Your post raises many questions philk.The mere fact Australia has now committed to $3 billion worth of Super Hornet orders, to cover for the JSF being late, amplifies my point.
As to maintenance costs, and so-called savings, when even a senior JSF partner like the UK had to strike a deal (still undisclosed re actual terms) to get the maintenance codes for it's very expensive investment in JSF, you gotta wonder how many Ozzie dollars will provide how many fully capable and fully maintainable fighting unit numbers from day one?
I suggest the answer will be very poor economic value per airplane.
The uncomfortable question the people writing the cheques don't want to front, is exactly what is the perceived threat?
If it's Indonesia, then we are talking 100 JSF who can take the flight line at short notice (not 100 in total, of whom 60 are in the shed)), probably 30 tankers, and adeqaute AWACS and interceptor cover. . not going to happen is it?
Menzies bought the F-111 because he wanted to be able to bomb Jakarta . . the arithmetic and practical military realities are different now.
The money wasted on an under-capable JSF (it is neither a real interceptor nor a bomber of any true deterrent capability even in flights of 10 or so . . which is all the RAAF will be able to field at any given time), the question mark over whether it will be fully maintainable in Australia unless the codes are handed over raises another barrier.
I stand by what I said before . . Aussie JSF is an expensive, late, and under-capable trophy project, which is no substitute for much greater numbers of more capable, and tanker supported, aircraft sooner.
Mate you should learn something about Australia's plans before making such definite statements, I think. For starters we haven't committed to a number of aircraft beyond "up to 100 fighters". We will not decide until 2008 to even BUY the F-35A Lightning II and there can be no doubt that RAAF is intensly studying the issues surrounding operating an all F-35 based fleet.The mere fact Australia has now committed to $3 billion worth of Super Hornet orders, to cover for the JSF being late, amplifies my point.
As to maintenance costs, and so-called savings, when even a senior JSF partner like the UK had to strike a deal (still undisclosed re actual terms) to get the maintenance codes for it's very expensive investment in JSF, you gotta wonder how many Ozzie dollars will provide how many fully capable and fully maintainable fighting unit numbers from day one?
Compared to what? We are buying Super Hornets at $30-$40m CHEAPER per plane than we could buy F-15's. Typhoons are likely MORE expensive than current iterations F-15, with F-22 at the TOP end of the price scale and Rafale sitting somewhere between SH and F-15. F-35A is intended to be cheaper than any of them. Whether it turns out to be or not remains to be seen, however that is the intention and we will get an AWFUL lot of combat capability at not a lot of money if it turns out to be the case.I suggest the answer will be very poor economic value per airplane.
The uncomfortable question the people writing the cheques don't want to front, is exactly what is the perceived threat?
How on EARTH did you come up with idea of 30 tankers? RAAF intends to acquire 5x KC-30B tankers. Where are the other 25x coming from?If it's Indonesia, then we are talking 100 JSF who can take the flight line at short notice (not 100 in total, of whom 60 are in the shed)), probably 30 tankers, and adeqaute AWACS and interceptor cover. . not going to happen is it?
10 aircraft? WTF? See my above remarks as to what we can generate now. I doubt very much even Occum would argue that operational F-35 aircraft will be MORE maintenance intensive than our legacy combat fleet.Menzies bought the F-111 because he wanted to be able to bomb Jakarta . . the arithmetic and practical military realities are different now.
The money wasted on an under-capable JSF (it is neither a real interceptor nor a bomber of any true deterrent capability even in flights of 10 or so . . which is all the RAAF will be able to field at any given time), the question mark over whether it will be fully maintainable in Australia unless the codes are handed over raises another barrier.
Apparently 9 Countries disagree with you there, all of which operate teen series fighters or equivalent which possess capabilities the Euro-canards have yet to match, let alone exceed.I stand by what I said before . . Aussie JSF is an expensive, late, and under-capable trophy project, which is no substitute for much greater numbers of more capable, and tanker supported, aircraft sooner.
I'm more then willing to listen to legitimate concerns about the program. But people shouldn't simply imply its a lemon and leave it at that. Most of all after serious defense professionals in the forum, and we have a few here, patiently examine each point made and answer the concerns and questions. Any other types of irrational ism borders on anti-Yank'ism due to a lack of concrete statistics and facts.Ho please: Give us a break with the basic "antiamericanism" thing.
I SAW the F-16 fly the contest vs the SAAB and Dassault contenders at Le Bourget Airshow and i thought it was a beautiful design and it WAS superior to the Mirage and the SAAB.
F-35 simply doesn't cut the mustard designwise it wasn't designed by a few genius, F-16 WAS.
Was does that mean exactly?F-35 simply doesn't cut the mustard designwise it wasn't designed by a few genius, F-16 WAS.
The thing just started flying so give it a chance. When you look at the aircraft and its systems do so in the parameters of how it will be used, how its support systems will meld with it, how the overall networked avionics and radars will come together, and overall how it will mesh with the RAAF, their mission, and the weapons it will carry.Want some examples? No supercruise, limited structurally to 7.0, 7.5., 9.0G by design, limited stealth features, lower TWR, Higher wingload very limited rearward visibility, low maximum Mach, limited payload etc.
Name the technologies capable of doing same please? You mean you cant? Well when you do develop a technology that negates the advantage of stealth then do let us know. Until you can that means you cant! And there's a reason NATO air forces have been on the F-35 wagon since the beginning. About 9 nations are funding its R&D. Do I need to tell you why?Excuse ME but if you want to have ME admiting it is better than ours or a Gripen or a Typhoon you better come up with a LOT better than that and make sure WE in Europe dont develop technologies capable of detecting L.O targets a much longer range (like AESA radar or long range, all weather Optronics for example), including entirely passively.
From the beginning we've designed it as primarily a attack aircraft. So I dont understand your point.I really think that a number of people who are giving the F-35 a thumb down have a case, one for example is the requierements and performances which aren't that of a LWF but of a strike aircraft.
Ive read that 6 times and still cant figure out what in hell it means. Maybe someone can translate.As for the argument "If it sales it's better" when it comes to a totally unproven prototype or pre-production aircraft it simply doesn't make sense and so far it is all due to commercial arguments.
I never saw a commercial about it. My answer is "stealth", stealth, stealth, stealth, avionics, radar, network, STOVL, affordability, performance, multi-role, dependability, and most of all its going to be able to see and kill the enemy before the enemy can see and kill it!So yes again what do YOU think makes it so good appart for the commercials from the manufacturer??? It better be good...
1 person designed the F-16? WOW. That's truly amazing.Ho please: Give us a break with the basic "antiamericanism" thing.
I SAW the F-16 fly the contest vs the SAAB and Dassault contenders at Le Bourget Airshow and i thought it was a beautiful design and it WAS superior to the Mirage and the SAAB.
F-35 simply doesn't cut the mustard designwise it wasn't designed by a few genius, F-16 WAS.
Well for starters you are wrong about the aircrafts agility. It is being designed to have the same agility and basic peformance levels of the F-16 or F-18 series fighters.Want some examples? No supercruise, limited structurally to 7.0, 7.5., 9.0G by design, limited stealth features, lower TWR, Higher wingload very limited rearward visibility, low maximum Mach, limited payload etc.
Excuse ME but if you want to have ME admiting it is better than ours or a Gripen or a Typhoon you better come up with a LOT better than that and make sure WE in Europe dont develop technologies capable of detecting L.O targets a much longer range (like AESA radar or long range, all weather Optronics for example), including entirely passively.
No-one in "France and many other places" have tried to create a stealthy supersonic STOVL aircraft before, with the same basic agility and performance levels of the F-16/F-18 series EITHER.I couldn't give a donkey if it was a Chinese or Russian aircraft, i'm a real aircraft enthusiast and as much as i like the F-22 i think F-35 is a good example of design cross-wiring and owes more to commercial necessities than real design genius.
BTW No one ever eared (in France and many other places) of an aircraft getting over 35% of its designed weight target (while using CATIA for the purpose of designing it) and then having to be so dramatically redesigned to reach them that it limits the G-load it can sustain structuraly. WHOTWOZAT???
Combination of stealth, more than acceptable aerodynamic performance, a combination of sensor fusion and networking capabilities that is unplanned by ANY other fighter today, unrefuelled range greater than that of virtually any other "tactical fighter" and a cost of production aircraft that is likely to be lower than other available tactical fighters, plus a range of options in aircraft configuration that is greater than any other aircraft period (CTOL, STOVL, CV, F-135 engine, F-136 engine, weapons choices etc).I really think that a number of people who are giving the F-35 a thumb down have a case, one for example is the requierements and performances which aren't that of a LWF but of a strike aircraft.
As for the argument "If it sales it's better" when it comes to a totally unproven prototype or pre-production aircraft it simply doesn't make sense and so far it is all due to commercial arguments.
So yes again what do YOU think makes it so good appart for the commercials from the manufacturer???:sniper It better be good...
But i'm open to sugestions...
Actually, thats not the case. There are still some serious issues about the Japanese compromising some elements of the US submarine fleet via Toshiba leaking propellor technology to China - and then there is the Aegis leak by one of their staffers.Also Japan, like the Uk and Australia represents little or no security risk in terms of the aircraft and its technology.
No supercruise? Only the F-22 can do that. The F-35 with weapons can cruise just as quick as all other fighters.Want some examples? No supercruise, limited structurally to 7.0, 7.5., 9.0G by design, limited stealth features, lower TWR, Higher wingload very limited rearward visibility, low maximum Mach, limited payload etc.