Good point. The fact the carrier design also takes Rafale into consideration (for the French navy) would also count in its favour.Rafale would come with Meteor already integrated, very simple integration of Storm Shadow, & a closer support base.
Good point. The fact the carrier design also takes Rafale into consideration (for the French navy) would also count in its favour.Rafale would come with Meteor already integrated, very simple integration of Storm Shadow, & a closer support base.
im not sure about that as the UK is contractually obliged for 232 planes all those deals can only delay the orders [making them cheaper as run increases]Does that include Tranche 3?
If gossip is to be believed, the MoD are looking at the possibility of India or Saudi buying up the RAF's Tranche 3 allocation. Planning is apparently already underway to divert more UK production for a highly possible 12-24 plane order from Oman starting from 2010.
Has anyone actually done that yet?If other nations can reduce their buys for the Typhoons
Other countries can't reduce their buys for Typhoons. Everyone is bound in by penalties which make it unaffordable (no saving over just taking the aircraft & storing them), not least because the UK was afraid of other countries wanting to cut their numbers. The shoe does fit every nation.If other nations can reduce their buys for the Typhoons and/or Lightning IIs, the United Kingdom should be able to do so too. Of course, by dropping out a penalty should be awarded to the other nations, as their price per plane just went up. How can anyone make future procurement plans when nations drop out and reduce their planned buys? This shoe should fit every nation.
Just going back to an earlier point Swerve. This morning I happened to come across in this month's edition of Air International Commander David Hobbs RN (Retired) arguing the merits of the Super Hornet for the Fleet Air Arm.Rafale would come with Meteor already integrated, very simple integration of Storm Shadow, & a closer support base.
That's exactly the situation Swerve. Avoiding the penalties needs all partner nations to agree to waive them and most countries (including us) would rather use their defence budgets for job creation than defending the nation.Other countries can't reduce their buys for Typhoons. Everyone is bound in by penalties which make it unaffordable (no saving over just taking the aircraft & storing them), not least because the UK was afraid of other countries wanting to cut their numbers. The shoe does fit every nation.
IIRC the original arrangements didn't include such heavy penalties, but they were introduced after Germany cut its requirement, to prevent further cuts impacting negatively on non-cutting partners.
I'm just wondering....
With the cost of an F/A 18E/F at $55million versus $90 - 100million for the F35B, if the RN went for the Super Hornet they could potentially realise savings minus catapult costs of several billion dollars. This money could be used to purchase a 3rd CVF which would allow the RN to have two operational carriers and one in maintenance at all times with two carrier wings of F/A 18E/F's.
A third CVF will not be bought. However, you are right, the potentially saved money from a Super Hornet or Rafaele buy could be spent elsewhere-more likely on buying some much needed Surface Warfare capablity (whether that be destroyers, frigates or corvettes) than a third CVF. (you have to remember that the RN is hoping to do away with long refits for its Carriers every couple of years with the CVF buy.)I'm just wondering....
With the cost of an F/A 18E/F at $55million versus $90 - 100million for the F35B, if the RN went for the Super Hornet they could potentially realise savings minus catapult costs of several billion dollars. This money could be used to purchase a 3rd CVF which would allow the RN to have two operational carriers and one in maintenance at all times with two carrier wings of F/A 18E/F's.
More or less as Windscorpion says. The Falklands War still resonates. The RAF were able to deploy Harriers on container ships, with pilots who'd gone through very little training for carrier ops, & when they got down there, use them effectively. They flew off the container ship, landed on Hermes, & successfully operated from her with RAF pilots. More RAF Harriers flew from Ascension, directly to Hermes.Fair point Sea Toby, I just fail to see why the Royal Navy (and for that matter the RAF) really want the F-35B. ....
Actually during the early stages of Enduring Freedom Harriers (USMC in this case) were the only fighter aircraft able to use the tattered runway at Kandahar. (even though as you said, they did not take off vertically. They used a short take off)That’s the point though, the Harrier was designed during the cold war. Logical thinking dictated that the runways/airfields were going to be hit, so they design a strike fighter that can take off and land vertically, hide it in the German forests and wait for the Russian tanks to come rolling across the hills…that scenario never happened.
I can’t recall a single Harrier mission (Falklands/Desert Storm/Kosovo/Afghanistan) where a Harrier has used this ability in an operational sense, it’s always used a runway or a short run-up on one of the Invincible class carriers. It has to if it wants to carry a half decent weapon load. I'm sure it'll be exactly the same for the Lightning II.
Don’t get me wrong here, I’m not slating the Harrier (always had a soft spot for the Sea Harrier since the Falklands) or the F-35. I’m just of the opinion if we’re finally going to get a decent sized carrier, then let’s do it properly. Let’s get decent aircraft that is not going to potentially get compromised by lift-fans, weight, range or anything else.