Vympel wrote:
Fair enough, but how are they doing it? One by one? Because an F-22 literally doesn't have enough missiles to shoot down 12 F-15s/ F-16s at once, IIRC.
If it's only small groups, it's not really a proof of concept.
They do that stuff full scale with the listed numbers of aircraft, though in several different manners governing if killed aircraft can return to play after going in a penalty box, or with unlimited ammo just to see how high the rape level really could go. You can also throw in the variabuls of only one side or neither side having the support of AWACS controllers or the support of jamming aircraft.
But the thing is, why does it have to shoot them all down? Shooting down even four enemy planes in one lone sortie would be a huge victory and probably cause the enemy formation to turn back from an offensive mission. Real life air combat is not an utter fight to the death every single time thing. As fitted now its eight internal, four external missiles. If that new AAM is ever fielded, then F-22 will have a modest 21 internal missiles.
The point of the war games is that it takes at least a dozen F-15 aircraft just to cover enough sky to actually gain a kill position on a single attacking F-22. Otherwise the F-22 is effective enough to score its kills and supercruise away. That ability to disengage at will, as well as initiate combat first reliability due to stealth should allow a an F-22 unit to simply make a series of hit and run attacks to which the enemy just has no response. He’ll he scattered all over the sky and by the time he’s done reassembling some kind of formation so much fuel will have been burned up maneuvering
The F-22 gains its real advantage when it operates in groups anyway; exercises have pitted 4 F-22s against as many as 48 opposing fighters flying in multiple groups. Most of that seems to be done out over the Gulf of Alaska, where the military has truly huge areas of airspace it can let the F-22 fly supersonic in. The ranges out in Nevada aren’t big enough!
Similar trials involving the Typhoon have show it can take on three F-16s reliably and win… but that means four of them and a Typhoon goes down while it would still have missiles to use. This is not nearly so impressive, and a fully equipped Typhoon is about two thirds the production cost of an F-22. R&D was about half as much but then the thing also doesn’t even have an AESA radar.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956