GOV/MIL Op-Ed: American Gripen: The Solution To The F-35 Nightmare

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://dailycaller.com/2016/01/22/american-gripen-the-solution-to-the-f-35-nightmare/

Opinion

American Gripen: The Solution To The F-35 Nightmare

David Archibald
Author, Twilight of Abundance
5:36 PM 01/22/2016

One thing that has helped keep the F-35 program going is a perception that there is no ‘Plane B.’ As Margaret Thatcher famously said,“There is no alternative.” No matter how bad the F-35 is, it is going to be built because the U.S. Air Force needs something to replace its worn-out fighters. That appears to be the fallback position in Lockheed Martin’s marketing plan for the F-35. The Department of Defence though is fully aware of the extraordinary cost of the F-35 relative to its performance and is looking to scale back its procurement. That could result in a death spiral as falling numbers send unit costs through the roof.

This figure shows U.S. Air Force fighter and light bomber procurement from 1975 with a projection to 2030:

Screen-Shot-2016-01-22-at-5.08.21-PM-620x402.png

http://cdn01.dailycaller.com/wp-con...een-Shot-2016-01-22-at-5.08.21-PM-620x402.png

Most of the fighter fleet was built in the fifteen years from 1977 to 1992. Then the F-22 came along a decade ago. While it is a fabulous fighter when it is flying, it is too costly to fly. The F-22 takes 42 man-hours of maintenance for each hour in the air. About half of those maintenance hours are taken with repairing its radar-absorbent-material (RAM) coating. Availability has risen to 63 percent. F-22 pilots are restricted to 10 to 12 hours in the air per month due to an operating cost of $58,000 per hour, the Air Force simply can’t afford more than that. Ideally pilots would get at least twice that amount of flying time in order to be fully proficient in their weapon system.

So restarting the F-22 production line to make good the fighter aircraft shortfall is not the ideal solution. Arguably the cost of the F-22 has wiped out half of the U.S. fighter fleet even before the Russians or Chinese have had a chance to attack it. Simply due to its cost, what was to be a 750-strong fleet stalled at 187 aircraft; of that number, only 123 are ‘combat-coded.’ After the 63 percent availability figure, that means that there is one modern fighter per every 4.1 million Americans. Of course that is not enough. The U.S. Air Force is considering buying more F-16 and F-15 fighters. That is not a solution either. As General Mike Hostage, former commander of Air Combat Command said,“If you gave me all the money I needed to refurbish the F-15 and the F-16 fleets, they would still become tactically obsolete by the middle of the next decade. Our adversaries are building fleets that will overmatch our legacy fleet, no matter what I do, by the middle of the next decade.”

The U.S. Air Force has been worshipping at the altar of stealth for over three decades, since the F-117 became operational in 1983. It was considered such a wonderful thing that it was deployed to South Korea in secret, only flew at night and so on. The F-117’s promise was borne out by its performance in Desert Storm in 1991. But things had changed by the end of that same decade. In Operation Allied Force against Serbia in 1999, one F-117 was shot down by a SAM battery and another was mission-killed by the same battery. The stealthy F-117 had a higher loss rate in that conflict than the F-16. It could only operate when it was protected by a pack of other aircraft.

Shaping provides 90 percent of the stealth of the invisibility cloak of a stealth aircraft with the remaining 10 percent coming from the RAM coating. The operational doctrine of the F-22 is based on the F-22 flying around without its radar on and not making any other electronic emissions either. At the same time it is vacuuming up the electronic emissions of enemy aircraft, triangulating their position and then pouncing at a time of its choosing. The world has moved on from that. Stealth, as practiced by the F-22 and F-35, is optimized on radar in the X band from 7.0 to 11.2 gigahertz. Detection in other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum has improved a lot over the last twenty years. Chief of these is infrared search and track (IRST) which enables an F-35 to be detected from its engine exhaust from over 60 miles away. The latest iteration of the Su-27 Flanker family, the Su-35, has IRST and L band radar on its wings. L band and lower frequency radars can see stealthy aircraft over 100 miles away. So an Su-35 can see a F-35 well before the F-35 can detect it. Stealth, as an end in itself, has outlived its usefulness, and maintaining that RAM coating is killing the budget for no good reason.

Right at the moment the U.S. Air Force is heading for a repeat to the start of World War 2 when its fighters got shot down by far better Axis aircraft. The qualitative edge in the small number of F-22s won’t save the day because they will be overwhelmed by the sheer number of Chinese Flanker variants, as per the RAND study of 2008. There is a solution but it means going overseas to get it. That has been done before. In the 1950s, the U.S. Air Force had the English Electic Canberra bomber built under license in the U.S. as the Martin B-57. It was a great design, illustrated by the fact that one B-57 was resurrected after 40 years in the boneyard in Arizona and used for battlefield communications in Afghanistan. Thirty years after the B-57, the Marine Corps fell in love with another UK aircraft, the Harrier, and had it built in the U.S. from 1985 as the McDonnell Douglas AV-8B.

The first F-35 to come off the assembly line was in 2006. That was ten years ago and, even though the F-35 is still years of from going into full production, it needs a $2.6 billion modernisation to upgrade its combat power. The solution to the F-35 nightmare first flew in 2008. This is the Gripen E of Saab in Sweden, updated from the original Gripen A of 1988. It is a delta wing with canards, likely the ideal planform for a single-engine air-superiority fighter. The last time the US Air Force had a delta-wing fighter was the Convair F-106 Delta Dart, retired in 1988. A promising effort that might have resulted in another delta-wing fighter was the F-16XL, a stretched version of the F-16 with a far greater range and bomb load. The F-16XL was sacrificed for the program that ultimately became the F-22.

Simulation has the Gripen E shooting down the Su-35 at almost the same rate that the F-22 does. The Gripen E is estimated to be able to shoot down 1.6 Su-35s for every Gripen E lost, the F-22 is slightly better at 2.0 Su-35s shot down per F-22 lost. In turn the Su-35 is better than the F-35, shooting down 2.4 F-35s for each Su-35 shot down. The Su-35 slaughters the F-18 Super Hornet at the rate of eight to one, as per General Hostage’s comment. How that comes about is explained by the following graphic of instantaneous turn rate plotted against sustained turn rate:

Screen-Shot-2016-01-22-at-5.09.51-PM-620x396.png

http://cdn01.dailycaller.com/wp-con...een-Shot-2016-01-22-at-5.09.51-PM-620x396.png

Turning, and carrying a gun, remains as important as it has ever been. Most missiles miss in combat and the fighter aircraft will go on to the merge. Assuming that pilot skill is equal, a 2° per second advantage in sustained turn rate will enable the more agile fighter to dominate the engagement. A high instantaneous turn rate is vital in being able to dodge the air-to-air missiles in the first place. The aircraft on the upper right quadrant of the graph will have a higher survival rate. The ones on the lower left quadrant will produce more widows.

The Gripen E has a U.S.-made engine, the GE F414, which is also the engine of the F-18 Super Hornet. The Swedish Air Force is buying its Gripen Es for $43 million per copy, less than one third of the price of the F-35. Its operating cost per hour is less than a tenth of that of the F-35’s. In fact it is the only aircraft that meets the selection criteria of the Joint Advanced Strike Technology program that spawned the F-35: that the acquisition and operating costs be not more than 80 percent of that of legacy aircraft.

Saab’s partner in the U.S. is Boeing, which will be without a fighter offering of its own once the F-18 Super Hornet production line in St Louis closes. It would be surprising if the two companies haven’t discussed bringing the Gripen to America. That would be good news for U.S. power projection in the Western Pacific, and for the families of U.S. airmen.

The story doesn’t end there. At the moment the Su-35 is the fighter to beat. It is almost as large as the F-22, with an empty weight of 18.4 tonnes and a maximum takeoff weight of 34.5 tonnes. Its fuel fraction of 38 percent gives it a combat range of 1,000 miles. The argument for having a large fighter aircraft is that physics makes larger aircraft more capable. Assuming that a smaller aircraft and a larger aircraft have a very similar lift to drag ratio, cruise at the same Mach number and have the same specific fuel consumption, the larger fighter will have about 40 percent better range. An inevitable consequence of the physics of flight is that long range aerial combat demands larger airframes and two engines, all other parameters being equal.

There is a role for a large, agile, twin-engined fighter aircraft in the Western Pacific. Apart from providing air superiority, such a platform would be ideal for delivering long range anti-ship cruise missiles. But this should not be a resurrected F-22. The F-22 program dates from 1991 when its prototype, the YF-22 produced by Lockheed Martin, won the fly-off competition against the YF-23 produced by Northrop, though the YF-23 was faster and stealthier. The U.S. Air Force awarded the contract to Lockheed Martin because it thought that Northrop would not be up to building the B-2 bomber and the new fighter at the same time. Given that the avionics of the F-22 are now over 25 years old, it would be a better outcome from here, for the long term, to go back to the YF-23 airframe and update its engines and avionics. This would produce an aircraft with a weight, acquisition cost and operating cost similar to that of the F-15. It would be as stealthy as possible from shaping without the expense, logistic footprint and low availability of maintaining a RAM coating. Northrop has been awarded the Long Range Strike Bomber program of 80 aircraft at $550 million each. Northrop’s bomber offering is an enlarged, subsonic YF-23. We also need the updated fighter variant.

David Archibald is the author of Twilight of Abundance (Regnery)

-

Reviving F-22 Raptor production a 'non-starter' - Sec of Air Force
Started by Housecarlý, 01-21-2016 12:47 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...tor-production-a-non-starter-Sec-of-Air-Force
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
The best is the enemy of the good.

My dad pulled wrenches on P-40s all the way through WW2, across North Africa, Sicily and Italy.

The P-40 was based on an older design. It was not radical or new or innovative. So what it was not the best fighter in the war. It wasn't and isn't famous like the P-51, P-47 and the P-38.

But it was plentiful because it was available in numbers and it was "good enough" at all that fighter stuff to get by - and more. "Good enough" will do in most cases. And quantity has a quality all its own.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtiss_P-40_Warhawk
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
I remember both Daggers and Darts flying over the house growing up, but I grew up slightly down range from Griffiss and Rome Air Development Center...
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Presumably the Sukhoi PAK FA T50 will suffer from the same problems as the f22?

I guess that all depends upon how far they want to go to get a low RCS or what they think is a low enough RCS, particularly when you throw in the different radar emission bands, faster computer processors for those systems and IRST all coordinated.
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
About half of those maintenance hours are taken with repairing its radar-absorbent-material (RAM) coating.

So all (or most of) the stealth is due to the coating? Same could apply to any aircraft?
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
I guess that all depends upon how far they want to go to get a low RCS or what they think is a low enough RCS, particularly when you throw in the different radar emission bands, faster computer processors for those systems and IRST all coordinated.

I can't see stealth aircraft taking off, all of the F35 stealth weapons have to be carried within the fuselage, meaning they can only deliver only a few weapons in stealth mode, in the real world does this count or not?. The Gripen, Eurofighter and Rafale are very similar aircraft. The USA will not buy any of them whether it is a good idea or not.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I can't see stealth aircraft taking off, all of the F35 stealth weapons have to be carried within the fuselage, meaning they can only deliver only a few weapons in stealth mode, in the real world does this count or not?. The Gripen, Eurofighter and Rafale are very similar aircraft. The USA will not buy any of them whether it is a good idea or not.

The biggest driver was "Day 1, Hour 1" offensive operations when you look at the F-117 as the starting point and the admission that the F-35, and for that matter F-22, wouldn't need optimum stealth performance all of the time with the wing hard points on both aircraft for stores carriage. The "kick in the door" mission very arguably can more efficiently be fulfilled with a higher number of stand off weapons in the mix.

Size, cost and utilization, particularly in the F-35, could be argued to have gotten completely disconnected, especially when the additional mess of the USAF, USN and USMC versions and airframe commonality got tossed in as well.

Gripen, Rafale and Eurofigher are different in terms of size, but not of technology (all three could be considered 4th Generation (or 4.5) depending on how equipment fit and RCS are factored in). That being said, an argument can be made that the F-16 or F-15 still have a lot of room for development in their airframes if for no other reason than the results of the DARPA/NASA test programs using those aircraft.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
House, as long as the US politicians and lobbyists design our fighting aircraft, vehicles, and weapons, it is a moot point.
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
The biggest driver was "Day 1, Hour 1" offensive operations when you look at the F-117 as the starting point and the admission that the F-35, and for that matter F-22, wouldn't need optimum stealth performance all of the time with the wing hard points on both aircraft for stores carriage. The "kick in the door" mission very arguably can more efficiently be fulfilled with a higher number of stand off weapons in the mix.

Size, cost and utilization, particularly in the F-35, could be argued to have gotten completely disconnected, especially when the additional mess of the USAF, USN and USMC versions and airframe commonality got tossed in as well.

Gripen, Rafale and Eurofigher are different in terms of size, but not of technology (all three could be considered 4th Generation (or 4.5) depending on how equipment fit and RCS are factored in). That being said, an argument can be made that the F-16 or F-15 still have a lot of room for development in their airframes if for no other reason than the results of the DARPA/NASA test programs using those aircraft.

OK given this analysis will the F35 still continue or be binned in the history of weapon development?

I would like to see it binned.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
They just need to get over it and take that turkey to the chopping block.

Oh no, let's get 30 or 40 of them shot down by Gen 4 ChiCom or Ruskie fighter planes first so as to prove the point that the morons who pushed this turd were wrong.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
OK given this analysis will the F35 still continue or be binned in the history of weapon development?

I would like to see it binned.

As JohnGaltfla pointed out, with the political/industrial complex angle, trimming or killing this turkey is going to require a Herculean effort.

IMHO, at best the whole thing should be seen as a gold plated R&D program with the results retrofitted to less expensive airframes (either legacy or "clean sheet").
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
House, as long as the US politicians and lobbyists design our fighting aircraft, vehicles, and weapons, it is a moot point.

In spades...
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
As JohnGaltfla pointed out, with the political/industrial complex angle, trimming or killing this turkey is going to require a Herculean effort.

IMHO, at best the whole thing should be seen as a gold plated R&D program with the results retrofitted to less expensive airframes (either legacy or "clean sheet").

Look I'm not blaming you or Americans but the F35 IMO will never take off, the Brits only bought a few as the F35B is the only aircraft that can take off and land vertically, no other reason other than to defer to the military establishment of the USA.

I remember at Farnborough Airshow a few years back there was a flying display of an SU35, I asked the pilot of an F15 what they thought of it, he said "they'd never engage it", so much for the effectiveness of American fighter aircraft, no show.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Look I'm not blaming you or Americans but the F35 IMO will never take off, the Brits only bought a few as the F35B is the only aircraft that can take off and land vertically, no other reason other than to defer to the military establishment of the USA.

I remember at Farnborough Airshow a few years back there was a flying display of an SU35, I asked the pilot of an F15 what they thought of it, he said "they'd never engage it", so much for the effectiveness of American fighter aircraft, no show.

No problem Richard, I didn't interpret anything you've posted in that manner. Heck, most of us on this side of the pond with interest in this stuff aren't drinking the F-35 "kool-aid" either.

The US went on an R&D and fielding hiatus between the "peace dividend" and the WoT in terms of the peer on peer/force on force stuff. Those programs that continued did so at such a low rate that "fiddling" with the specs was too easy. The key example being the F-35.

You put vectoring thrust, newer engines and upgrade the flight control systems on an F-15 and a lot of those performance issues between it and an Su-35 go away.
 

AlfaMan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The Gripen is being pushed by Boeing in the US. Hmmm..didn't the Gripen just lose the Indian AF competition?.....It's a good plane-perhaps small and short ranged for Pacific ops though.
We already have all kinds of airframes at AMARC-F-15s and F 16's. TONS of them-most being older models but these could be refurbished into the F15K (South Korean AF version with thrust vectoring nozzles, FAST packs and upgraded radars) and F16XL variants easily and with lots less cost than an all new airframe. All of the F14's are at AMARC-perfectly serviceable 4th gen fighters with world class avionics even now. One 14 is worth 5 F18s-an F18 can't outdrag a Mig 23.........
To go even further-why not revisit the F-20 Tigershark? Sure it's single engined; but it was cheap to build and on a par with many 4th gen fighters.
I'm a firm believer in technological superiority-but I also believe in more bang for your buck. We need numbers of planes; not just how many super duper 5th gen fighters we can crank out. We have thousands of planes at AMARC-let's put them to use! We can refurbish these planes (which are in level 1000 cocooning incidentally-in anticipation of FMS sales to other countries). Theyre ready and able to still fight, effectively. Much better use for defense dollars in my opinion.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
The Gripen is being pushed by Boeing in the US. Hmmm..didn't the Gripen just lose the Indian AF competition?.....It's a good plane-perhaps small and short ranged for Pacific ops though.
We already have all kinds of airframes at AMARC-F-15s and F 16's. TONS of them-most being older models but these could be refurbished into the F15K (South Korean AF version with thrust vectoring nozzles, FAST packs and upgraded radars) and F16XL variants easily and with lots less cost than an all new airframe. All of the F14's are at AMARC-perfectly serviceable 4th gen fighters with world class avionics even now. One 14 is worth 5 F18s-an F18 can't outdrag a Mig 23.........
To go even further-why not revisit the F-20 Tigershark? Sure it's single engined; but it was cheap to build and on a par with many 4th gen fighters.
I'm a firm believer in technological superiority-but I also believe in more bang for your buck. We need numbers of planes; not just how many super duper 5th gen fighters we can crank out. We have thousands of planes at AMARC-let's put them to use! We can refurbish these planes (which are in level 1000 cocooning incidentally-in anticipation of FMS sales to other countries). Theyre ready and able to still fight, effectively. Much better use for defense dollars in my opinion.

The USN had all of the F-14s at AMARC shredded to prevent any possibility of any of the parts getting out to Iran.

As to the F-20 Tigershark, in many respects it was the Gripen before Saab came up with it in terms of technology and capabilities, only falling a little short on number of hard points (5 instead of 8) and legs due to it being started as a product improved F-5E. Also the F-20 that everyone is familiar with was the "A" model. There were development plans that would have seen the aircraft being even more capable, but Northrop didn't have the time or money to roll that out first. Between money being sucked up by the "stealth" programs and the limits of the "A" verse the already in inventory F-16 and the defense gain having US allies that could go with the F-16 instead of essentially a mid-step aircraft more focused at the FX "export fighter" program, which with the coming end of the Cold War was fulfilled with keeping F-5Es running and early block surplus F-16s given in military aid to those who could handle them.
 

AlfaMan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
http://www.amarcexperience.com/ui/i...iew=article&id=118&catid=16&dbsource=arealist

The site above has current inventory at AMARC by aircraft type and with Bu-AER numbers, no less. There's still a lot of Tomcats around-like you I thought they ended up in reclamation but seems to be not the case. And they're in the level 1000 area too-which means they are cocooned in near flight ready condition. LOTS of '16s and 15's too. Suspect the high hour 15s are there but the 16's could be used. There's a lot of C models in the yard......I would HATE to be the one removing the Spraylat though. That stuff is hard as a rock!
And just look at the numbers of A10's there! And the B-52 G models-which most of these got the "big belly" mod like the Arc Light D models during Vietnam..........Very interesting.
Saab makes a good plane-got to walk all over an ex Austrian S-35Draken about 10 years ago. Beautifully made and engineered.




The USN had all of the F-14s at AMARC shredded to prevent any possibility of any of the parts getting out to Iran.

As to the F-20 Tigershark, in many respects it was the Gripen before Saab came up with it in terms of technology and capabilities, only falling a little short on number of hard points (5 instead of 8) and legs due to it being started as a product improved F-5E. Also the F-20 that everyone is familiar with was the "A" model. There were development plans that would have seen the aircraft being even more capable, but Northrop didn't have the time or money to roll that out first. Between money being sucked up by the "stealth" programs and the limits of the "A" verse the already in inventory F-16 and the defense gain having US allies that could go with the F-16 instead of essentially a mid-step aircraft more focused at the FX "export fighter" program, which with the coming end of the Cold War was fulfilled with keeping F-5Es running and early block surplus F-16s given in military aid to those who could handle them.
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
Gripen, Rafale and Eurofighter are different in terms of size, but not of technology (all three could be considered 4th Generation (or 4.5) depending on how equipment fit and RCS are factored in). That being said, an argument can be made that the F-16 or F-15 still have a lot of room for development in their airframes if for no other reason than the results of the DARPA/NASA test programs using those aircraft.

The Rafale and Eurofighter are practically identical, fortunately, see other thread, the Eurofighter is being quickly updated so that in the UK at least it will replace the Tornado by 2018. The Gripen and Rafale haven't been produced in great numbers and the likely future world customer base is small. Germany will not be buying the F35 and didn't really want the Eurofighter in the first place. I can see customers such as Saudi updating their F15s for quite a long time furthermore will not buy the F35 due to their purchase of Eurofighters. I can see a long delay before the F35 is fully operationally capable, in the meantime existing fighters will or can be updated and drones may provide jet fighter type capability in some scenarios. The F35 may be squeezed between extending the life of existing fighters and the production of even more capable drones in the future. I expect the T50 to go the way of the F22 or be produced in very small numbers.
 
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