@Hambo
Assuming that you can upgrade the typhoon to a sea typhoon at a reasonable price:
Not that I think the sea typhoon is a good idea, but the price on one could be substantially lower than the the price on a typhoon.
IF one considers the investment in R&D etc. in the original typhoon project as a sunken cost (after all those money are spendt) a sea typhoon could be sold at "upgrade cost of a sea typhoon" + "marginal cost of a typhoon"+ profits.
So to speak, a sea typhoon could be a spin off project, where you sell the typhoon design again, add a little extra, but don't pay for the R&D that went into the original typhoon project. Such a construct will ofcourse not improve the economy in the original project who's owners might demand their share of the spin off... (it could also be a biatch to tell your electorate that while they paid full price, we are selling the same stuff to the indians at 2/3 the price, and others might call it goverment subsidies)
The F-35, as far as I know, are projected at a programme cost at $330bn, with 2440 planes that works out to around $135M each. I don't know what the chances are that 2440 planes are getting built with an European-American debt crisis that is a clear and present danger to life as we know it. And somebody might get the idea that 2000-and-something F35s is unneeded, and less could do. In which case the price per plane will jump.
So there could be room for alternatives (not that I think that sea typhoon is necessarely a good candidate for that)
Assuming that you can upgrade the typhoon to a sea typhoon at a reasonable price:
Not that I think the sea typhoon is a good idea, but the price on one could be substantially lower than the the price on a typhoon.
IF one considers the investment in R&D etc. in the original typhoon project as a sunken cost (after all those money are spendt) a sea typhoon could be sold at "upgrade cost of a sea typhoon" + "marginal cost of a typhoon"+ profits.
So to speak, a sea typhoon could be a spin off project, where you sell the typhoon design again, add a little extra, but don't pay for the R&D that went into the original typhoon project. Such a construct will ofcourse not improve the economy in the original project who's owners might demand their share of the spin off... (it could also be a biatch to tell your electorate that while they paid full price, we are selling the same stuff to the indians at 2/3 the price, and others might call it goverment subsidies)
The F-35, as far as I know, are projected at a programme cost at $330bn, with 2440 planes that works out to around $135M each. I don't know what the chances are that 2440 planes are getting built with an European-American debt crisis that is a clear and present danger to life as we know it. And somebody might get the idea that 2000-and-something F35s is unneeded, and less could do. In which case the price per plane will jump.
So there could be room for alternatives (not that I think that sea typhoon is necessarely a good candidate for that)