I Have quietly read this thread for a while now, with some amusement I have to say.
Would preferred it to stay that way as I´m not so fond of these kind of debates with claims (often without sources) going back and fourth. But some recent comments kneed an answer!
First, I don´t claim to "know it all" but could perhaps bring some clarity to certain things.
In the defence of a country the size of Denmark, i think Gripen has more then adequate range and
endurance.
But in an international commitment.
for example loitering around above the hills in Afganistan, in case a suspect looking afgan take a walk...
SAAB claims Gripen would have a impressive CAP capacity at a range of 600nm(see map link below) I think that is more than sufficient for most international missions.
hp://img508.imageshack.us/img508/1874/gripennorwaycapnorden80io6.jpg
(sorry, can´t post URL's yet, change hp to http)
As most here probably already know, fuel fraction is a measurement of a air crafts range, the formula is: Internal Fuel/empty weight + int. fuel.
AFAIK the term "super cruise" require a number above 35%.
Typhoon: 11,000/24,250 + 11,000 = 0.312
Rafale: 9,900/21,000 + 9,900 = 0.320
F-18 E/F: 14,400/30,560 + 14,400 = 0,320
Gripen E: 7,300/15,650 + 7,300 = 0,318
(Adding one external tank lands at ~36-37%, witch is what I think SAAB referred to when they mentioned super cruise with F-414G)
And further... Gripen NG can in addition to ~7300lb of internal fuel carry ~9000lb external (with a combat load of 2 BVR and 2 WVR missiles) which is not bad IMHO.
(Numbers are from various Internet sources, SAAB's is from the info material to Norway bid.)
Regarding if Gripen NG would be built or not, I think that it's almost certain that the next Gripen MLU around 2020 or so will feature the upgrade. SWAF requirement have change so will the capacity of Gripen. Remember it's not necessary to build new airframes to get E/F Gripens. Moving main gear, replace engine etc., in place for bigger internal fuel
tanks is possible with existing A/B, C/D versions. That's SAAB's design goal - to tailor the aircraft after customers needs, whether it's about radar, engine, fuel capacity...
The F-35 possesses greater thrust, a clean airframe even in operational configuration and a very sleek aerodynamic shape. It
possesses an enormous amount of 'dry thrust" (more than a Gripen on afterburner) very large fuel fraction and a very light
airframe considering the capabilities that it possesses.
Yes it has a "enormous amount" of thrust (~40000lb) but also a enormous weight (about ~60000lb). Heaviest single engine on earth to date.
That 43000lb is also not confirmed AFAIK (see source below)
That gives T/W ratio (with 2000lb of weapon and pilot):
100% fuel - 0,86
50% fuel - 1,06
hp://www.jsf.mil/downloads/mediakits/7764.zip
(sorry can´t post URL's yet, change hp to http)
All aircraft is compromises, in F-35 case, adding internal fuel also add drag...There is a reason most fighter aircraft has had a fuel fraction of around 30%.
I agree though that super cruise is mostly a slogan.
Regards/C