The 1980s was the last decade to witness air-to-air combat on a large scale, and the fighters of this age were impressively capable machines.
Advances in radar, missile and human-machine interface technology produced extremely potent machines that were far easier to fly and fight in than their 1960s forebears. In the past, enemy aircraft had been safe hiding in the clutter of ground returns (flying low could hide you from earlier radars) but by the mid-80s many fighters had a look-down/shoot down capability (the ability to detect and shoot down an air target moving below the horizon) making the sky a far more dangerous place. Here are 10 of the most potent air-to-air fighters of 1985:
10: BAe Sea Harrier FRS. Mk 1

The Sea Harrier is the oddest aircraft on this list: its top speed was half that of the other aircraft, it could only carry half the number of missiles and its radar had half the detection range. Yet, it managed to perform extremely well in the air-to-air role in the Falklands War of 1982.
Its virtues were its high thrust-to-weight ratio and that it was small and smokeless, but the main reasons for its success were its highly-trained pilots and the excellent AIM-9L heat-seeking missile that the Americans supplied to the British at the last moment in time for the Falkands, thanks to the influence of Anglophile US Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger. The Sea Harrier could also operate in weather conditions that would have kept any other carrier fighters on or under the deck.
10: BAe Sea Harrier FRS. Mk 1

The Harrier was the first operational vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) fighter aircraft, earning it the nickname of the ‘Jump Jet’. The Harrier family pioneered the use of vectored thrust for abrupt decelerations and unexpected manoeuvres in the dogfight, though these have not been used in actual air combat.
The Sea Harrier was a modified variant of the Harrier for use on Britain’s relatively small aircraft carriers. A small fighter that could carry two powerful 30-mm cannon and four of the best short range air-to-air missiles of the time, only a fool would underestimate the plucky Sea Harrier. The Sea Harriers shot down 20 Argentinian aircraft in the Falklands versus no air-to-air losses of their own.
9: Dassault Mirage F1

France’s resurrection after World War II saw the creation of a world-class jet fighter industry. Of this military production renaissance, the most significant contribution was the Mirage series of combat aircraft from the Dassault company. Not only excellent aircraft, they proved a success on the export market, especially for nations wishing to avoid (or refused the opportunity of) buying aircraft from the US or Soviet Union.


















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