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#1
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U.S. Fighter Modernization Plans: Near-Term Choices.
Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. http://www.csbaonline.org/4Publicati...er_Moderni.pdf |
#2
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On Jun 22, 4:24 pm, Mike wrote:
U.S. Fighter Modernization Plans: Near-Term Choices. Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.http://www.csbaonline.org/4Publicati...070620.US_Figh... Thank you for publishing. interesting data. The chart implies an F22 costs c. $300m? I hadn't realised the plan is to keep so many F15s flying for so much longer. The actual table says a new F16 costs $60m (but doesn't include a comparable figure for the F22). You can see the making of the downward spiral. Cut the number of F35s, unit price increases, therefore buy fewer, therefore unit price increase, therefore... That said, the option to kill the carrier-based one is probably a good one. Remembering that Macnamara (sic) left the UK high and dry on the TSR2/ F111, leading to the cancellation of the TSR2, a UK-person has got to feel jittery about the threat to the VTOL F35. Special Relationship, anyone? ;-). |
#3
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Yeah, thanks for posting that. A very interesting news!
I think it is the first time ever put so clearly in the open text that F-35A procurement may be cut in half, and F-35C reduced to zero, replaced by F/A-18E/F and earlier arrival of combat UAVs. Only the Marine Corps seem to be struggling for their own F-35B to go as planned... Is Super Hornet going to gain in this growing F/A-18E/F/G vs. F-35A/B/C war? Best regards, Jacek On 22 Cze, 18:43, " wrote: On Jun 22, 4:24 pm, Mike wrote: U.S. Fighter Modernization Plans: Near-Term Choices. Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.http://www.csbaonline.org/4Publicati...070620.US_Figh... Thank you for publishing. interesting data. The chart implies an F22 costs c. $300m? I hadn't realised the plan is to keep so many F15s flying for so much longer. The actual table says a new F16 costs $60m (but doesn't include a comparable figure for the F22). You can see the making of the downward spiral. Cut the number of F35s, unit price increases, therefore buy fewer, therefore unit price increase, therefore... That said, the option to kill the carrier-based one is probably a good one. |
#5
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This is the problem as I see it - right now the JSF has come out of
development too early - the real question is - "what does it do better". In the new Code One there is a great review of the flight test program and some awesome drawings of the loads all showing external racks, weapons, missiles, and tanks - guess what - just another Hornet or F-16 and not as good in the less-then-stealth role. The sheer performance of the JSF is not a game stopper - but that does not mean we will not need the stealth down the road but it will need something more to make it a platform we really want - that it I can see the JSF being pushed down a decade of development and merged with UCAS/UCAV to produce both manned and un-manned versions - this would then take the position of the unmanned "earning" it way into the airwing sort of like "TinMan" did in the movie "Stealth" - for lack of a better "vision". Add to this a laser weapon to get rid of the bombs and racks and make it the true penetrator it needs to be to become the platform of choice against China, Iran, North Korea, etc. Focus on this and regroup the international consortium to bring the JSF into a Recce, EW, and Penetrator one-type CTOL version a decade away where many of the problems will take it anyway - as you can see the savings on that are substantial and you throw that money into high production rates of the legacy aircraft to carry the force structures for a decade and to recover the attritions from the GWOT wear-out. America needs infrastructure and jobs right now so pushing F-18, F-16, F-15 production along is good and it rekindles many of the FMS programs to also fill the voids. For the UK, the F-18 is just as solid of a viable alternative for the JSF as it is for the Marines. Now as mentioned before - providing the Marines with a full-deck assault aviation ship (that is a refurbished JFK and/or Kitty Hawk), killing the LHA(R) also pours savings back into investment and brings back the numbers needed now. Make the JSF morph into something we really need and exploit the industrial base to fill in for the GWOT - continue the F-22 because it is the only "High - far - fast" machine remaining but there the avionics spill over from JSF and others could be likewise exploited wrote in message ps.com... Yeah, thanks for posting that. A very interesting news! I think it is the first time ever put so clearly in the open text that F-35A procurement may be cut in half, and F-35C reduced to zero, replaced by F/A-18E/F and earlier arrival of combat UAVs. Only the Marine Corps seem to be struggling for their own F-35B to go as planned... Is Super Hornet going to gain in this growing F/A-18E/F/G vs. F-35A/B/C war? Best regards, Jacek On 22 Cze, 18:43, " wrote: On Jun 22, 4:24 pm, Mike wrote: U.S. Fighter Modernization Plans: Near-Term Choices. Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.http://www.csbaonline.org/4Publicati...070620.US_Figh... Thank you for publishing. interesting data. The chart implies an F22 costs c. $300m? I hadn't realised the plan is to keep so many F15s flying for so much longer. The actual table says a new F16 costs $60m (but doesn't include a comparable figure for the F22). You can see the making of the downward spiral. Cut the number of F35s, unit price increases, therefore buy fewer, therefore unit price increase, therefore... That said, the option to kill the carrier-based one is probably a good one. |
#6
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![]() .. For the UK, the F-18 is just as solid of a viable alternative for the JSF as it is for the Marines. I suspect that the UK wants the STOVL version to allow it to be deployed (in emergency) of other RN flat tops and large aircapable ships (e.g. Bulwark, Albion, Ocean etc.) rather than just the two CVF. The lesson from the Falklands was that you had to have two operational decks to carry out real war operations if there are no land fields available to you. If one CVF was in refit, therefore, one could no launch any independant actions. David |
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