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Watch the news and compare it to the official F-35 site. Additionally there's that blog site I posted. Compare what's being said about each program as the media still lumps the whole program into one bucket.So what's new and likely to be unseen (by those who are sceptically non-committal), any Pro/For, Con/Against or Undecided Clips/Mini-Docu's you can recommend then FBJ?
...not the old ones that've been rehashed, or with early facts and cuttings from 'Battle of the X Planes' which is good, specially watching the mil guys 'squirming on the hook' trying to sound up-beat to the camera about the problems they're facing early on; to be fair, some of those are fixed or replaced now -the problems, not the guys (perhaps).
I wouldn't - but then again he and Spey made those comments about the f-35 how many years ago???I wouldn't call Col. Everest Riccioni's credibility "shaky" in the slightest.
That's one comparisonAnd he's right about several things. Kloos wants to compare a loaded F-35 with a fully loaded F-16 ... but the guys who will be chasing the F-35 if they find it inbound will not be configured for an attack mission ... they'll be configured for an air-to-air intercept mission. Not if, but WHEN they find the fully loaded F-35's, I don't think the F-35's chances are better than average unless he maybe releases his load and engages in air-to-air.
And again, you have your opinions, I have mine, so far many of the issues pointed out in those early clips have been addressed and progress made....So, again, we'll see. I will NOT jump on board the F-35 bandwagon until it proves itself in a multiservice acceptance test ... and it would never be allowed to fail right up until combat proves whether or not it can be a good one. We have too much money in it as of now.
There are....So you might as well save your time with me at least. I wish the F-35 well out of a lack of options otherwise, but will never be a fan unless time proves it a very good one. That won't be for another 5 - 8 years at LEAST, and there are a lot of great planes to talk about in the meanwhile.
Mission ready? Do you mean "mission capable" MC or "fully mission capable" FMC? Until the aircraft is in squadron service you can't really have MC rates, at least in the USAF (REF AFI 00-20-1)Does anyone have any mission-ready numbers that are current?
A 50% MC isn't too bad for an aircraft that still being flight tested!!!!Look at the first 100 F-15 and F-16 rates. Even now, the F-15 fleet may carry a 60% MC rate due to a TCTO or other maihntenance action.Is it still in the 50% range?
Again Greg, a lot of negative "what ifs." Your opinions. BTW the first USAF maintenance crews are being trained at Luke. Here's some recent news about the B model which I thinks paints a fair picture of the program.For a plane with a reasonable cost it might be OK, but for a plane that costs what the F-35 does, the cost of 10 unserviceable aircraft could run some countries for more than a year. As a taxpayer, I am unwilling to fund that if given a choice. That's why I don't get a choice; I am forced to live with this program despite it not being very fiscally sound.
It depends what the test squadron is asking for and what the current mission phase is asking for - now you're trying to talk about aircraft scheduling, something I deal with daily and unless you're familiar with the TO I listed earlier, you don't understand how the game is played. If the mission requires one aircraft, then one aircraft is all that has to be presented to the operator. You will be "allowed" to have aircraft non-mission capable for routine maintenance and flight test modifications (which are constant), and an acceptable MC rate will be established by those running the operation, and it will vary. Because people who don't know or understand how the AF "plans and schedules" aircraft (even in a flight test environment) "assume" things, (and you know the old saying about "assume") they think the most negative when they see several aircraft on the ground. Again, in a flight test world a lot of these rules are out the window because its flight test and not at an active squadron level.C'mon Joe, the question is very simple.
If they have 10 F-35's in flight test, how many are ready to fly each day? Mission ready.
Well you better start writing your congressmen Greg because some aircraft such as the T-6, T-38, C-21 have had MC rates under 50% for short periods of time, the B-2 had a 2004 FMC rate under 44% and has an acceptable FMC rate of 50% and these are mature operational airframes that have had a lot of money pumped into them over the years.Able to fly the mission, whatever it is. I don't have an issue with some down aircraft, but if the down planes are nearly 50% or even close to that, then we're buying unreliability at the start of the program. What will it be like in 20 years after they get a chance to develop long-term faults?
Ok - did your friend tell you specifically what broke on the Migs?Will we see mission rates like the old MiG-209's some 10 years back? I have a good friend who went TDY to Finland with an F-16 squadron back in the early 2000's. They were going to fight the Germans in a war game and they sent 16 F-16's. They were supposed to sortie 8 turn 8 turn 4. That is, 8 F-16's, attack, return, rearm, 8 F-16's, attack return, rearm, 4 F-16's. They made that every day for 12 days.
The Germans were going to use the MiG-29's they inherited from the East Germans when they reunified. They had 30 MiG-29's at the German base. They made 8 turn 8 turn 4 the first day and never made it again. Real story.
I don't want to buy into that type reliability and I was wondering if anyone knows the current F-35 in-service rate without trying to evade the question ... a straight answer. If not, then it is either classified or nobody wants to let the cat out of the bag. I would not be surprised if nobody in here knows just because they are not on the program, but you can't tell. Someone MAY know and it would be nice to learn a real in-service rate for the LRIP and initial service models. I'm assuming the F-35A will have some in-service rate as will the F-35C. Don't know if there are enough F-35B's around with enough flight time to generate a representative in-service rate yet, but we certainly ought to have a good, representative in-service rate for the F-3A.
I am not even implying a bad in-service rate; I am asking. Please no estimates. You either know or you don't know.
If the main purpose of the F-35 is to drop bombs, would it not be cheaper and more efficient to use cruise missiles?
I do not know a lot about the F-35, but I did see a special where the B-1 could launch air to air missiles which the F-35 then take over and control them.
AFAIK even the birds at Luke have not been following a formal FMC tracking per 00-20-1 because the aircraft is still being flight tested and is not officially operational.I was pretty sure, Joe, that the F-35A was in the initial stages of operational squadron training. That is, I thought they were doing some lead-in F-35A training at Luke and a few other bases ... not regular flight ops, but lead-in to regular flight ops. Therefore I was looking for the in-service rate for the F-5A's at someplace like Luke ... not for MC rates for flight test at Eglin.
Well to fully undersatnd how the AF NOW comes up with FMC rates you'll have to read and understand it, it's a different AF from the 1970s needless to say. Here's a RECENT article on the aging AF fleets and MC rates, you'll be very surprised what you'll see here...I don't have to read an Air Force TO to ask the reliability of an aircraft and I didn't have to do it when I was in the Air Force to ask and get a good answer from the crew chiefs. The numbers were pretty widely known and disseminated. I was mostly at Ellsworth AFB (Rapid City, SD) and we knew the reliability of our B-52's, KC-135's,and Minuteman ICBM's with posted monthly numbers.
Again, same response as above, they are now all blended. One of the big selling points of the F-35 is it's "supposed to" offer better FMC rates then the current front line fighters (F-15/ F-16). If you even looked at what I posted you'll find that both aircraft are carry about a 75% FMC rate and that was acceptable to the AF during that time period. I don't know what the FMC rates are today but I could easily find out.My questions are pretty simple. Reliability, cost of acquisition, cost to operate, MTBF, etc. I don't care about MC/FMC, or all the modern terms. I wanted to know a ready-to-fly rate if we know one. Apparently we don't yet and that is entirely acceptable. When I was in the USAF in the mid 1970's we pretty much all knew what the reliability was.
AgreeRates vary, but they invariably bounce around some mean in-service rate. It usually has a mean and a standard deviation that really doesn't move around all that much once you have a good set of 30+ samples ... unless the real reliability gets better or worse. You'll see that first in the standard deviation of the samples as they will change value much more quickly than the mean will. With 44 F-35A's flying, they SHOULD have some good in-service number after only a few day's flying ... much less a few years or more.
I will agree it does, and will also admit this aircraft is expensive, I could hang my hat on the old comment "you get what you pay for," but on the other end I have no problem holding LMCO's feet to the fire ensuring the US taxpayer gets what they paid for - the most advanced combat aircraft ever built, and making them pay if the aircraft doesn't work.So ... you're saying everything is still in test. OK, I can buy that. 100 test planes with an acquisition cost as high as it is seems a bit extravagant, doesn't it?
I believe 22 airframes were built, one was used for stress analysis, one crashed, that leaves 20 being operated at a 50% and lowerFMC rate and costing 2.1 billion a copy!!! The Osprey has a higher FMC rate!!! Maybe you need to express your frustrations towards that program as well!We didn't have to buy 100 of anything else to know if we wanted it. Total production of B-2's was .. what? 21 service airframes? With one being an air test vehicle converted to service configuration?
YepOn Dec 13, 2013 they delivered the 100th F-35 at Fort Worth. So far, that means 44 F-35A's (CTOL), 42 F-35B's (STOVL), and only 14 F-35C's (Naval variant). I'd think with 42 of the B's in operation, they would be a better known quantity than the F-35C by long shot. But I might be just assuming that. If so, let's ground the things until 42 planes are better known than 14. I see the first F-35A for Luke AFB was scheduled for early 2014 and since we (the museum's P-38) are flying over to be with it, I guess it was delivered. Being Luke's first, I suppose there is virtually NO data yet on MC rate, so I'll wait to hear it. So I just answered my own question above about Luke ... they don't HAVE a lot of F-35's yet.
Over the years the T-38 have had some minor issues, some of them relating to specific bases that forced their MC rates down. see my linkWhen I was in the USAF, the T-38 was the most reliable supersonic jet in the world, bar none. I think the last time the rate was around 50% was in the late 1950's to early 1960's, but it WAS there for a very short time. As I recall, the T-38 had honeycomb wings and the F-5 had ribs and aluminum skin more like a traditional jet and late-model piston fighter together with leading edge extensions that led directly to the YF-17. It was more or less an improved T-38 design with much larger wings. Unless I misremember (possible), the chief designer was Edgar Schmued, formerly of P-51 and F-86 fame with North American. He might have been a Northrop executive by then, but he wasn't far from the design, being first and foremost a designer. Ed Heinemann was involved in design right until the end at Douglas.
Hey Joe, question ... how can I stop my "8's" from turning into smiley faces? That's very annoying ... I know, not much of a problem, but annoying anyway.
Cheers!
Could the long term effect be worse than any failings of the F-35? ie that fighter programs for a large portion of the west is vested in only one company?
Is there any aircraft company that hasn't merged? Can't think of any, that's still doing its thing (MiG? Sukhoi?) nowadays, like in the good old days....
Talking about cost, what is the difference moneywise today compared to 50's and 60's, do you get the same bang for the buck as to speak....?