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eatfastnoodle wrote:
:On Feb 2, 2:24*am, Fred J. McCall wrote: : wrote: : : :See: : : : :http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Boei..._For_Next_Gene... : : : :How much longer will the Navy keep upgrading Harpoon before : :switching to a newer, possibly supersonic, weapon? : : : : This one seems to fall into the "if it works, don't **** with it" : category. : : What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than : what's already there and in the development plan? : : :F14/F15/F16/F18 certainly work, so why do we spend tens of billions of :dollars on F22/F35? Why not just buy newer upgraded version of Eagle :and Falcon? Cause the enemies aren't sitting still, what works today :might not work tomorrow, you must plan for the future. : I'll simply note you dodge the question. Let me ask again. What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than what's already there and in the development plan? As for the aircraft you mention, we knew what new requirements we had (supercruise, stealth, improved maintenance rates, etc). So what do you want to add to Harpoon that isn't already in the roadmap? -- "Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong." -- Thomas Jefferson |
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On Feb 2, 2:11*pm, Fred J. McCall wrote:
eatfastnoodle wrote: :On Feb 2, 2:24*am, Fred J. McCall wrote:: wrote: : : :See: : : : :http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Boei..._For_Next_Gene.... : : : :How much longer will the Navy keep upgrading Harpoon before : :switching to a newer, possibly supersonic, weapon? : : : : This one seems to fall into the "if it works, don't **** with it" : category. : : What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than : what's already there and in the development plan? : : :F14/F15/F16/F18 certainly work, so why do we spend tens of billions of :dollars on F22/F35? Why not just buy newer upgraded version of Eagle :and Falcon? Cause the enemies aren't sitting still, what works today :might not work tomorrow, you must plan for the future. : I'll simply note you dodge the question. Let me ask again. *What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than what's already there and in the development plan? As for the aircraft you mention, we knew what new requirements we had (supercruise, stealth, improved maintenance rates, etc). So what do you want to add to Harpoon that isn't already in the roadmap? -- "Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the *truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *-- Thomas Jefferson Supersonic speed is a good capability addition. Russians are selling supersonic anti-ship missiles to anybody willing to pay, investing in new missiles at least can help fending off Russian competition on the international arms export market. |
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eatfastnoodle wrote:
:On Feb 2, 2:11*pm, Fred J. McCall wrote: : eatfastnoodle wrote: : : :On Feb 2, 2:24*am, Fred J. McCall wrote:: wrote: : : : : : :See: : : : : : :http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Boei..._For_Next_Gene... : : : : : :How much longer will the Navy keep upgrading Harpoon before : : :switching to a newer, possibly supersonic, weapon? : : : : : : : This one seems to fall into the "if it works, don't **** with it" : : category. : : : : What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than : : what's already there and in the development plan? : : : : : :F14/F15/F16/F18 certainly work, so why do we spend tens of billions of : :dollars on F22/F35? Why not just buy newer upgraded version of Eagle : :and Falcon? Cause the enemies aren't sitting still, what works today : :might not work tomorrow, you must plan for the future. : : : : I'll simply note you dodge the question. : : Let me ask again. *What do you want a newer weapon to do that would : work better than what's already there and in the development plan? : : As for the aircraft you mention, we knew what new requirements we had : (supercruise, stealth, improved maintenance rates, etc). : : So what do you want to add to Harpoon that isn't already in the : roadmap? : : -- : "Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the : *truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong." : * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *-- Thomas Jefferson : :Supersonic speed is a good capability addition. : Why? What does it get you? The missile is already 20x faster than what you're shooting it at. Capability isn't free. If you want a supersonic anti-ship missile, it has to be bigger (which means you can carry fewer of them), fly higher (to escape reflections of its own shockwave from the surface), etc. : :Russians are selling :supersonic anti-ship missiles to anybody willing to pay, investing in :new missiles at least can help fending off Russian competition on the :international arms export market. : You don't make sales by copying them. You make sales by having more capable kit. What about "supersonic speed" is worth the costs of adding it (in both money and traded off capabilities)? -- "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable man persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man." --George Bernard Shaw |
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In message
, eatfastnoodle writes Supersonic speed is a good capability addition. Russians are selling supersonic anti-ship missiles to anybody willing to pay, investing in new missiles at least can help fending off Russian competition on the international arms export market. Who is shopping for supersonic anti-ship missiles that (a) would be eager to buy from the US and (b) would be an acceptable customer? Somehow I don't see developing a new weapon for China or Iran as being very popular in the US... What's the splendiferous advantage brought by going supersonic, compared to the drawbacks, and why would this tradeoff appeal to the US (or anyone else) compared to the existing Harpoon capability? -- The nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors, will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools. -Thucydides pauldotjdotadam[at]googlemail{dot}.com |
#5
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On Sat, 02 Feb 2008 13:11:39 -0700, Fred J. McCall
wrote: eatfastnoodle wrote: :On Feb 2, 2:24*am, Fred J. McCall wrote: : wrote: : : :See: : : : :http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Boei..._For_Next_Gene... : : : :How much longer will the Navy keep upgrading Harpoon before : :switching to a newer, possibly supersonic, weapon? : : : : This one seems to fall into the "if it works, don't **** with it" : category. : : What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than : what's already there and in the development plan? : : :F14/F15/F16/F18 certainly work, so why do we spend tens of billions of :dollars on F22/F35? Why not just buy newer upgraded version of Eagle :and Falcon? Cause the enemies aren't sitting still, what works today :might not work tomorrow, you must plan for the future. : I'll simply note you dodge the question. Let me ask again. What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than what's already there and in the development plan? As for the aircraft you mention, we knew what new requirements we had (supercruise, stealth, improved maintenance rates, etc). So what do you want to add to Harpoon that isn't already in the roadmap? I thought that the drive for the last few years had been to be able to deal with numbers of smaller targets and that the surface-air weapons have been modified in response. The USN seems to be responding to needs which does not surprise me all that much. Peter Skelton |
#6
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On Feb 2, 12:28 pm, eatfastnoodle wrote:
On Feb 2, 2:11 pm, Fred J. McCall wrote: eatfastnoodle wrote: :On Feb 2, 2:24 am, Fred J. McCall wrote:: wrote: : : :See: : : : :http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Boei..._For_Next_Gene... : : : :How much longer will the Navy keep upgrading Harpoon before : :switching to a newer, possibly supersonic, weapon? : : : : This one seems to fall into the "if it works, don't **** with it" : category. : : What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than : what's already there and in the development plan? : : :F14/F15/F16/F18 certainly work, so why do we spend tens of billions of :dollars on F22/F35? Why not just buy newer upgraded version of Eagle :and Falcon? Cause the enemies aren't sitting still, what works today :might not work tomorrow, you must plan for the future. : I'll simply note you dodge the question. Let me ask again. What do you want a newer weapon to do that would work better than what's already there and in the development plan? As for the aircraft you mention, we knew what new requirements we had (supercruise, stealth, improved maintenance rates, etc). So what do you want to add to Harpoon that isn't already in the roadmap? -- "Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong." -- Thomas Jefferson Supersonic speed is a good capability addition. Russians are selling supersonic anti-ship missiles to anybody willing to pay, investing in new missiles at least can help fending off Russian competition on the international arms export market.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, I have been wondering about developing a land attack/anti-ship version of the Standard missile family. We already use the regular version to attack ships from the Flight-2a DDGs so we now it's possible and there was the LASM after all, so we know such a version of the Standard should be possible. All we need is to finish development of the warhead and add a terminal Anti-ship guidance system to the GPS system. |
#8
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"Paul J. Adam" wrote in news:BkVqTUEmtFpHFwc0
@jrwlynch.demon.co.uk: In message , writes See: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Boei...r_Next_Generat ion_Harpoon_Block_III_Missile_999.html How much longer will the Navy keep upgrading Harpoon before switching to a newer, possibly supersonic, weapon? For as long as Harpoon keeps doing the job. You hit tradeoff territory on missile speed: flying faster means you can't come in so low, increases your radar and thermal signature, and gets you some other drawbacks. My experience was that Foreign Military Sales (FMS) customers were the main drivers for Harpoon developments. scott s. .. |
#9
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"scott s." wrote:
:"Paul J. Adam" wrote in news:BkVqTUEmtFpHFwc0 : : : In message : , : writes :See: : :http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Boei...r_Next_Generat :ion_Harpoon_Block_III_Missile_999.html : :How much longer will the Navy keep upgrading Harpoon before :switching to a newer, possibly supersonic, weapon? : : For as long as Harpoon keeps doing the job. You hit tradeoff territory : on missile speed: flying faster means you can't come in so low, : increases your radar and thermal signature, and gets you some other : drawbacks. : :My experience was that Foreign Military Sales (FMS) customers were :the main drivers for Harpoon developments. : Really? I don't suppose you could demonstrate this by telling us which FMS customers drove which developments? -- "The odds get even - You blame the game. The odds get even - The stakes are the same. You bet your life." -- "You Bet Your Life", Rush |
#10
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Fred J. McCall wrote in
: "scott s." wrote: : :My experience was that Foreign Military Sales (FMS) customers were :the main drivers for Harpoon developments. : Really? I don't suppose you could demonstrate this by telling us which FMS customers drove which developments? Sorry, but I don't think I want to go there. scott s. .. |
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