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Kevin Brooks wrote:
: The B-2 : and even more so the F-117 were very specialized designs, and : aircraft that require special maintenance procedures and : climate-controlled hangars are of limited operational usefulness. : They have already proven their operational usefullness. In view of that : fact, the above is an unsupportable assertion. I wrote "limited operation usefulness", not "no operational usefulness". Penalties such as these are acceptable for a small number of aircraft with specialized roles. They are not acceptable for the main body of an air force. If the F-16 had had the maintenance requirements of the B-2, the Gulf Wars would simply not have been fought. In some ways stealth has been a backward step; since the 1960s engineers have aimed to reduce maintenance requirements and turn-around time, and to make aircraft less dependable on well-equipped bases. The need for this was obvious in Korea and Vietnam, as well as from the budget... The first generation of stealth aircraft reversed this trend, a most unwelcome limitation on their use. : For stealth to be really useful, it must be made compatible : with dirt strips and pierced metal planking. : It already is "really useful". The loss of one stealth aircraft against how : many hundreds of sorties into environments that were rich with radar : directed threats in Iraq and former Yugoslavia. Allow me to point out that the USAF has bought only 59 F-117s and equipped only two operational squadrons with them. To me this reflects a rather sober view of the operational usefulness of the type: An useful accessory to the arsenal, but not able to replace more conventional types. Before Stealth can be incorporated in the backbone of the air frce, serious technical problems need to be solved, and compromises must be made. It is true that the loss rate of the F-117 has been low: The low rate of other USAF aircraft has also been low, to the point of making a comparison statistically insignificant. -- Emmanuel Gustin |
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![]() incorporated in the backbone of the air frce, serious technical problems need to be solved, and compromises must be made. It is true that the loss rate of the F-117 has been low: The low rate of other USAF aircraft has also been low, to the point of making a comparison statistically insignificant. -- Emmanuel Gustin Sort of a narrow view of air operations, I would say. Having particiapted in a number of 100 plane raids in SEA against a single point target that a single B-2 cold take out now I'd say the tradeoffs with Stealth is no brainer. The high maintenance requirements for stealth and the controlled hangar environments are mainly a matter of materiels used in maintaining stealth coatings and those materials have been much inproved in the past decade. |
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