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2D thrust vectoring for the F-35A and F-35C?



 
 
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  #41  
Old March 4th 04, 11:22 PM
Michael Zaharis
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Tarver Engineering wrote:
"Michael Zaharis" wrote in message
...


Tarver Engineering wrote:


All aviation is politics and the F-15 survives on Gephardt's vote. The


USAF

has less options than they did last Summer. I personally believe an


F/A-18x

buy would be symbolic of why dishonest management leads to humble pie.



Pardon my ignorance, but isn't he F/A-18E/F managed by the same people
that manage the F-15? Aren't they both built in St. Louis?



I am not claiming there is any ethical problem with the F-15's management.



Then why is the F-15 in worse shape, politically, as mentioned in your
earlier post? Not disagreeing, just trying to understand.

  #42  
Old March 4th 04, 11:23 PM
Michael Zaharis
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Posts: n/a
Default



Tarver Engineering wrote:

"Michael Zaharis" wrote in message
...


Tarver Engineering wrote:


All aviation is politics and the F-15 survives on Gephardt's vote. The


USAF

has less options than they did last Summer. I personally believe an


F/A-18x

buy would be symbolic of why dishonest management leads to humble pie.



Pardon my ignorance, but isn't he F/A-18E/F managed by the same people
that manage the F-15? Aren't they both built in St. Louis?



I am not claiming there is any ethical problem with the F-15's management.




Then why is the F-15 in worse shape, politically, than the F/A-18, as
mentioned in your earlier post? Not disagreeing, just trying to
understand.

  #43  
Old March 4th 04, 11:30 PM
Scott Ferrin
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The impression I got from the other thread is that you were going to
refrain from sniping at people and grow up. My mistake.


Did you expect that somehow your ignorance would now go unchallenged?



Snipping out the 2/3 of your post that were without basis was intended to be
instructional for you in the future.


"Sniping" not "snipping" dumbass. As for ignorance, who are you to
make that distinction? If we need input on splaps, optical nukes, and
strakes on the F-22 feel free to chip in. Otherwise you're no more
qualified then you are implying I think *I* am. You'd think from all
of the abuse you've gotten here you'd have figured it out by now but I
guess that's giving you too much credit.






Any way the F-22 program turns out now, I will have been correct in my
agreement with the Congressman for California that the program should

have
died in '98.

*massive eye roll* No matter how it turns out huh? Well I'm glad you
are happy in that little fantasy world you've constructed for
yourself.

They are not enough F-22s to be cost competitive in an era of reliable
airborn weapons delivery platforms.


*IF* they get the full 277 they will have more than enough.


There is no 277, Ferrin and even that "full 277" is less than the "full 336"
of 2 years ago. The number of likely production F-22s is now well south of
180.


Well I'm glad you at least know that 277 is indeed less than 336. As
for not being enough how about at least attempting to back up your
claim? If you can't find any facts how about at least giving us your
"expert" opinion?





From an
air to air perspective go read up on how many F-15Cs were used in
Desert Storm. You also have to keep in mind that *reliable* and
*effective* are not interchangable.


Why would I have to keep that in mind?


Because you seem to be confusing the two.


It is the weapons themselves that
need to be effective. Wasting money on flash is of little real utility.


What good is the weapon if you can't get in a position to deploy it?




A reliable airborn weapons platform is what is required, the F-22 does not
address the issues of today's warfare, let alone tomorrow's.


A blimp would be a reliable platform. Fat lot of good it would do you
in a dogfight.
  #44  
Old March 4th 04, 11:54 PM
Scott Ferrin
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On Thu, 4 Mar 2004 18:03:52 -0500, "Kevin Brooks"
wrote:


"Scott Ferrin" wrote in message
.. .

,snip agreeable type stuff


As to the F-22 (Roche's belated addition of "A" being little more
than a sop to congress), yeah, we should produce enough of them to be our
silver bullet, but unless it is developed to be a better striker as well,
the 200 number look quite sufficient. Are you really worried about

Chinese
Flankers? With no effective AWACS support for them, and precious little
tanking support? Not to mention the questionable quality of pilot

training?


If all I had was F-35s? Yep. In a China / Taiwan scenario the
Flankers wouldn't NEED tanking.


Begging the question of how much value *any* of the landbased tactical
fighters would be in such a scenario--I don't see us likely to base fighters
on Taiwan proper. That places under the the gun of the complete threat
envelope, including TBM's, cruise missiles, SOF attack, etc.



My point is that regradless of where we strike from those Flankers
will be able to be on station without tanking at enough distance that
we'd still have to run the gauntlet to deploy our weapons. Air
delivered that is. I wasn't implying US fighters would be stationed
on Taiwan but then the further away you station the fighters from
where they are needed the more useful supercruise becomes.



IMO the China
scenario, as *unlikely* as it is to actually materialize, is a place where
the truly long range strike assets, in cooperation with the air wings from
the USN CVBG's and Tactical Tomahawks launched from CG's and SSN's, would be
the primary players. Plus, your Flankers are still without good C4ISR
support from AWACS.


Today that is the case. Nothing stays the same forever and China has
already tried to get real AWACS capability from Israel. True they
didn't get it this time but even 80's technology AWACS is nothing to
dismiss.


As far a pilot quality goes all it
would take is for someone over there to determine that they NEED top
of the line pilots and in a few years they could have them.


I believe you are minimizing the requirements to solve that problem. They
would have to finally completely do away with their "mass is the answer"
approach (they have admittedly made progress in that direction, but they are
not there yet, and won't be in the immediate future), and they have a
problem with their basic foundation (i.e., tactics/techniques/procedures,
qualified instructors and doctrinal developers, and last but not least, the
PLA's historical mistrust of individual initiative). That is a lot to have
to contend with before they even *start* developing a world class fighter
force.


Again, hoping China doesn't figure it out isn't the best way to go
IMO. Every conflict that occurs drives home that mass isn't the
answer and that good pilots willing to use initiative and having the
skills to use it is the way to go. Eventually China will figure it
out, it's just a matter of time.




Look what
the USN did with Top Gun during the Vietnam war. I don't doubt that
in the end we'd still win, but at what cost? We want it to stay as
close to zero loses as possible.


The USN had one heck of a foundation to start out with--the PLAAF does not.


Not on hand. How hard would it be to invite in some Israeli pilots to
get advice on how China ought to train it's airforce? Or from
somewhere else. The talent is out there and if China ever does put
the pieces together they will be a force to rekon with. Just because
they don't today doesn't mean they never will.




Or, is it worth buying *more* F-22's than we really need to ensure against a
rather remote threat set, while other critical needs go unfilled?


No. That's not what I'm saying. They've got the cap in place and
whatever they can buy with it would likely be sufficient to deal with
the China scenario. I only mention China, not so much because I think
that it's going to happen, but that it's the biggest threat on the
horizon from an air to air perspective. As I pointed out in another
thread, in Desert Storm there were suprisingly few F-15Cs tasked for
patroling air to air in comparison to how many the USAF has. Even the
180 number that has been kicked around would likely be enough. The
fact is though it's apparently been decided that the cost cap that has
been given to the F-22 program is affordable. They should just let
the USAF do with it what they can rather than cancelling the program.
To sum up I don't think MORE is what we need but we do need SOME.



the budget
is not completely elastic--and it appears that it is not going to have the
largesse we have seen the last couople of years for all that much longer.
How many ground troopies are likely to die in *other*, more likely
scenarios, because we still lack a decent mounted breaching system for
minefields? How many more convoy participants lost to off-route mines
because we don't commit enough money to developing countermeasures against
that threat? Or, how many strike missions get cancelled because the tanker
force continues to decline? Ya gotta rob from Peter to pay Paul, and
anything more than the absolute minimal F-22 buy makes a pretty goof Peter
IMO.


I agree. I'm saying that we shouldn't cancel the F-22. I'm not
saying we need 500 of them :-) Troops are getting wounded and killed
almost every day and they definitely need to solve that problem. The
talk of "let's be transformation and kill heavy armor" scares me
though.




  #45  
Old March 5th 04, 12:12 AM
Tarver Engineering
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Michael Zaharis" wrote in message
...


Tarver Engineering wrote:

"Michael Zaharis" wrote in message
...


Tarver Engineering wrote:


All aviation is politics and the F-15 survives on Gephardt's vote. The


USAF

has less options than they did last Summer. I personally believe an


F/A-18x

buy would be symbolic of why dishonest management leads to humble pie.



Pardon my ignorance, but isn't he F/A-18E/F managed by the same people
that manage the F-15? Aren't they both built in St. Louis?



I am not claiming there is any ethical problem with the F-15's

management.

Then why is the F-15 in worse shape, politically, than the F/A-18, as
mentioned in your earlier post? Not disagreeing, just trying to
understand.


Sen. Dick Gephardt of Missouri also expressed his concern on the possible
closure of Boeing's F-15 production line.

http://www.clw.org/atop/newswire/nw072601.html

``The production line of F-15 will have no option but to shut down if Korea
does not select F-15,'' Gephardt was quoted as saying in the U.S. Senate
Armed Services Committee held on Feb. 27 to confirm the appointment of Paul
Wolfowitz as U.S. deputy defense secretary.

http://www.iamaw.org/publications/fa...over_story.htm

The demonstration of support and enthusiasm for Gephardt's presidential bid
lasted for fifteen minutes. The sustained applause mixed with popping
flashes as photographers sought to capture the moment.

By the time Gephardt exited the room, those who would vote on the
endorsement knew the sco 90,000 IAM members had lost their jobs since
January 2001.

http://www.house.gov/akin/release/20010801.html


  #46  
Old March 5th 04, 12:13 AM
Tarver Engineering
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Scott Ferrin" wrote in message
...


My point is that regradless


Little spell flame monkey.


  #47  
Old March 5th 04, 01:34 AM
Scott Ferrin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 4 Mar 2004 16:13:28 -0800, "Tarver Engineering"
wrote:


"Scott Ferrin" wrote in message
.. .


My point is that regradless


Little spell flame monkey.


Shouldn't that be:

"Little Spell

-Flame Monkey"


  #48  
Old March 5th 04, 03:46 AM
Kevin Brooks
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Scott Ferrin" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 4 Mar 2004 18:03:52 -0500, "Kevin Brooks"
wrote:


"Scott Ferrin" wrote in message
.. .

,snip agreeable type stuff


As to the F-22 (Roche's belated addition of "A" being little more
than a sop to congress), yeah, we should produce enough of them to be

our
silver bullet, but unless it is developed to be a better striker as

well,
the 200 number look quite sufficient. Are you really worried about

Chinese
Flankers? With no effective AWACS support for them, and precious

little
tanking support? Not to mention the questionable quality of pilot

training?


If all I had was F-35s? Yep. In a China / Taiwan scenario the
Flankers wouldn't NEED tanking.


Begging the question of how much value *any* of the landbased tactical
fighters would be in such a scenario--I don't see us likely to base

fighters
on Taiwan proper. That places under the the gun of the complete threat
envelope, including TBM's, cruise missiles, SOF attack, etc.



My point is that regradless of where we strike from those Flankers
will be able to be on station without tanking at enough distance that
we'd still have to run the gauntlet to deploy our weapons. Air
delivered that is. I wasn't implying US fighters would be stationed
on Taiwan but then the further away you station the fighters from
where they are needed the more useful supercruise becomes.





IMO the China
scenario, as *unlikely* as it is to actually materialize, is a place

where
the truly long range strike assets, in cooperation with the air wings

from
the USN CVBG's and Tactical Tomahawks launched from CG's and SSN's, would

be
the primary players. Plus, your Flankers are still without good C4ISR
support from AWACS.


Today that is the case. Nothing stays the same forever and China has
already tried to get real AWACS capability from Israel. True they
didn't get it this time but even 80's technology AWACS is nothing to
dismiss.


They have one heck of a learning curve to master.



As far a pilot quality goes all it
would take is for someone over there to determine that they NEED top
of the line pilots and in a few years they could have them.


I believe you are minimizing the requirements to solve that problem. They
would have to finally completely do away with their "mass is the answer"
approach (they have admittedly made progress in that direction, but they

are
not there yet, and won't be in the immediate future), and they have a
problem with their basic foundation (i.e., tactics/techniques/procedures,
qualified instructors and doctrinal developers, and last but not least,

the
PLA's historical mistrust of individual initiative). That is a lot to

have
to contend with before they even *start* developing a world class fighter
force.


Again, hoping China doesn't figure it out isn't the best way to go
IMO.


But neither does committing a larger chunk of resources than is justified by
that particular threat scenario. Firstly, as much as I believe in honoring a
threat (we have to address both the most likely and most dangerous threats,
but not to the *same* degree in terms of resource allocation), China is in
reality a decreasing threat for us, and the more their populace gets plugged
into capitalism and the information age, coupled with their ever increasing
economic ties to Taiwan, the likelihood of this scenario ever playing out
grows ever more dim. Even *if* it were to happen as you are positing here
(China overcomes all of its training and doctrinal shortcomings, buys a
bunch of AWACS and learns how to integrate them into the battle in record
time, etc.), then IMO there is still no real justification for buying more
than 200 or so F-22's. That would be what, maybe seven squadrons worth plus
attrition spares and training birds? Worst case it and you surge up to four
squadrons of F-22's into the AO--maybe they are going to fly long range
operations out of Okinawa and the PI. The F-22 is supposedly so much better
than all comers (including your PLAAF Su-30's) that we don't have to plan to
acheive anything close to a 1:1 parity in terms of raw numbers; plus you
have to toss in the USN contribution (figure a couple of CAW's minimum, with
their Super Bugs and later F-35C's), and you can't forget the Taiwanese
contribution of both F-16's and Mirage 2000's. Those combined forces alone
are enough to swat the PLAAF a rather nasty blow--coupled with the *fact*
that the PLAN/PLA are just not capable of executing and supporting the
required assault operation into Taiwan, I don't see this a very concrete
example of why we need to buy umpteen *more* F-22's for the air dominance
role.

Every conflict that occurs drives home that mass isn't the
answer and that good pilots willing to use initiative and having the
skills to use it is the way to go. Eventually China will figure it
out, it's just a matter of time.


During which time the PRC as an offensive military threat will continue to
diminish (while the PRC as an economic competitor continues to grow).


Look what
the USN did with Top Gun during the Vietnam war. I don't doubt that
in the end we'd still win, but at what cost? We want it to stay as
close to zero loses as possible.


The USN had one heck of a foundation to start out with--the PLAAF does

not.

Not on hand. How hard would it be to invite in some Israeli pilots to
get advice on how China ought to train it's airforce? Or from
somewhere else. The talent is out there and if China ever does put
the pieces together they will be a force to rekon with. Just because
they don't today doesn't mean they never will.


It takes more than just a few trainers. It will take the PLAAF developing an
entirely new paradigm regarding how they operate, from the individual pilot
level all the way up through their air division's and beyond. And that is
going to take some serious time to come together.


Or, is it worth buying *more* F-22's than we really need to ensure

against a
rather remote threat set, while other critical needs go unfilled?


No. That's not what I'm saying. They've got the cap in place and
whatever they can buy with it would likely be sufficient to deal with
the China scenario. I only mention China, not so much because I think
that it's going to happen, but that it's the biggest threat on the
horizon from an air to air perspective. As I pointed out in another
thread, in Desert Storm there were suprisingly few F-15Cs tasked for
patroling air to air in comparison to how many the USAF has. Even the
180 number that has been kicked around would likely be enough. The
fact is though it's apparently been decided that the cost cap that has
been given to the F-22 program is affordable. They should just let
the USAF do with it what they can rather than cancelling the program.
To sum up I don't think MORE is what we need but we do need SOME.


You must have misunderstood my earlier comments--I have not advocated
cancellation of the F-22. Indeed, I believe in the "silver bullet" approach
to their inclusion in the force structure; that 180-200 figure sounds plenty
sufficient to me.



the budget
is not completely elastic--and it appears that it is not going to have

the
largesse we have seen the last couople of years for all that much longer.
How many ground troopies are likely to die in *other*, more likely
scenarios, because we still lack a decent mounted breaching system for
minefields? How many more convoy participants lost to off-route mines
because we don't commit enough money to developing countermeasures

against
that threat? Or, how many strike missions get cancelled because the

tanker
force continues to decline? Ya gotta rob from Peter to pay Paul, and
anything more than the absolute minimal F-22 buy makes a pretty goof

Peter
IMO.


I agree. I'm saying that we shouldn't cancel the F-22. I'm not
saying we need 500 of them :-) Troops are getting wounded and killed
almost every day and they definitely need to solve that problem. The
talk of "let's be transformation and kill heavy armor" scares me
though.


I don't think transformation is directed at merely killing heavy armor. In
fact, a lot of the Army's initial transformational effort has been directed
at the light and medium fighters (i.e., improving personal communications,
battlespace awareness, and individual weapons for the light guys, and of
course the new Stryker BCT's in the medium weight arena). In fact, IMO we
have (rightfully) moved further away from the Cold War focus on armor
killing, as witnessed by the deaths of so many anti-armor systems over the
past few years (SADARM, MLRS with scatterable AT mines, etc.).

Brooks






  #49  
Old March 5th 04, 03:48 AM
Henry J Cobb
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Posts: n/a
Default

Scott Ferrin wrote:
If all I had was F-35s? Yep. In a China / Taiwan scenario the
Flankers wouldn't NEED tanking. As far a pilot quality goes all it
would take is for someone over there to determine that they NEED top
of the line pilots and in a few years they could have them. Look what
the USN did with Top Gun during the Vietnam war. I don't doubt that
in the end we'd still win, but at what cost? We want it to stay as
close to zero loses as possible.


Can you please list all of the air bases the US Air Force has within 600
miles of Taiwan that they can use without needing a permission slip from
a foreign government?

What if we had a war and the US Air Force didn't show up because their
F/A-22s couldn't reach it?

Better yet, what if we didn't have a war because the US Navy deterred it?

-HJC

  #50  
Old March 5th 04, 04:47 AM
Kevin Brooks
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Henry J Cobb" wrote in message
...
Scott Ferrin wrote:
If all I had was F-35s? Yep. In a China / Taiwan scenario the
Flankers wouldn't NEED tanking. As far a pilot quality goes all it
would take is for someone over there to determine that they NEED top
of the line pilots and in a few years they could have them. Look what
the USN did with Top Gun during the Vietnam war. I don't doubt that
in the end we'd still win, but at what cost? We want it to stay as
close to zero loses as possible.


Can you please list all of the air bases the US Air Force has within 600
miles of Taiwan that they can use without needing a permission slip from
a foreign government?


Trust Henry to jump in a day late, a dollar short, and with his skivvies on
fire. We do have one such base in Okinawa, looks to be close to the five to
six hundred mile range. Of course, the PI are a possibility, and they have
no great affection for the PRC, either.


What if we had a war and the US Air Force didn't show up because their
F/A-22s couldn't reach it?


While I sympathize with your position here (and indeed believe the USAF
fighters would likely be a minor contributor in this particular scenario),
you seem to have forgotten some platforms that do indeed have the range to
ensure that the "US Air Force shows up"--B-1, B-2, B-52, Global Hawk,
KC-135/10 (which your USN folks *do* appreciate when they can get them),
etc. And how far was it from the Gulf states to Afghanistan?


Better yet, what if we didn't have a war because the US Navy deterred it?


But how, Henry? By your estimate, we'll only have 20 knot capable ships,
which will still be enroute after it is over...

Brooks


-HJC



 




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