MAD is a redundant tech - you can do more with current tech and you don't need a stinger stuck out the bum of the planeWhere does that come from?
P1 is purpose built and has room for growth as well as MAD fitted as standard and four engined.
P8 is a converted civilian airliner does not carry MAD, is two engined and not sure about room for growth.
Be interested in your reasoned opinion.
Didn't India get the mad boom?MAD is a redundant tech - you can do more with current tech and you don't need a stinger stuck out the bum of the plane
the P8 might have a passenger heritage but its completely re-engineered to carry the weapons and sensor fitout
there is extensive data on the rotation and availability rates of the P8's when they were involved in looking for MH370 - huge persistence rate differences compared to the old benchmark - and the P1 is not the old benchmark
their plane, their fitout. despite the US advising that MAD not required,Didn't India get the mad boom?
What's the story there, diffrent internal?
Cheers GF thanks.their plane, their fitout. despite the US advising that MAD not required,
or perhaps not an absolute transfer of weapons systems
ours will be USN identical - no MAD stinger
MAD needs to be "close" to the target to work. As P-8 is explicitly designed NOT to go down to the wavetops, it made no sense. To support that programs are in works for high altitude glide torpedo deployment as well as possibly a UAV that will go down with a MAD sensor. In addition to better fuel efficiency, it helps give a little buffer against possible future sub launched SAM development. For RAAF purposes, tech transfer of all the supporting expendables is a near certainty.Didn't India get the mad boom?
What's the story there, diffrent internal?
the future tech weapsystems options are pretty impressive.To support that programs are in works for high altitude glide torpedo deployment as well as possibly a UAV that will go down with a MAD sensor.
the future tech weapsystems options are pretty impressive.
my understanding is that all the high altitude torpedo launches have been pretty impressive - so "son of HAAWC (ALA)" is a game changer
add in developments in aerial launched surface arrays where triangulation becomes "easier" - it will cause all sub drivers to lift their game - and some sub classes will more or less be "the walking dead" as they've already hit their technology peaks
the capability delta between P3 and P8 is pretty significant
This is my first read about the HAAWC. It seems to be a very impressive piece of kit.The Boeing HAAWC is operational and running. Allows drops from 30000 feet and the torpedoe to glide as fears as 10 miles to the target. This further enhances security for the P8 against potential submarine detection and SAMs. The submarine won't know it's been detected until the MK 54 hits the water close by.
Details
Boeing moves forward with flying torpedo high-altitude ASW attack system for P-8A aircraft
Contract
US Navy Awards Boeing High Altitude Anti-Submarine Weapon Contract
Depends how quickly they want a replacement, I think. Exocet and Harpoon could definitely do with a facelift, but I would have thought SCALP/Storm Shadow (perhaps with some updates) would be good to go for years yet - particularly the French naval surface/sub-surface launched MdCN variant, which as far as I know hasn't even entered service yet. So if they're looking as long-term as a replacement for a missile that isn't in service yet, then I think Perseus could definitely be in with a shot.Anglo-French cruise/ASM study via MBDA:
UK, France to study next-generation cruise and anti-ship missile - IHS Jane's 360
Perseus or similar ?
A surface/sub-surface launched SCALP/Storm Shadow with active guidance, modified flight profiles, some kind of booster to help the range drop-off from a surface launch, and compatibility with Sylver and/or Mk. 41 VLS would do a fine job as an anti-ship weapon, I would have thought. Granted a surface launch and sea skimming flight profile will eat into the effective range, but publicly released figures indicate the weapons can already fly in excess of 500kms. Maybe add a booster, lighten up the warhead weight for more motor/fuel (I doubt an anti-ship missile is going to need a 450kg armour-piercing payload), and design a hi-low flight profile so it's only at low altitude when it's approaching/during the terminal phase? Maybe also look into improving LO characteristics and ECCM fit so the weapon has the maximum chance of surviving to make it to that final low-flight phase? Like I said, I would have figured this could make a perfectly serviceable anti-ship missile, though I would welcome informed commentary from anyone who knows/sees anything I've missed, or wants to point out any assumptions I've made in error.reading it again, they're talking 3 year design study with a tech demonstrator for 2019 which would seem to indicate a lot of component re-use which team complex weapons seem to do very well - think a rejigged SCALP or similar, with motor, warhead and seeker re-use. Not Perseus I'm guessing. Hmmm...
Swerve,MdCN - fits torpedo tubes & Sylver A70 (so no problem with physical fit in Mk 41 Strike Length, but would need integration), has the booster - but AFAIK isn't set up for attacking mobile targets. The radar & IIR seekers are for terminal guidance when attacking pre-planned fixed sites.
What I don't think it has is a two-way datalink, & for attacking ships you'd need that. They could have moved a long way, or another ship could have moved into the way. The current seeker, intended for identification of & precise homing onto pre-planned fixed targets, may not be able to find a target which isn't exactly where it's supposed to be: some sort of search ability may be needed.
The terminal flight trajectory may also need changing, as said. IIRC it dives now.
At the cost of 5 type 26 frigates. OuchLink borrowed from the STOVL thread, F35B in quantity earlier than expected, but more amazingly, 9 P8's to be ordered.
If that all pans out in the SDSR, that's a lot of good news in terms of solid equipment purchases.