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Finnish F/A-18C/D replacement

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Thread images: 67

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ITT: Which one should replace F/A-18C/D in Finnish service, Gripen or F-35? Why?
>>
>>29480353

The F-35 because the Slavs are squatting on your doorstep.
>>
>>29480353

The Gripen actually works so pretty easy choice there.
>>
>>29480353
Wouldn't the Super Hornet be the most logical transition?
>>
>>29480353
F35 because politics and one foot already on NATO.
>>
>>29480369
assuming we'd maintain the current number of fighters (around 60) F-35 would be way too expensive, can it land on a highway, be serviced by a ground crew in minutes & take off with full combat load from that same strip of highway, and can it do it well enough to warrant the extra cost in comparison to Gripen?
>>
>>29480353

The full list of competitors for the combination are:

- Super Hornet
- F-35
- Typhoon
- Rafale
- Gripen

Gripen seems the msot likely candidate. It has internal government support already.
>>
>>29480353
Gripen is the only coherent choice.

But this board is too "muh F35 best RCS" to admit it.
>>
>>29480416

Well the Singaporeans are buying them with that same purpose in mind. Of course the Singaporeans are richer and have only ever gone to Sweden for submarines, so take that as you will.
>>
>>29480416
>Gripen NG
>$113 million
>but the F-35 is so EXPENSIVE guyz
>>
>>29480489

>Thinking that flyaway cost is the only number involved
>>
>>29480489

Consider operating costs.

F-35's are too expensive to operate in the numbers that Finland requires for a new plane.

Also, the F-35 has a poor track record for reliability.
>>
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Hyvä lanka!
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>>29480416
I vote F-20; uses the same engine as Hornet, you can build hundreds for the cost of 60 Gripens/40 F-35s & apparently the F-5s have shown that they can kick 5th gen plane's asses...
>>
>>29480640

i know of one example where a T-6 Texan II scored a gun kill on a F-22A at Red Flag. the F-22A pilot was going through WIC at the time too.

that doesn't mean the T-6 is a better plane for combat.

also nobody's built a F-20 in 35 years. we might as well have Finland buy surplus F-4's.
>>
>>29480681

WIC?
>>
>>29480353
Super Hornet, because you're already operating Hornets so operating the new model is the smart option.
>>
>>29480518
>>29480521
Don't forget that the F-35 with ALIS will also massively reduce maintenance hours, since it's both designed to be insanely easy to work on, both in terms of access and modularity, as well as the plane itself being able to diagnose and predict maintenance needs.
>>
>>29480418
>>29480720

Wait, so they're considering the Super Hornet but not the Advanced Super Hornet?
>>
>>29480521
>Also, the F-35 has a poor track record for reliability.
>Plane still in final dev stage swarming with techs after every flight
>Still perfect flight record
>>
>>29480732

The F-35 has more bugs than a beehive.

No software can fix that.
>>
>>29480758
Wrong.
>>
>>29480750

Other than the fact that the computer crashes every 4 hours and the weapons bay overheats every 10 minutes.
>>
>>29480758
>all bugs are on the software side and will likely be fixed in the near future
>No software can fix that.
>>
>>29480416
>can it land on a highway
The F-35B certainly can.
>>
>>29480783
Every Gripen NG that has flown with weapons has crashed, killing the pilot.
>>
>>29480743
The super-duper hornet isn't finished yet.
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>>29480807

I assume you have some proof of this outrageous claim?
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>>29480353
F-35, if you are actually interested in defending your country when Russia gets uppity.
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>>29480828
No, I just thought if we were going to just straight up lie, go the whole way
>>
>>29480803
can it get airborne from a highway without burning half of the fuel in its' tanks?
>>
>>29480783
>Other than the fact that the computer crashes every 4 hours and the weapons bay overheats every 10 minutes.
You mean a minor radar freeze like the F-15 has regularly, and isn't that important because it can reboot in seconds, or the bay door thing that only matters at altitudes way below normal combat altitude and will be fixed in LRIP 9 or 10 and cascaded back to the current builds anyways?
>>
>>29480812

Neither is the F-35 nor the Gripen NG.
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>>29480353
Su-35.
>>
>>29480521
>Also, the F-35 has a poor track record for reliability.

The F-35 has a fantastic track record for an aircraft in development.
>>
>>29480846
Good meme anon

>>29480353
F35 is probably the best choice considering that they might actually have to use their aircraft. Gripen is the choice of nations who don't think they'll ever be in a real conflict and 3rd world countries.
>>
>>29480836
can you shitpost without expending 99% of your mental capacity?
>>
>>29480839

The F-35 is unable to even open its weapon bay if it is going above Mach 1.2. Combine that with the overheating and the F-35 will never be able to use internal weapons with any sort of reliability, completely negating the stealth advantage.
>>
>>29480880
Source?

Also, you realize that it's an extremely limited duration supercruise, right? It's not exactly meant to fight at mach 1.2
>>
Why the fuck would anyone want to replace the F-18?
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>>29480416

The F-35 requires a runway at least 2400 meters long to operate from. By comparison, the Gripen is able to take off with less than 800 meters of runway.
>>
>>29480908
It's old. The airframes are getting worn out. 5th gen technology is just coming around for export. Now's about as good a time as any to ditch legacy hornets, which is why so many nations are doing so.
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>>29480923
The fact that you would specifiy that without quantifying stores load shows how ignorant you are.

Much like specifying clean aircraft maximum speed, or turn rates.

Its utterly meaningless.
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>>29480732

>The F-35 has a logistics system (ALIS) that requires an internet connection to a centralized maintenance system in the United States. ALIS is kept permanently informed of each aircraft's technical status and maintenance requirements. ALIS can, and has, prevented aircraft taking off because of an incomplete data file. If the internet link is down, the aircraft can't fly even if there is nothing wrong with it. This is one of the more bizarre problems. It could lead to a situation in which enemy aircraft are inbound and the F-35s are refueled and ready to go but can't take off to meet the threat.

http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/01/5_reasons_why_our_f35s_are_too_dangerous_to_fly.html
>>
>>29480908
because it's a shitty low-performance fighter?
>>
Why don't they just build their own? I want to see Finnish jet fighter designs
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>>29480880
>The F-35 is unable to even open its weapon bay if it is going above Mach 1.2.
>Releasing weapons, or even opening bays while supersonic
You're a special kind of idiot, aren't you?

>>29480923
Or less than 100 with the B.
>>
>>29480923
>>29480949

>The F-35 requires a runway at least 2400 meters long to operate from.

Or 450 meters.

Or 0 meters, at the cost of carrying damn near no stores.
>>
>>29480369
>F-35 runways in shooting distance of Russian MLRS
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>>29480959
>unsourced bullshit article
About what I expect from that site.
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>>29480983
>>29481005

Or 2400 meters for the version that actually matters in this context
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>>29481005
You made the same mistake of quantifying jack shit.

2400 meters carrying 18,000lb stores? 2,000lb?

Who knows! Who cares!
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>>29480959
That's wrong, and the source you quoted is retarded.
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>>29481039
If you're planning to mainly deploy a 610nmi radius stealth fighter that close to the fighting you've already fucked up.
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>>29480923
that settles it then, the highway base near my home has maybe 2km stretch of carefully paved road to be used as a runway, and the others seem to be of similar length.
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>>29480353

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&v=sxMYFYDNF_g

At the end of the day, you have to admit that the Gripen can do everything that the F-35 can do, but for 1/3 the operating costs. The JAS-39 is a superior, more reliable aircraft.
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>>29480930

Your mom is old and her airframe is getting worn out but that hasn't stopped me.
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>>29481091
So you've given up actually refuting points or backing yours up, back to muh feelins

as expected of a swedeophile
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>>29481098
To be quite honest dude you have some pretty low standards if you're fucking my mom. I recommend you find a replacement.
>>
>>29481101
>>29480353

What points? The JAS-39 is simply a superior plane.

>Low Cost of Operation
>High Availability
>Easy to Maintain
>Super Maneuverable
>Advanced Avionics

But you don't have to take my word for it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3-PeY-heho
>>
>>29481091
>barely better than the F-16 in every spec
>can do everything the F-35 can
Ha! Good one!
>>
>>29481091
How about fly 1100 kilometers to strike a target and return?
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>>29480983
>Or less than 100 with the B
as cool as STOVL is, I doubt FiAF can afford to buy the most complex version of an already expensive fighter just for the ability to burn half of the fuel in tanks (as well as burn/melt a hole in the paved runway in the process) during takeoff.
>>
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>>29481091
>At the end of the day, you have to admit that the Gripen can do everything that the F-35 can do

The amazing thing is there are people who probably actually believe this.
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>>29481192
You're repeating yourself now, m8.

>>29481217
Its unlikely they actually do.
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>>29481172
>will scream about Lockheed shills
>proceeds to shill for Saab
>>
>>29480923
The F-35B (STOVL) can take off from less than 300 meters.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lu7ZUVXs6Ec
>>
>>29481091
>buy a plane with a great track record from your next door neighbour, whose best interests is your safety from Russia, that will easily provide support and parts.

or

>buy a plane with zero track record from a country where every military purchase you buy is of political nature and will throw you under the bus any given moment.

Jee that was sure hard!
>>
>>29481192
>as well as burn/melt a hole in the paved runway in the process
If you're trying to land on a highway then your airstrips have already been burnt to a crisp so that matters little.
>>
>>29481253
Anon, there is little point in having this discussion with someone that doesn't know anything past quoting numbers at you.

Saying an aircraft can take off in "800 meters" is great and all, but you need to quantify it. Is that on full afterburner? Carrying nothing but 2 AIM-9s and 50% fuel load? What?

Its completely arbitrary, much like saying a radar system can "detect a target at 500nmi" without quantifying target RCS.
>>
>>29481266
>buying obsolete hardware from your neighbor because of muh feels
>cannot actually specify a nation that was "thrown under the bus" in his lifetime
>>
>>29480353
One thing is for certain. You're not buying the Rafale.
>>
>>29480845
And it the F-35 will take years to get finished. Better to stick with an air frame you're already familiar with like the Hornet.
>>
Buy Sukhoi. You're going to be Russian property eventually anyway.
>>
>>29481385
Familiarity is a good thing.

Adopting a 40 year old airframe and expecting it to last another 40-50 years is not.

Its thoroughly retarded.
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>>29481278
oh, so now you are attacking my word choise (if a fixed-wing aircraft is taking off of it/landing on it it counts as a runway) when you very obviously understood what I meant, which was: one F-35 takes off vertically in a highway base & now there's a hole in the pavement preventing anyone from landing or taking off conventionally until someone patches the hole.
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>>29481406
>one F-35 takes off vertically in a highway

kek, F-35s don't take off vertically. Nobody expects them to in an operational environment. They perform in a STOVL mode.
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>>29481406
>one F-35 takes off vertically in a highway base & now there's a hole in the pavement preventing anyone from landing or taking off conventionally until someone patches the hole.

That's not the way it works for one thing. The heat is an issue for long-term usage, the idea that the F-35 melts roads and ship decks with one launch is a meme.
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>>29481253
>>29480353

STOVL is irrelevant to this thread. Finland has no requirement for a STOVL aircraft. Rather, they want a conventional take-off plane that doesn't require a 2400+ runway like the F-35A.
>>
>>29481463
see
>>29481287

Its great that you repeat yourself so hard I can just link previous posts. Much easier.
>>
>>29481229
It was the year 2016. The battle for Finland's Military Aerospace capability was not fought in a boardroom, or the halls of government, but in a board of memes. The finns looked upon this, and saw that it was good.
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>>29481319
some examples of USA throwing other nations under the bus because of politics:

South Korea (withheld promised weapons/ammunition deliveries because of fear that South would invade North, instead North invaded South and UN had to step in to throw the Norks out)

Taiwan (sales of hardware have been a constant rollercoaster because of butthurt PRC)

Iran (F-16s ordered by Iran sold to Israel instead because USA didn't like the new Iranian regime)
>>
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>>29480353
What are the Finns budgetary limits? Ideally they'd get the F-35 (because Russia), but F/A-18E/F/G are less expensive and would be an easier transition for Finnish pilots.
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>>29480712
weapon instructor course.

like TOPGUN but better.
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>>29481471
>>29480353

The requirement for the Gripen is that is must be able to take-off with less than 800 meters of runway. Actual numbers are something like 650 meters for take-off and 550 meters for landing. A specific load-out is not specified. You'll just have to accept that.

This outstanding runway performance is achieved by making clever use of the plane's two canard-wings. During take-off, the canards are angled upwards to improve lift and decrease minimum take-off distance. During landing, the canards are angled downward and used as airbrakes.

You can't do that with an F-35.
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>>29481472
Indeed.
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>>29481593
>A specific load-out is not specified. You'll just have to accept that.

Sorry, but that makes the numbers meaningless.

I can find maximum speed numbers for the F-16 carrying absolutely nothing, as well. Doesn't make them relevant.
>>
>>29481480
None of those constitute 'thrown under the bus'.
>>
>>29480983

supersonic AMRAAM useage is doctrinal for maximum WEZ
>>
>>29480923

the distance you achieve liftoff and your min runway distance aren't the same. you need a longer runway when you're landing. this is basic TOLD stuff that you ought to know.
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>>29481593
>This outstanding runway performance is achieved by making clever use of the plane's STOVL design. During take-off, the engine nozzle is angled downwards to improve lift and decrease minimum take-off distance. During landing, the lift fan intake cover is angled upwards and used as airbrakes.
>You can't do that with a Gripen.
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>>29481607
>>29480353

Saab 39 Gripen: Able to take off with less than 800 meters of runway. (loadout unspecified)

F-35: Can't take off with less than 800 meters of runway regardless of conditions. (The ultra-expensive STOVL version doesn't count)

The runway that Saab uses to test the Gripen is EXACTLY 800 meters long. So really, the plane could manage it with any loadout.
>>
>>29481593

we do the same thing with a F-15 (except with stabilators instead of canards). it's literally a 40-some year old design.

clearly you have no idea how fighter aircraft work.
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>>29481593
You can do that with a B-1.
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>>29481723
>F-35: Can't take off with less than 800 meters of runway regardless of conditions. (The ultra-expensive STOVL version doesn't count)

Got a source for that, champ?
>>
>>29481723
>(The ultra-expensive STOVL version doesn't count)
>Nuh uh, that doesn't count!
What are you, 12?
>>
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>>29481663

The F-35B doesn't matter for this discussion. There is no way that Finland could ever afford that albatross. (although you can say that about all the F-35 variants, but especially the F-35B STOVL meme plane)

>>29481749

>The F-35 requires a runway at least 8,000 feet long to operate from. By comparison, the F-16's minimum runway length requirement is 3,000 feet.

http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/01/5_reasons_why_our_f35s_are_too_dangerous_to_fly.html

>>29481774

The Finnish Air Force has no requirement for a STOVL aircraft. The F-35B is not even being considered.
>>
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>>29480353
I don't think either is ideal, but I'm guessing in an imperfect world the Gripen is probably the best option. It's quite well suited to operating from short runways, are there actually any military runways in Finland long enough for an F-35 to base from at the moment?

Obviously they can lengthen some runways but the Gripen is designed to operate off rural highways, it's really quite handy.

And before y'all start whining about muh stealth, it doesn't need stealth when the battle plan involves staying at or below tree top level anyway.
>>
>>29481806
You know thats not a source any more than if I rent a domain and said "The Gripen NG is 100% shit", right?
>>
>>29481806
>http://www.americanthinker.com


everything fall to places now...
>>
>>29481806
How about using an actual source instead of quoting a blog that itself does not provide a source.
>>
>>29481814
>it doesn't need stealth when the battle plan involves staying at or below tree top level anyway.


are you clinically retarded?
>>
>this retarded Gripen shill

Explain why the Gripen got absolutely BTFO in every tender it competed in.
>>
>>29481806

8000 is a fairly standard minimum runway length restriction for fighter-type aircraft. and there are ways of getting around that. i will say that a fat, old F-15E with the weaker -220 motors and a pretty heavy bomb load gets airborne by about 4000 feet at sea level.

also not talking about atmospheric conditions and altitude shows you don't really understand TOLD calculations.
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>>29481814
>it doesn't need stealth when the battle plan involves staying at or below tree top level anyway.

I'm fucking dying
>>
>>29481814
>when the battle plan involves staying at or below tree top level anyway

You know nothing about air warfare

>>29481806
>http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/01/5_reasons_why_our_f35s_are_too_dangerous_to_fly.html
>AmericanThinker

It all comes tumbling down, tumbling down, tumbling down
>>
>>29481837
>>29481854

Within 10 years, advances in radar will make stealth pretty much irrelevant. It's not even worth factoring it into the equation.
>>
Brewster Buffalo
>>
>>29481901
>or below tree top level anyway.


i was referring to this part, and the answer seems to yes
>>
>>29481607
doesn't it go without saying that the "has to be able to take off from 800m runway" means "take-off with full combat load" (an example of a combat load: 6 Sidewinders); the requirements Flygvapnet set also include turnaround time of 10 minutes with 1+5 -man ground crew, that means refueling and rearming the plane (if it didn't mean full refuel and rearming the turnaround time would be "as soon as the plane can physically turn around" instead of "10 minutes")
>>
F-35 is the closest Finland can get to NATO status without joining NATO.

Finland will be able to send pilots/maintainers to NATO schools. Operate NATO weaponry and avionics. Link with and receive NATO assets relating to the F-35 with ease. And in a contingency, augmentee seamlessly with NATO forces.

It's either join NATO or ally with Russia and buy Su-35's. One or the other.
>>
Finn here
>hoping for F-35A, buying outdated tech would be pointless
>fearing Gripen because politicians will cry "muh nordic defense" when ultimately allies are irrelevant militarily and nordics are irrelevant politically
I bet the retards will buy some ancient super hornets that will start falling out of the sky in 20 years to shove responsibility of major acquisitions to the next governments.
>>
>>29480385
The Spitfire works and is even cheaper
>>
>>29481950

6 sidewinders is not a full combat load. it's a ridiculous load that is so short-armed as to be completely asinine.
>>
>>29481950
No, not really.

Much like them lying about operational costs, you're running completely into assumptions there. Could be that the most you can get out of a runway like that is an emergency CAP with a horrific fuel load.

6 Sidewinders is a hilariously light "combat load", by the way.
>>
>>29481953
Finland should join NATO not for muh article 5 shit, but for equipment acquisitions and political weight. Ahtisaari was right.

Su-35 is never going to happen, buying Russian gear to fight against Russia is a terrible idea.
>>
>>29481994
>mad
>>
>>29481848
>get BTFO by a Swede
>m-muh F35! ;_;

Deal with it yankee that your plane is a pile of dogshit.
>>
>>29481172

The avionics on the Gripen are no better than that on F-16C block 40.

Avionics are expensive, skimping on them is one of the reasons that the A and C version of the Gripen are cheap.

But Avionics also matter immensely in modern operations, and Saab is spending money to actually put something good in the NG.
>>
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>>29481901
>Chinese and Russian radars will make stealth irrelevant
>China and Russia are making stealth aircraft

I doubt you can resolve this conflict.
>>
>>29481910
"flying beer bottle" was nice after Yanks stripped off all the shit they didn't want to give us (including some armor plus the engines, giving us second-hand engines of inferior specs), accidentaly resulting in a better fighter than what was sold to US Navy, the British and the Dutch.
>>
>>29481978
>>29481997
where did I say 6 sidewinders was a *full* load? I said it was an example of a combat load.
>>
>>29481994
The irony in this post is deafening.
>>
>>29482015
>Fielded the only 5th gen aircraft a decade ago
B...but Putin said stealth was a meme
;_;
>>
>>29482061
Neither of the posts you quoted said full load.

Pure IR missiles isn't a combat load at all.
>>
>>29482015
>BTFO

No, not really. Just sad you're defending your national pride that can't even compete with 50 year old American air frames
>>
>>29481266
You know what's thrown under the bus?

Finland in 1809 and 1939, by Sweden.
>>
>>29480353

Why would you consider picking the meme-35 over the Gripen? The F-35 is fast becoming an international laughing stock.
>>
>>29482115
Oh Saab, you so silly.
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>>29482115
>That graph
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>>29482115
>Implying turn rates matter

Behold what even SAAB thinks about their jet compared to the F-35
>>
>>29482163
Its cute they're delusional enough to think even the NG has parity with other Eurocanards.
>>
>>29482163

Funny how they think Gripen NG is the same price as the old Gripen and cheaper than F-16 C.

Or that a Super Hornet costs more than the two eurocanards.
>>
>>29482098
they claimed *I* had called 9 Sidewinders a full combat load, I asked where did I say that, 6 Sidewinders is listed as a configuration on every website about Gripen I can find (the data on most seems to be the exact same as in Wikipedia, not sure which sources are original & which draw their info from Wikipedia), and I simply picked one because I needed an example of a weapons load & if I started making one up (like "16 Sidewinders, 20 AMRAAMS and ten tons of bombs lel") people would complain about the impossibility/retardedness of the configuration no matter what I wrote, so I picked the first config listed in Wikipedia.
>>
>>29481806
Hey look, I can post sources too!
finlandairforce.spurdospar.de
Clearly the F-35 is the superior choice and the Gripen NG is a communist lie.
>>
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>>29481939
>>
>>29482222
*6 sidewinders
>>
>>29482246
Fighters have no radar? AWACS doesn't exist?

kek
>>
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Go for the Gripen, it will be more useful than the F-35
>>
>>29482282
>Middle stick
What is this, 1960?
>>
>>29482274
closer you fly to terrain the harder it gets for an airborne radar to spot you, come on this should be basic knowledge.
>>
>>29482313
>vidya games
>>
>>29482313
That's not how doppler radar works anon
>>
>>29482338
Why do TV stations spend fucktons of money building 2000 foot towers for their transmitters if altitude doesn't affect RF?
Why do we even bother with satellites if we can just leave antennas on the ground?
>>
>>29482313
What year do you live in?
>>
>>29482392
The fact that you make that comparison is not surprising.
>>
>>29482425
I'm not >>29482313
by the way, I'm just saying that altitude is a factor in detection distance.
>>
>>29482282
>Go for the Gripen, it will be more useful than the F-35
>more useful
Ha, that's a great joke. F-16-grade payload and range, a .97 TW, and limited sensors and comms as well, and, again, no stealth.
>>
>>29482442
If the enemy has airborne systems looking down, then low level penetration does basically nothing.

Look-down/Shoot-down has been a thing for decades.

Stealth at high levels can do penetration by flying between gaps in radar coverage. Just cutting detection range by half can open up opportunities.
>>
>>29482274
An aerial radar operated from some distance away (i.e. inside Russia) is not going to be at much of an advantage over a ground radar here. The angle would be only slightly more favorable while the actual radar system poorer or perhaps with an AWACs plane still no better than the ground-based system.

Now when it gets to the point that the enemy can park an AWACS over the middle of Finland, yeah, that trick would no longer work. But as long as you have fighters operating they can't do that, you'd just shoot the AWACs down when it tried.

In the more likely scenario, with contested airspace, the ability of these fighters to hug very closely to the nap of earth until able to engage, then lock, fire weapons, and immediately break for a ridge and disappear behind it would be very practical. It takes shockingly little time for them to drop down onto a rural highway hit a cache re-arm re-fuel and get airborne again.

If they put the money into F-35s all the Russians have to do is mess up a couple of runways to ground their force.
>>
>>29482599
>Scenario that depends entirely on NATO ignoring a partner nation getting attacked by Russia
>Scenario built around 1960s tactics and tech
>>
>>29482599
> It takes shockingly little time for them to drop down onto a rural highway hit a cache re-arm re-fuel and get airborne again.
I'm a Bong, we planned on doing that in the Falklands, It ended well: honest boss
>>
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>>29482686
I can imagine if the first time you tried it was under fire it wouldn't go so well.

In Sweden they practice it constantly. You have to watch out on the highway because they WILL simply appear in front of you and set right down on the highway - they have the right of way and you pull over for them. The ones I saw seemed extremely practiced at it.

For obvious reasons they don't like too many pictures of the roadside bases floating around but they are everywhere. Here's one that's fairly easy to find. It's a Vigen in the pic obviously but the base is even more useful for the Gripen.
>>
>>29483053
sounds about right for Finland as well

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1piR6LPJ6I
>>
>>29483159
another video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-pXKeyNeYs
>>
>>29481480
>South Korea (withheld promised weapons/ammunition deliveries because of fear that South would invade North, instead North invaded South and UN had to step in to throw the Norks out)

Not in your lifetime.

>Taiwan (sales of hardware have been a constant rollercoaster because of butthurt PRC)

DESU pham IDK about this one.

>Iran (F-16s ordered by Iran sold to Israel instead because USA didn't like the new Iranian regime)

The F-16s were ordered by the previous government. You must be grasping for straws if you are saying that the US withholding fighter jets from a group that preformed a hostile takeover of the previous allied regime, and is literally screaming death to America, after storming the US embassy and taking hostages, throwing someone under the bus.
>>
>>29483184
and another from the same place (probably different time though):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNtFc0Z44m8
>>
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This could have been a good thread, but it isn't.
The Gripen E is expected to be launched on May 18th. It really is too early to give a judgement on this bird, which, after all, is significantly different from the previous Gripen models.
The F-35 is still also pretty young, and while people like to rip on in for low reliability, such things are liable to be improved upon very heavily with time.
Waiting a few months to see how it plays out is probably better than calling eachother shills repeatedly for hours on hours.
>>
>>29481998
>Su-35 is never going to happen, buying Russian gear to fight against Russia is a terrible idea.
That's why I said ally with Russia instead of NATO you fucking doorknob
>>
>>29483708
Finland has little to no incentive to ally with Russia. They're mostly culturally western, are part of the EU and the Eurozone, are despite not being members of NATO still fairly tightly allied with Estonia and the Scandinavian countries. Plus it's not like the Winter War made the finns particularly fond of their neighbours to the east.
>>
>>29483708
>there's a growing threat that X will attack you
>become allies with X
>probably lose all of your old friends + any respect anyone might have had for you
>X might still attack because what are you going to do about it now that you have no friends?

yep, no way this could go horribly wrong...
>>
>>29480385
the gripen that they consider arent even flying anon.
>>
>>29483761
>Better to ally with a marxist country like America that forces you to open your borders/import millions of terrorists

Sounds like a brilliant idea
America totally isn't part of the globalist cabal that is dead set on destroying the west, right?
>>
>>29483865
When did America force Europe to open its borders?
>>
>>29480418
>>29480743
This, the ASH is the best thing if you're not willing to go full F-35.
>>
>>29483901
The EU is a puppet government of America/globalists
>>
>>29483949
But when did America force Europe to open its borders?
>>
>>29483962
First time was in 1961 when USA forced germany to take turk "guest workers" who stayed permanently
>>
>>29483865
>ally with Marxist America
uhh, what? Marxist and America don't really belong in the same sentence, also just because we don't want to ally with Russia doesn't mean we are going to ally with USA (though every time Kremlin starts foaming about some tinfoil hat conspiracy we supposedly have with USA to destroy Russia the idea of joining NATO becomes more and more tempting)

>forces you to open your borders/import millions of terrorists
USA hasn't forced us to open our borders, our decision to join EU did, about importing millions of terrorists, instead of "millions" we are talking about thousands (BTW around Christmas Russia was trying to get us to accept Syrian/Iraqi refugees that had entered Russia and had somehow ended up on our borders, I am sure they totally walked all the way without Russian government having in any way contributed to their travel from Black Sea/where ever they entered Russia to the Finnish border)
>>
>>29484039
*and instead of "terrorists" it's "bums coming here to leech off of our social programs & complain about every detail they don't like even after the government is already bending over backwards to accommodate their needs"
>>
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>>29480353

The F-35's only real advantage over the Gripen NG was stealth. But now that the Gripen has a sensor that can detect stealth aircraft beyond visual range, that no longer matters.

http://aviationweek.com/awin/gripen-sensors-claim-counter-stealth-performance
>>
Gripen because fingolls deserve to be cucked
>>
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Imagine if they actually bought the F-15 (it's apparently technically in the running).

Imagine the memes.
>>
>>29481463
>we don't need stovl
>we need stol
Well guess what nigger, stovl aircraft are just like stol aircraft except they're better.
>>
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>>29484404

I.....I kinda want at least 1 country to buy the Silent eagle. Just so we can see what it looks like. I think it died when Korea said no, though.
>>
>>29484404
You mean the Silent Eagle?
>>
>>29484428

Finland doesn't even have an aircraft carrier. Why would they buy the F-35B? That plane is irrelevant to this discussion.
>>
>>29484457
are swedposters the new austrailiaposters?
>>
>>29484457
Did you even read his post? It fulfills their requirement of short take offs, having a carrier has nothing to do with it. The B model isn't even for carrier use.
>>
>>29484485
The B model is for carrier use if your carrier isn't CATOBAR
>>
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>>29484469
>>29484485

The point is that the Gripen NG is able to achieve take-off and landing on a runway less than 800 meters in length WITHOUT relying on an expensive and complicated lift-fan set-up. Besides, only 1 version of the F-35 even has this lift-fan, and that's not the version that the Finns are looking at. The F-35A requires a runway that is at least 2400 meters long for take-off.
>>
>>29483208
>DESU pham IDK about this one.

We just sold Taiwan a couple frigates, most of Taiwan's lack of purchases come from monetary reasons (like the delay on their M1A1 buy).
>>
>>29484404
in that case it would probably be "Silent Eagle", I haven't looked into it, at least it has two engines (after the lecture we got from a Hornet pilot when we visited an air base en route to an air defence exercise I think our pilots might want to have two engines as a lucky shot from >23mm cannon in the right place can take out an engine)
>>
>>29484560

If you're close enough that you're taking hits from a 30 mm cannon (you said greater than 23 mm) and the other guy is in a position where he is able to hit you with such a weapon then you're cooked no matter how many engines you have.
>>
>>29484542
What sort of minimum runway can the F-35C manage?

Seems likely that you could manage on shorter runways for the F-35A with lower payload & rougher takeoffs/landings.
>>
>>29484560
It's not the worst option, it's just not all that cost-effective for the benefits. The Super Hornet would be a better investment at that point.
>>
>>29484542
The point is you keep avoiding what kind of payload it carries when doing that.

Being able to take off in 800 feet does not mean much if all you have is a pair of Sidewinders and 1/3 fuel.
>>
>>29484521
That doesn't mean it is exclusively for carrier use. You lose nothing by not operating it from carriers.

>>29484542
So then why aren't they considering the B model if it fulfills their requirements?
>>
>>29484595

If you're curious about what a standard combat load for the Swedish Air Force is, then got look it up yourself. I'm satisfied with knowing that the aircraft is able to take-off and land with less than 800 meters of runway, which was a core requirement during the Gripen's development. Of course, the actual number is more like 650 meters for take-off, and 550 meters for landing. You can't actually use the entire runway.

>>29484615

But the F-35B is made for carriers. Finland does not have a carrier. Why would they buy this plane?
>>
>>29481014
BF4 pls go.
>>
>>29484687
>But the F-35B is made for carriers. Finland does not have a carrier. Why would they buy this plane?

Just saying, but that's an odd argument given Finland's been using the Hornet for the last few decades.
>>
>>29484592

>What sort of minimum runway can the F-35C manage?

It doesn't really matter, because it practice it is going to be assisted by catapult whenever it takes off.
>>
>>29484595
800 meters, not feet, I think 800m is something like 2624 feet
>>
>>29484687

why did countries without aircraft carriers buy the F-4, a naval aircraft? or like >>29484722 pointed out, why buy the F/A-18?
>>
>>29481403
The ASH or Super Hornets aren't 40 years old.
>>
>>29484745

That's different. The F-4 and the F-18 aren't STOVL. They're essentially conventional planes, just hardened for carrier use.
>>
>>29484687
>But the F-35B is made for carriers. F
That's why it has an arresting hook and folding wings? Oh wait.
>>
>>29484777

so why does it matter if it was designed for carrier use

>>29484812

almost all fighters have an arresting hook. the land-based ones don't usually use them except in emergencies, but they're on board.
>>
>>29484829

The F-35B is a hideously expensive aircraft, both in terms of unit price and cost of operations. The Finns would not be able to operate a sufficiently large air fleet with that plane.
>>
>>29484588
actually I was talking about being hit by triple-A, the reason I said >23mm was because the ZU-23-2 is one of two AA -cannons FDF uses & for some perverse reason we always use our own weapons as a yard stick when talking about how to best destroy our own equipment, a lucky burst from a ZU-23-2 on the right spot is a bit different than a lucky hit by another fighter.
>>
>>29484777
Holy fuck the doublethink is strong with you.
>>
>>29484777
The F-4 was originally developed for carrier use.
The F-18 is used mostly on carriers.
>>
>>29484856
Theres literally nothing cheaper
>>
>>29484750
the C -models in Finnish service are also what 22, 23 years old at oldest (not sure about the second-hand D -models we bought from Canada at the same time we were manufacturing the Cs)
>>
>>29484865

It essentially doesn't matter. You're better off just trying to not get shot in the first place. If a plane loses an engine, it will be crippled even if it manages to get back to base.

>>29484896

The Gripen costs less than $5,000 per flight hour. The F-35 costs a whopping $32,000 per flight hour! The Gripen has the lowest operating costs of any modern jets fighter.
>>
>>29484910
Did you? I thought all of Finland's F-18s were made for Finland.
>>
>>29484954
>Talking about cost per flight hour as if its even a meaningful statistic
>F-35 isn't even in full production or a working fighter yet
>Using old costs per flight hour to refer to new gripens

>These improvements have reportedly increased the Gripen NG costs to an estimated 24,000 Swiss Francs (US$27,000) per hour,[315] and increased the flyaway cost to 100 million Swiss Francs (US$113M).

hm
>>
>>29485001

That's not possible. What could they possible do to the Gripen that would make the operating cost go up like that? I don't believe it.
>>
>>29484971
I mixed two different things into one; the Ds came straight from the factory in USA, the thing about buying Canadian Hornets was just one front-half of a CF-18B used to rebuild a crashed C -model into a D (it crashed again some time later and wasn't rebuilt again...)
>>
>>29485028
A completely different engine for one thing, which is one of the major factors in aircraft maintenance.
>>
>>29485028
Or maybe your claim of less than $5,000 per flight hour cost is wrong?
>>
>>29484198
>The F-35's only real advantage over the Gripen NG was stealth.
So, the greater range, payload, EOTS, EODAS, ASQ-239 Barracuda and the comms suite don't count as advantages for the F-35? A basic IRST isn't the same thing as an EODAS, and I'll admit it's probably on par with the NG's radar, but that's the least important sensor on the -35.
>>
>>29484954
The Gripen model you are getting that cost from is not a modern fighter.
>>
>>29484687
>If you're curious about what a standard combat load for the Swedish Air Force is, then got look it up yourself.
>I don't know what the numbers I bleat mean.
>>
>>29484687
>But the F-35B is made for carriers. Finland does not have a carrier. Why would they buy this plane?
No, the F-35B is designed to operate out of nearly anywhere Helos can operate from, that it, forward bases, USMC "complete military in a box" LHDs, and so on. You're thinking of the C, which is built for the CATOBAR carriers we are the sole users of.
>>
>>29480640
But that plane was never put into production. Do you really think the manufactures could restart that program?
>>
>>29480418
That's retarded. The newest Gripens are $100 million apiece. So you'd end up with a less capable aircraft for the same amount or slightly more money than the alternatives.
>>
>>29482222
Dude, you just admitted you have no clue what you're speaking of. Either be more respective and listen to what people are telling you, or take a couple of months and learn the subject.
The fact that you need to rely on wikipedia to figure out possible combat loads should be a blazing alarm in your mind *I'm in over my head*.
Asking questions would serve you better than making silly assertions.
>>
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>>29484542
>The F-35A requires a runway that is at least 2400 meters long for take-off.

Fully loaded the F-35 requires 8,000 feet for takeoff. The recommendation for training fields is no less than 10,000 feet. (source: http://www.aph.gov.au/DocumentStore.ashx?id=b2b1ed75-dc16-447a-a878-b8670edb674d&subId=254100 )

2400 Metres = 7874 feet.

>The point is that the Gripen NG is able to achieve take-off and landing on a runway less than 800 meters in length

The Gripen *fully loaded* can take off in just under 2,000 feet (same source.) 800 metres = 2625 feet.

Fact check passes. If anything you are erring in favor of the F-35 on both ends of the calculation.
>>
>>29485815
the point was that since the requirements set for Gripen were a take-off from an 800m runway it would make no sense if the requirement wasn't for a fully loaded plane, I wasn't going to spend all day googling for one result out of a million that mentions what a typical combat load for Gripen would be, and since all of the sources I could find easily had exactly the same list of different configurations I picked the first one from the list, the fact that this list is, among other sites, in Wikipedia doesn't mean I took the information from there, only that I saw the same list on a number of sites & Wikipedia was one of them.
>>
>>29486024
That http://www.aph.gov.au link says nothing about the Gripen.
>>
>>29480732
Gripen is designed to be maintained by conscripts. Switching an engine takes a few hours, which is basically no time at all.

Land on a desolate road base, refuel and reload and be out of there in 10 minutes. It is a great plane if that is your doctrine. However, i feel that Finland will turn away from atleast a completely conscription based system rather soon.
>>
>>29486103

so you're saying you're full of shit and don't understand fighters or air combat.

cool, thanks for playing
>>
>>29486170
the Navy and Air Force have a high percentage of career/fixed time period contract personnel, only the Army has more conscripts than professional soldiers.
>>
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>>29486151
Hmm you seem to be right.
5 minutes of googling gave me a half dozen sources for that number (800m full laden) but none of them as official as I wanted. One source ( http://jas39gripen.blogspot.com/ ) actually claims 600 metres instead, and strongly implies that's fully loaded. Wikipedia gives the 800 metre number but says specifically that the design requirement was for take off from an 800 metre "snow-covered" strip so the 600 metre figure could be for dry pavement.

At any rate it's clear that the Gripen is much better on this one particular metric, the only room I can see for argument is as to how important that metric is, which is very situational and depends on a lot of assumptions about who you would be fighting, when, and why.
>>
>>29486330

takeoff figures are exactly the same no matter the surface.
>>
>>29480478
Being surrounded by illiterate warmongering mob (in the south) and jealous neighbor (in the north) does not equate to living next to a fucking bear
>>
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>>29486367
Then I suppose the difference must be down to loadouts or something.

At any rate they operate from stations like this and that's clearly just not going to happen with the F-35.
>>
>>29486330

also the 8000 ft runway figure for the F-35 is undoubtedly the minimum for landing. that's an extremely standard distance for landing given that aircraft usually can take off in a lot shorter distance than they need to land. my F-15E can take off in 2400 ft but needs 6-9k to land.
>>
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>>29482231
>spurdospar.de
>>
>>29482231
This is a severely underrated post
>>
>>29485357
The Charles de Gaulle has steam catapults, and is nuclear powered.

Based France.
>>
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What the fuck are all these Swedeposters here doing quoting stats for the fucking Gripen A and C models like those are the ones Finland is looking to buy.

The Gripen NG is the one in the running. Get your fucking facts straight you autistic surströmming slurpers.
>>
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>>29486421
this is what a Finnish one looks like, I estimate about 2200m of usable runway, maybe a bit more if you come for landing from North-West.
>>
>>29482163

Haha holy fuck, Grishill BTFO in perpetuity.

>>29484404
>>29484429

WHAT IF, somehow... somebody built a 4G++ air force completely out of Silent Eagles AND Super Duper Bugs?
>>
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>>29480353

Do it Finland....do it.....and not because I own stock.
>>
>>29486708
>>Silent Eagles AND Super Duper Bugs

I
am
become
diamonds
>>
>>29486779
go away and take your "let's have two different countries design a wing each so that we can trick another country into sharing the development costs!" -scam with you
>>
>>29486563
I dont think france is buying F-35's tho
>>
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>>29487042
They have the Rafale which is the best 4.5 gen fighter available. I'm sure Dassault has a fifth gen fighter in the works and I bet it'll be just as aesthetic as the Rafale.
>>
Just out of curiosity, why not just build a few runways that are long enough for whatever you want and then not limit your aircraft purchases by runway length?
>>
what about the f35c? is its runway requirement shorter?
>>
>>29487174
of course there's plenty of real airfields that fighters could use, the problem is our doctrine is based on the expectation of them getting bombed in the opening salvo of any war, that's the reason we have countless strips of highways designated as highway bases, the problem is finding long enough stretches that are also level enough to be used as runways, take >>29486619 for example; you can't tell it from satellite pictures, but even though the road further North-West is still straight, the pictured stretch is the only part of it that's level enough for aircraft (there's a rather steep slope starting right at where the road reaches the edge of the picture), so it's a trade-off between a large number of ~2000m strips or a smaller number of longer strips.
>>
>>29487203
It's longer; these runway requirements are NOT the distance required for the F-35 to take off or stop normally; it's the runway length that's required to be able to safely receive F-35s that have had their brakes, etc fail.
>>
>>29487249
since bombs are cheap, won't every 1000 meter stretch of highway get blasted along with every traditional runway?
>>
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Come to me
In all your glamour and cruelty
Just do that thing that you do
And I'll undress you

We could, we could belong together SUPER DUPER HORNET
>>
>>29480681
>finns flying F-4s

its gonan be like the fucking winter war all over again. just with more thrust
>>
>>29480353

Why not party like worst Korea and pick up the Silent Eagle?
>>
>>29487277
Just don't think you get to do that unopposed. While their planes are trying to destroy everything on their target list (and obviously the longer you can make that list the longer this will take) your planes are hunting their planes.

The more bases you have for them the better, and it's plainly obvious that significantly reducing the length of straight-and-narrow required will dramatically increase the number of bases that can be used - and that must be bombed.
>>
>>29487404
I wouldn't use planes for most if it, just barrages of cruise missiles. I'm sure the location of every fighter is known and plugged into a gps somewhere.
>>
>>29483232
this was the sole intellegent post in this entire thread
>>
>>29487419
You can stop arguing with the delusional gripencuck now, anon.

Its a waste of effort.
>>
>>29487456
>only has 60 fighters
>announce to world that you'll spread them out and use streets as runways
>doesn't think the russians would think to counter this
>still thinks that fighting nazis 70 years ago means they could be the russians 1v1
>but only if they can use 600 foot runways
>>
>>29480353
Gripen, because we know it works, and the cost won't go up.
>>
>>29487505
>the Gripen NG's price has only increased as Saab has realized the problems associated with upgrading an older airframe
>the F35's price has only decreased as production increases

the delusion is too strong
>>
>>29482656
NATO has no obligation to help Finland or Sweden, various heads of NATO has emphazised this repeatedly. Only full member states enjoy the security guarantee.
>>
>>29481480
How are any of these "throwing them under a bus"
>South Korea
America smashed the bus, then isolated it back in it's hermit kingdom

>Taiwan
Taiwan's already in the path of the bus, there's no throwing involved.

>Iran
Turned into the bus.
>>
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>>29483232

>mfw 2 of them where practicing dogfighting over my town and I could see them all day from work.
>>
>>29487589
Can I come live with you?
>>
>>29487589
don't know why but I was reminded of a story I once heard: a guy I know was in Tampere and a fighter flew over while he was waiting for a bus with few other people, and one guy complained about how the fighters were always making so much noise, to which an old lady responded "I don't mind the noise the fighters make as long as they are Finnish", the complainer looked at this lady, old enough to have witnessed WWII, and shut up.
>>
>>29487589

I live in WA state, back in 02 or 03 POTUS flew in for some reason or another. Some bumble fuck in a Cessna didn't get the memo and broke restricted airspace causing F-15's to be scrambled from JBLM, they took up station over my neighborhood. I think I fell in love with aircraft that day.
>>
>>29482114
1809 was fought for but lost due to many reasons. Main reason was an ill preapered army that still lived on the notion that it was the greatest army in the Baltic area.

1939 I can agree on.
>>
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>>29487645

I live on the east coast and I tell you what, all the fuzz the russians are starting up sure helped with getting this place see some action again.

Reminds you of the days when they used to come over the houses so low the porcelain rattled in the in the cabinets and the windows started to shake.

fucking nostalgia trip here boys.
>>
Seems rather suited to the conversation until Finland can pick.

https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/australian-algorithm-extends-life-of-classic-horn-423803/
>>
>>29487874
>The new algorithm has already been applied to Canberra’s fleet of Hornets
wait wat
>>
>>29487374
F-15K is a modified E, not an SE.
>>
>>29487374

Korea said that they were going to buy the Silent Eagle. They later rescinded that statement in favor of the F-35 Lightning II.
>>
>>29481901
>Within 10 years, advances in stealth will make radar pretty much irrelevant.
Fixed for you.
>>
>>29487419
>I wouldn't use planes for most if it, just barrages of cruise missiles
Russia doesn't have infinite amount of Iskanders.
And it sure as hell can't afford to waste them all on Finnish roads.
>>
>>29489248
Kek, why would you need an SRBM for a fucking road?
>>
>>29480353
The Gripen is an F22 killer, so the expensive advanced F-TurtleFive should die rather quickly as well.
>>
>>29483053
I know the viggen is completely outdated but the idea of green troll-fighters emerging from caves to intercept Russians is a cool mental image.

>>29483208
The PRC thing is true. We're constantly playing hot potato with the China issue because the ROC is an ally but we can't recognize them without pissing off a major trading partner. Hopefully we can rein the PRC in a bit, move more of our manufacturing back home, and tell them to go pound sand.
>>
>>29489331
Well memed. 4 Krona have been deposited into your account.


And that was the Rafael, dipshit.
>>
>>29489514
*Rafale
Fuck
>>
>>29489518
*with luneberg lenses equipped to the F-22 in a canned, forced dogfight scenario
>>
>>29480353
Which ever allows the process to be as long and expensive as possible. A lot of people are waiting for that payday.
>>
>>29481181

>something that the finns do not have the need for
>>
>>29480839
Just few weeks ago Bogdan in congressional hearing said the reboot process takes over an minute to complete
>>
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>>29487295
>>29486708

OTP
>>
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>>29489649
Don't smash the poor fanboys dreams with facts, you monster!

Really the computer system is probably the biggest problem with the entire project. For some inexplicable reason they decided to save money by having it done in C++. Whoever signed off on that decision should seriously be sentence to hard labor for life, and I only say that because I am against the death penalty in principle. It's really impossible to exaggerate just how awful a decision that was. It guarantees that the system will never work right. Which guarantees continued contracts to keep 'fixing' it I guess.
>>
>>29489729
Yeah but it's C++ so you're allowed to use exceptions. Death penalty.
>>
>>29489729

>Whoever signed off on that decision should seriously be sentence to hard labor for life, and I only say that because I am against the death penalty in principle.
But anon, that's why development decisions like this are diffused between dozens to hundreds of people.
>>
>>29489788
That's when the death penalty gets applied to the entire executive team and board of directors.
>>
>>29489729

Didn't the military toss some ADA in there just for the fuck of it?
>>
>>29489821
Most of it's actually done in ADA, IIRC. There's also some Assembly in there.
>>
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>>29489834
Technically correct but deceptive.

As of 2009-2010 the system was reported to break down:


7% Assembly,
5% Ada 83,
35% C++, and
53% C.

But everything added since and everything to be added in the future is in C or C++. The majority C++. The only parts that are done in Ada are bits that were brought over mostly whole from the F-22.

The F-22 will wind up being a better plane even in roles it really wasnt designed for simply because it has a computer system that can be relied upon. The F-35 does not and never will have that.
>>
The Finnish Air force usually have exercises above my town. The fact that they are considering F-35's makes me all giddy. I'd love to see one in person.

But realistically, I don't see us ever being able to afford them.
>>
>>29482019
>F-16C block 40
More like block 52 but still over two decades old.
Gripen development got left to rot in a corner after the soviet collapsed, the only difference between A/B and C/D is conversion from the metrical system to nautical for NATO standardization.
Not that it matters in this context, it's Gripen E/F that's up for sale.
>>
>>29490028

I actually think that the Gripen would be better for nice airshows. And you are part of the cross border training programe twice a week wich includes swedish Gripens and soon norwegian F-35s so you might see some anyway.

There was a few finnish fighter pilots at my airbase here in sweden today, they seemed nice.
>>
>>29482179
Rafale might be an even match for gripen NG but the Eurofighter is a burning piece of trash whose development cycle makes the F-35 look like a nice, cheap and clean affair.
>>
>>29490067
Yeah the Gripen would make most sense, and you Swedes have made quite the reputation for make sweet ass planes.
>>
>>29482488
It's not the C/D that'son offer.
You also can't put a price on the added bonus of no getting massively fucked in the ass by lockmart. Having to ship over experts from the US when the software fucks up is not very fun.
>>
>>29490048

>the only difference between A/B and C/D is conversion from the metrical system to nautical for NATO standardization.

As someone who has sat in the cockpit of operational aircraft of both the A and C variant, i know you are lying.

But you are correct that that is a bit irrelevant now that the E is the new thing.

The Gripen has one of the worlds best computer to human interface according to a very experienced pilot. I cant seem to link the sauce as 4chan thinks its spam.

(I will gladly link it [in swedish] if anyone knows how to bypass this spam thing)
>>
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>>29483708
>allying with russia

There is a reason why literary everybody who has ever been under russian rule hates them with burning passion.
Russians are a people of troglodyte goblins living in a constant misery and whose only source of enjoyment is to bring their neighbors to a level of worse misery than themselves.
>>
Brazil has agreed to buy 36 Gripen E for 4.6 billion USD

Japan has agreed to buy 42 F-35As for 10 billion USD

Tell me again how cheap the F-35 is becomming.
>>
>>29490168

BRfag here.

I got so cheap for us because we're participating on the project. The BR version will be different from the Swedish. >>29482282
>>
Mark my words, it'll be a toss-up between Gripen, Rafale and F-15FIN.
>>
>>29490134
Try replacing the . with (dot)

Also, what are the main differences in the cockpit layout between the A and C? Only ever been in a C.
>>
>>29490076
Agreed, the Rafale's BVR abilities are astounding
>>
>>29490168
This is partly because of rather significant technology transfers the US made to Japan so it could produce its own F-35 parts. The price also includes the lifetime maintenance cost for each plane.

Meanwhile Saab is basically just selling Brazil a license to build their own Gripens.
>>
>>29490263

>Meanwhile Saab is basically just selling Brazil a license to build their own Gripens.
Not the other anon, but I'm pretty sure that's still technology transfer...

Although to your point, I was wondering if the respective contracts account for lifetime costs differently.
>>
>>29490260
>BVR abilities
>Doesn't even have a BVR missile yet

Plus I'm pretty sure the Typhoon has a better radar
>>
>>29490277
>Not the other anon, but I'm pretty sure that's still technology transfer...

The Gripen's technologies aren't nearly as sensitive as what's in the F-35. Japan got a lot of valuable stealth and avionics data that they plan to use in the F-3.
>>
>>29490277
The usual Saab offering has been everything except man hours and fluids
>>
>>29490263
There is no such thing as "just selling a license" when it comes to modern fighter jets.
>>
>the current year
>not choosing the Typhoon

It's like they hate europeans.
>>
>>29490284
Thatsthejoke.jpg
>>
>>29489729
>>29489739
>>29489788
>>29489802
>>29489821
>>29489834
>>29489925
>Software development for the most advanced fighter ever is difficult
"Hurr see we shouldn't bother guize dump all da crrnt work down duh drainz lol!"
>>
>>29490134
There are a million ways, for instance you could google 'hex encode'

for instance the link to this thread hex-encoded is 687474703A2F2F626F617264732E346368616E2E6F72672F6B2F7468726561642F3239343830333533

and anyone worth talking with will know how to decode it at a glance.
>>
>>29490303
It is when around 30 of those Gripens are going to be completely domestically manufactured in Brazil.
>>
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>>29490263
>>29490277

This Gripen deal is more than just tech transfer. Lot of stuff been happening between our AF, Embraer and SAAB.

Swedes might even get KC-390s and they modernized the E/R-99s
>>
>>29490313
Tiffie is amazing at high and fast with massive radar, the game is however moving away from that concept. If they pick a cuckcanards, it'll be either Rafale or Gripen (if Saab can deliver on its promises) depending on how much Finnish Air Force values flight performance
>>
>>29490291

Indeed, which is what the additional cost actually comes down to as far as I can tell. Better aircraft.

Still, I wonder if congress should have just sold F-22J. Surely the Japanese are reliable about keeping the JSDF Chinese-free.

>>29490342

Right, and there seems to be broader industrial base cooperation with you guys.
>>
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>>29490330
WTF are you really too stupid to read?
>>
>>29490368
The last post is a moron claiming the F-22 is better because it has a dumber computer and less code while ignoring every advantage the F-35's advanced systems give, so yes, I read, did you?
>>
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>>29490363

We did the same thing with the Italians.
>>
>>29490342
Also another thing to keep in mind is that Japan was not a development partner for the F-35, so they don't get the nice discounts other nations are getting.
>>
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Speaking of Eurocanards, why is everyone always claiming the Rafale to be miles ahead of everyone when fucking no one wants them?
Both Gripen and EuroFighter has sold better despite France and Dassault had like cornered the market selling Mirages to everyone.
The only big order for the Rafale is India and that one got slashed from +100 to like 36 and even that deal isn't even signed yet.

What makes the Rafale everyone's favorite pet eurocanard while no one buys it IRL?
>>
>>29490447
Typhoon and Gripen don't trap you into a fuck-fuck support plan with Dassault and the French government and limited payload selection that isn't joint NATO gear.
>>
>>29490334
A license is sold on things like rifles and munitions.
Brazil has no way of making a comparable fighter of heir own so a major tech transfer is what it is.
>>
>>29490447

Expensive as fuck for what it is.
>>
>>29490447
>while no one buys it IRL?
Isn't it because the Rafale uses proprietary weapons?
>>
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>>29490431

I honestly though they'd go for the F-18 or at max F-22s.

Do Russians with their cheeky sukhois fly on Japanese airspace as well?
>>
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Gripen is the only true choice here! Gripen is a great jet and is relative easy to maintain.
>>
>>29484954
That's not what South Africa says
>>
>>29490447

Q-Qatar too!

>>29490500

The F-22 was what they wanted. The sale was blocked in 2007.
>>
>>29490519

>The sale was blocked in 2007

Why?
>>
>>29490529
Congress forbade any export of the F-22.
>>
>>29490500
They originally wanted the F-22 but at the time it was cutting edge tech that Congress didn't want anybody else to have until the F-35 got into gear.

And yes, Japan does have territorial grievances with Russia.
>>
>>29490548

Security concerns. Too bad they didn't know at the time that the Chinese were going to pilfer US networks for critical F-22 testing and development data anyway.
>>
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>>29490485
>>29490478
>>29490470
>limited loadout
India must have known that when they selected it for MRCA, right?

>aww sick new fighter jet you bought Pajeet! What can it carry?
>hold on Raju, lemme check
>...
>well?
>fucking frogs, thank Vishnu I saved the receipt
>>
>>29490529
Probably the biggest reason is that the F-22's stealth is high maintenance, which means regular supply to overseas users is a great way for RAM to "fall off the truck" and go to China and Russia. F-35's requires a complete panel replacement if damaged.

That, and political fuck-fuck games.
>>
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>>29490548

So now they'll sell the F-35 which it has even for sensible tech?

>>29490549

I know about the islands. But do Russians get into their Air Space with nuclear bombers, SU-27s and all that?
>>
>>29490529

http://thediplomat.com/2015/05/imagine-f-22-raptors-for-export/

>The unstated reason for this ban was suspicion that Israel would, if it gained access to the F-22, transfer technology associated with the aircraft to Russia or China. The United States cannot, as a political matter of course, single out Israel for a ban on the sale of advanced technology, and so the F-22 export ban covered all potential buyers.
>>
>>29490573
>But do Russians get into their Air Space with nuclear bombers, SU-27s and all that?
Yes
If there is a nation within operational range of a TU-95, they will get a visit, no exceptions.
Those things are like bedbugs.
>>
>>29490431

Finland isnt a partner so that is kind of a retarded point.
>>
>>29490592

>Singaporean F-22s
That would have been h y p e.

Dammit, fuck the techno-jew.
>>
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>>29490399
No you clearly are too dumb to read.
>>Software development for the most advanced fighter ever is difficult
>"Hurr see we shouldn't bother guize dump all da crrnt work down duh drainz lol!"

Literally no one said anything like that. Even what you say next doesn't match that

>The last post is a moron claiming the F-22 is better because it has a dumber computer and less code while ignoring every advantage the F-35's advanced systems give, so yes, I read, did you?

Yeah you're the only one that's said any of that.

The F-22's computer system is better because it is *reliable* which is something that requires real software engineers and real planning and sticking to a real design. This is an expensive and time-consuming process that is appropriate when the consequences of a software bug are likely to include loss of lives.

On the F-35 they *chose* to use a development methodology more familiar to those who work in less rigorous applications, and the result is predictable.
>>
>>29490529
>EuroFighter has sold better
And how many of them are outside the consortium building them?

>Gripen [C/D]
Different market segment

Early 00's frogs opted to sell out Mirage 2000's instead of then half finished Rafales, then 2008 happened. By the time someone was seriously considering any new jets Rafale had had its "combat proven"-badge glued on, F3 standard finished, etc and if you haven't noticed it has been selling quite well recently
>>
>>29490229
Still thinks its spam.

It was a post on wiseman wisdoms made in may 2015 called "Operativ effekt är inte detsamma som billigaste lösningen" you could try to google it.

The cockpit might look similar but the displays are way better and the way the system presents information to the pilot is improved in a way that is a bit difficult to explain. Basically it it has developed from telling you "You have x liters of fuel left in the tanks" to "you can land on airbases within x km with the current ammount of fuel.
>>
>>29480353

The one country that would really benefit from the Gripen NG would be Taiwan. They want F-35B but the USA will not sell them to Taiwan. The Gripen's ability to take-off with less than 800 meters of runway could be an asset for them.
>>
>>29490629
The F-22 also has something like a quarter of the total code and none of the complex sensor integration. You are literally saying the F-22 is better like an Apache server is better than Deep Blue.
>>
>>29490612
But muh $80m F-35 cheaper than $130m Gripen agruments
>>
>>29490688

Take off can be done in about 4 - 500 meters with a light load.

With two RBS-15 ASM and two sidewinders its close to 800 m.

Sauce?
I have seen it with my own eyes as I work in the SwAF.
>>
>>29490699
Kek

85 million USD is really only realistic for the US. Export sales will for sure be a lot more expensive...

Same of course applies for the Gripen.
>>
>>29490682
>wisemanswisdoms blogspot se/2015/05/operativ-effekt-ar-inte-detsamma-som.html
Looks like gookmoot has stepped up the game in the war against links.
>>
It's the fucking landing distance that is the limiting factor you retards. Only thing in that what matters are approach speed, weight of the plane and breaking implements. Gripen with its low wing loading (that approach speed), low weight and canards + a set of air brakes wins in this category hands down any other conventionally landing plane
>>
>>29490688

If Beijing starts deploying S-400s in the SCS (not necessarily likely, but they're already building up IADS there so why not), I imagine the White House would become much more inclined to furnish Taiwan with 5G aircraft. And if Cruz wins the election, I suspect an F-35 sale would only be a matter of time.
>>
>>29490781
>Let's counter an IADS designed to defeat stealth with stealth fighters
wew lad
>>
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>>29490698
Dude the fact that the computer system is so important to so many of the F-35s claimed/planned capabilities rely on that computer is exactly why reliability is MORE, not less important than on the F-22. If there is any part of the entire project where it's absolutely critical to do things properly instead of cutting corners, it's there. The plane will/should eventually have such incredible capabilities, and yet most of them disappear... wait 2 minutes for boot and you'll have radar again. This is the world's most advanced plane? What?
>>
>>29490781

Washington hasn't even accepted the idea of letting the Taiwans buy slightly less out-of-date F-16's yet. There is no way in hell that they're getting F-35. Like I said, they should just go ahead and order Gripen NG from Sweden. It fits their needs and they're not getting anything better from the US.
>>
>>29490313
The Typhoon is too old to be the solution up to 2050's.
>>
>>29490834
You do know that most of the things you're bitching about will be fixed in Block 3f or one of the later versions, right? It's not like older planes where once the software is done it's locked into firmware and set in stone.

And, again, the active radar is the F-35's least important sensor.
>>
>>29482313
That is true, but the degree to which that is true has gone down over time. The people who work on rader have known about that issue for longer then the F-117 and follow up designs have been a thing. Rather then go into the what has been improved on rader for the past 30 years they have mostly fixed that issue. Modern Russian search radar have lowered the effective radar horizon to 100 ft. In the future people will be using radar aimed at the ground to detect infantry .

http://northamerica.airbus-group.com/north-america/usa/Airbus-Defense-and-Space/SPEXER/SPEXER-2000.html

That system is in active use since 2014 at the Saudi-Iraq barrier.
>>
>>29490821

No, that certainly wouldn't be the rationale for selling F-35s to Taiwan. The US doesn't make ANY military sale to Taiwan under the auspices of defense against Chinese encroachment or aggression, not explicitly.

Leaving that aside, the F-35 would be more survivable against advanced air defenses than upgraded F-16s or fucking Gripens. And they're generally superior aircraft. Not that it would be up to Taiwan to destroy emplacements in the Spratlys anyway.

>>29490853

I guarantee you that the Swedish government has zero (0) interest in trying to muscle in on one of the most consistent defense-industrial relationships in modern history only to piss off both China and the US by doing so.

Also, I'm pretty sure the F-16V is still bound for sale to Taiwan.
>>
>>29490914
>You do know that most of the things you're bitching about will be fixed in Block 3f or one of the later versions, right? It's not like older planes where once the software is done it's locked into firmware and set in stone.

No actually we know for a fact that what I am bitching about is not to ever be fixed ffs man!

>>29489925
>everything added since and everything to be added in the future is in C or C++. The majority C++. The only parts that are done in Ada are bits that were brought over mostly whole from the F-22.

The bulk of this should have been done in Ada/Spark other appropriate mission critical languages from the start. In practice the only code written in that sort of language seems to be the stuff they managed to keep from the F-22's system, it was only 5% of the total code in 2010 so it might be .5% of the code now.

This is why it crashes. You can bandaid specific problem after specific problem but you will keep having problems because the rot goes down to the basement. This won't keep them from flying and making lots of money and even being amazing combat aircraft most of the time. But they'll never be really reliable with that sort of 'brain' you see?
>>
>>29487404
>>29487493
Not that guy, but I'd imagine the point is that in any scenario where Russia is attacking Finland they'd also be at war with many other countries at the same time. Considering that Russia didn't even have enough PGMs to warrant using them in Syria after a couple of weeks I imagine it would be a logistical nightmare to try and bomb every potential runway in Finland while also waging a conflict against NATO. And NATO gets a rather nippy little force of 5 dozen 4+ fighters that can pop out of a street and blast a Blackjack before it bombs Belarus(I mean realistically they couldn't protect Belarus but the alliteration was worth it). This is of course assuming that NATO can launch enough SEAD attacks to keep S-400s out of the game.

So it seems that a Gripen force is much better than a stealth force, because that's already covered. They're fucked against Russia either way, but this strategy means they could actually be relevant in an air war instead of being put out of the game immediately.
>>
>>29490976

Anon your alliteration flat-out doesn't make sense.
>>
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>>29491081
...you're right. It doesn't.
>>
>>29486613

Holy shit that was taken in my city a month ago. I saw them flying in formation while I was walking my dog
>>
I have a real concern about the F-35's development schedule and eventual reliability. But let's say the plane works as marketed. Is it really as sluggish and poor fighter as they say? We really need a plane, which can beat any Russian plane in the hands of an average pilot, so having hangars full of expensive paperweights is not an option.
>>
>>29491678
It already flies as marketed. Just because a testbed model with highly restrictive control laws flew like a Hornet against a Viper doesn't mean it's a bad dogfighter, which seems to be the sole basis for this "slow and sluggish" memery.

The F-35 is a genuine upgrade, but you've been caught in the Fighter Mafia meme that fighter procurement is always wrong.
>>
>>29491778
How about the comparisons made in this blog?
http://bestfighter4canada.blogspot.fi/
Do they have any weight to them? The candidates are basically the same.
>>
>>29491857
Look at the writer, an EMT.
>>
>>29491778
That test didn't test how good it was in dogfighting but how to improve on the control laws, and importantly the leaked report didn't criticize the plane on losing to viper but the severe energy disadvantage F-35 had. That later is a disadvantage that can't be fixed with a software patch and will affect the planes performance outside the WVR sphere as well, what comes to "knife fighting", yes F-35 will fare better with a functioning HMD and missiles but if that plane ever finds itself in that type of situation everything has already gone horribly wrong for it.
>>
>>29492022
An energy disadvantage that can be compensated for with the right tactics, and even then, everything loses to the Viper of you make it a pure energy/sustained turn comparison.
>>
>>29491137

It happens.
>>
>>29491678
>But let's say the plane works as marketed. Is it really as sluggish and poor fighter as they say?

I don't think anyone posting here has flown one. Having read reports both positive and negative from those who have and compared the technical specs, most say it sucks as a dogfighter (but isn't supposed to dogfight so that's ok) and the technical specs show it has less thrust per pound and less lift and control than any plane that is considered a good dogfighter, by a good margin. So hopefully we can consider that settled. It's NOT a good dogfighter and it's not intended to dogfight.

Dogfighting shouldn't happen very often in modern air warfare anyway, though it's still nice to be able to now and then. But we have the F-22 which is without a doubt the worlds best so maybe it makes sense for the F-35 not to even try there.

Bigger issue is that virtually everything relies on a flaky computer system that is still barely a quarter done and is poorly designed.
>>
>>29492340
That's part of the problem. If the F-35 is designed to compliment the F-22, can it really be considered an option for a country without F-22s? So is the real question here, which plane can compete with F-22 in terms of performance?
>>
>>29492384

>If the F-35 is designed to compliment the F-22
Your words, not anon's.

Regardless, yes, the F-35 is still the best option for a country without F-22s. Most countries without F-22s (which is to say, most countries that are not the United States) are not wealthy enough to justify paying for that kind of dedicated air dominance platform anyway, and instead emphasize the procurement of multi-role aircraft. The F-35, representing the cutting edge of multi-role capability, with biases towards BVR and strike capabilities, is therefore the best choice.
>>
>>29492460
You mention strike capabilities. What about defensive operations? Most of the operations our fighters would have to do in wartime would be interceptor operations.

And is stealth the key advantage over any competitor? Hypothetically, what would happen, if F-35 would lose its stealth? Would it still be the best choice?
>>
>>29492504

>Hypothetically, what would happen, if F-35 would lose its stealth? Would it still be the best choice?
Then you still have an aircraft that can carry 4-6 AMRAAMs without impacting aerodynamic characteristics and which maintains extraordinary battlespace integration with allied forces.
>>
>>29492504
In defensive situations what there would be is aggressors in non-stealth 4/4.5 gen fighters heavily reliant on radar or silent, pre-planned strike packages, which wouldn't evade the sensor suite on an F-35. What the F-35 also gives you is an airborne, real-time mini-AWACS capability that can react faster than the aggressors can adapt to being detected and engaged.

STEALTH. IS. NOT. AN. ON. OFF. SWITCH.
Despite Russian bluster there is no frequency that can provide useful ID and track on current stealth at "we're not already fucked" ranges, to start with. Then you add in adept mapping and having control over the decision to evade, drive through, or engage air defenses. And where the F-35 really shines is that the external stores multiply it's strike capabilities after Roll-Back is finished.
>>
>>29492613
Weight of the IWB's affects the aerodynamic characteristics, so does the extra width of the hull caused by those IWB and the weight of the carried weapons. Calling those factors non-existent is fooling yourself.
>>
>>29492340
>I don't think anyone posting here has flown one. Having read reports both positive and negative from those who have and compared the technical specs, most say it sucks as a dogfighter (but isn't supposed to dogfight so that's ok) and the technical specs show it has less thrust per pound and less lift and control than any plane that is considered a good dogfighter, by a good margin. So hopefully we can consider that settled. It's NOT a good dogfighter and it's not intended to dogfight.

The thing is, it's NOT settled. An F35 at 50% fuel and 4 AMRAAMs compared to an F16 with the same 4 AMRAAMs and full fuel, (similar capabilities with this fuel load, range, afterburner time), the F35 has a greater thrust to weight ratio. The 'flying experience' advantage pilots seem to remark upon the most with the F35 is its apparent engine power and acceleration, as compared to other aircraft they've flown. Even in the worst case scenario, this combined with its high AoA performance would more likely make the F35 an 'adequate' dogfighter, not a straight up inferior one.

Nevermind its advantages in other areas nor how HOBS IR missiles changes the dogfighting situation for ALL equipped aircraft.
>>
>>29492613
But don't the other fighters carry way more missiles and have at least equally capable communication and software?

>>29492666
Russia does have stealth fighters though. Or at least will have by the time we'll go to war, if the schedule holds.

Another question. We'll most likely have around 60 fighters. One of the main selling points of Gripens is the short turnaround time and easy maintenance. Could 60 F-35s keep our airspace clean 24/7 during war or would there be service gaps?
>>
>>29492733
Not to mention how the combination of its insane AoA capabilities with helmet-cued HOBS missiles mean the pilot can likely snapshot inside the missile's envelope even faster and with greater surprise to the opponent.
>>
>>29492731

Contemplating a hypothetical scenario where the F-35 suddenly "loses" stealth is similarly foolish.

Also, do you think that a weapon's weight changes depending on whether or not it is internally or externally carried?

>>29492769

>But don't the other fighters carry way more missiles and have at least equally capable communication and software?
No.
>>
>>29492769
No, the F-35 can carry more internal + external.
>>
>>29492769
>Russia does have stealth fighters though. Or at least will have by the time we'll go to war, if the schedule holds.
>PAK-FA
>Stealth
lolno, not by a long shot. Even their own data puts it in Eurocanard range.

>Another question. We'll most likely have around 60 fighters. One of the main selling points of Gripens is the short turnaround time and easy maintenance. Could 60 F-35s keep our airspace clean 24/7 during war or would there be service gaps?
Here's the big thing about the F-35: Modularity. The F-35 is built to make maintenance easy and fast, and, most importantly, to self-diagnose issues so nobody's dicking around inside hunting out a failure point. The engine slides out the back, and the chamber is big enough for maintenance to kneel inside of. The control surfaces have separate, independent electro-hydrodynamic actuators. In service it will have tiny repair hour counts compared to 4th gen, the problem rigfht now is that everyone's using the ultrastrict procedures for testing and iterational development maintenance as if they are true for post FOC.
>>
>>29492797
>>29492822
Correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't the F-35 lose it's stealth, if it uses the external hardpoints? I also found a spec sheet, which says that the F-35 has 4 internal and 6 external hardpoints, so 10 in total and the competitors have 10-14. The payload seems to be above average but only when you put some of it outside the frame.

How do the communication systems and software stack up between the different fighters?

>>29492863
It's always best to prepare for the worst though.

And I guess that sounds reasonable, if it will work like that, when the plane is finished in the future.
>>
File: on-stealth-aircraft.jpg (28KB, 638x479px) Image search: [Google]
on-stealth-aircraft.jpg
28KB, 638x479px
>>29492769
There's no question the Raptor (which is what's being compared here) is a much more effective plane, but it also requires a lot more time on the ground for maint.
>>
>>29492917
Well the F-22s aren't sold to anyone, so how would the F-35 fare in a similar comparison?
>>
>>29492911
>Correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't the F-35 lose it's stealth, if it uses the external hardpoints?
It's lowered, but by that point anything that requires full stealth is dead, so it doesn't matter.

>How do the communication systems and software stack up between the different fighters?
There's no comparison, the comms, sensors, and how it's all tied together are decades ahead of everything else.

>And I guess that sounds reasonable, if it will work like that, when the plane is finished in the future.
It's not "if."
http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/absolute-youngest-marine-in-the-f-35-test-force-shares-1716981177
>“Next-generation is an understatement when applied to F-35. Keep in mind that this is the perspective of a maintainer, because they never would let me fly the darn thing. There was not a moment when I wasn’t infatuated with some detail of its construction, mission, or engineering. The maintainability factor is absolutely huge in comparison to platforms such as the F/A-18 or the AV-8B. In many cases, the aircraft seems as though it was designed with end-user practicality in mind, as opposed to the Hornet’s “need to replace a hydraulic pump? Great, remove all other things first” and the Harrier’s “engine replacement? That’s two wings coming off, baby!” Gone are the days of awful hi-torque fasteners that strip themselves out every time you look at them wrong. Behold, hex tips!
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