Introduction on USS
Enterprise in 1962. Designated
A3J-1, the Vigilante first entered service with
Heavy Attack Squadron Three (VAH-3) in June 1961 at
Naval Air Station Sanford, Florida, replacing the
Douglas A-3 Skywarrior in the heavy attack, e.g., "strategic nuclear strike" role. All variants of the Vigilante were built at North American Aviation's facility at
Port Columbus Airport in Columbus, Ohio, alongside the
North American T-2 Buckeye,
T-39 Sabreliner and
OV-10 Bronco. Under the Tri-Services Designation plan implemented under
Robert McNamara in September 1962, the Vigilante was redesignated
A-5, with the initial A3J-1 becoming
A-5A and the updated A3J-2 becoming
A-5B. The subsequent reconnaissance version, originally
A3J-3P, became the
RA-5C. The Vigilante's early service proved troublesome, with many teething problems for its advanced systems. Although these systems were highly sophisticated, the technology was in its infancy and its reliability was poor. Although most of these reliability issues were eventually worked out as maintenance personnel gained greater experience with supporting these systems, the aircraft tended to remain a maintenance-intensive platform throughout its career.
End of carrier-based strategic bombing The A-5's service coincided with a major policy shift in the US Navy's strategic role, which switched to emphasize
submarine-launched ballistic missiles rather than manned bombers, while the US Navy had a requirement for a long range reconnaissance aircraft, which could be met by the now-surplus Vigilante. As a result, in 1963, procurement of the A-5 was ended and the type was converted to the fast reconnaissance role. The first RA-5Cs were delivered to VAH-3, the A-5A and A-5B Replacement Air Group (RAG)/Fleet Replacement Squadron (FRS), subsequently redesignated as Reconnaissance Attack Squadron Three (RVAH-3), at
Naval Air Station Sanford, Florida in July 1963. As they transitioned from the attack version to the reconnaissance version, all Vigilante squadrons were subsequently redesignated from VAH to RVAH. Under Commander, Reconnaissance Attack Wing One (COMRECONATKWING ONE), a total of 10 RA-5C squadrons were ultimately established. RVAH-3 continued to be responsible for the stateside-based RA-5C training mission of flight crews, maintenance and support personnel, while
RVAH-1,
RVAH-5,
RVAH-6,
RVAH-7,
RVAH-9,
RVAH-11,
RVAH-12,
RVAH-13 and
RVAH-14 routinely deployed aboard , , , , , , , , and to the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Western Pacific.
Vietnam service Eight of ten squadrons of RA-5C Vigilantes also saw extensive service in the
Vietnam War starting in August 1964, carrying out hazardous medium-level post-strike reconnaissance missions. Although it proved fast and agile, 18 RA-5Cs were lost in combat: 14 to anti-aircraft fire, 3 to surface-to-air missiles, and 1 to a
MiG-21 during
Operation Linebacker II. Nine more RA-5Cs were lost in operational accidents while serving with
Task Force 77. Due, in part, to these combat losses, 36 additional RA-5C aircraft were built from 1968 to 1970 as attrition replacements. In 1968, Congress closed the aircraft's original operating base of Naval Air Station Sanford, Florida and transferred the parent wing, Reconnaissance Attack Wing One, all subordinate squadrons and all aircraft and personnel to
Turner AFB, a
Strategic Air Command (SAC)
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress and
Boeing KC-135 base in Albany, Georgia. The tenant SAC bomb wing was then inactivated and control of Turner AFB was transferred from the Air Force to the Navy with the installation renamed Naval Air Station Albany. In 1974, after barely six years of service as a
naval air station, Congress opted to close Naval Air Station Albany as part of a post-Vietnam force reduction, transferring all RA-5C units and personnel to
Naval Air Station Key West, Florida.
Retirement Despite the Vigilante's useful service, it was expensive and complex to operate and occupied significant amounts of precious flight deck and hangar deck space aboard both conventional and nuclear-powered aircraft carriers at a time when carrier air wings, with the introduction of the
F-14 Tomcat and
S-3 Viking, were averaging 90 aircraft, many of which were larger than their predecessors. With the end of the Vietnam War, disestablishment of RVAH squadrons began in 1974, with the last Vigilante squadron, RVAH-7, completing its final deployment to the Western Pacific aboard USS
Ranger in late 1979. The final flight by an RA-5C took place on 20 November 1979 when a Vigilante departed
Naval Air Station Key West, Florida. Reconnaissance Attack Wing One was subsequently disestablished at Naval Air Station Key West in January 1980. (formerly
Naval Air Station Memphis), Tennessee. ,
Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona in November 1978. The Vigilante did not end the career of the A-3 Skywarrior, which would carry on as photo reconnaissance aircraft, electronic warfare platforms, aerial refueling tankers, and executive transport aircraft designated as RA-3A/B, EA-3A/B, ERA-3B, EKA-3B, KA-3B, and VA-3B, into the early 1990s. Fighters replaced the RA-5C in the carrier-based reconnaissance role. The RF-8G version of the
Vought F-8 Crusader, modified with internal cameras, had already been serving in two light photographic squadrons (
VFP-62 and
VFP-63) since the early 1960s, operating from older aircraft carriers unable to support the Vigilante. The Marine Corps' sole photographic squadron (
VMFP-3) would also deploy aboard aircraft carriers during this period with RF-4B Phantom II aircraft. These squadrons superseded the Vigilante's role by providing detachments from the primary squadron to carrier air wings throughout the late 1970s and early-to-mid-1980s, until the transfer of the recon mission to the Navy's fighter squadron (VF) community operating the F-14 Tomcat. Select models of the F-14 Tomcat would eventually carry the multi-sensor
Tactical Airborne Reconnaissance Pod System (TARPS) and the Digital Tactical Air Reconnaissance Pod (D-TARPS). Up to present day, the weight of carrier-based fighters such as the F-14 Tomcat and
Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet have evolved into the same class as the Vigilante.
Records On 13 December 1960, Navy Commander Leroy A. Heath (pilot) and Lieutenant Larry Monroe (bombardier/navigator) established a world altitude record of in an A3J Vigilante carrying a payload, beating the previous record by over . This new record held for more than 13 years. The attempt was accomplished by reaching a speed of Mach 2.1, then pulling up to create a ballistic trajectory beyond the altitude at which its wings could continue to function. The engines flamed out in the thin atmosphere, and the aircraft rolled onto its back. This had already been experienced in previous flights, and so the pilot simply released the controls and the aircraft regained control naturally as it descended back into the thicker air of the lower atmosphere. ==Variants==