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#41
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It is demanded in the procurement "process" - to get new you must show
that the old is no longer relevant and there problem is some folks try to help that along " wrote in message ups.com... Interesting theory and I have heard something similar back in 2004 or 2005. I don't know how much of this is true however. On May 2, 9:41 pm, "Flashnews" wrote: You know considering how the Navy chose to deliberately go about destroying anything and everything "old" that would interfere with their plan to modernize the Navy - a politically motivated behavior seen in the demise of the Convair B-58 Hustlers as a retribution act to match to the destruction of all the Northrop Flying Wings. I am not so sure the Iranians can really get or want those F-14 parts from AMARC (if it were even possible) but it is possible that the F-14D could be refurbished into an even stronger jet that would embarrass first the F/A-18 and then much worse the F-35, especially given its failing components and subsystems. The methodology is all the same - over kill the hype about how old and broken the airframe is, selectively shut down spares and key component supply, and make the program look like a mess. The F-14D can still fly circles around all other Navy fighters and if it would be given some of the reliability and maintainability upgrades evident in the E/F as well as the AESA upgrade from the F-35 - well the old Turkey would smile a new light on Naval Air. As long as anyone can look back the present breed of Naval air leadership is petrified - absolutely paranoid - of not only that it can't do the Tomcat's job with what's left but what the F-14 could still grow beyond itself. The demise of the Tomcat will be the date in which carrier aviation became unbalanced - with new fast nuclear ships and a weak unsupportive air wing - thus bringing the submarine one notch closer to replacing the surface fleet as the critical combatant lead. "Choose Wisely" and they did not - |
#42
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tell that to the carrier group when Chinese cruise missles are coming over
the horizon-- remember the Super Bug's AESA radar still is not working properly--so......are you tell me a Super Bug with non ASEA radar and AMRAAMS can handle that--oh--let's make that single seater F-18E ..... are there any drivers who have handled both the F-14D and Super Bug--what's your view??? "Daryl Hunt" wrote in message ... "Paul J. Adam" wrote in message ... In message , rstro writes sure there is/......... call ARMARC and get some real airplanes back in the Navy--F-14 Useless gold-plated junk dependent on radar (which never works) and missiles (worse than useless). How many missile kills in the Korean War? QED. The only Three things that our 15 and 16 drivers repected on the F-14 was the extra set of eyes, the first turn during the wings sweeping forward and the Phoenix system that costs way too much to use. The F-35 can out turn the 14 no matter what, the Superhornet can do the Top Cap with Amrams just fine and the days of the need for two sets of eyes is all but gone. Plus, the 14 was taken out of service because it became too expensive per flying hour to continue. Too bad, JAG had some nice footage of it. But let's face it, in it's day, the 14 was the 800 lb gurrilla for Top Cap over the Carrier Group but age bit it in the ass. Get *real* aircraft. Re-equip the USN with F6F Hellcats. I vote for the F3F myself. |
#43
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On 4 Maj, 05:38, "rstro" wrote:
tell that to the carrier group when Chinese cruise missles are coming over the horizon-- remember the Super Bug's AESA radar still is not working properly--so......are you tell me a Super Bug with non ASEA radar and AMRAAMS can handle that--oh--let's make that single seater F-18E ..... are there any drivers who have handled both the F-14D and Super Bug--what's your view??? Certainly not a driver of any plane mentioned, but some observations of mine: 1) Correct - AESA radar may surely be apt to show some deficiencies at this phase of its introduction. Therefore I belive alternative FLIR/ IRST systems must still be developed. 2) I don't think AIM-54 would be a better solution against balistic or cruise missiles than newest models of AIM-120, not so speedy, but more agile, more modern, and you could take more of them with not making your plane flying like a brick with 5,000 pounds of air-to-air ordnance. 3) Certainly two-seaters are more capable than single-seat fighters, but I guess you could find some guys with a lot of experience from F-14 days in those F/A-18Es;-) 4) Recent years the number of AEGIS ships per a carrier group doubled, Standard and TBMD programs were run, whereas the size of the air wing was reduced - so the entire philosophy of defending the Boat must be different... |
#45
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Nice link. Thanks! I was not aware of the fact that web page was
updated. But frankly, I am quite surprised: here I'd rather expect to see some comments that F/A-18 FLIR pods (no matter if AAS-38 NITE Hawk, or this one) were worth nothing in comparison with Tomcat's LANTIRN ;-))) Also, part of the Tomcats had IRST (some of F-14A and all F-14D, IIRC) - similar device to be added in Super Hornets as a part of "Block III" modification as late as around 2012 or 2013. What's more, the whole sensor suite is going to be capable to see the same target when needed. Best regards, Jacek On 4 Maj, 15:03, Henry J Cobb wrote: The Super Hornet already has FLIR. http://www.raytheon.com/products/atflir/ "Raytheon’s Advanced Targeting Forward Looking Infrared pod delivers pinpoint accuracy and NoDoubt™ reliability for air-to-air and air-to-ground mission support." ... "Planned enhancements include:" ... "Automatic target recognition" Er, well give them a few years to work out the bugs and the super bugs will be able to automatically alert the pilots should they actually spot any cruise missiles. No doubt. -HJC |
#46
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In article , "rstro"
wrote: tell that to the carrier group when Chinese cruise missles are coming over the horizon-- remember the Super Bug's AESA radar still is not working properly--so......are you tell me a Super Bug with non ASEA radar and AMRAAMS can handle that--oh--let's make that single seater F-18E ..... are there any drivers who have handled both the F-14D and Super Bug--what's your view??? While the APG-71 has more radar range than the APG-73 (mechanically scanned radar), don't sell the APG-73 short. It is well matched to the AIM-120 missile and while it may not have all the bells and whistles of the AESA radar, the system performance (against aircraft) of the radar with the missile is certainly competitive with the system performance of the APG-71 with the AIM-54. I realize that statement may drive F-14 lovers to a frenzy, but it's true nonetheless. It's the end-game that matters, not the individual performance of one aspect of the system. The APG-73 with AIM-120 (IMO without getting technical ) is a better system than either the APG-71 with AIM-54 (lack of missile flexibility) or APG-71 with AIM-7 (goodnesss me...where to start...) When the fleet gets APG-79 things will get even better. -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur |
#47
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