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http://globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/040104-f-22.htm
"They're just trying to find a role for this plane because they've sunk so much money into it," Riccioni said. -HJC |
#2
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![]() "Henry J. Cobb" wrote in message om... http://globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/040104-f-22.htm "They're just trying to find a role for this plane because they've sunk so much money into it," Riccioni said. "The way Air Force officials and Lockheed Martin executives tell it, 2003 marked a turning point in the development of the F/A-22 Raptor fighter jet. " Odd that, considering 2003 saw tail delamination, departure from controlled flight, failure to integrate the joint standoff munition and continueing problems integrating weapons sensors. Especailly with Congress offering the program one year to get their act together, with the passage of the FY04 budget. Denial is not just a river in Egypt. |
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On Sun, 4 Jan 2004 16:12:51 -0800, "Tarver Engineering"
wrote: "Henry J. Cobb" wrote in message . com... http://globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/040104-f-22.htm "They're just trying to find a role for this plane because they've sunk so much money into it," Riccioni said. "The way Air Force officials and Lockheed Martin executives tell it, 2003 marked a turning point in the development of the F/A-22 Raptor fighter jet. " Odd that, considering 2003 saw tail delamination, departure from controlled flight, failure to integrate the joint standoff munition and continueing problems integrating weapons sensors. Especailly with Congress offering the program one year to get their act together, with the passage of the FY04 budget. Denial is not just a river in Egypt. Right on schedule. |
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On Sun, 4 Jan 2004 23:33:49 +0100, "Emmanuel Gustin"
wrote: "Henry J. Cobb" wrote in message . com... http://globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/040104-f-22.htm "They're just trying to find a role for this plane because they've sunk so much money into it," Riccioni said. These are people with an axe to grind -- the 'light weight fighter maffia'. Their arguments don't impress me much; lightweight fighters have never been very successful. I've read part of Stevenson's "The Pentagon Paradox" book once, but found it hard to take seriously -- too many errors and fallacies. I'd have to agree with you there. Some of his arguements were weak at best. First he complains that in mock combat that the F-22 started in the rear and then he complains that it's "not realistic" when it started up front. Another clue he needs to get is when determining maximum speed *no figther* is carrying a warload. They're always clean. His whining that the F-15 only hit Mach 2.5 because it was clean screams of either him having an axe to grind or just plain lack of common sense. Let's see the F-16 or anyother fighter for that matter, hit it's maximum speed when loaded down with ordinance. Nevertheless, I think a good case can be made that it was wrong to go for a high/low mix F-22/F-35 in imitation of the F-15/F-16 mix. It is very costly, even though Lockheed Martin is obviously using F-22 know-how in the F-35, to develop two types; and you end up with one type which isn't as capable as you really want and one type which is too expensive to be built in really large numbers. Instead, the USAF should have invested in a single, medium fighter type, single-engined and a real multi-role aircraft, and simple-and-cheap STOVL attack type for the USMC and as a *real* replacement for the A-10. By the time it was a for-sure thing that Russia was no longer was a threat a lot of money had already been sunk into the program. Combine this with the fact that the USAF won't get as many aircraft as it needs no matter *how* cheap they are, they wanted to get as much capability as possible. If it only cost five million dollars the politicians and tree huggers would still find a reason to whine about it and rave on about how it's a "Cold War" weapon like that's a BAD thing. I agree that the F-35 in any incarnation is a poor replacement for the A-10. Basically what you need to replace the A-10 with is new A-10s. Add on a few electronic gizmos to improve it's ability to do what it does best and no more. |
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![]() "Scott Ferrin" wrote in message ... On Sun, 4 Jan 2004 16:12:51 -0800, "Tarver Engineering" wrote: "Henry J. Cobb" wrote in message . com... http://globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/040104-f-22.htm "They're just trying to find a role for this plane because they've sunk so much money into it," Riccioni said. "The way Air Force officials and Lockheed Martin executives tell it, 2003 marked a turning point in the development of the F/A-22 Raptor fighter jet. " Odd that, considering 2003 saw tail delamination, departure from controlled flight, failure to integrate the joint standoff munition and continueing problems integrating weapons sensors. Especailly with Congress offering the program one year to get their act together, with the passage of the FY04 budget. Denial is not just a river in Egypt. Right on schedule. So now the F-22 program has gone from "there is no problem" to "we have turned the program around. Were they lying before, or now. (ie both) |
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On Sun, 4 Jan 2004 17:51:22 -0800, "Tarver Engineering"
wrote: "Scott Ferrin" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 4 Jan 2004 16:12:51 -0800, "Tarver Engineering" wrote: "Henry J. Cobb" wrote in message . com... http://globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/040104-f-22.htm "They're just trying to find a role for this plane because they've sunk so much money into it," Riccioni said. "The way Air Force officials and Lockheed Martin executives tell it, 2003 marked a turning point in the development of the F/A-22 Raptor fighter jet. " Odd that, considering 2003 saw tail delamination, departure from controlled flight, failure to integrate the joint standoff munition and continueing problems integrating weapons sensors. Especailly with Congress offering the program one year to get their act together, with the passage of the FY04 budget. Denial is not just a river in Egypt. Right on schedule. So now the F-22 program has gone from "there is no problem" to "we have turned the program around. Were they lying before, or now. (ie both) I'd have to say it depends on how long passed inbetween the statements and what they meant when they said "problem". Was it three our four years and there was no problem they were aware of, then they found some, and then they fixed them? Were they saying "no problem" for the media because the media would take all the little kinks that get worked out in the flight test problem as being major problems as they have in the past with the "flammable aluminum Bradleys"? Joe blow on the street doesn't know the difference between show-stoppers and the normal working-the-bugs-out process. The thing is the scenario you lay out could be argued either way. Think of it like this. Even if the F-22A has problems as you've suggested in the past, the USAF *still* wants them over any alternative despite their high cost. Why is that? If it was soley in the interest of keeping jobs they'd can the F-22 and have Boeing cranking out F-15s. But they're not. The military has cancelled stuff before that they wanted but were not living up to their promises. The A-12, Sgt, York, and TSSAM come to mind. |
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But they're not. The
military has cancelled stuff before that they wanted but were not living up to their promises. The A-12, Sgt, York, and TSSAM come to mind. Now even Air Force wants to get rid of Jurassicfighter. It was aready too late for cancellation in year 2001,thats the only reason why it survived up to now. |
#8
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They're just trying to find a role for this plane because they've
sunk so much money into it," Riccioni said. I think EF-22 could be a perfect ECM plane,but if everything else fails we have still Smithsonian for the Jurassicfighter. |
#9
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"Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message ...
Instead, the USAF should have invested in a single, medium fighter type, single-engined and a real multi-role aircraft, and simple-and-cheap STOVL attack type for the USMC and as a *real* replacement for the A-10. How can you make a STOVL that's as sturdy as the A-10? Last time I looked armor weighed something. -HJC |
#10
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