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#11
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Steven- Carrier aircraft are more mobile than land-based aircraft? BRBR
Nope but the place they land sure is... I think ya need to spend some time in a USN airwing and a USAF ariwing...like I have and the 'answers' such seem easy. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#12
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![]() "Giz" wrote in message ... It takes a B-2 a loooonng time to fly from the US to a target in the Middle East. Not exactly an on demand platform. How does the speed of a B-2 compare to that of an aircraft carrier? To fly that same aircraft from somewhere near the fight requires host country approval. Why is that a problem? Remember how difficult it was for the Air Force to get in the fight against Libya? Eldorado Canyon? I recall the F-111s had to take a lengthier route than desired and that carrier aviation alone wasn't up to the task. Is that not correct? Just think, that was with host country approval. CV aviation will always have that advantage over shore based. 4.5 acres of sovereign territory that can go to the fight. 4.5 acres that can go to the fight at a rather slow speed, joining the land-based aviation already involved. |
#13
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![]() "Giz" wrote in message ... Where is Edwards AFB? California. Where is the USS John C. Stennis? Beats the hell outta me. Where will both be 6 months from now? Same answers. I don't see what your questions have to do with the relative mobility of carrier aircraft versus land-based aircraft. Aircraft that you cannot use for political reasons are worse than useless. They have cost you, but are not returning on the investment. So we purchase carrier aircraft for political purposes and land-based aircraft for combat purposes? You honestly can't see the advantage of a CVBG off a hostile coast over a wing of B-2's in middle America? No, why don't you explain it to me? Open your eyes. Even the Air Force doesn't try to make the argument you are. They did before, but have come to their senses. CV aviation will not replace shore based aviation, but it will not succumb to it either. The argument I'm making? I thought I was just asking a few questions. |
#14
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![]() "Pechs1" wrote in message ... Nope but the place they land sure is... So what? I think ya need to spend some time in a USN airwing and a USAF ariwing...like I have and the 'answers' such seem easy. Well, then, perhaps you could answer some of the question I've asked in this discussion. Nobody else seems able to. |
#15
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...."reusable hypersonic cruise vehicle (HCV) ... capable of
taking off from a conventional military runway and striking targets 9,000 nautical miles distant in less than two hours".... And how long can this "HCV" loiter in the target area while the White House makes it's go-to-war decision? Those "ancient" aircraft carriers have been continuously on-station all day, every day at multiple hot spots all over the world for over HALF A CENTURY [almost half a million hours at EACH hot spot]! No, this latest engineering solution-in-search-of-a-problem does not preclude the continuing need for aircraft carriers and what only they can do!!! Incidentally such HCV concepts have been repeatedly considered over many decades. About every twenty years we revisit these old "new ideas". By the way, just calculate the pay load fraction needed for fuel to move that 12,000 pound HCV hypersonically over 9,000 miles. "Get it right or just forget it!" WDA end "s.p.i." wrote in message om... To pay for the envisioned force structure below? Well the seemingly inviolate 12 carrier hull money is most likely one place. With what is being proposed why would you need 12 carriers anyway? Maybe its time to begin to transform Naval Aviation away from being so completely centered around a weapons system that hasn't fundamentally changed in 60 years-the Aircraft Carrier-before it becomes completely irrelevant... Julian Borger in Washington Tuesday July 1, 2003 The Guardian The Pentagon is planning a new generation of weapons, including huge hypersonic drones and bombs dropped from space, that will allow the US to strike its enemies at lightning speed from its own territory. Over the next 25 years, the new technology would free the US from dependence on forward bases and the cooperation of regional allies, part of the drive towards self-suffi ciency spurred by the difficulties of gaining international cooperation for the invasion of Iraq. The new weapons are being developed under a programme codenamed Falcon (Force Application and Launch from the Continental US). A US defence website has invited bids from contractors to develop the technology and the current edition of Jane's Defence Weekly reports that the first flight tests are scheduled to take place within three years. According to the website run by the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) the programme is aimed at fulfilling "the government's vision of an ultimate prompt global reach capability (circa 2025 and beyond)". The Falcon technology would "free the US military from reliance on forward basing to enable it to react promptly and decisively to destabilising or threatening actions by hostile countries and terrorist organisations", according to the Darpa invitation for bids. The ultimate goal would be a "reusable hypersonic cruise vehicle (HCV) ... capable of taking off from a conventional military runway and striking targets 9,000 nautical miles distant in less than two hours". The unmanned HCV would carry a payload of up to 12,000 lbs and could ultimately fly at speeds of up to 10 times the speed of sound, according to Daniel Goure, a military analyst at the Lexington Institute in Washington. Propelling a warhead of that size at those speeds poses serious technological challenges and Darpa estimates it will take more than 20 years to develop. Over the next seven years, meanwhile, the US air force and Darpa will develop a cheaper "global reach" weapons system relying on expendable rocket boosters, known as small launch vehicles (SLV) that would take a warhead into space and drop it over its target. In US defence jargon, the warhead is known as a Com mon Aero Vehicle (Cav), an unpowered bomb which would be guided on to its target as it plummeted to earth at high and accelerating velocity. The Cav could carry 1,000 lbs of explosives but at those speeds explosives may not be necessary. A simple titanium rod would be able to penetrate 70 feet of solid rock and the shock wave would have enormous destructive force. It could be used against deeply buried bunkers, the sort of target the air force is looking for new ways to attack. Jane's Defence Weekly reported that the first Cav flight demonstration is provisionally scheduled by mid-2006, and the first SLV flight exercise would take place the next year. A test of the two systems combined would be carried out by late 2007. A prototype demonstrating HCV technology would be tested in 2009. SLV rockets will also give the air force a cheap and flexible means to launch military satellites at short notice, within weeks, days or even hours of a crisis developing. The SLV-Cav combination, according to the Darpa document, "will provide a near-term (approximately 2010) operational capability for prompt global strike from Consus (the continental US) while also enabling future development of a reusable HCV for the far-term (approximately 2025)". The range of this weapon is unclear. This is what I wrote in April and so far I'm half right... "And I'll bet a paycheck the Air Force will argue just that Real Soon Now. Also the Space folks will likely chime in about the operational usefulness of the Common Aero Vehicle as well. I wouldn't be surprised if there were only a six carrier force by 2015." |
#16
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How much of the Earth's surface is out of range of land-based aviation?
How much of the Earth's surface is out of range of carrier aviation? Irrelevant. Land-based aviation requires runways. We operate from many of them at the pleasure of a host nation. What that nation gives, so can it take away. R / John |
#17
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roncachamp- How does the speed of a B-2 compare to that of an aircraft
carrier? BRBR If the CV is already there,,,lots faster. To fly that same aircraft from somewhere near the fight requires host country approval. Why is that a problem? BRBR Cuz some countires will say no(?).... Eldorado Canyon? I recall the F-111s had to take a lengthier route than desired and that carrier aviation alone wasn't up to the task. Is that not correct? BRBR Nope not correct...and we(CVs) werre on station for many moths after the USAF went home,,,flying 10 miles north of the 'line of death'...no USAF units were invloved.... 4.5 acres that can go to the fight at a rather slow speed, joining the land-based aviation already involved. BRBR See above and there were NO USAF landbased assets involved in this or many oher exercises... P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#18
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roncachamp- Where is Edwards AFB?
California. Where is the USS John C. Stennis? Beats the hell outta me. Where will both be 6 months from now? BRBR bing bing, we have a winner...and he doesn't even know it.... I don't see what your questions have to do with the relative mobility of carrier aircraft versus land-based aircraft. BRBR ummmmm vulnerability?? Predictabiulity? Ability to make a US 'statement'? I know having a bunch of SAC weenies dressing up nice with their scarfs and new leather jackets and all and standing next to their B-2s makes my eyes water but the people in Liberia don't really GAS... P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#19
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roncachamp- Sea lines of communication and supply cannot be maintained
without carrier aviation? Other countries without carriers seem to manage. BRBR ya mean third or fourth world nations who's economy is a fraction of California's?? See confliuct, worlkd war, etc...If it weren't for the 'sea lines of communication', the UK would be speaking German. Well, if the response requires carrier aviation, then we'd have to call the US Navy. But why would any response necessarily require carrier aviation? BRBR Ya deploy a USAF TacAir wing? And put a load of Army guys on ships? Nope-you are going to call Naval Aviation with their ugly, ****ed off little sister, the USMC onboard Anphibs. Please explain why. BRBR Faster, more versatile, more effective, cheaper... How would a TacAir wing be any more anything, please explain..Your clue-lessness is fast approaching 'troll' status... P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#20
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roncachamp- How much of the Earth's surface is out of range of land-based
aviation? How much of the Earth's surface is out of range of carrier aviation? BRBR Lots...center of Russia, lots of China...you aren't going to just wander around in their airspace w/o their permision. BUT how many seaports can be threatened by a CV that is already w/i 1000 NM of the country?? Compared to being theatened by land based aviation of the US... Has a runway ever been sunk? I seem to recall a few carriers have, that would seem to indicate a 1000 ft runway that moves at 25 knots is indeed more vulnerable than a 10,000 ft one that does not. BRBR you are out to lunch...I seem to think of a runway and some aircraft in Hawaii that were put out of action by some CVA based aircraft...I think they were Japanese.. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
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