Aaaalright! Back on track.Aren't we getting a bit off track? There is little being discussed relative to Norway.
Creampuffs for everyone!F-35 Lightning Joint Strike Fighter a big hit
an McPhedran
June 13, 2008 12:00am
Deep in the heart of Texas, a $59 million jet fighter is being built that soon could be patrolling Australian skies.
THE private dining room on the 35th floor of the Petroleum Club in downtown Fort Worth, Texas, screams prosperity.
From its timber-panelled walls and impressive artworks to the waiters in crisp white jackets and bow ties, this is clearly a place where deals are done.
In days gone by it was oil and cattle, but today the focus is another of Fort Worth's famous exports -- military aircraft.
The accents might be Texan and the location post-modern wild west -- the locals boast that nearby Dallas is where the east ends and Fort Worth is where the west begins -- but the subject matter is stealth jet fighters.
And this means big money, even by Texas standards: they are $58.7 million apiece.
Lockheed Martin executives had spent a long day singing the praises of their F-35 Lightning Joint Strike Fighter to a group of Australian journalists.
The legendary Texan hospitality and public relations patter was broken only by a tour of the impressive JSF production line and a long debate about how much the so-called fifth-generation fighter planes would cost Australian taxpayers.
Lockheed, which has 140,000 staff and annual sales of $40 billion, is reluctant to commit to a firm price for its wares.
So it was with some relief that by day's end the company had, for the first time, revealed a realistic figure on the fly-away price for Australia's new frontline air combat aircraft.
That $58.7 million will be for each of the first 368 foreign-bound fighters to roll off the line.
It was the price the Pentagon, which sells military gear to foreign countries, quoted to Norway as it decides between the JSF and other options, including the European-built Eurofighter and SAAB Gripen.
According to those who know, it is a very competitive price.
Even allowing for inflation, the price, to be offered to the eight JSF consortium members (Australia, Britain, Italy, Norway, the Netherlands, Turkey, Canada and Denmark) early next year, is up to $10 million a plane below what Australia had expected to pay.
Given the RAAF is due to sign up for 100 planes next year, that is a potential saving of $1 billion.
"That pays for an awful lot of flying hours and support systems," an Australian official said.
It also puts a cap on the project's cost, allows Australia to buy with an unprecedented degree of certainty -- and it virtually eliminates the incentive for the Government to delay its order.
George Standridge, the vice-president at Lockheed in charge of the JSF, said: "This is going to be the most affordable fighter out there for the future because we have such a large production base."
....
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,23855599-662,00.html
Small but significant point, Goon is not a Doctor, be it Vetinary, Human or one of Philosophy.Dr. Goon must be eating crow, somehow the Lightning IIs are half his price of Raptors. He and his group must be totally egged. It will take a long long time for his group to wipe the eggs off their faces. Should we serve them crow?
Or it's another 2002 dollars price . . . .Because US flyaway ain't partner flyaway. Different accounting practices, as I understand it (some of what would usually be accounted for as programme cost is included in the FY09 flyaway cost).
Otherwise they'd have some explaining to do to the USAF and Congress.
Ok, try to disseminate this one... is Dr. Davies mixing up AUPC and UFC?Or it's another 2002 dollars price . . . .
...or is it the journo (most likely).Dr Davies's study shows a real increase in JSF prices because of rises in development costs from USD56.5 million to USD77.3 million in the average procurement cost of the JSF when measured in 2007 dollars.
The average procurement cost is the cost of the basic aircraft, and the equipment, support and training required to operate it, averaged over the JSF's production run. "As the final cost settles down to the long-term trend, it will result in a JSF flyaway cost (the production cost) of USD80million in 2007 dollars," Dr Davies says.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,23688761-31477,00.html
That ASPI study made by Dr.Davies his a case study by himself!Ok, try to disseminate this one... is Dr. Davies mixing up AUPC and UFC?
...or is it the journo (most likely).
Aaaalright! Back on track.
Creampuffs for everyone!
http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3881Q A question on JSF, and then I have a quick follow-up. The Air Force
is briefing that the ramp-up for JSF is going to plateau at 48 airplanes
instead of 110, which would have a net effect on the per- UNIT cost of the
aircraft. What are your concerns with that program's costs spiraling upward
as a result of fiscal decisions you're making now?
I do have a follow-up, as well.
ADM. STANLEY: The details of the ramp for the Joint Strike fighter I'll
have to refer you to the Air Force on.
Q They indicated it would plateau at 48.
MS. JONAS: I think we do have the Air Force here, so you can follow up
with them, the breakout.
http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/2007/02/AFbudget070202/The F-35 Lightning II program stays in development, but instead of buying 110 of the jets annually starting around 2013, the Air Force will limit its yearly purchase to 48 of the stealthy jets.
No they will still get the 1763 F-35s....it will only take 40 years to get it though.....But that "2009 USAF budget" doesnt reflect this VERY BIG "stealth cut", they are still predicting costs on a 1763 units production run... And you wont get 1763 units at that production speed.
The chances of that happening are more or less the same for snowing tomorrow in OuagadougouNo they will still get the 1763 F-35s....it will only take 40 years to get it though.....
Nope, Read this from your link form airforcetimes:Grand Danois
Remember the 48/year F-35A production rate for the USAF that we have discussed?
Found it.
http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3881
http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/2007/02/AFbudget070202/
But that "2009 USAF budget" doesnt reflect this VERY BIG "stealth cut", they are still predicting costs on a 1763 units production run... And you wont get 1763 units at that production speed.
See the USAF has no choice but to get all the F-35s because not only do they have F-16s and A-10s but they also have F-15s that need to be replaced and they did a few studies before to determine a certain number of jets that are needed for the USAF to do its job effectively plus its highly unlikely the F-35 will be cut because the USAF is only getting 183 F-22s.The chances of that happening are more or less the same for snowing tomorrow in Ouagadougou
Cheers
No, no, no.Nope, Read this from your link form airforcetimes:
The F-35 Lightning II program stays in development, but instead of buying 110 of the jets annually starting around 2013, the Air Force will limit its yearly purchase to 48 of the stealthy jets.
The USAF Plans to ramp up to 110 in 2015, not 2013 as airforcetimes says. In 2013 it will be 48 as planned (so according to aftimes they're cutting from 48 to 48 in 2013!).
What the USAF is indicating is that they have not have money in the budget for more than 48/yr. This is part of the budgetary game; they want extra funding - and it's classic - just like the ongoing story of the GE/RR F-136 engine; DoD cuts it at every review and Congress reinstates it. The USAF is facing a major fighter gap even with the F-35 being built on schedule. Congress is going to demand F-35 en masse a few years from now. USAF knows this.
re: Dr. Davies I'm also confused, but now on a higher level than before. Will get back to him.
Air Force Willing to Abandon Joint Fighter to Save the F-22
By ELIZABETH BECKER
Published: October 23, 1999
To save its expensive F-22 jet fighter from Congressional budget-cutters, the Air Force is willing to sacrifice another, less-costly new jet fighter -- to the consternation of the Navy and the Marines who also want to use the cheaper jet, a senior Air Force official said.
The less-expensive jet, the Joint Strike Fighter, is unusual in that it was being developed for the Air Force as well as the Navy and the Marines. But a senior Air Force official, speaking on the condition that he not be identified, said this week, ''It may not be cost-effective to continue with the Joint Strike Fighter.''
''We have alternatives for the Joint Strike Fighter -- but not for the F-22,'' the official said. ''We have to have the F-22.''
By raising the prospect that it would pull out of the program to develop the Joint Strike Fighter, the Air Force was starting a battle within the Pentagon and was signaling Congress that it could not tolerate the loss of the F-22. The strategy indicated a willingness to barter away the Joint Strike Fighter so Congress would not kill financing for the F-22, which would be the most expensive jet in history at a projected cost of at least $125 million a plane.
.....
I have been following the JSF from it´s birth, and yes i have read a lot of "Doomsday" predictions, in 1998 the great Ray Braybrook called the idea of making three separate versions including a STOL one as a complete "Idiocy", he was proven wrong, "kuddos" to Lock Mart for that one.Once again. USAF will need those jets and there is no other game in town. AT 48/year, USAF will effectively drop below 1,000 tacair jets inside 20 years. Do you think this is going to happen? Is this what the USAF plans on? Or Congress? Seriously?
Have you seen the list of doomsday predictions for the JSF - the ones that NEVER came true? It's long, very long.
EDITED BY /GD
The thing is, when the funding for 2015 is allocated then no one will care what has been said and done - it's a free ride to create FUD.
(Fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD) is a tactic of rhetoric used in sales, marketing, public relations)