F-15C Eagle 390 FS "Wild Boars" 366 FW "Gun Fighters" Mountain Home AFB Home Prints
Images are reduced fidelity for copyright protection.
The 390th Fighter Squadron Wild Boars, based at Idaho’s Mountain Home AFB, were part of the USAF’s “Air Intervention Expeditionary Wing” experiment. To improve integration between different aircraft types, they were based together rather than at single type bases. The wing consisted of F-15C’s, F-15E’s, F-16CJ’s, a Combat Control Squadron, in addition to an attached B-1B and KC-135 squadrons.
The Wild Boars provided the wing’s dedicated Air-to-Air support with their “light grey” F-15C… including 86-170. She is show with a “2-bag” external wing tank configuration and is armed with 4 x AIM-120B, 2 x AIM-7’s on the forward intake stations, and 2 x AIM-9M’s in addition to her 20mm internal M-61 cannon and defensive Chaff and Flares.
Any Fighter Studios print can be customized with different squadron marking, different store configurations, names on the nose or canopy rail. To get yours started, click Personalized Print for more information or click Email with questions.
Images are reduced fidelity for copyright protection.
The 390th Fighter Squadron Wild Boars, based at Idaho’s Mountain Home AFB, were part of the USAF’s “Air Intervention Expeditionary Wing” experiment. To improve integration between different aircraft types, they were based together rather than at single type bases. The wing consisted of F-15C’s, F-15E’s, F-16CJ’s, a Combat Control Squadron, in addition to an attached B-1B and KC-135 squadrons.
The Wild Boars provided the wing’s dedicated Air-to-Air support with their “light grey” F-15C… including 86-170. She is show with a “2-bag” external wing tank configuration and is armed with 4 x AIM-120B, 2 x AIM-7’s on the forward intake stations, and 2 x AIM-9M’s in addition to her 20mm internal M-61 cannon and defensive Chaff and Flares.
Any Fighter Studios print can be customized with different squadron marking, different store configurations, names on the nose or canopy rail. To get yours started, click Personalized Print for more information or click Email with questions.