Pave Tack was developed in the late 1970s and entered service in 1982, and was initially used by the USAF
McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II and
General Dynamics F-111C Aardvark strike aircraft. It was first used in combat in 1986 during the
Operation Eldorado Canyon air raid against
Libya by F-111F aircraft stationed at RAF Lakenheath, England. F-111s used it to great effect in the
Gulf War of 1991, against both fixed targets and
tanks. F-4 crews called Pave Tack "Pave Drag" because it was carried externally. Pave Tack is a large installation, with the 166 inch (4,220 mm)-long pod alone weighing 1,385 lb (629 kg); on the F-4, the pod had to be carried on the centerline station in place of the standard drop tank, imposing substantial
aerodynamic drag, and was generally unpopular. The F-111C and F-111F had a rotating carriage normally carrying the Pave Tack pod in its internal
bomb bay to reduce drag and protect it from damage, deploying it externally when in use.
F-111F in 1982, equipped with a Pave Tack and
GBU-10s. About 150 AVQ-26 pods were built, substantially fewer than originally planned. The last USAF Pave Tacks were withdrawn with the retirement of the F-111 in 1996. The
Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) purchased ten Pave Tack pods in 1980 for its F-111 fleet. All 24 F-111Cs were wired for the pod, although there were not enough pods for all to be simultaneously equipped. Following the retirement of the USAF's F-111F in 1996 the RAAF purchased enough surplus pods for all of its F-111Cs. The
Republic of Korea Air Force (RoKAF) ordered an initial batch of eight pods in 1984 for delivery in 1987. It may have subsequently obtained additional pods from USAF surplus. The RoKAF uses the pods on its F-4 Phantoms. ==See also==