I agree, I was simply a little underwhelmed at its air to air load out but it sounds as though we're working to increase the internal AMRAAM load up to 6 if needed. Will also be able to internal,y carry the LRASM when fielded
I'm not a critic of the system, but always working to be better informed. I'm impressed by its RCR and ECM power. Combined it will be hard to match
Yeah for some reason F-35A doesn't get the free ride that Typhoon etc got in the press for their capability at entry to service.
Typhoon didn't have a cannon available at all at Tranche 1, no helmet mounted sight, no air to ground targetting capability (no radar modes and no EO/IR or IRST capability whatsoever) and no abiility to carry air to ground ordnance at ALL and a limited EWSP capability and while this carried some criticism in some quarters that was a mere pittance compared to the negativity directed towards F-35.
What has to be remembered is that the F-35 is funded to have a certain level of capability at entry to service. People are complaining about its development time, but what do people want? An F-35 that can immediately take over the majority of roles performed by F-16 and F/A-18 legacy aircraft from day one, with full replacement in all roles (and more obviously due to the increased capability of F-35, particularly in ISR and EW missions) that is presently funded to deliver, along with the same sort spiral development for overall capability development, or a fully developed F-35 that takes forever to deliver?
One can't have both. You can have 'x' amount of capability delivered at a certain time (which F-35 is struggling with, but that is the plan) or you can have more capability, but you'll spend a heap more, take longer to deliver it and have to rely more heavily on legacy aircraft in the meantime.
From 2017 onwards we'll see Block 3F, F-35 aircraft hitting the various squadrons around the world and its real capability will be quickly identified. It is fortunate enough to have a funded and committed spiral upgrade path that already plans to address most of capability 'gaps' that many 'experts' continually harp on about.
The reality is however that only so much capability can be introduced at any one time to an operational force and it takes a significant amount of time for various forces to develop professional mastery of the capability they have. That is the difference between 'flying' the capability and 'fighting' it.
Its also why it is perfectly legitimate to adopt the crawl, walk, run philosophy in terms of spiral capability development. They could probably put all manner of kit on the F-35 more quickly if they threw enough resources at it and that might satisfy the fankiddies in terms of (odious) empirical 'comparisons'.
But does that mean any user could actually develop that capability into an operational system as part of an overall combat force any quicker? Obviousy not. The same goes with ANY system by ANY user. Sure an SU-35 might have a manufacturer advertised capability to carry 14 weapons of various types and this spec or that spec, but given no-one has this in operational service what difference is there in reality to the promised (and as previously mentioned, funded...) capability of F-35 down the road?
Neither is operational...