retiredCan a civilian fly the F/A-18 Hornet?
Hikaye

The winner that lost — and rewrote how navies fly

The Hornet grew out of a loser. Northrop’s YF-17 “Cobra” lost the US Air Force’s Lightweight Fighter fly-off to the General Dynamics YF-16 in 1975 — the design that became the F-16. But the US Navy wanted a twin-engine, carrier-capable multirole jet, and picked the YF-17 as the basis for its Naval Air Combat Fighter. McDonnell Douglas became prime contractor, with Northrop as partner, and heavily navalized the design: a bigger, stronger structure, folding wings, carrier landing gear and an arrestor hook.

The F/A-18 first flew on 18 November 1978 and entered US Navy and Marine Corps service in 1983 with squadrons VMFA-314 and VFA-113. Its breakthrough was doing two jobs in one airframe — fighter Ve attack, hence the “F/A” designation — replacing separate F-4s and A-7s. The improved F/A-18C/D arrived from 1987 with new avionics and weapons, and the US Navy’s Blue Angels have flown Hornets since 1986.

Widely exported, the legacy Hornet armed seven allied air forces — Canada, Australia, Spain, Kuwait, Finland, Switzerland and Malaysia — and flew combat for many of them. Today it is an active but retreating aircraft: the US Navy retired the legacy Hornet from its front-line fleet squadrons in 2018, Australia bowed out in 2021, and Canada, Finland and Switzerland are transitioning to the F-35. This page is the original “legacy” Hornet — not the larger, later Super Hornet.

Win the dogfight and complete the strike on the same mission, without swapping jets or dropping ordnance — that was the promise of the slash in “F/A.”One airframe, two jobs — why the Hornet replaced two specialists
01The multirole revolution, proven in one 40-second F/A-18 sortie

On the opening morning of Desert Storm, 17 January 1991, four VFA-81 “Sunliners” F/A-18Cs launched from USS Saratoga, each hauling four 2,000-lb Mk 84 bombs toward the H-3 airfield in western Iraq. An E-2C Hawkeye warned of MiG-21s closing head-on. Lt Cdr Mark Fox Ve Lt Nick Mongillo swung to the threat and killed both MiGs — Fox with an AIM-9 Sidewinder, Mongillo with an AIM-7 Sparrow — then rolled back onto their attack run and dropped their bombs on target.

The whole air-to-air engagement lasted under a minute. No aircraft type had ever so publicly demonstrated the “F/A” promise: win the dogfight Ve complete the strike on the same mission, without swapping jets or jettisoning ordnance. It became the enduring case study for why one multirole airframe could replace two specialists.


Design & Engineering

What makes the F/A-18 Hornet special

01

Twin GE F404 turbofans

Two General Electric F404 turbofans (F404-GE-400/-402), roughly 78–80 kN each in afterburner, gave the reliability, tolerance and quick throttle response the Navy demanded. Two engines meant redundancy for long over-water carrier sorties, and strong spool-up for the exacting carrier approach — a deliberate contrast to the single-engine F-16.

02

Leading-edge extensions & high-alpha control

The big wing-root leading-edge extensions (LEX), paired with relaxed stability, generate stabilising vortices that keep airflow attached at extreme angles of attack. The result is superb slow-speed, nose-high controllability — the signature air-show and dogfight trait that lets the Hornet point its nose where older jets would simply depart.

03

Carrier-suitable, digital, and multirole

A beefed-up structure, folding wings, tailhook and rugged gear made it carrier-suitable; a digital fly-by-wire system, APG-65/73 radar, HOTAS controls and glass-cockpit multifunction displays let one pilot switch from fighter to attack in flight. That marriage of a robust airframe and modern avionics is the core “F/A” idea made real.

02The F/A-18’s LEX: vortices that tame high angle of attack

The strakes running forward of the wing roots are not decoration. At high angle of attack they shed powerful vortices that re-energise the airflow over the wing, keeping it attached when the nose is pointed high and older designs would stall and depart. That is why the Hornet stays crisply controllable in the slow, nose-high regime — a decisive advantage in a close-in knife-fight and, just as importantly, on the low-and-slow carrier approach where control authority is everything.

03Why the Hornet is heavier than the F-16 it shared a contest with

The YF-17 and YF-16 were rival lightweight fighters, but navalizing the YF-17 into the F/A-18 meant reinforcing almost everything: a heavier structure to survive catapult shots and arrested landings, catapult-capable nose gear, an arrestor hook and wings that fold to fit crowded decks. All of that added weight over a land-based fighter like the F-16. The payoff was an aircraft that could slam onto a pitching carrier deck day and night, over open ocean, on two engines — exactly what the Navy could not get from the lighter, single-engine design.


Technical Data

Full F/A-18C specifications

Airframe & Performance

Mürettebat
1 (C) / 2 (D)
Uzunluk
~17.1 m (17.07 m)
Kanat açıklığı
~11.4 m (~8.4 m folded)
Yükseklik
~4.7 m (4.66 m)
Kanat alanı
~37.2 m²
Max takeoff weight
~23,500 kg (up to ~25,400 kg cited)
Max speed
>Mach 1.8 · ~1,900 km/h
Servis tavanı
~15,000 m (~50,000 ft)
Savaş yarıçapı
~537 km / 290 nm (interdiction; profile-dependent)

Propulsion & Armament

Motor
2 × GE F404-GE-402 (EPE)
Thrust
~78–80 kN each with afterburner
Cannon
1 × 20 mm M61 Vulcan (~578 rounds)
Air-to-air
AIM-9, AIM-7, AIM-120 AMRAAM
Air-to-ground
Mk 80 bombs, JDAM/JSOW, Maverick, HARM, Harpoon
First flight
18 November 1978
Unit cost
~US$29–57M (historic; varies widely)
Cost per flight hour
No single reliable public figure
04The F/A-18 Hornet’s cost: why the numbers are slippery

Published unit costs for the legacy Hornet range roughly from US$29 million to US$57 million depending on the variant, the year and how the accounting is done — flyaway cost, program cost, then-year versus constant dollars all give different answers. Treat any single figure as an approximation. No credible, consistent cost-per-flight-hour number exists in open sources for the legacy A/B/C/D either. What is clear is the value proposition the Navy bought: a single airframe that did the work of two, cutting the number of aircraft types a carrier air wing had to buy, crew, arm and maintain.


Timeline

From rejected prototype to retreating veteran

1974–75

The YF-17 loses

Northrop’s YF-17 loses the USAF Lightweight Fighter fly-off to the YF-16 — the jet that becomes the F-16.

2 May 1975

The Navy adopts the loser

The US Navy selects the YF-17 as the basis for its Naval Air Combat Fighter; McDonnell Douglas becomes prime contractor.

18 Nov 1978

First flight

The navalized F/A-18 takes to the air for the first time.

1983

Enters service

The Hornet joins US Navy and Marine Corps squadrons VMFA-314 and VFA-113.

1986

The Blue Angels adopt it

The US Navy flight demonstration squadron re-equips with the Hornet, making its shape iconic.

1987

The improved C/D

The F/A-18C/D enters production with upgraded avionics and expanded weapons.

17 Jan 1991

Two MiGs, then the bombs

VFA-81 Hornets down two MiG-21s in under a minute on the opening morning of Desert Storm, then complete their bombing run.

1999–2000s

Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan

US and allied Hornets fly combat over the Balkans, Iraq (2003 onward) and Afghanistan.

2018

US Navy retires the legacy Hornet

Front-line fleet squadrons hand over to the Super Hornet; legacy Hornets pass to reserve and training roles.

Nov 2021

Australia retires its Classic Hornets

The RAAF withdraws its F/A-18A/B fleet, replaced by the F-35A. Canada, Finland and Switzerland are also transitioning to the F-35.


Stories & Eyewitnesses

From the flight line: twelve Hornet stories

Design

Born from a rejected fighter

The winner that lost

Read the full story
The Hornet is the YF-17 “Cobra,” which LOST the USAF Lightweight Fighter contest to the jet that became the F-16. The Navy wanted twins for over-water safety, adopted the loser, navalized it heavily under McDonnell Douglas — and got one of the most successful carrier fighters ever. The runner-up outlasted expectations.
Combat

Two MiGs killed, then the bombs still fell

Dogfight and strike, one sortie

Read the full story
17 January 1991: VFA-81 Hornets bound for H-3 airfield were jumped by MiG-21s. Fox and Mongillo downed both in under a minute — Fox with a Sidewinder, Mongillo with a Sparrow — then rolled back in and dropped their Mk 84s on target. The definitive proof of the multirole idea.
Design

Why it’s F/A, not just F or A

What the slash means

Read the full story
Before the Hornet, navies flew separate fighters (F-4) and attack jets (A-7). The F/A-18 did both in one airframe, one pilot, switchable in flight. The “F/A” designation announced a new philosophy — and every modern multirole fighter follows its lead.
Display

America’s team flew Hornets for 34 years

The Blue Angels’ mount

Read the full story
From 1986 to 2020 the US Navy Blue Angels performed in legacy Hornets, thrilling millions and making the jet’s shape iconic. The high-alpha passes that define the show trade on the Hornet’s LEX-driven low-speed control — before the team moved to the Super Hornet.
Tech

How the LEX tame high angle of attack

Vortices that keep flying

Read the full story
The strakes running forward of the wing roots generate powerful vortices that keep airflow attached when the nose is pointed high. Result: the Hornet stays controllable at extreme angles of attack where older jets depart — a gift in a knife-fight and on the carrier approach.
Export

MiGFlug’s home country flies the Hornet

Switzerland’s Alpine Hornets

Read the full story
Switzerland bought F/A-18C/D Hornets in the 1990s to guard its mountain airspace, and they remain among the most prominent operators. Prominent — but NOT flyable with civilians. Switzerland is now transitioning to the F-35, so the Swiss Hornet era is drawing toward its close.
Export

Cold-weather Hornets on the Baltic frontier

The Finnish Ilmavoimat

Read the full story
Finland acquired F-18C/D Hornets in the 1990s as its air-defence backbone, operating them in harsh sub-zero conditions from dispersed bases. They soldier on into the late 2020s until the F-35 replaces them under the HX programme.
Carrier

Folding wings, a hook and a very strong airframe

Built for the boat

Read the full story
Navalizing the YF-17 meant reinforcing everything: heavier structure, catapult-capable nose gear, an arrestor hook and wings that fold to fit crowded decks. It made the Hornet heavier than the F-16 — but able to slam onto a pitching carrier deck day and night.
Combat

The Hornet went to war for many flags

Allied over many skies

Read the full story
Beyond US Navy and Marine service, legacy Hornets flew combat for allies: Canada over Libya and against ISIS, Australia over Iraq and Syria, Spain over the Balkans, Kuwait in regional operations. Few export fighters have seen action under so many national roundels. (Exact sortie and claim figures are best treated with caution.)
Retirement

The Classic Hornet’s Down Under farewell

Australia says goodbye

Read the full story
After more than 30 years, the Royal Australian Air Force retired its “Classic” F/A-18A/B Hornets in November 2021, replaced by the F-35A. Some airframes were sold on; others became museum pieces and gate guards. A long, hard-working career ended quietly.
Family

Legacy Hornet vs Super Hornet

Don’t confuse the cousins

Read the full story
The F/A-18E/F Super Hornet looks similar but is a bigger, heavier, later aircraft — roughly 25% larger, new engines, different radar. It is a SEPARATE type (and a separate exhibit). This page is the ORIGINAL “legacy” Hornet: A/B/C/D. The distinction is critical — figures do not transfer.
Human

The workload the Hornet handed its aviator

One pilot, two jobs

Read the full story
Doing fighter and strike work solo meant a single pilot juggling radar, weapons and threats. HOTAS controls and multifunction displays — advanced for the early 1980s — were what made it possible, foreshadowing the sensor-fused cockpits of today’s fighters.

Gallery

The Hornet in pictures

A US Marine Corps F/A-18C Hornet fires off the catapult of USS Harry S. Truman  the violent carrier launch the airframe was reinforced for.
A US Marine Corps F/A-18C Hornet fires off the catapult of USS Harry S. Truman — the violent carrier launch the airframe was reinforced for.Photo: MC3 Blagoj B. Petkovski, U.S. Navy · Public domain
An F/A-18 Hornet catches a wire in an arrested landing aboard USS George Washington in the Persian Gulf.
An F/A-18 Hornet catches a wire in an arrested landing aboard USS George Washington in the Persian Gulf.Photo: U.S. Navy / Brian Fleske · Public domain
A US Navy F/A-18C Hornet in flight  the clean lines of the original legacy jet.
A US Navy F/A-18C Hornet in flight — the clean lines of the original legacy jet.Photo: U.S. Navy · Public domain
A US Navy Blue Angels legacy Hornet  the team flew the type from 1986 to 2020.
A US Navy Blue Angels legacy Hornet — the team flew the type from 1986 to 2020.Photo: U.S. Navy Blue Angels · Public domain
A Finnish Air Force F-18C Hornet flies alongside a US Air Force B-52  the Ilmavoimat has flown the Hornet since the 1990s.
A Finnish Air Force F-18C Hornet flies alongside a US Air Force B-52 — the Ilmavoimat has flown the Hornet since the 1990s.Photo: U.S. Air Force / Tech. Sgt. Codie Trimble · Public domain
Two F/A-18C Hornets of the VFA-131 Wildcats on patrol  a US Navy strike-fighter pair.
Two F/A-18C Hornets of the VFA-131 “Wildcats” on patrol — a US Navy strike-fighter pair.Photo: U.S. Navy / Lt. Tom Haeussler · Public domain

Watch

The Hornet in motion

A legacy F/A-18 Hornet video feature is on the way.


Operations

Where the Hornet flies


Combat Record

Combat-proven, under many flags

The legacy Hornet made its combat debut in Operation Desert Storm in 1991 — including the two US Navy MiG-21 kills of 17 January, after which the same Hornets completed their bombing run — and went on to fly thousands of strike sorties. It later served over the Balkans and Kosovo (1999), Iraq (2003 onward) and Afghanistan, flown by US Navy and Marine crews and by allies. Per-nation air-to-air tallies for the legacy jet are small and sometimes contested, so specific claims are best hedged.

7Allied export operators of the legacy Hornet
1991–Combat from Desert Storm onward
2 MiGsKilled, then bombs dropped — same sortie, 17 Jan 1991

Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Figures as of July 2026.


Questions & Answers

Everything people ask about the F/A-18 Hornet

Can I fly in an F/A-18 Hornet?
No. The legacy Hornet is an active — and now recently-retired — frontline carrier fighter, and it is not offered to civilians by MiGFlug. Even in Switzerland (MiGFlug’s home country), where Swiss Hornets are prominent, no civilian Hornet flights exist. However you CAN fly several genuine military jets today — see MiGFlug’s real fighter-jet flights at migflug.com/flights-prices/.
Why is it called “F/A”?
Because it is both a Fighter and an Attack aircraft in one airframe — the first true carrier multirole jet, replacing separate F-4 fighters and A-7 attack jets.
Is the Hornet the same as the Super Hornet?
No. The F/A-18E/F Super Hornet is a bigger, later, separate aircraft (and a separate exhibit). This page is the original legacy A/B/C/D Hornet; the two share a name and a look but not their dimensions, engines or radar.
How fast is the F/A-18 Hornet?
Over Mach 1.8 — roughly 1,900 km/h at altitude.
Is it related to the F-16?
Distantly. The Hornet’s ancestor, the YF-17, lost the same US Air Force lightweight-fighter contest that the F-16 (YF-16) won; the Navy then developed the loser into the Hornet.
Who flies the legacy Hornet now?
In 2026, Finland, Switzerland, Spain and Malaysia still operate legacy Hornets, though several are transitioning to the F-35. The US, Canada and Australia have retired theirs.
Did the F/A-18 Hornet see combat?
Yes — Desert Storm in 1991 (including two MiG kills followed by a bombing run on the same sortie), then Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, flown by US and allied crews.
Do the Blue Angels fly the Hornet?
They flew legacy Hornets from 1986 to 2020, and now fly the Super Hornet.

Sources & Further Reading

Every fact, checked