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#1 |
Chief of the Boat
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I found the comparisons interesting and a little worrying.
http://www.news.com.au/technology/in...-1227181998650 |
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#2 |
Navy Seal
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So far the F35 seems to be one big fail.
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Putting Germ back into Germany. ![]() |
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#3 |
Lucky Jack
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#4 | |
Ace of the Deep
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Youtube
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"If you want to know the age of the Earth, look upon the sea in a storm." -Joseph Conrad ![]() USS Pompano (SS-181) https://www.oneternalpatrol.com/uss-pompano-181.htm ![]() |
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#5 |
Soaring
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This thing always wanted to be too much, and thus invited too much compromise. The Airbus 340 transport is plagued by immense problems for exactly the same reasons: promising to be too much, inviting too many special wishes - and now the whole program again being in serious trouble. There is doubt that Germany will get the second transport this year. The first one has serious deficits.
Needless to say that if so many wishy-washy-don't-know-what-i-want-wishes get cllected for one and the same program, this is a provokation for the nindustry to milk as much coins as possibel. Because idiodts pay for just everything as long as it makes them look good when posing beside it. Especially if said idiots waste money that is not theirs. No money is spend as easily as money that one does not own. I do not udge the technical sophistication of the Russian and Chinese designs. But their way of deciding on a design is looking superior to our method, more focussed, with less voices throwing in a growing amount of compromising special wishes. The weapon loadout of the F-35, for a plane that should replace the F-15E and the A-10, is a bad joke.
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#6 |
Ocean Warrior
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F-35 should be open cockpit, that way pilots could at least fire their sidearms at the enemy.
![]() Guess nothing has been learned in the "too big to fail" department, huh?
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em2nought is ecstatic garbage! |
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#7 |
CINC Pacific Fleet
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#8 |
Ocean Warrior
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Article is of very mixed quality.
Kopp (from Australian airpower) is known to be biased against the JSF. Basically - JSF is not bad by itself. It offers good strike performance, is fairly survivable, could complete the air superiority missions, the likes US and US allies were conducting in the recent decades. All things considered USAF would still be the strongest air force around, if only due to the numerical superiority of the F35A fleet it plans to field. The only issue with the JSF is that it is -expensive- to buy and probably to operate, even though originally it was envisioned to be -cheaper- than the Super Hornet! Compared to a Su35S jet it is around 7-8 times more expensive, meaning that a Flanker series operator could get a fleet of 4 Su34s and 4 Su35s (Su34 being cheaper) for the price of a single JSF (prices in comparison are based on the 2014 contracts for the JSF batches, with engine costs included, and on the ongoing Su35S/Su34 contracts adjusted for inflation). Now, even though this (as I have already said) may not be a problem for the USAF/USN/USMC, it will be a problem for any export JSF client, who would have to measure up his air force against that of a potential Flanker series operator. And in my opinion having 4 Su34s and Su35Ss for every JSF is a good position to be in, as it provides you new capabilities due to the air force size when considering the average contract sizes for the export JSF, which I believe tend to be in the real of a few squadrons (ie a Flanker operator could field air wing for the same price, allowing him to be in many places at the same time, ect). |
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#9 |
Silent Hunter
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Sprey is a hack, people like him because he does not like the F35, but he thought the F15 was a lemon also.
http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/pie...and-1592445665
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#10 |
Navy Seal
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It's not going to get any better for the US Navy or Airforce or Army with prices going up and budgets going down.
They will have to live with what they have till these contracts are finished and then they will be able to borrow no more. Times are changing ... ![]() as for the F-35 I think the Marine carrier based version will be among the best fighter planes of the future. I hope we don't have to start a war to prove it ![]() |
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#11 | |
Ocean Warrior
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The pre 1991 BVR capability and the costs of having it on an aircraft vs the day only F16 is another can of worms entirely. As is multi-role vs specialised plane. |
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#12 |
Fleet Admiral
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Bah, F-35 is old technology nowadays. Kids are into drones these days. We'll just overwhelm them with our drone hordes.
...oh wait, they are all made in China. ![]()
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#13 |
Ocean Warrior
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What I don't understand is, we canceled the F22 back in 2009, because it was too expensive. This is from Defense Review article at the time-
"So, what’s wrong with cancelling the Raptor? Well, for one thing, we finally got the production cost down to approximately $143 million per aircraft. If they cancel the F-22 program at 187 total aircraft–56 aircraft short of the 243 aircraft the U.S. Air Force had stated as its requirement–the F-22 Raptor will really come in somewhere around $350 million apiece, with the last four aircraft coming off the line at an estimated cost of approx. $200 million per, due to the $147 million “end-of-production expenses” that will be rolled into their procurement price. Understand that the Air Force originally wanted 750 aircraft, but they wittled that number down to 442 aircraft, then 381, then 243, and then 183, before bring that number back up to 187. This leads us to the second reason why F-22 Raptor program cancellation is a bad idea. Strategically, 187 F-22 Raptors simply isn’t an adequate number for a future war against China and/or Russia, and the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF), also made by Lockheed Martin, simply doesn’t have the Raptor’s air-to-air combat capability, so it can’t fulfill the same air-superiority role against the latest Russian fighters, let alone their Gen-5 fighters that are currently either under development or on the drawing board–and Russia likes to export their fighters. DefenseReview would therefore feel much more comfortable with a quiver of at least 1,000 Raptors–preferably half of them in two-seat “Super Raptor” form–for a war against the Dragon and/or the Bear. Both countries (China and Russia) are currently developing low-observable, supermaneuvarable 5th Generation fighter aircraft–like the Russian Sukhoi T-50 PAK-FA, for example–and Russia’s latest 4th-Gen. Sukhoi and MiG aircraft currently being manufactured and exported to other countries are arguably superior to our latest F-15 and F-16 fighter aircraft in a number of aspects." http://www.defensereview.com/f-22-ra...iew-weighs-in/ So 6 years ago, the F22 was too expensive, now 6 years later, still in debt up to our eye balls, suddenly we can afford the F35? Wonder what Congress is smoking anyway!! If you got into a Senators face about this, he would simply say "Obviously, you don't know how Congress works!" Well, obviously there are over 400 on Capital Hill, who don't have a stinking clue either! They have gone from serving the people to turning into a bunch of corporate whores! ![]()
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#14 |
Ocean Warrior
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Well we would see as to what kind of price JSF goes for, as currently I don't think that it is cheaper than the F22A.
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#15 |
Silent Hunter
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The F22 is a great plane, easily the best fighter in the world. However, it was designed primarily for the AA mission and according to most reports had a per unit cost around $300 million.
The F35 is a multirole aircraft and according to most reports, the per unit cost of the CTOL F35A, which most airforces will buy, is probably in the $150-200 million range, which makes it slightly more expensive than the F/A-18 SuperHornet and slightly less expensive than a Eurofighter Typhoon, both of which are older designs. In Stealth mode, the F35 will be able to penetrate enemy air defences that the F15/16/18 can't and in non-stealth mode, it can carry a comparable amount of ordnance and has a comparable extended range. critics keep harping on what a POS the F35 will be, yet it is meeting all of its performance goals. People seem to forget that criticism against the F22 was as harsh while it was being designed. ![]()
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