First Flight Anniversary
4 March 1954
71
Years Since First Flight

Lockheed F-104 Starfighter

Kelly Johnson’s razor-winged interceptor that set world records, served across NATO and Asia, and flew operationally until 2004

1952
USAF Requirement Issued
1954
First Flight
1958
Entered Service
2004
Final Military Retirement

Conceived at Lockheed’s Skunk Works by Clarence “Kelly” Johnson after debriefing Korean War pilots, the F-104 Starfighter was the distilled answer to a simple brief: climb fast, fly very high, and go very, very fast. On 4 March 1954 the XF-104 made its maiden flight at Edwards AFB, ushering in a new era of thin, razor-edged wings and blistering performance that would make it the first production aircraft to hold the world airspeed, altitude, and time-to-climb records simultaneously in 1958–59.

“A rocket with a man in it” — the Starfighter married a powerful GE J79 to ultra-thin wings, prioritising climb and speed over turning performance.

The Starfighter entered USAF service in 1958 and, through extensive licence-production and upgrades, equipped many NATO and allied air arms as the F-104G and later F-104S. Its record-setting performance was offset by demanding handling and high landing speeds, contributing to a difficult safety record in some fleets. Yet it remained in frontline European service into the 1990s, with Italy retiring the last military F-104s in 2004.

Operationally the type saw combat in Southeast Asia, over the Taiwan Strait (1967), and in the Indo-Pakistani wars (1965/1971). From interceptor to strike and reconnaissance, the Starfighter’s long career traced the arc of early Cold War jet air power.

Operational Chronicle

Key development milestones, deployments, records and service highlights

1952

USAF Requirement & Skunk Works Concept

A December 1952 USAF requirement for a lightweight, high-performance day fighter catalysed Kelly Johnson’s team to propose the minimal-wing, J79-powered interceptor that became the Starfighter.

1954

Maiden Flight

The prototype XF-104 flew on 4 March 1954 from Edwards AFB with Tony LeVier at the controls. Early flights proved the concept while revealing hydraulic and landing-gear teething issues typical of cutting-edge designs.

1956

YF-104A with J79

The lengthened YF-104A, fitted with the new GE J79 and ventral fin, first flew in February 1956, reaching sustained Mach 2 and maturing systems for production.

1958

Enters Service

The first production F-104A was delivered in January 1958; the 83rd FIS became the first operational unit the following month, employing the Starfighter as an interim high-speed interceptor.

1958–1959

World Records

In May 1958 the F-104 set altitude (91,243 ft) and speed (2,259.5 km/h) records; in December 1959 it raised the altitude mark to 103,395 ft, becoming the first aircraft to hold all three major records at once.

1960s

NATO “One-Oh-Four” Era

The licence-built F-104G equipped Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Denmark, and others as a multi-role strike/interceptor under NATO’snuclear-strike and QRA frameworks.

1965

Vietnam War Deployment

USAF F-104C units deployed to Southeast Asia (1965–67) for MiGCAP, BARCAP and strike escort during Rolling Thunder, flying over 5,000 sorties.

1965

Indo-Pakistani War

Pakistan’s F-104As saw intensive combat against the IAF, claiming the PAF’s first AAM kill while also sustaining losses in close-in engagements.

1967

Taiwan Strait Air Battles

ROCAF F-104Gs engaged PLAAF J-6/MiG-19 fighters near Kinmen on 13 January 1967, with both sides claiming victories; one ROCAF Starfighter was lost.

1971

Indo-Pakistani War

F-104s again fought over the subcontinent in 1971 in both air-to-air and strike roles, facing MiG-21s, Hunters and SAM/AAA threats.

2004

Last Frontline Retirement

Italy retired the final military Starfighters in October 2004 after 42 years of national service; several aircraft continue flying in private hands for research and heritage.

Combat Operations

Where the Starfighter went to war

Rolling Thunder / SEA
1965–1967 • Vietnam / Laos

USAF F-104Cs flew MiGCAP/BARCAP and escort for strike and reconnaissance aircraft, logging over 5,000 sorties. Missions included EC-121/EB/recce cover and SAM-threat environments.

Indo-Pakistani War
September 1965 • South Asia

PAF F-104As conducted interception and strike missions, claiming early missile victories but suffering losses when drawn into low-speed dogfights.

Taiwan Strait
13 January 1967 • Kinmen/Quemoy

ROCAF F-104Gs tangling with PLAAF J-6s marked one of the last classic jet-age duels over the Strait; two J-6s were claimed with one Starfighter lost.

Indo-Pakistani War
December 1971 • Western/Eastern Fronts

Starfighters flew interceptions, strike, and radar-site attacks, meeting IAF MiG-21s and Hunters amid dense SAM/AAA defences; several F-104s were lost.

Cold War QRA / NATO
1960s–1990s • Europe

F-104G/S fleets in Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and Italy stood QRA, strike and reconnaissance duties for decades, later transitioning to upgraded F-104S in Italy.

Records & Research
1958–1959 & Later

Altitude, speed and climb records cemented the F-104’s reputation; in the 21st century, civilian Starfighters have supported flight-test and aerospace research roles.

Service Record

Headline dates and figures from the Starfighter’s career

1952
Requirement Issued
1954
First Flight Year
71
Years of History
2004
Final Military Retirement

Technical Specifications

Essential details and characteristics of the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter

Manufacturer
Lockheed (Skunk Works); licence production by Canadair, MBB, SABCA, Fokker, Aeritalia
First Flight
4 March 1954 (XF-104)
Role
Supersonic interceptor / fighter-bomber / reconnaissance (variants)
Primary Operators
USAF; Luftwaffe; Aeronautica Militare; ROCAF (Taiwan); Royal Netherlands, Belgian, Danish, Norwegian Air Forces; PAF; others
Design Lead
Clarence “Kelly” Johnson, Lockheed Skunk Works
Service Period (frontline)
1958 – 2004 (Italy last military operator)
Key Operational Variants
F-104G (multirole/NATO standard); F-104S (Italian interceptor/strike)
Powerplant
1 × General Electric J79 afterburning turbojet (various marks)
Notable Records
World speed & altitude records (1958–59); first aircraft to hold speed/altitude/time-to-climb simultaneously
Combat Use
Vietnam War (USAF F-104C); Taiwan Strait (ROCAF, 1967); Indo-Pakistani Wars (PAF 1965/1971)

Development Story

From minimalist concept to record-setting interceptor

The Starfighter’s philosophy was ruthless simplicity: the smallest possible airframe wrapped around the most powerful engine available, optimised for climb and speed.

Origins and Requirements

In late 1952 the USAF sought a lightweight, high-performance day fighter. Kelly Johnson’s Skunk Works responded with a radical approach: wafer-thin, small-area wings set well aft, a T-tail and side intakes feeding the emerging GE J79. The result promised unmatched climb and speed at the expense of low-speed handling and turn performance.

Prototypes, Testing and the J79

The XF-104 first flew on 4 March 1954. Pre-production YF-104A aircraft introduced the J79, ventral fin and boundary-layer control to tame approach speeds. By 1958 the F-104A entered service as an interim interceptor while the Century Series matured.

Records and NATO Expansion

In 1958–59 Starfighters captured world altitude, speed and time-to-climb records, showcasing the design’s strengths. The licence-built F-104G became a NATO standard for strike/reconnaissance and QRA, with thousands produced across European lines; Italy’s upgraded F-104S extended frontline service into the 21st century.

Operational Reality

In combat the Starfighter’s acceleration and climb were assets for escort and point-defence, but tight, low-speed manoeuvring exposed its limitations. Accident rates varied by operator and mission profile; high-tempo, low-level all-weather roles and early systems issues contributed to losses in some fleets. Even so, experienced units achieved long, effective service lives.

Enduring Legacy

A Cold War icon of speed and climb

The Lockheed F-104 Starfighter remains one of the most recognisable jets ever built — a minimalist, high-performance interceptor that set world records, served widely with NATO and allies, and fought from Vietnam to the Taiwan Strait and the subcontinent. From its first flight on 4 March 1954 to Italy’s farewell in 2004, the “One-Oh-Four” defined a generation of Cold War air power, its strengths and compromises alike shaping pilot training, tactics and technology for decades.

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