Well, most modern Forces don't have 30+ tanks and jets, without upgrade, the oldest in the US would be the B-52, and thats been reworked a 100 times. The Abrams is from 1978, and has gone through 3 upgrades and reworks, for it to last another 10-15 years, although current budgeting may make it longer.wow..I can't believe that they aren't preparing now.hmm one question..why is india buying jets/tanks if they wont be usable in 30-50 years? because from what I've seen india tends to use its military equipment for 40+ years and to spend $15 billion on jets and $3 billion on tanks to use them for only 20yrs is kind of a waste. Oh and why build nuclear powered DDG's? dont you think that it would be unwise to send in a nuc powered DDG ahead of the fleet in times of war? considering the environmental effects if one was sunk *especially when DDG's are sunk from countries that do not have the level of nuclear tech that the US has
Hi all,Hey guys I'm new on this site and I was wondering if anyone has information on what fuel is going to replace oil for the military in the future and if any major military power has started preparing by developing engines that use other fuels? (ex: jet engines that use hydrogen?)
well what I meant was that india specifically has aircraft that are 30+ years and because it is not able to buy large amounts of aircraft every 20-25 yrs I would expect them to plan ahead for any road blocks that may appear. I understand that they could replace the engines with ones that burn different fuels but considering (to the best of our knowledge) that no country has done large amounts of research on alternative fuel burning engines why does india even bother spending money on aircraft that will be only flying for 20 years? wouldnt they be better off spending it on r&d?Well, most modern Forces don't have 30+ tanks and jets, without upgrade, the oldest in the US would be the B-52, and thats been reworked a 100 times. The Abrams is from 1978, and has gone through 3 upgrades and reworks, for it to last another 10-15 years, although current budgeting may make it longer.
Most jets are out of date 5 years after introduction, let alone 30. They will phase out and replace in another 20-25 years, this is normal practice to keep up to date, imagine if Britain kept their spitfires?
As for the nuke power, their in subs and Carriers because they are harder targets, carriers normally travel in fleets, protected by large escort of DDGs and subs. The problem of nuke subs was evident in the Kursk sinking, with fear it was carrying Nuke warheads and could explode when being raised but most nuke subs are safe and carry a money back guarantee!
Just a question, but why would public opinion shift in favor of carbon fuels if they are trying to find alternatives? from what i've seen most major oil companies are moving away from oil and supporting alternative fuels in some way or another.Hi all,
I feel that the original question has been lost in amongst these excellent and thought provoking replies. Alernative fuels are normally considered as non-fossil, non-nuclear and carbon neutral. Ethanol for example is usable in most multi-fueled vehicles of today; with some modification it can be used in COGAS powered ships. The real question is why are the alternatives (such as hydrogen cell batteries - as used by the new German Submarines) being looked at? The answer must be: that the major oil companies are intertwined with the major defence players. I predict that within the next few years there will be a significant and irresistable shift in public opinion in the acceptability of carbon fuels. While there is not much to report on at the moment, I would say, whatch this space...
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAJust a question, but why would public opinion shift in favor of carbon fuels if they are trying to find alternatives? from what i've seen most major oil companies are moving away from oil and supporting alternative fuels in some way or another.
wouldnt ethanol be uneconomical considering how much we would have to do to produce it? i heard awhile back taht making/transporting of ethanol pollutes enough to get rid of the benefits of using it as an alternative. and does ethanol release enough energy to be used in military aircraft?
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAJust a question, but why would public opinion shift in favor of carbon fuels if they are trying to find alternatives? from what i've seen most major oil companies are moving away from oil and supporting alternative fuels in some way or another.
This is very good actually. India in 15-20 years time will buy another 100 of the latest probably stealthy fighters which then sends the suhkoi's to a secondary role. This is brilliant as it gives a "High-Low" combat mix and brings the amount of aircraft to an acceptable level and requires fewer new aircraft to bring the numbers up. So it doesn't need to buy "large amounts of aircraft every 20-25 yrs" it needs to buy a moderate amount of aircraft every 20-25years. This would cost the same as buying a large amount every 30-40years. Good move by India.well what I meant was that india specifically has aircraft that are 30+ years and because it is not able to buy large amounts of aircraft every 20-25 yrs
i dont know how business works in australia, but here in america if businessmen see that they're going to go out of business in 30 years they're going to do something about it. either prevent it or sell off the business to make a profit. i know they're greedy, but they arent stupid. comeon what would you do if you controlled a large part of the worlds fuel supply. i dont think you'd be stupid enough to let that slip out of your hands. also i said that oil companies are supporting research on finding alternative fuels in some way or another. i never said that they are contributing large amounts of money. $250,000 is better then nothingHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
You really think they are trying to find "alternative" fuels, if it doesn't come at the same price as current petroleum, or make as much money for them, they don't care. The ultimate smoke screen, while you write a $250,000 for research, your company just made $25million, while you were signing the cheque . Be careful what you see. More likely the CSIRO and other major research centres contribute more(and also the smaller ones)
Last I heard was that Australia was purchasing F-18 Super Hornets at a good deal from the U.S, you can rest assured that we do not have a crisis puchasing aircraft, if they serve a role why not keep them around, the more technology advances that you have in a aircraft the less that you need to get the job done. I would think Going to alternate/multi fuels should not be a issue with helicopters seeings how the motor on a M1 tank is basically a Blackhawk helicopter engine, this engine will handle gasoline, alcohol,diesel and JP 4 aviation fuel.This is very good actually. India in 15-20 years time will buy another 100 of the latest probably stealthy fighters which then sends the suhkoi's to a secondary role. This is brilliant as it gives a "High-Low" combat mix and brings the amount of aircraft to an acceptable level and requires fewer new aircraft to bring the numbers up. So it doesn't need to buy "large amounts of aircraft every 20-25 yrs" it needs to buy a moderate amount of aircraft every 20-25years. This would cost the same as buying a large amount every 30-40years. Good move by India.
Australia stuffed that up greatly, with its Hornets and F-111's they are all at the end of their life so all of them have to be replaced at once. So Australia will of course be forced to buy a high end aircraft and we will not have enough money to replace the aircraft 1 to 1. Australia will be lucky if we can replace every two of a current aircraft with a single JSF.
Also remember you only need stealth or high levels of agility for a small number of missions. So an older aircraft can perform some missions just as good as the brand new expensive aircraft, however you have to plan ahead so the aircraft have enough flying hours left. If Australia had of purchased a second lot of C model Hornets in the 90's, we could have used the hornets to perform the "Low" part of a "High-Low" mix, this would cost more in the short term but then we would have only needed half as many JSF's which would have saved us in the long run.
So India is doing fine like this.
The US has stuffed up like Australia has. Their older aircraft have run out of flying hours and have to be retired and the US cant buy new more expensive aircraft at a 1:2 replacement let alone a 1 to 1 replacement. As the US cant buy enough high end aircraft its forcing the retirement of 50 aircraft just to get a single F-22. Sure the F-22 is good but its not the correct answer to the problem.
When budget runs thin you dont develop 5 different types of aircarft and buy 20 aircraft of each type. That brings a total of only 100 aircraft. If you canceled 3 of those aircraft you could buy the two remaining aircraft in bigger numbers and end up with nearly twice as many aircraft and a much more powerful air force!!
The JSF should be the aircraft on the chopping block. If it was canceled the US would be able to buy 1000 F-22's and 1,000 new F-16's, for the same price as 200 F-22's and 1000 JSF's. You'd have enough F-22's to perform all the stealthy missions required of the JSF, and enough F-16's to perform the non stealthy low-tech conflict missions. You'd then have a 800 more aircraft in total which then allows for all the older aircraft to be retired without sacrificing numbers.
Since when?Last I heard was that Australia was purchasing F-18 Super Hornets at a good deal from the U.S.