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NINJA said:Not really. All it shows is what aircraft were hit and which of those were either damaged (didn't say whether or not damaged beyond repair or how severely damaged) or destroyed. Also it doesn't list how many missions each type flew.
At least the pilot is back to base (and can fly the very next day) and the aircraft can be used for spare parts at worst. But in books I've read about the Gulf War, they were back on the line in 1 week. An ejected pilot, and captured pilot is a big liability for an army/air force/navy
NINJA said:While the SH might be a good performer on it's own, compared to other aircraft of it's generation, it's a pig. Thrust to Weight might help you accelerate and climb faster, but overall, the current hornet is a little more agile. It all depends on what type of performace you are talking about.
Thrust to weight can be related to acceleration, sustained Gs (Turn rate & turn radius, consequently) which are the things that are important in a fight.. Be able to turn faster than your opponent, inside its turn circle and be able to bug efficiently. Don't try to teach me aerodynamics, it is my speciality. I've been into that for about 8 years now and I do have formal education (both university and military) on it.
How can you say the Super Hornet is less agile that our curernt version? Fact or speculation?
NINJA said:Exactly why alot of people don't like the SuperHornet, it was never a real replacement for the F-14.
In what context would the Hornet not be able to do what the F-14's were initially meant to do?
NINJA said:Overall, the JSF will be alot cheaper in the long run because it already has current technology and is alot more maintenance friendly, IE F-16 friendly. Having only one engine decreases the cost of flight per hour dramatically.
Not if you factor losses. You will loose more because of its only engine. Again, check the flight safety system, you'll see many Hornets had engines problems. To be fair, divide the number of occurence by 2 (twice as many chance of having engine problems with 2 engines). If they had 1 engine, they would have lost that many airplanes. That can become fairly expensive at 36M$ a piece, not to count the pilot. Have you worked on the F-35? How can you tell it is maintenance friendly? How can you tell the Super Hornet isn't maintenance friendly? I thought it was a totally different airplane on the maintainers' perspective (so you say).
The technology on the Super Hornet is probably as recent as on the JSF. Can you name a few things that aren't up to par with the JSF, technology wise?
NINJA said:Stealth is something that gives you an upperhand in an aerial battle. It's what makes the Raptor such a dominate force in the sky, without it, it's just a fancy uber expensive F-15 with great radar. The JSF can carry enough internal stores and fuel for it's missions, and there is also AAR which always extends range. No one yet knows for certain the capability of the JSF anyways so it's pointless to speculate. What is certain though is the Superhornet and it's outdated airframe, old, blotchy avionics and weapons systems and horrible reputation in the fighter community. There is a reason why only the USN operates them and why Australia is only buying them to fill the hole for a real replacement - it's a polished C/D model hornet turd. Only reason why some people on this forum like it is because it has two engines. I'm just glad that the people who make the real decisions don't consider only that one "advantage".
The JSF isn't a Raptor. 2 different mission. Air Superiority vs Multi Role. In an Air Superiority role, sure I can buy that stealth is good. However, on a multi role, that you WILL need to put bombs on pylons, it's not something that is that important anymore. Again, did you read my post on the typical loads of the Hornets in Kosovo? AAR doesn't usually go past the FLOT. If you don't have the range (don't forget, you're fully loaded at that point, you burn more gas). Range is an issue. They will need jugs.
Outdated airframe? How so?
Horrible avionics? What do you know about avionics and flying with it? AFAIK, their radars are very similar, which is a very big piece of a fighter's avionics suite.
Weapon systems? It uses the same the JSF will use. AMRAMS, AIM 9 (possibly X with Off-Boresight and Helmet Mouted Sight), standard Mk 82 for old fashion drops, Laser guided, GPS guided, whatever you want. What can the JSF bring other than what the Super HOrnet (or even our Hornet) can bring?
It's not ONLY because it has 2 engines. It IS cheaper to buy (can buy more), you will loose less, it's more combat persistent, it's somethign we are already familiar with and overall, I think think the extra kit on the F-35 is worth the price difference at all. (you failed to tell me WHAT the JSF can bring more than the SH other than being stealthy...)
Anyways, I'm a bit fed up with arguing with you over that. You seem to pull out facts out of you *** (sorry for the expression) and have no experience or source to back it up.
drunknsubmrnr said:Technically, there are SM-2 IR versions out there and they're a lot bigger than a MANPADS.
And no, I wouldn't say it's "very possible" that a second engine will survive a close detonation of even a MANPADS warhead. That's a lot of chunks of prefragged steel flying into an engine spinning really quickly and with tight tolerances. "Remotely possible" yes. Maybe even "somewhat possible" for a little while at least. Not "very possible".
SA-2 Guideline? IR? Never, ever heard of that. And even if it did exists, you still need a radar for initial guidance. It MAY use IR for final guidance, but I've never heard of it.
Missiles rarely have direct hits. There's a reason it's call a missile and there is a reason there's not only a contact fuse on it. I think it is very possible that 1 engine survives. You'll rarely have a hit directly from behind. Usually on the beam sector if it actually explodes near the aircraft. There is a shield in between the engines for that specific reason (and it is very rigid). On a dumb, non-manoevring target, you'll probably be able to kill both engines. However, aircrews are trained to react to treats like that. Read the military litterature a little. You will read stories of that happenning. I'll give you some titles as soon as I have a minute to dig the books out.