Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
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Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
I just wanted to throw this out there for commentary from those who know more than I do..
Modern Combat Aircraft- Who has the best what, and why? Some simple categories..
Interceptor- I ~assume~ that an ASRAAM-equipped F-22 takes the cake, but ive been wrong before. How capable are the last-generation Soviet 'Superfighters'? Pending entrance of the F-22 into major service, how do the aformentioend Soviet Superfighters compare with the late-build F-15s and F-14s? And are the people in Europe building anything on par?
Genericus Fighterus- I dont know what else to call it.. the F-16s, the F-18s, the Viggens and Eurofighters and the like of the world. Designed not to be the best aircraft in the sky... but the best aircraft we can afford alot of.
Groud-Attack- RAF Tornado? Something from Sukhoi or Illuyshin? Do the A-10s advantages outwigh its disadvantages? Dont you wish we still had F-111s and that SOMETHING had come out of the A-12 program?
Just seeking information... I grew up consuming manuals on military hardware, but they just dont print as many, or as easily accesible, ones as they did then.
Modern Combat Aircraft- Who has the best what, and why? Some simple categories..
Interceptor- I ~assume~ that an ASRAAM-equipped F-22 takes the cake, but ive been wrong before. How capable are the last-generation Soviet 'Superfighters'? Pending entrance of the F-22 into major service, how do the aformentioend Soviet Superfighters compare with the late-build F-15s and F-14s? And are the people in Europe building anything on par?
Genericus Fighterus- I dont know what else to call it.. the F-16s, the F-18s, the Viggens and Eurofighters and the like of the world. Designed not to be the best aircraft in the sky... but the best aircraft we can afford alot of.
Groud-Attack- RAF Tornado? Something from Sukhoi or Illuyshin? Do the A-10s advantages outwigh its disadvantages? Dont you wish we still had F-111s and that SOMETHING had come out of the A-12 program?
Just seeking information... I grew up consuming manuals on military hardware, but they just dont print as many, or as easily accesible, ones as they did then.
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
The post soviet (we can't afford to implement them but we've got the designs) no one knows for sure, though there are a mix of crappy and terrifing rumours.Marcus wrote:How capable are the last-generation Soviet 'Superfighters'?
(I even heard one about the Russian Federation developing a working cloaking device )
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
Which superfighters? The Russian Su-35/37 series is a very formidable heavy fighter- nothing can match it in the air until the F/A-22 comes out. The Indian's already have it inventory- the Su-30MKI is an Su-37UB in all but name. China's Su-30MKK aircraft aren't nearly as well equipped, though they're still extremely fearsome. What a difference an I and a K makes ...NecronLord wrote:
The post soviet (we can't afford to implement them but we've got the designs) no one knows for sure, though there are a mix of crappy and terrifing rumours.
If you mean the MiG MFI or the Sukhoi Su-47 FIRKIN (previously S-37 Berkut), then in the first case, this was meant to be the Russian 'Raptor killer' but it got axed, and is now being used a technology testbed for MiG's part in the PAK FA program (current program to create the next generation Russian fighter)- MiG is a subcontractor. Sukhoi, the prime contractor and victor of the tender to design the fighter, is using the Su-47 design for both testing and as a base for the new fighter- a line-drawing of the proposal was put up by Jane's Defense Weekly- it's a twin-engined (pair of 175kN class AL-41F turbofans) design in the same weight and size class as the FLANKER, with wings similar to those of the F/A-22 and a fuselage very similar to the Su-47 (with no canards). Of course, this design will be much refined as the process goes on. First prototype flight is expected in 2006, with IOC in 2010 and service in 2012.
Ah ... the 'plasma stealth'. Everyone's skeptical about it. It's still pie in the sky, IMO.(I even heard one about the Russian Federation developing a working cloaking device )
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
The F/A-22 will carry the AMRAAM and AIM-9X. The US withdrew from the ASRAAM project.Marcus wrote:Interceptor- I ~assume~ that an ASRAAM-equipped F-22 takes the cake, but ive been wrong before.
Very.How capable are the last-generation Soviet 'Superfighters'?
Generally superior to the Western designs, though the F-14D is probably a superior interceptor to any of those fighters.Pending entrance of the F-22 into major service, how do the aformentioend Soviet Superfighters compare with the late-build F-15s and F-14s?
The Eurofighter Typhoon, which is quite good.And are the people in Europe building anything on par?
Prepare to be attacked for fake Latin.Genericus Fighterus
What about them? Eurofighter isn't supposed to be a "generic fighter." Viggen is being replaced by Gripen, IIRC. F-35 will dominate this market, though the Gripen may seize the low-end with its lower costs.I dont know what else to call it.. the F-16s, the F-18s, the Viggens and Eurofighters and the like of the world. Designed not to be the best aircraft in the sky... but the best aircraft we can afford alot of.
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
Didn't they get rid of AIM-54 Phoenix?phongn wrote: Generally superior to the Western designs, though the F-14D is probably a superior interceptor to any of those fighters.
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1.) Im terribly well aware that it isnt real latin, being in my usage something of a verbal shorthand.
2.) Ahh, I suppose my mental grouping of production fighters into 'expensive and limited numerically' and 'less expensive, greater numerically', as represented by the USAF F-15/F-16, had blead over into other matters. It was my apparently misunderstanding that the Eurofighter was in the school of the F-16, intended to be more affordable and produced in greater numbers.
2.) Ahh, I suppose my mental grouping of production fighters into 'expensive and limited numerically' and 'less expensive, greater numerically', as represented by the USAF F-15/F-16, had blead over into other matters. It was my apparently misunderstanding that the Eurofighter was in the school of the F-16, intended to be more affordable and produced in greater numbers.
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
Effectively, the F-14 will be retired in the not too distant future and it is still the only aircraft capable of using that missile.MKSheppard wrote:Didn't they get rid of AIM-54 Phoenix?phongn wrote: Generally superior to the Western designs, though the F-14D is probably a superior interceptor to any of those fighters.
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i thought the funding on that program got pulled?darthdavid wrote:Some one forgot the JSF as a low end high numbers fighter. it will whoop any thing in that classes ass like there's no tomorrow. VTAL, and stealth, and lotsa other technological nuggets, c'mon it rocks.
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Bit behind the times considering they'll start delivering the first units not a million years from now.Col. Crackpot wrote:i thought the funding on that program got pulled?darthdavid wrote:Some one forgot the JSF as a low end high numbers fighter. it will whoop any thing in that classes ass like there's no tomorrow. VTAL, and stealth, and lotsa other technological nuggets, c'mon it rocks.
The problem with the Super Hornets is that they have too short of legs still. They simply don't have the same range as the F-14 or A-6.Arrow Mk84 wrote:Still, I love the new Super Hornets.
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
The opinion of the world stealth experts is that no one will have it within 50 years. I hold the opinions of designers who have actually built stealth aircraft and come from nations with more advanced electronics over totally unsupported Russian claims.Vympel wrote:
Ah ... the 'plasma stealth'. Everyone's skeptical about it. It's still pie in the sky, IMO.
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Umm no, the USN and USMC order recently got cut back, but the F-35 still is looking at firm orders for thousands of aircraft to about a dozen airforces.Col. Crackpot wrote:i thought the funding on that program got pulled?darthdavid wrote:Some one forgot the JSF as a low end high numbers fighter. it will whoop any thing in that classes ass like there's no tomorrow. VTAL, and stealth, and lotsa other technological nuggets, c'mon it rocks.
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
Of the planes named only the F-14 is actually and Interceptor. And that was only in mission, the design is a quite good fighter.Marcus wrote:I
Interceptor- I ~assume~ that an ASRAAM-equipped F-22 takes the cake, but ive been wrong before. How capable are the last-generation Soviet 'Superfighters'? Pending entrance of the F-22 into major service, how do the aformentioend Soviet Superfighters compare with the late-build F-15s and F-14s? And are the people in Europe building anything on par?
Tornado and F-111 are both interdiction/strike aircraft. Not ground attack. Assuming we count things, which only exist as prototypes, the best is probably one of the recent Su-25 upgradesGroud-Attack- RAF Tornado? Something from Sukhoi or Illuyshin? Do the A-10s advantages outwigh its disadvantages? Dont you wish we still had F-111s and that SOMETHING had come out of the A-12 program?
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Re: Modern and Post-Modern Military Aircraft: Analysis
Raptor is the best out there, equipped with AIM-120 AMRAAM and AIM-9X Sidewinder. With its combination of stealth, highly accurate missiles, and target prioritizing AI system, it's virtually unbeatable in most fights. If they're pitted class-to-class (F-14 against MiG-31, F-15 against Su-27), Russian and American fighters were roughly equivalent. American fighters tended to be slightly better for radar and weapons systems, Russian fighters were usually a touch more maneuverable for the large ones.Marcus wrote:I just wanted to throw this out there for commentary from those who know more than I do..
Modern Combat Aircraft- Who has the best what, and why? Some simple categories..
Interceptor- I ~assume~ that an ASRAAM-equipped F-22 takes the cake, but ive been wrong before. How capable are the last-generation Soviet 'Superfighters'? Pending entrance of the F-22 into major service, how do the aformentioend Soviet Superfighters compare with the late-build F-15s and F-14s? And are the people in Europe building anything on par?
Late block Falcons are still among the best. The Gripen's close in capabilities, but the new Sniper/Pantera system maintains the electronic superiority. I don't know exactly how their maneuverability compares, but everything I've heard makes it sound as if they're fairly close.Genericus Fighterus- I dont know what else to call it.. the F-16s, the F-18s, the Viggens and Eurofighters and the like of the world. Designed not to be the best aircraft in the sky... but the best aircraft we can afford alot of.
Depends on what you're looking for. In CAS, the Thunderbolt II is probably still among the best. Its 30mm GAU-8A Avenger autocannon is very useful against armor assets, and it is actually hard for other fighters to take out because it is so slow. The Frogfoot (Su-25) is another good CAS aircraft. Other than that, I can't think of a good one in use right now. The Harrier is a horrible airplane. It's weak structurally and has problems with vibration. Lockheed Martin engineers who have tried to develop electronics pods for it have given up because the centerline on it vibrates worse than the wingtip pods of a Hornet.Groud-Attack- RAF Tornado? Something from Sukhoi or Illuyshin? Do the A-10s advantages outwigh its disadvantages? Dont you wish we still had F-111s and that SOMETHING had come out of the A-12 program?
True. I'm still trying to find better resources than what I have. I've got decent World War II sources and moderately good modern sources, but they're all almost a decade out of date.Just seeking information... I grew up consuming manuals on military hardware, but they just dont print as many, or as easily accesible, ones as they did then.
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Unfortunately, the cost of the prototypes alone (six or eight aircraft combined between the -32 and -35, can't recall off the top of my head) would have paid for a few hundred Raptors. Even one of the planners who helped develop the F-35 feels it's an unnecessary aircraft. No mission it fulfills cannot currently be done by another aircraft.Sea Skimmer wrote:Umm no, the USN and USMC order recently got cut back, but the F-35 still is looking at firm orders for thousands of aircraft to about a dozen airforces.Col. Crackpot wrote:i thought the funding on that program got pulled?darthdavid wrote:Some one forgot the JSF as a low end high numbers fighter. it will whoop any thing in that classes ass like there's no tomorrow. VTAL, and stealth, and lotsa other technological nuggets, c'mon it rocks.
BattleTech for SilCoreStanley Hauerwas wrote:[W]hy is it that no one is angry at the inequality of income in this country? I mean, the inequality of income is unbelievable. Unbelievable. Why isn’t that ever an issue of politics? Because you don’t live in a democracy. You live in a plutocracy. Money rules.
Surely the US needs JSF as a fighter it can export?The Dark wrote: Unfortunately, the cost of the prototypes alone (six or eight aircraft combined between the -32 and -35, can't recall off the top of my head) would have paid for a few hundred Raptors. Even one of the planners who helped develop the F-35 feels it's an unnecessary aircraft. No mission it fulfills cannot currently be done by another aircraft.
MDC/Boeing had trouble selling the F-15 to all but the very richest countries. How many nations could afford even a token force of Raptors? And how sellable is the Super Hornet?
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The JSF is expensive but frankly with stealth becoming as important as it is, we'll need a stealth replacement for a lot of those aircraft.Unfortunately, the cost of the prototypes alone (six or eight aircraft combined between the -32 and -35, can't recall off the top of my head) would have paid for a few hundred Raptors. Even one of the planners who helped develop the F-35 feels it's an unnecessary aircraft. No mission it fulfills cannot currently be done by another aircraft.
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There are no real JSF prototypes. Both the X-32 and X-35 where technology demonstrators. But the costs behind them include all of the heavy devolopment work which does cost billions. Really though, the F-35 is three aircraft that happen to share 75% of there parts. When judging costs it should be thought of as such.The Dark wrote:
Unfortunately, the cost of the prototypes alone (six or eight aircraft combined between the -32 and -35, can't recall off the top of my head) would have paid for a few hundred Raptors. Even one of the planners who helped develop the F-35 feels it's an unnecessary aircraft. No mission it fulfills cannot currently be done by another aircraft.
The JSF is far more important then a few hundred F-22's. Already there are orders equal to nearly 3/4's of the F-16 production run, though the F-16 has orders through 2009 and may have more coming.
Also remember that many other countries are counting on it and have paid quite a bit of money. The UK has two billion in the project for development, and several other nations gave 175 million each to have a say in more minor aspects of the design.
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The Super Hornet is meant to replace the Tomcat as fleet protector and interceptor. One slight problem. The Super Hornet is inferior in every single respect. And it gets worse. All the standard Hornets are going to be replaced by the JSF eventually. So they replace the strike element of the fleet with a better aircraft but put a worse aircraft to replace the Interceptors of the fleet.Arrow Mk84 wrote:Lockheed won the JSF contract. I think the JSF is going to enter service before the end of the decade.
Still, I love the new Super Hornets.
The Super Hornet is the wost possible choice the Navy can make. The entire Hornet series will be replaced by the JSF and they put an inferior design to replace the Tomcat.
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The Interceptors capabilities of the F-14 are of minimal use. Most of the threat they where to counter never existed in the first place. And for medium range work, the Super Hornet is more capable.
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