Photo bird.Yep there was a Hawk Mk 127 escorting them part of the way.
Photo bird.Yep there was a Hawk Mk 127 escorting them part of the way.
I'm guessing he was referring to the Wedgetail's DIRCM system?Hmm, this sounds very interesting, looks like the RAAF has stolen a march on the rest of the world.
Quote:
The Royal Australian Air Force Boeing Wedgetail, one of a fleet of five, can destroy incoming missiles with laser beams and track airborne targets up to 400km away while monitoring ground threats up to 100km away
From this article:
High-tech plane to scan for threats - The West Australian
Mightly impressive don't you think :rotfl
Guess the RAAF can save a lot of money then not having to buy A2A missiles etc now. So when are they fitting these laser beams to the Hornets & Shornets?Hmm, this sounds very interesting, looks like the RAAF has stolen a march on the rest of the world.
Quote:
The Royal Australian Air Force Boeing Wedgetail, one of a fleet of five, can destroy incoming missiles with laser beams and track airborne targets up to 400km away while monitoring ground threats up to 100km away
From this article:
High-tech plane to scan for threats - The West Australian
Mightly impressive don't you think :rotfl
1. We've got 6 of them. Not 5.Hmm, this sounds very interesting, looks like the RAAF has stolen a march on the rest of the world.
Quote:
The Royal Australian Air Force Boeing Wedgetail, one of a fleet of five, can destroy incoming missiles with laser beams and track airborne targets up to 400km away while monitoring ground threats up to 100km away
From this article:
High-tech plane to scan for threats - The West Australian
Mightly impressive don't you think :rotfl
Hi all - been a while1. We've got 6 of them. Not 5.
2. It is fitted with NEMESIS - DIRCM (Directed Infra-Red Counter-Measures) so I guess they are sort of vaguely correct. Except for the bit about being equipped with laser beams and being able to destroy missiles, that is...
3. Re: AWACS/AEW&C capability: and France, Israel, Singapore, Japan, India, Pakistan, Brazil, Greece, Turkey, South Korea and so on...
Otherwise pretty good article!
Jack - we haven't run an article by Carlo since late 2004.besides, I make a lot of allowances for your magazine that publishes Kopp's articles, you have enough trouble
Hey Andrew good to see you back. Not using the Magio handle anymore? I think it's still active?Jack - we haven't run an article by Carlo since late 2004.
Hey AD (what happened to ADMkI?)Hey Andrew good to see you back. Not using the Magio handle anymore? I think it's still active?
I wasn't having a go at you earlier, just the numpty that wrote that article...
Hope everything is well?
probably the same numpty who accused me of also being jack....I wasn't sure if 'Magoo' was still active, but one of the haters over at Ares accused Magoo and Jackjack of being the same person ( :eek ), so I thought it better to post under my own name and try to remain as uncontroversial as possible.
Hey GFsend me an email, I have some interesting chat for you - not to my work addy though.
Had to temporarily close down the AD moniker. Some internet stalker made me the object of his ire for a while and so I had to change some things around...Hey AD (what happened to ADMkI?)
Not back permanently...these forums were taking up too much of my life and I had to make a clean break, but no doubt I'll check back occasionally if something's of interest.
I wasn't sure if 'Magoo' was still active, but one of the haters over at Ares accused Magoo and Jackjack of being the same person ( :eek ), so I thought it better to post under my own name and try to remain as uncontroversial as possible.
The "numpty" is usually a good writer, but he doesn't have any grounding in Defence and was in a hurry when he called me. I'll tell him that, in future, I'll only do it if I can fact-check the final draft.
Cheers
Shiver ran down my spine reading that remembering all the vitriol and spite I was subjected to as that event was explained to me from the other side. That particular crew were never nice people to anyone who did not bow down and worship them and their ideas.Jack - we haven't run an article by Carlo since late 2004.
Yeah that guy has got more than a few issues (aka - a complete fruitcake). I try to stay clear of his particular brand of idiocy.Hey AD (what happened to ADMkI?)
Not back permanently...these forums were taking up too much of my life and I had to make a clean break, but no doubt I'll check back occasionally if something's of interest.
I wasn't sure if 'Magoo' was still active, but one of the haters over at Ares accused Magoo and Jackjack of being the same person ( :eek ), so I thought it better to post under my own name and try to remain as uncontroversial as possible.
Can we say that the F-35 is the Collins-class of the US? I think it has become quite the partisan object and a useful political tool.Where do all of the cynics get all of this false information with the F-35?
A few things to point out and keep in mind. The F-35 programme is projected to run until somewhere in the 2050-2065 timeframe, potentially. This is where some of the huge cost projections come from, since there is also expected to be a significant increase in fuel costs over the next half-century.Can we say that the F-35 is the Collins-class of the US? I think it has become quite the partisan object and a useful political tool.
Whenever I read these stories I always ask "If it is too expensive and not good enough, what is their alternative?". Truly, there isn't one.
So if the F-35 is "outclassed", what is the alternative before the Hornets reach their end of life? This is not only true for the RAAF but the US as well. They can keep on churning out F-15/16/18 fighters indefinitely, slowly improving and refining with each iteration, and they will be a formidable force, but eventually the PAK-FA/J-20/S-400 or even something else entirely is going to be fielded by a potential adversary. Even if it isn't superior, it would be of concern for military planners.
The F-35 costs do hurt though, and is always a convenient counter-argument. But the $250 billion cost of the program over the expected 35 years from 2001 - 2035 pales when compared to the thought of how much money (real and notional) the US has pissed against a wall to little or no purpose over the last decade.
The argument is that it would cost less to cancel the F-35, despite the fact the aircraft is almost finished. Let us say for argument's sake that an advanced teen-series fighter costs half a F-35 (not that we really know what a full production F-35 costs yet). So for roughly 2400 US fighters:
F-35 (50 for dev + 200 for production) = $250 billion.
Continued teen series: (50 for F-35 dev + 100 for production) = $150 billion.
New LO fighter: (50 for F-35 dev + $Y for F-XX dev + $Z for F-XX production) = Unknown amount well over $250 billion.
So to save $100 billion or so over 25 years (or save nothing at all on a F-XX) they want to cancel what will be the most important defence program of the last or next decade? It is one thing canceling DDG(X) or CG(X) or Crusader or EFV or FCS or even maybe the LCS or JLTV, as I would consider many of these to be "gold-plated" capabilities, but I think the airpower of the F-35 is one system that promises to superpass how past fighter were employed.