F-18L: the failed land-based Hornet
May 15, 2026•Channel
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Video Overview
Video Details
Published1 month ago
Duration14:18
Video IDZ4Dnped4MwM
Languageen
CategoryFilm & Animation
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views15.2K
Likes870
Comments69
Engagement Rate6.16%
Likes per 100 views5.71
Comments per 1K views4.53
Description
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In the late 1970s, Northrop proposed the F-18L — a land-based variant of the F/A-18, stripped of naval constraints and optimised for speed, agility, and cost. Lighter, simpler, and potentially more capable in several key areas, it was designed to compete directly with aircraft such as the F-16 in the global export market.
On paper, the F-18L offered significant advantages: improved thrust-to-weight ratio, greater payload flexibility, lower operating costs, and the same multirole capability that would make the Hornet famous. Some projections even suggested it would outperform its carrier-based counterpart in turn rate and range.
So why was it never built?
CONTENTS
00:00 Intro
01:23 Cobra's history & teaming deal
02:46 Land-based Hornet
05:33 Specs & Design
08:59 Marketing the F-18L
10:38 Lawsuit
11:48 Failure to Sell
12:48 Conclusion
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Some original footage and recreated scenes (using simulators like DCS and War Thunder) may not be 100% accurate to the events depicted but have been used for illustrative and dramatic purposes where archival footage was unavailable or restricted by copyright. We aim to remain as historically accurate as possible given the available resources. We use synthetic narrator voices for clarity.
Copyright Notice:
This video may contain copyrighted material used under the "fair dealing" provisions (ss 40/103C, ss 41/103A, ss 42/103B) of the Australian Copyright Act for purposes of research, study, criticism, review, and news reporting.
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About Us:
We are three aviation enthusiasts who create documentaries, interviews, and video essays focused on Australian and international military aviation history. Our channel explores the stories of military aircraft, fighter pilots, air battles, and the evolution of air power from WWI to today. We do our own research but are not experts in any particular area, so corrections and suggestions are welcome.