Ewan and Colin McGregor's documentary on the RAF for the RAF Centennial.
Remains to be seen whether the UK spend the money to sustain it properly. Always been their Achilles heel. A perfect case in point is the current mess with the E3D. Those airframes wouldnt be in the current poor state they are currently if they had th £££ spent through life.yup - and we're getting the same kit that the big dog in the yard uses so no more orphan platforms, ageing air frames etc. Just need to qualify it for Stormshadow and all's good..
The Wedgetails were built in the U.S. If you were thinking that the U.K. acquiring Wedgetails as a quid pro que for Australia buying the T26 I doubt there would be any Australian content in the Boeing built aircraft for the RAF.A Parliamentary Committee is recommending against a sole source purchase of the Wedgetail surveillance aircraft as there is an alternative. As the alternative is still under development it seems to me the reason is, like so many other defence decisions, its all about money, not capability. After Australia went for the T26, selecting a proven platform from Australia makes sense.
UK committee urges against Wedgetail selection
T
The Wedgetails were built in the U.S. If you were thinking that the U.K. acquiring Wedgetails as a quid pro que for Australia buying the T26 I doubt there would be any Australian content in the Boeing built aircraft for the RAF.
The money would be better spent maintaining the E-7s properly.
One of the other, potentially important considerations is the capabilities and limitations of the various AEW radar systems.It seems to me that they are looking at post Brexit and how new expenditures can enhance trade influences, nothing against the G6000 but they did say it was in development as opposed to in MOTS aircraft, after choosing P8 over the P1 why really would they not go for in service Wedgetail?
Honestly I would not be surprised if at some point in the near future the USAF were to start looking at augmenting/replacing their E-3 Sentries. The base airframe for the E-3 has been out of production since 1991 and it is now about 27 years later. At some point, the cost to support and sustain the aircraft in a flightworthy condition, plus keeping the avionics and mission systems upgraded to an operationally useful state, is going to be more than replacing the E-3 Sentry with new units with modern capabilities. Given that the NATO E-3 Sentry force has started to retire some of their AEW aircraft due to the cost to maintain them in light of their accrued flight hours, it would seem likely IMO that even with some of the block upgrades being done to USAF E-3's that threshold will be met.I don't think discussion of the E7 is related to anything about a cross over deal - any sale would be US FMS - I don't know about the capabilities of the platform but the upgrades to E3 look to be around 2bn and the purchase of a brand new fleet of E7 may be similar money - that's a whole brand new fleet with that "new plane" smell and using a modern passenger jet as an airframe.
Plus, same spares chain as P8 in the main so..yeah, could be persuaded.
Against that, we'd be off the upgrade and improvement track that the rest of NATO are on for E3.
Or alternatively it may come from the milspec B-767-2C airframe that is the basis for the KC-46, which will be in production for at least the next 10 years and was designed specifically in the knowledge for future sensor installation if required.Honestly I would not be surprised if at some point in the near future the USAF were to start looking at augmenting/replacing their E-3 Sentries. The base airframe for the E-3 has been out of production since 1991 and it is now about 27 years later. At some point, the cost to support and sustain the aircraft in a flightworthy condition, plus keeping the avionics and mission systems upgraded to an operationally useful state, is going to be more than replacing the E-3 Sentry with new units with modern capabilities. Given that the NATO E-3 Sentry force has started to retire some of their AEW aircraft due to the cost to maintain them in light of their accrued flight hours, it would seem likely IMO that even with some of the block upgrades being done to USAF E-3's that threshold will be met.
From there, it would seem logical that the US would look to domestic airliner designs which can fit the avionics and mission systems required as well as provide the power generation, range, loiter and mission endurance times required. IMO it would probably not be one of the current B737 NG designs like are seen in the Wedgetail or Poseidon, but one of the follow-on B737 designs.
It is possible, but I suspect the potential advantages of using a newer, more efficient aircraft coupled with the economies of scale likely available in an airframe based off the B737 MAX would outweigh the B767 airframe. Particularly since there is already the MESA radar which has been developed and integrated onto a B737 body. I suspect that it would be much easier to install and integrate that radar array aboard a B737 MAX than the much larger airframe of a B767.Or alternatively it may come from the milspec B-767-2C airframe that is the basis for the KC-46, which will be in production for at least the next 10 years and was designed specifically in the knowledge for future sensor installation if required.
Frankly there are strong points for both aircraft. I wouldn't declare the 737 the winner yet. MESA integration on a B767-2C I suspect is not beyond the capabilities of Boeing and that the range of the selected aircraft would be something of significance and greater self sufficiency with respect to fuel and A2A demands. The 767-2C was deliberately future proofed in the design so as to enable it to adopt other roles. Part of the reason why the E-10 was culled was that the KC-46 programme was directed into a more multi-role application regarding future mission potential.It is possible, but I suspect the potential advantages of using a newer, more efficient aircraft coupled with the economies of scale likely available in an airframe based off the B737 MAX would outweigh the B767 airframe. Particularly since there is already the MESA radar which has been developed and integrated onto a B737 body. I suspect that it would be much easier to install and integrate that radar array aboard a B737 MAX than the much larger airframe of a B767.
IMO it would be questionable that an aircraft as large as one based off the B767 would really be needed for AEW&C operations. The KC-46 has a MTOW of ~2.4 x that of the Wedgetail, and is ~1.5 x (or 16.9 m) longer. Such capacity for weight and volume is important if the aircraft has roles for in-flight refueling, or as a cargo/personnel airlifter. However, with an AEW system I doubt there would be a need for that much weight capacity due to sensors and associated control stations. Had that been a consideration, then I suspect Boeing would have looked at using the B767 airframe as the base for the P-8 Poseidon, as opposed to modifying a B737-800 airframe.
As a side note, there had been a programme to develop a B767-based ISR platform, the E-10, as a replacement for the USAF E-3 Sentry, E-8 JSTARS, and RC-135 Rivet Joint but the plug was pulled on that back in FY 2007. At the time, it was expected that those aircraft could be maintained effectively via avionics and systems upgrades for another 20 years, barring age-related problems with the aircraft. What this strongly suggests to me is that in the 2025-2030 timeframe, the USAF will have a replacement programme underway for those three types of ISR assets. I suspect that something based off the B737 could most quickly be developed into a suitable replacement, and be an effective and efficient replacement, possibly with expanded capabilities if developments and lessons learned from the P-8 Poseidon are also applied.