what the royal navy should do tho,is put catapults on the two new carriers and buy rafales or s.hornets for them instead of f35's and save a whole lot of cash ...and allowed compatibility with the french and us carriers for operations....
mind you,if they had thought ahead they would have produced a navalised typhoon in the first place and they could then have justified the 3rd trenche of tiffies.....
The basic Queen Elizabeth was designed from the onset to have the ability to mount catapults (some redesign would still be required). However, the more you look at the fundamental design of the carrier, and the peripheral technological and political issues surrounding it, I don't think it very likely that the Royal Navy is going to or ever was going to install cats on her carriers.
There's several reasons why.
Firstly, the gas turbine-drive electronic propulsion and power systems means that steam catapults, without a major redesign to the ship and the addition of auxiliary steam plant means steam cats are out the door, or at least a highly undesirable option. (
http://www.rokusforum.org/pdf_files/future_aircraft_Carrier.CVF.pdf) (on a side note: an interesting link to the propulsion system proposals for the CVF
Navy Matters | Home Page /cvf6.htm)
That means EMALs (the US Navy's ElectroMagnetic Aircraft Launch System, effectively a railgun with a catapult shuttle attached to the top of it) is the best option for the Royal Navy. The problem is, EMALS is unproven on a full scale. Half-scale test versions and simulators have showed promise, but nobody quite knows if it will work. Granted, the US Navy has a huge stake in making work, especially since EMALS is key to the success of the Gerald Ford-class; but it's still a huge question mark and one the Royal Navy certainly has reason to worry about.
Secondly, there's the political aspect of it. Buying F-35Cs, navalized Typhoons, or Rafales would cost hundreds of jobs at Rolls-Royce, given the fact they are the producer (or one of the producers) of the F-35B's lift fan. Thus an F-35B cancellation is somewhat politically unpalatable for British MPs, etc. (
Defence jobs at risk as MoD drops jump jet fighter engine - Telegraph)
Now, that doesn't mean Britain isn't still considering an F-35C, Sea Typhoon, or Sea Rafale deal. The F-35B doesn't have some disadvantages, among them reduced range, and concern that it "[may] prove unable to take off and land with full air-to-air armament" and hence the Royal Navy "sees the F-35C as its primary “Plan B” for naval aviation." (
EMALS: Electro-Magnetic Launch for Carriers). Based off of other sources, the F-35 still seems to be the most probable contender should the RN switch to a CATOBAR setup for the Queen Elizabeths (
F-35C variant has the MoD's eye - Defence Management)
The possibility of a Rafale or Sea Typhoon process seemed strongest in 2005-2006 due to ITAR tech transfer concerns and the ensuing possibility of a UK pullout from the JSF program. However, the United States' eventual willingness to share some JSF information with the UK somewhat reduced these concerns. (
ITAR Fallout: Britain to Pull Out of F-35 JSF Program?).
This is a quick question. I'm new and don't know a lot about military strategy and how this would affect us but... I heard that since the F-35 cost is going up, our numbers of buying them would (Or could) go down. And I was thinking that if the cost is going up. Should we buy some Rafales so we don't have to rely on a low number of fighter jets in the navy?
No. The Super Hornet is US-built, already well-operational, well-liked, and cheaper than the Rafale. Air and ground crews are already well-trained on it, and unlike the Rafale, it's currently capable of carrying nearly every, if not every aircraft weapon in the US Navy's arsenal