t68
Well-Known Member
that's good to hear that they committed the RAAF, Goon & co must be spitting chips over their beersThey've confirmed an extra 58 yesterday
that's good to hear that they committed the RAAF, Goon & co must be spitting chips over their beersThey've confirmed an extra 58 yesterday
the good thing is that most of the media have worked out that he and his self aggrandizing cohort are out to lunch. I've heard some choice descriptors from a few of the other broadsheet editors and journos....And 'former RAAF engineer' Goon was shown on ABC this morning bagging it out. Loved the comment of limited weapons carriage and fuel range ...... ignoring the fact this all carried inside the aircraft not slung on the wings.
Out of curiosity what is the impact on the performance of an Su30 with all tanks and weapons slung on the wings.........
It’s to be ordered under FMS I believe everything is sweet with the “A” the UK is poised to make an order for “B” soonish if the scuttle bug is too believed. Now that a five eyes partner has made the push with a large order on the table others should see the aircraft for what it is a major capability enhancement to the RAAF order of battle in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities when working with other platforms such as Wedgetail, P8 Poseidon and Super Hornets and Growler.Glad they finally made the decision to buy a grand total of 72 JSF thus far.
Even Labour are supporting the governments decision of the purchase.
Yep APA,RAND and a number of jurno's must be drowning their sorrows.
Is this a joint purchase with the US and other nations?
I believe everybody except the US and Canada fall under FMS when ordering US kit. IIRC there were some changes (or perhaps exceptions) made in US law with respect to Canadian orders and FMS/ITARS.IQuick question do the pom’s order under FMS or directly with the manufacture?
According to APA and 'REPSIM' there is none.And 'former RAAF engineer' Goon was shown on ABC this morning bagging it out. Loved the comment of limited weapons carriage and fuel range ...... ignoring the fact this all carried inside the aircraft not slung on the wings.
Out of curiosity what is the impact on the performance of an Su30 with all tanks and weapons slung on the wings.........
Both UK and Aust were elevated to a different level a few years back. Can't remember exact details but we did get internal advice on fast tracking and elevated access benefitsAustralia and the UK, both being ABCA nations would have little trouble getting approval from State and Congress.
-Cheers
The funding for the F-35 purchase would/will come from areas of the Defence budget, and that the purchase was made has been known for some time. The 'Classic' F/A-18 A/B Hornets are approaching 30 years old in some cases, so a planned replacement fighter purchase has been known and planned for, for perhaps a decade or so.It seems that there are a lot of people angry over this purchase, I was looking at the RAAF Facebook page and their recent post on the purchase seems to be copping a lot of flak, I also saw this on the article posted earlier, I'm no defence expert just a beginner Enthusiast but Many are saying that it should be spent on other things like pensioners and Healthcare, I was under the impression though that this money had been saved up over many years, is this the case or is it being drawn from other areas of the Budget? I know this May be a bit off topic sorry if it is
they'll go back - the only ones worth keeping are the Growlers - and they're not keepers either at this stage.I'll be interested to see what happens with the super hornets. Whether they provide something the F-35 cannot, or even are an asset the ADF is more willing to risk in conflicts. And as the USN phase out supers then spares/replacements must surely become cheap.
Not to mention the possibility of a F-35B should the need warrant.Having the SHs and Growlers is an opportunity to future proof the air combat force by splitting the buy between blocks and potentially even versions of the F-35. For instance there may be a more capable two seater down the track that would nicely cap off our fleet and that we wouldn't be able to consider if we had bought 100 A's up front. Other outside options would be UCAVs or the new USAF strike bomber the LRS-B, which, if it eventuates, will use a lot of proven F-35 systems.
Not questioning the utility and benefit of Growler in current warfighting constructs and paradigms - I'd question same against proposed force development and integration a-la systems integration into the broader force capability modelGF001-aust;
As much as i disagree i can 'somewhat' understand the decision to return the Super Bugs but why the Growlers? They bring amazing capability to the table and are a force multiplier.
Does the JSF have the same ewar capabilities as the Growler? If not then i see it as moving backwards.
Id like nothing more than to see the 72 JSF as well as a full complement of 2 squadrons of Super Bugs and another of Growlers as a 1 for 1 replacement of our Hornet/F111 force plus the added capability of the Growlers and I dont think the public will make much of an outcry, the lefties whine when we buy not when we keep existing airframes in service.
So the plan is still to get back to ~100 F-35's? I thought the larger SH order prevented that from happening easily?Shornet/Growler/JSF is an anomaly - it was never intended as the final fleet package
Without contingency it would have been worse
As mentioned in the RAN thread, the comment of 'precisely what type' is interesting, but probably a mis-speak, (F-35B's anyone? No?) Probably not. In the same paragraph is the other interesting comment in relation to the option of the additional (fourth) squadron.We are certainly retaining the option to purchase an additional squadron – a further 18 Joint Strike Fighters and we haven’t decided precisely what type it might be – that will be something that will be looked at in the context of the coming Defence white paper.
Jensen is still smarting over the fact that the Lib Executive decidedly didn't want him as a Science Minister and decided long ago that his posturing along with the usual suspects placed him in the fruit basket as well. They also weren't going to give him the Defence gong.One thing is for sure ,the JSF purchase has stirred up debate.
I saw a Sydney Morning Herald poll on the JSF .
*Should the Abbott governments spend 12 billion on fighter jets given the budget situation.
14170 people were polled and 80% thought JSF was a bad buy.
Liberal MP Dennis Jensen attacks Joint Strike Fighter order as a 'dud' decision
Being in the minority has never felt so good :
Australia may also win more contracts to build parts for the JSF now we have placed an order.
Australian F-35 orders will help drive down price -Lockheed | Reuters