Guynumber7
New Member
New interesting plane that i think would be very good for Canada. Longer range with CFTs, AESA radar and a stealth weapons pod.
Agreed, this upgraded Superhornet is worth looking at. The Growler version should be considered as well. Canada should buy a 1-2 dozen and wait and see how the F-35 pans out.New interesting plane that i think would be very good for Canada. Longer range with CFTs, AESA radar and a stealth weapons pod.
The Canadian Govt planned to buy 65 F-35As. This is still possible only if the pricing gets down to the 85-90m range. If not, the number of jets that Canada could afford would be too small making a dual purchase more feasible, 16-24 F-35s for operating in high threat environments and a 30-40 mix of F-18/EA-Gs for less contested environments.Canada is at a fork in the road. It can decide to invest in the past 4th gen technology or invest in the future in the form of the F-35. I think I'll take the word of the pros as to which is the
^^^^ THISAs far as I understand it, the full rate production price of the A model will drop to the range you've indicated anyway, in short order
First of all you've got to stop dividing the number of jets by the overall contract price as this gives an incorrect assessment of the price (the favoured trick of the Euro-canard manufacturers and their pet websites like defence-aerospace.com and it's ridiculously biased and disingenuous editor - Giovanni de Briganti) to make their prices look more attractive.The Canadian Govt planned to buy 65 F-35As. This is still possible only if the pricing gets down to the 85-90m range. If not, the number of jets that Canada could afford would be too small making a dual purchase more feasible, 16-24 F-35s for operating in high threat environments and a 30-40 mix of F-18/EA-Gs for less contested environments.
The USN could likely do this as they have both Shornets and Growlers and it wouldn't be necessary to upgrade their existing aircraft with CFTs although Boeing would welcome the upgrade. Australia is the only other operator of Superhornets and Growlers and neither of these jets or their planned F-35As will be used from carriers so they will use their new EADS tankers based on the Airbus 330 airframe.This is my first post and excuse me if its not up to par
My question though is on the possibility of f/a 18e/f Growlers with conformal tanks acting in conjunction wth the f35 on longer range patrols and being able to refuel the f35 on such patrols :
Out of curiosity did you know why it is a period of 13 years?First of all you've got to stop dividing the number of jets by the overall contract price as this gives an incorrect assessment of the price (the favoured trick of the Euro-canard manufacturers and their pet websites like defence-aerospace.com and it's ridiculously biased and disingenuous editor - Giovanni de Briganti) to make their prices look more attractive.
Overall contract price includes simulators, other training devices, infrastructure, test and repair capabilities for aircraft, engines, systems etc, weapons inventories and so on.
If you want to measure this way (and I think it's a good way to do it personally, despite the sticker-shock because it informs you as to what a capability costs rather than what an individual airplane costs) then you need to be consistent across ALL possible aircraft types and measure the "capability price" of every aircraft rather than the aircraft price of one possibility and the capability price of another (as is done constantly with F-35).
When you do this, in the case of Australia's F/A-18F fleet (24 aircraft at $6.3B) you can make a (weak) argument that F/A-18F Super Hornets individually cost $224m each (at 2007 prices...) or about $5B past your Countries budget if you stick to the 65 aircraft plan... The reality is that price includes everything you need to run that capability for 13 years, it's not the aircraft price though.
When you drill down to actual contracted aircraft prices, you will see that F-35A's aren't significantly more expensive than their competitors as even the current low rate production is greater than any of their competitors and from LRIP 8 onwards (71 aircraft per year from recollection) it's build rate is actually greater than virtually all of it's competitors (in the Canadian context) combined.
Bridgeing capability for the F111, which was retired early was originally planed to last untill 2020 from memory. Then move to an all F35A fleet.Out of curiosity did you know why it is a period of 13 years?
Also does anyone know what the training cycle will be like for pilots as there is no two seater?
More often than not, modern fighters don't have dedicated trainer aircraft.Out of curiosity did you know why it is a period of 13 years?
Also does anyone know what the training cycle will be like for pilots as there is no two seater?
So just simulator and lead in trainer/light fighter? Didn't know that.More often than not, modern fighters don't have dedicated trainer aircraft.
The Russians use different training models... you can't do a comparison as suchSo just simulator and lead in trainer/light fighter? Didn't know that.
Does anyone know the likely numbers of support staff to maintain say a squadrons worth of F-35's?
I don't believe existing contracts would be at risk if Canada does not select the F-35 but future contracts most likely would go to other partner countries that stick with the F-35. As for votes lost, who knows. Judging by posts in Cdn media, the F-35 is a vote loser and this is largely due to false information and a pi$$ poor job by DND and the Govt explaining the life cycle cost for fighters, regardless of which one is selected. The latest LRIP price of 113m is an indication that the cost is trending in the right direction for the F-35. By mid to end of 2014, we should have a good idea of eventual cost and program status to make a decision. The problem is by that time an election will be looming and the F-35 might be the same cross to bare as the EH101 was in 1993 for the Tories.Problem with selecting a different plane now is that Canada had already invested a large sum of money into the F-35 program. Also, contractors in Canada will be building some of the parts, so there is also a job creation issue. The money will go down the toilet if they opted for the Hornets instead, not to mention votes lost.
Depends on how much payload you think the Hornet needs. That pod is very much a 'first day of the war' capability, clearly the intent is to mimic as far as possible the capability that currently only the F-22A and F-35 can bring to those scenarios, neither of which feature impressive internal payloads compared to what a modern fighter COULD carry if necessary (albeit at the expense of range, performance and low observability).I like the idea of CFTs on the Hornet but now the weapons pod. I think it sacrifices far too much capability and payload for a very minor gain in stealth.
Just looking at it quickly other platforms, like say the F-35 have a similar issue when they only use their LO internal weapons bay's. Your looking at highly reduced payloads there as well.I like the idea of CFTs on the Hornet but now the weapons pod. I think it sacrifices far too much capability and payload for a very minor gain in stealth.