John Fedup
The Bunker Group
- Thread Starter Thread Starter
- #341
As the learned philosopher Sir Mick Jagger observedIf this is true, another disappointment for the RCA as their preference was the C-27J.
The advantages of the C-27J are supposedly being more rugged, larger diameter fuselage for outsize loads and faster. Only the latter is any significance in the FWSAR role, and presumably that wasn't enough to offset the (allegedly) much higher cost.No, you can't always get what you want
You can't always get what you want
You can't always get what you want
But if you try sometime you find
You get what you need
Same glass cockpit, pallets, and engines as our C-130Js and more range were additional C-27Js advantages. The actual numbers will be interesting.As the learned philosopher Sir Mick Jagger observed
The advantages of the C-27J are supposedly being more rugged, larger diameter fuselage for outsize loads and faster. Only the latter is any significance in the FWSAR role, and presumably that wasn't enough to offset the (allegedly) much higher cost.
LMFAO So So True. That is all it is about. Saving face of the Liberal Party.There may be some special add-ons but nothing too serious. The number one criterion would have been price. The Canadian content of PWC engines was more than countered by the C-27J's commonality with our Herc C-130J fleet. The shared engines and glass cockpit avionics would mean significant cost savings on lifecycle costs. Then there was the performance advantages of the C-27J which is why the RCAF favoured it. As for delivery, the media here says 3 years for 16 aircraft once the contract is signed so there must be a reasonable number of other orders for the C295 or production rate is somewhat limited. Not sure if Leonardo could do any better. Anyways its done, not my preference but at this point almost anything looks good.
Just speculation on my part but perhaps 18 Superhornets and 16 C295s keeps both Boeing and Airbus from ragging on about provincial and federal loans towards Bombardier's C-Series.
Yes, a token order to Viking would be another example of vendor appeasement by junior although two new Viking Otters would be valuable for northern SAR operations.I guess the next thing to happen is an order for Viking for Twin Otter NG's to replace the Yellowknife based legacy Twin Otters.
Naughty boy. As punishment you will learn the Dear Leaders (Justin Trudaeu) book of wisdom :rotfl@nova There is an interesting article by Major Ed Stokes of Australia in this month's Canadian Naval Review. He discusses the need for a careful evaluation of options for ship defence against new supersonic ASCMs and ASBMs including hypersonic glide missiles. These new missiles (in 5-20 million dollar range) look pretty attractive considering they might take out an enemy asset worth 1-1.5 billion (modern frigate) or 8-14 billion (aircraft carrier). Several countries are in the process of replacing surface combatant ships so hopefully their is some collaborative thinking on new options for ship defence against these new missiles.
Sorry, this should have been in the RCN thread.
That shouldn't take too long.Naughty boy. As punishment you will learn the Dear Leaders (Justin Trudaeu) book of wisdom :rotfl
times are changing, eg there used to be a requirement in some countries for submissions in triplicate, one was secured, one went to finance and legals, and the last went to the eval PM and engineering teamsI used my limited math skills to determine that 2700 kg of paper is equivalent to 298 boxes of paper with 5000 sheets per box. Or 1.49 million sheets of paper. Divide that by two for English and French submission that's still almost three quarters of a million pages to support their bid.
How can this be justified?
Seems to me with the media you have brought up he just might have scored an own goal, since I don't follow Canadian politics any other programs he's outsmarting himself with?As followers of this thread are aware, junior will be buying some some SHs as an interim solution for our fighter requirements despite the comments by the RCAF chief stating this was unnecessary. Junior quickly had the requirements changed so the RCAF had to simultaneously meet NATO and NORAD commitments thus justifying (in his mind be anyway) the need for SHs. Despite his new commitments for the the RCAF, apparently there is no problem making CF18s available for air shows. BTW junior, most attendees at air shows would rather see F-35s!
Air force sets aside CF-18 for airshows despite lack of jets for military missions
There's some perverse side effects that can kick in with this, and although I'm loathe to normally say things like this in public as it can trigger the nutters - there is some foundation truth to consider
Trump is anti-NAFTA
JSF canadian work is of some concern to the 8.3.3 partners as they (current can govt) have no commitment to the platform with that change of govt
American companies especially would have some executive leverage with Trumps mindset to argue that canadian work should be pulled as they are no longer within the spirit and intent of purchase and the program
the 8.0.3 members would and have been ramping up their same concerns and around the same issues - and its not as if they don't have legitimate concerns and a basis for getting work pulled
Lockmart could immediately take heat off themselves by acceding to the principle of Trumps public theatre by redirecting the canadian contracts back to the continental US
there is some real concern here, and the other partners are not just engaging in public dancing. I've attended JSF briefs from 8 years ago where the other international partners were already peeved off that the canadians appeared to be getting disproportionate work compared to intended acquisition, and that advantage was due to NAFTA.
It wouldn't take much for this to blow up from private and controlled meetings to one where Trumps public thought bubbles give someone the courage to start generating traction and put public pressure on Lockmart.
Its an easy win for Lockmart in POTUS terms, contractually though there could be some hurt, but that could be offset by new and additional orders from the tail enders in the 8.3.3 club
Note the reader comments - some of them can't even get the plane details right. reminds me of australian media commentary