A
Aussie Digger
Guest
130k's is the range of the Harpoon missile. Your "all singing all dancing" SDB's have a quoted range of 70k's, when launched from high altitude AND supersonically, less so when launched subsonically. It is NOT a replacement for an ASM and all the wishing in the world won't make it so. Yes if it hits a ship it will do severe damage. It is the ability to hit said ship that I doubt and is the reason Navies still use ASM's instead of simply employing JDAM's.Small diameter bomb can hit SAM sites, it can also hit moving ships. The F-22 can carry more SDB's than a pair of Superhornets can carry HARM missiles.
The F-22 uses radar to track targets. It does not require other means to track targets. It does not require laser guided weapons.
A bomb only has to hits it target, it doesn't have to do loop-da-loops on the way to the target.
Yes, from a supersonic, high altitude launch.
Did you write 130km because you thought that SDB range is only 60Nm or 112kms, so i would have to answer no to this question? Because the SDB has traveled 130kms :
The Super Hornet can maintain that for minutes, the F-22 can maintain it for hours.
F-22 does not need a buddy tanker as it not short legged like the hornet. The small diameter bomb can hit naval targets its just a matter of software, which of course would be modified in the Naval version of the F-22.
Also Recon is one of the future roles on the F-22 using a pod in the side bay. Lack of money may never see this happen. If the Navy goes with a modded F-22 then the money will be there and the Recon features will be added. Alot of functions can be added with software updates. So anything the Navy adds the Air force will get and vice versa.
Even if the Radar cross section of the F-22 is doubled, it is still smaller than the JSF
Even if the roll rate, pitch rate is reduced 20% and the empty weight is increased 20%, performance will still be ahead of the JSF and Super Hornet.
The F-22 has over 100 degree per second roll rate at 120 knots. Thats better low speed handling than a Super Hornet.
If the JSF is canceled due to money, then it will free up alot of money. Not all that money saved will go into the F-22, but some of it will so more F-22 aircraft will get ordered if the JSF is canceled.
In 2020 the Super Hornet will no longer be cutting edge. So if the JSF is canceled completely then a replacement for the Super Hornet will be needed. It would be logical for this Super Hornet replacement to share alot of common features with the F-22 such as engines, avionics, radar and alot of other parts. It may share only 50% of the parts and look completely different but it would still be a navalised F-22 to a certain extend.
I thought you would have picked up the hint with the range and waypoint questions, but obviously not. A weapon in maritime strike missions MUST have the ability to do "lopp de loops" as you call it if the firer wishes to avoid the self-defence systems carried by warships.
The same is true with the HARM. An "un-guided" bomb can hit a SAM site too. The ability to destroy a SAM site is not in doubt now. The ability to systematically conduct SEAD against a SYSTEM is what makes these sorts of weapons important and a glaring hole in RAAF capability generally.
A bomb (generally) cannot fly via a number of waypoints, at different altitudes during the course of it's flight AND hit at the waterline of a ship. Only a missile has the control needed to do that. With a warhead size roughly half, half the range and accuracy no better, SDB makes a pretty poor substitute for the Harpoon as a maritime strike weapon.
RAAF is also ensuring it's JASSM's will have a maritime strike capability eventually as well, ensuring a 400k standoff range AND a 1000lbs warhead... Yet another weapon the F-22 won't be able to carry...
The F-22A will track targets with it's radar only eh? Guess current ROE's are going out the window then. Any kind of visual indentification of a target (apart from the Mk1 eyeball) will be impossible and who's going to be ballsy enough to risk a $200m F-22A in conducting low-level operations to visually confirm a target???
The upgrades for the F-22 to provide a EO/IR targetting capability (which was to be mounted internally FYI, not Pod mounted on the side of the aircraft) were cancelled due to budget restrictions. As yet they have not been funded or developed any further...