the concerned
Active Member
Wouldn't one of the priorities be to gain some sort of recon capability for the jsf'b. Does anyone know if this is being developed,also would we purchase the sdb 2.
It would have to be agreed at Hammond level, but I don't think it would be unreasonable, if a service thinks the capability is so vital they are prepared to make sacrifices elsewhere that they should retain control over the assets. Particularly as the other service has been happy in the past to ditch the capability. As for headcount/budget transfer is just book keeping. The issue would be the contractual commitment to BAE of ship numbers, although I'm sure everything is up for negotiation.The FAA doesn't have the manpower to operate 48 F-35. It would need a transfer of personnel from the RAF. Nor do I think it has a base it could operate them from, without expensive works.
Ditto for P-8. The FAA would have to start from scratch.
The RN does not have the budgetary control to cancel a couple of Type 26 & spend the money on P-8s. That is determined at MoD level.
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The RN are acutely aware for the necessity to get things like the T26 on budget to keep the numbers they have allocated now (already cut down from initial requirements as is normal). It would be considered a big blunder for them voluntarily sacrifice numbers on possibility of getting something else which would then be up for its' own round of cutting.It would have to be agreed at Hammond level, but I don't think it would be unreasonable, if a service thinks the capability is so vital they are prepared to make sacrifices elsewhere that they should retain control over the assets. Particularly as the other service has been happy in the past to ditch the capability. As for headcount/budget transfer is just book keeping. The issue would be the contractual commitment to BAE of ship numbers, although I'm sure everything is up for negotiation.
As for the P8, they are based on 737, I suspect the RN could get a better deal outsourcing to a civil operator than the RAF building a capability around a handful of aircraft.
You want to outsource operation of P8s to a civil operator or your want to outsource maintenance?As for the P8, they are based on 737, I suspect the RN could get a better deal outsourcing to a civil operator than the RAF building a capability around a handful of aircraft.
It's not a matter of headcount, or budget transfers, but of reassignment of personnel who signed up for one service & would be transferred to another one. Many of them would not be happy about that. They joined a particular service because they wanted to be in that service.It would have to be agreed at Hammond level, but I don't think it would be unreasonable, if a service thinks the capability is so vital they are prepared to make sacrifices elsewhere that they should retain control over the assets. Particularly as the other service has been happy in the past to ditch the capability. As for headcount/budget transfer is just book keeping. ....
Sorry it was unclear, but I did mean maintenance, the RAF do outsource a lot of maintenance on some aircraft and a civil design in fairly widespread service would be logical.You want to outsource operation of P8s to a civil operator or your want to outsource maintenance?
Wouldn't be able to do all the maintenance though, probably restricted to engine and routine airframe, lots of stuff baiscally everything that makes it a P8 and not a 737 would still need to be done via military staff/defence contractors.Sorry it was unclear, but I did mean maintenance, the RAF do outsource a lot of maintenance on some aircraft and a civil design in fairly widespread service would be logical.
Actually I was thinking of a defence contractor such as Babcock/RR (they are 2 or the 3 in the MRTT PFI), but I guess right a pure civil contractors could look after the 737 bit.Wouldn't be able to do all the maintenance though, probably restricted to engine and routine airframe, lots of stuff baiscally everything that makes it a P8 and not a 737 would still need to be done via military staff/defence contractors.
Using an Airbus as the basis for an MPA would have been just as problematical for us as the P8 was for the USN but without the benefit of a massive budget to get the job done. The project would have been extrememly expensive and would have resulted in a modest number of airframes.Actually I was thinking of a defence contractor such as Babcock/RR (they are 2 or the 3 in the MRTT PFI), but I guess right a pure civil contractors could look after the 737 bit.
It is such a pity we did not go down the Airbus route in the first place, but now I would want a low risk option available asap
Probably, but a fraction of the cost of the radical reconstruction of a 1st generation commercially based design like Nimrod, with very limited available air frames restricting any additional participants. I think an Airbus version would have attracted interest, I would not be surprised if the French eventually go down that route....in the distant future.Using an Airbus as the basis for an MPA would have been just as problematical for us as the P8 was for the USN but without the benefit of a massive budget to get the job done. The project would have been extremely expensive and would have resulted in a modest number of air frames.
It would be just as bad, possibly worse as we already know the Nimrod airframe worked, it would still be a radical reconstruction, you have to cut lots of holes in the aircraft for weapon bays, sonar bouy despensors, possibly a MAD boom, underwing hardpoints, strenghtern the fuselage and then do all integration of all the sensors etc, add in-flight refueling capability..........Probably, but a fraction of the cost of the radical reconstruction of a 1st generation commercially based design like Nimrod, with very limited available air frames restricting any additional participants. I think an Airbus version would have attracted interest, I would not be surprised if the French eventually going down that route....in the distant furure.
Get real they hacked the wings of the Nimrod and built new larger ones that didn't fit... Even people in BAE admitted it would have been cheaper to have built a new aircraft from scratch. We are not going to agree on this one and I am firmly in the camp of buying c6 P8s now, so lets close a pointless debate.It would be just as bad, possibly worse as we already know the Nimrod airframe worked, it would still be a radical reconstruction, you have to cut lots of holes in the aircraft for weapon bays, sonar bouy despensors, possibly a MAD boom, underwing hardpoints, strenghtern the fuselage and then do all integration of all the sensors etc.
This is one of the reasons that the P8a Poseidon programme r & d costs are $8b+.
Basically you are talking about doing the same thing Boeing have done but on a much smaller production run.
Boeing P–8A Poseidon | Info, Avionics, Costs/Budget, Specs
Yes and they would have to have cut massive holes in your Airbus A330s and spend a huge amount of time strengthening and reconstructing the fuselage, wind tunnel tests, flight tests etc. Turning an airliner into a military MPA is not a cheap job and never will be.Get real they hacked the wings of the Nimrod and built new larger ones that didn't fit... Even people in BAE admitted it would have been cheaper to have built a new aircraft from scratch. We are not going to agree on this one and I am firmly in the camp of buying c6 P8s now, so lets close a pointless debate.
I never said it would be cheap but it would have been a product that could have been exported. I think a similar plane might have been the a320/321, the P8 was not a cheap conversion.Yes and they would have to have cut massive holes in your Airbus A330s and spend a huge amount of time strengthening and reconstructing the fuselage. Turning an airliner into a military MPA is not a cheap job and never will be.
It probably wouldn't as bad as the Nimrod programme but it wouldn't be the cheap replacement for MR2s that you think it would have been.
No but you did say a fraction of the cost.I never said it would be cheap but it would have been a product that could have been exported. I think a similar plane might have been the a320/321, the P8 was not a cheap conversion.