Usaf Aviation Posters — 3 museum-grade prints on the theme. The McDonnell Douglas F-4G Advanced Wild Weasel was the United States Air Force's final Phantom-based SEAD platform, converting surplus F-4E airframes at Hill Air Force Base with APR-38 Radar Homing and Warning System pods and ARN-101 digital modular avionics to locate and destroy enemy radar emitters. Paired with the Textron AGM-88 HARM, the F-4G devastated integrated air-defence networks during Operation Desert Storm — 561st TFS aircraft launched opening-night HARM salvos against Baghdad-area SAM sites. The Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II entered service in the 1970s as a dedicated tank-killer and forward-air-support platform, built around the seven-barrel GAU-8 Avenger 30 mm cannon — still the heaviest automatic cannon ever mounted on an aircraft. The A-10C modernization added digital glass cockpit and precision-guided munitions such as GBU-38 JDAM while preserving the Warthog's titanium-armoured bathtub cockpit and straight-wing slow-speed agility. The General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon entered USAF service in the late 1970s as a lightweight day fighter that evolved into the world's most numerous fixed-wing combat aircraft, with pilots universally nicknaming it the Viper for its agile handling and Battlestar Galactica echo. The Block 30 introduced incremental avionics and engine options while retaining the type's signature frameless bubble canopy, side-stick flight controls, and cropped-delta wing.