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![]() "Admin" wrote in message s.com... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "redc1c4" wrote in message ... Baron Huntchausen wrote: snip The F-16 is just a fraction of the cost of a frontline fighter. It's even cheaper than an A-10 if the A-10 were to be produced today. The F-16 is still under development while the F-15 is not. They won't put development money into something that already has the follow-on AC ready for productions. The fact remains, there is hardly anything in a gun to gun arena that can compete with an F-16 dollar for dollar. Plus, the F-16 has been modified for the ground attack role. It's small, light, carries a decent load and after pickling it's load, it can out turn most frontline fighters. I saw something I just didn't believe it was possible with anything short of a Rocket. A Danish F-16 floated to just overhead in level flight. The Pilot forced the nose to a 90 degree angle. The AC seemed to be completely stopped. He poured the coals to it (full AB) and went straight up. Talk about a better than a 1 to one power to weight ratio. I don't know of any other AC that could do that short of having an Atlas Rocket attached to it's butt. The Dane was showing off to the US F-15C models at Bitburg AB, GE. The F-15 would have smacked the ground doing that manuever even though the F-15 has a better than a 1 to 1 power to weight ration. Even though the F-16 is from the same era, it's not your fathers Oldsmobile. The F-15 is. coupla things here for the RAM folxs: 1. it seems to me that coming to a more or less "complete stop" is suicidal in ACM. it sure as hell would make the AAA solution easier. Don't know the actual numbers, but I'd be surprised if the F-16 has a thrust-to-weight ration that is significantly bettter than that of the F-15C. IIRC, over its lifetime the F-16 has gained quite a lot of weight, and while newer engines in the later models undoubtedly provide greater thrust and response than the early generation F-16's enjoyed, the F-15's have also taken advantage of newer engine fits over their lifetime. And the F-15 has gained weight as well. It's the cost factor. The 16 costs about a fourth of what a 15 costs. Plus, the 16 is still in production. So is the F-15 (in production, that is); sales to Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Korea are keeping the line open, and it is still competing in Singapore last I heard. And where are you getting the idea that the F-15 costs four times what an F-16 costs today? The cost of the F-15K's going to the ROKAF is about $100 million per, based upon total contract cost; the price of the F-16C Block 50's sold to Chile is about $50 million per (total contract cost), *not including the freakin' engines*! 2. are the F-16 claims valid, or just more of the usual DM schise? It apparently is quite good, and has demonstrated a significant growth capability over the program's lifetime (witness the differences in capabilities of the F-16A versus the latest Block 52 C's, or the export Block 60's). But if it was, as the poster seems to be claiming, so much better than the F-15C in the air-to-air role, then one would wonder why (a) the USAF has not tossed its F-15's out and gone to a F-16-only force, and (b) why folks like the Israelis, South Koreans, etc., have seen enough merit in the F-15 to keep buying them (and why the Israelis still consider the F-15 to be their preeminent air-to-air fighter, in spite of their also being a major F-16 operator). In a Radar environment, the 15 is better. In a knife fight, the 16 is pretty much king. He cut the rest of it to present his trolling. Again, why do the USAF and israel still fly the F-15 as their premier air-to-air fighters? Why did the ROKAF select the F-15K? Note that all three of those forces also operate F-16's. 3. A-10 vs. F-16 acquisition cost: does anyone really think the current Falcon is cheaper than a Hog, assuming the production lines were both open? No. The originally conceived F-16 might have been approaching the cost (but was still above it, IIRC) of the A-10, but it quickly morphed into a heavier, multi-role platform, with attendant cost increase. They still are not "cheap"; the Chileans bought 10 late model (Block 50) F-16C's at a cost of about $40 million each for the aircraft (not including the other contractural services), but apparently that cost did NOT include the engines, which were being procured under a separate contract. Yep, and you add the other contractural services and you get that $50 million per copy cost, NOT INCLUDING ENGINES. So we can assume a total flyaway cost of probably $60 million, versus $100 million for an aircraft that you acknowledge has a better BVR capability. So how is the F-16 such a hands-down better choice again? Brooks Brooks your thoughts, please. TIA! redc1c4, |
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