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#11
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Speaking of a possible hornet/f-11 sucessor, why didn't the RAAF
choose the Rafale instead? Currently the F.2 block of rafales seem to match the hornet and possibly the aardvark's strike capability plus i think dassualt really need some buyers for their jet |
#12
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"Prowlus" wrote in message om... Speaking of a possible hornet/f-11 sucessor, why didn't the RAAF choose the Rafale instead? Currently the F.2 block of rafales seem to match the hornet and possibly the aardvark's strike capability plus i think dassualt really need some buyers for their jet Have they actually got the multi-role version in service, or even flying? Last i heard all they had were the air-to-air only naval variants. Brooks |
#13
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Michael Kelly said the following on 10/06/2004 12:04 PM:
Doubt you'd only want a fleet of 4 of any aircraft. I've had the experience of trying to support 3 customers with a squadron of only 6 Bones (6 + 1 in depot), and it wasn't pretty. This is at a base with two other squadrons flying another 24 planes, 4 would be unworkable. Furthermore, there aren't enough Bones left to lease four unless congress backs off from bringing the 23 out of retirement (7 are gone for good). Even at that not sure you'd want the ones at DM, pretty picked over. That said, it could be workable with a fleet size of 10 or 11 if the US follows through with the plans to stand up a squadron in Guam. Although that would depend on us only bringing back 11-12. How would the B1B and B2 compare? Would a force consisting of F-22 fighters and B-1B or B-2 bombers be feasible for the RAAF (as compared to the F-35) or would it be way too expensive? |
#14
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"DC" wrote in message . au... Michael Kelly said the following on 10/06/2004 12:04 PM: Doubt you'd only want a fleet of 4 of any aircraft. I've had the experience of trying to support 3 customers with a squadron of only 6 Bones (6 + 1 in depot), and it wasn't pretty. This is at a base with two other squadrons flying another 24 planes, 4 would be unworkable. Furthermore, there aren't enough Bones left to lease four unless congress backs off from bringing the 23 out of retirement (7 are gone for good). Even at that not sure you'd want the ones at DM, pretty picked over. That said, it could be workable with a fleet size of 10 or 11 if the US follows through with the plans to stand up a squadron in Guam. Although that would depend on us only bringing back 11-12. How would the B1B and B2 compare? Would a force consisting of F-22 fighters and B-1B or B-2 bombers be feasible for the RAAF (as compared to the F-35) or would it be way too expensive? So expensive as to be complete and utter fantasy; the B-2, which is not in production any longer, came it at around $1 billion per copy IIRC, and the F/A-22 is a pricey item too, depending on how the pricing is worked out (the $100 million per figure has been tossed around IIRC, but if you take the total program cost and divide it out by the currently planned total number of airframes you get something closer to the $150 million plus figure). The RAAF is not going to be looking at either of those platforms, that is for sure. Brooks |
#15
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"Prowlus" wrote in message
om... Speaking of a possible hornet/f-11 sucessor, why didn't the RAAF choose the Rafale instead? Currently the F.2 block of rafales seem to match the hornet and possibly the aardvark's strike capability plus i think dassualt really need some buyers for their jet I think you just answered your own question. -- "The code of the warrior class has room for fallibility but there is no room for a lack of integrity." |
#16
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"DC" wrote in message
. au... Michael Kelly said the following on 10/06/2004 12:04 PM: Doubt you'd only want a fleet of 4 of any aircraft. I've had the experience of trying to support 3 customers with a squadron of only 6 Bones (6 + 1 in depot), and it wasn't pretty. This is at a base with two other squadrons flying another 24 planes, 4 would be unworkable. Furthermore, there aren't enough Bones left to lease four unless congress backs off from bringing the 23 out of retirement (7 are gone for good). Even at that not sure you'd want the ones at DM, pretty picked over. That said, it could be workable with a fleet size of 10 or 11 if the US follows through with the plans to stand up a squadron in Guam. Although that would depend on us only bringing back 11-12. How would the B1B and B2 compare? Would a force consisting of F-22 fighters and B-1B or B-2 bombers be feasible for the RAAF (as compared to the F-35) or would it be way too expensive? Australia could not afford to own/operate B2 aircraft, perhaps a handful of B1's if given a massive "friendly" discount . Even reaching for F-22's would mean buying no more than a dozen or so before the budget ran dry..... -- The Raven http://www.80scartoons.co.uk/batfinkquote.mp3 ** President of the ozemail.* and uunet.* NG's ** since August 15th 2000. |
#17
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"Kevin Brooks" wrote in message
news "DC" wrote in message . au... Michael Kelly said the following on 10/06/2004 12:04 PM: Doubt you'd only want a fleet of 4 of any aircraft. I've had the experience of trying to support 3 customers with a squadron of only 6 Bones (6 + 1 in depot), and it wasn't pretty. This is at a base with two other squadrons flying another 24 planes, 4 would be unworkable. Furthermore, there aren't enough Bones left to lease four unless congress backs off from bringing the 23 out of retirement (7 are gone for good). Even at that not sure you'd want the ones at DM, pretty picked over. That said, it could be workable with a fleet size of 10 or 11 if the US follows through with the plans to stand up a squadron in Guam. Although that would depend on us only bringing back 11-12. How would the B1B and B2 compare? Would a force consisting of F-22 fighters and B-1B or B-2 bombers be feasible for the RAAF (as compared to the F-35) or would it be way too expensive? So expensive as to be complete and utter fantasy; the B-2, which is not in production any longer, came it at around $1 billion per copy So if Australia shut down the rest of the defence force it could buy (assuming availability) about 6 per year, allowing for exchange rates etc. IIRC, and the F/A-22 is a pricey item too, depending on how the pricing is worked out (the $100 million per figure has been tossed around IIRC, but if you take the total program cost and divide it out by the currently planned total number of airframes you get something closer to the $150 million plus figure). Which is about half the oft bandied price of $75M AUD for a Hornet. So Australia could get 30 odd for the same price....assuming the operation costs remain the same (doubt it). The RAAF is not going to be looking at either of those platforms, that is for sure. B1's only if it's a fire sale. B2's in your dreams. F-22 only if Australia needs a handful of those and nothing else. -- The Raven http://www.80scartoons.co.uk/batfinkquote.mp3 ** President of the ozemail.* and uunet.* NG's ** since August 15th 2000. |
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