So what is the problem then? If supply chain stuff is an issue for everything then you cannot only fault Tiger on it. I get that the supply chain was poor; but from mid-11 onwards it has been nigh on faultless.We are not immune from support issues is the basic answer. We've seen this in ridiculous detail with Tiger and now MRH-90. I think the difference here is worrying more about what might have been an issue, rather than what IS and always has been issue and not just for us, but EVERY user of the capability.
Yes, as I said. Though AH-64 would have cost more for everything, so the amount of money would be avaliable for MLU is likely to be less (in this fiscal climate and assuming that the extra money had been partially brought forward from the MLU to TLS world).There is money for the Tiger upgrade, would that money not be available for AH-64D upgrades, even if we didn't opt for the full Block III capability?
As with Tiger.Growth paths exist for Apache too. Just like the TUSK upgrades we've acquired for the M1A1 fleet, I've no doubt we could pick the options we are most in need of to ensure our capability remains effective and supportable throughout it's service life.
It hasn't been a basket case since about mid-08 and its provided a capability (capably of being deployed) for the past while.The difference is, we'd have had an operational aircraft for the last 7 years, instead of the basket-case developmental program we've been stuck with.
No; but I would say that a fleet of 22 Tiger (when EC has said we need 22 to meet the contract requirement) is more capable than a fleet of X AH-64 when Boeing has said you need X + 6 (especially when we could only afford X).Do you honestly think an AH-64D only provides 75% of the capability of the Tiger? The AH-64D met our requirements for AIR-87 even in the de-spec'd form that was bid for it...
To some extent (and I wholeheartedly agree about EC / AusAero and their...optimistic views). But I'll note that Zulu isn't fully sorted and ARH suffers a little from the Collins Class symptoms in that the general public and media are not aware of how far along 1 Avn has dragged the beast. It has problems - but nothing that is new or different.Those programs tracked pretty closely actually. The difference is that Bell acknowledged their development issues, Australian Aerospace did not. Everything was "fine" with the Tiger on paper and it was cheaper than it's rivals too, according to it's manufacturer.
We can all see how those claims turned out...
If we'd chosen the AH-1Z we'd have had much the same problem as the USMC did, the difference seems to be that we COULD have had AH-1W to provide an interim capability to support our training function and provide a limited operational capability to replace the Bushrangers and support tactics development. On top of which, despite their issues, the kinks in that program HAVE been worked out, quicker than the Tiger program has managed.
And the AH-1Z would have been far better suited to operations off our LHD's...
As for Zulu and LHD's, I'll wait until I see gf's stuff about ARH and LHD first. I'm currently unconvinced that a Zulu would be better than an ARH.