What would Canada do with F-35 aircraft? Fisheries monitoring?![]()
With all due respect to Eaglesmack and yourself; the Iraqi Army and the Republican guard were not equipped with the latest stuff from either Russia or China and the greatest advantage the Abrahams has is it's fire control optics and range of weapon.Like Eaglesmack said in an earlier tank discussion, critics claimed for years that the M1 would not be suitable for the desert. That the engines would clog with sand. Look what the M1 did in the Iraq desert. It blew the smithereens out of the opponent.
I think that's an excellent idea. The Badley Grasshopper is the most versatile, high-performing MRCA in the world!We've chosen badly grasshoppers.
With all due respect to Eaglesmack and yourself; the Iraqi Army and the Republican guard were not equipped with the latest stuff from either Russia or China and the greatest advantage the Abrahams has is it's fire control optics and range of weapon.
This hypothetical battle took place in an Asian theater with friendly airbase density far greater than our northern theater and although it describes the earlier generation of F-22, an aircraft with better stealth and thrust vectoring than the F-35, one can easily anticipate what would happen in our northern zones with Canada not having the economic capabilities to launch them in any numbers nor the refueling aircraft to support them while engaged in combat or loitering up there patrolling.
I think that's an excellent idea. The Badley Grasshopper is the most versatile, high-performing MRCA in the world!
Nah, we've already seen that a bunch of Stone Age teddy bears can take them out.Hopping Armored vehicles would offer a great tactical advantage.
Sorry Kreskin, but again with all due respect that is simply not the case as the versions used in Iraq were still of the gas turbine variety and they needed to stop frequently for refueling with one notable occasion enabling the escape of the entire Republican Guard armour while they were being refueled due to them having used speed at the cost of fuel consumption to get with in range of them.But critics of the Abrahams said the desert sand would clog the engines. It was the military-decision outrage of the day. When all the bluster ws said and done the tank went clear across the Iraqi desert.
Sorry Kreskin, but again with all due respect that is simply not the case as the versions used in Iraq were still of the gas turbine variety and they needed to stop frequently for refueling with one notable occasion enabling the escape of the entire Republican Guard armour while they were being refueled due to them having used speed at the cost of fuel consumption to get with in range of them.
They also refined their entire engine change out procedure to enable engine module changes in 15 minutes purely due to the fact those things ingested desert sand at an incredible rate with filters clogging constantly.
In short; not one of those tanks went "clear across the desert" without needing to stop frequently for maintenance, very frequent re- fueling.
All tanks are subject to the problems associated with operating in the desert but a gas turbine one suffers more than a diesel one.
My last post was an attempt to mitigate this somewhat, but anyway. They did escape the initial attempt to engage them because just as your tanks got within range they required a refueling stop while the Guard ran for the hills requiring you once again to chase them down to engage them. That was not the original intended battle plan.BruSan... the entire Republican Guard did not escape. They were beaten pretty badly as a matter of fact.
Battle of Medina and Battle of 73 Easting... look it up.
Yes... tanks need to refuel. Not a revelation there.
My last post was an attempt to mitigate this somewhat, but anyway. They did escape the initial attempt to engage them because just as your tanks got within range they required a refueling stop while the Guard ran for the hills requiring you once again to chase them down to engage them. That was not the original intended battle plan.
Once again; don't misunderstand my opposition to the F-35 as a blanket denigration of the aircraft. It will undoubtedly develop into a formidable platform BUT it does not have those essentials for far north operation that will be enjoyed by nearly every one of it's likely opponents: speed, range, and engine redundancy. Partial stealth is of little use to you when you're running out of fuel and are slower and less capable of loitering to use that stealth effectively.
Talk to any of the authoritative sources within the air combat fraternity and they will invariably choose any one of the OTHER existing aircraft to use as their primary interceptor weapon for the far north.
In keeping with Canada's mission of defence rather than offensive capabilities, we need a long range, FAST, multiple weapons capable, multi engined, very maneuverable platform to engage the LIKELY opponents and even after the F-35 attains full operational readiness it will not service those parameters.
Please keep in mind we are not the United States with multiples of aircraft choices available for all theaters of operations where a combat situation can lead to an officer asking the question based upon satellite or air cover radar platforms flying overhead "what are they throwing at us" and then choose any one of probably at least four other aircraft better suited to engage.
My last post was an attempt to mitigate this somewhat, but anyway. They did escape the initial attempt to engage them because just as your tanks got within range they required a refueling stop while the Guard ran for the hills requiring you once again to chase them down to engage them. That was not the original intended battle plan.
Once again I did NOT make this about those damn tanks! They performed well and are now, after modifications learned from that experience, much better prepared for any desert warfare.
My points are:
The F-35 is not being designed with our needs paramount among it's requirements. It will never have multiple engines. It will never have speed in it's quiver. It will never have fuel range. It will never have ability to engage with it's likely opposition in the far north.
We will need to perform any number of additional considerations to make the thing anywhere near usable or effective up there involving everything from building multiple operating airfields for them to operate from to having way more of them to having multiples of refueling platforms readily available from those same bases. To date none of those additional ABSOLUTELY required resources have even been mentioned.
We have a current interception ability based upon 60's technology of getting an early warning of monitored aircraft entering or approaching our airspace, we then launch F-18s to go after-burner to reach them, give them the finger from the cockpit and after they obligingly turn away after performing their designated "test" of our response our aircraft then cruise speed to conserve fuel back to base......helllooooo. Where does using an aircraft without even the current speed and range capability fit into that scenario?
Now factor in a very possible cockpit warning light occasioning just one of those to mission cancel and what have you left?
I've attended two aircraft flight display demonstrations in the U.S. where the Raptors were unable to perform at all due to electronic glitches, so the attendant F-15's and even the venerable P-51 had to lengthen their program to keep the crowd entertained and fill out the time slots. We (either the U.S. or Canada) can ill afford that behaviour in a like aircraft in a far tougher environment such as over the far north.
Of course I'm aware of the difference of the F-22 to the F-35 but the F-35 is sharing so much of the same technology and development paths we cannot discount those issues the F-35 will have in parallel to the F-22's well known reliability problems. Canada cannot afford to simply accept a do-over, we have neither the economy or the plurality of aircraft availability to accommodate development happening WHILE USING them.You see BruSan... what you are saying what happened and what actually happened are so far apart. The Republican Guard armor was not able to get away during a refueling stop.
The Republican Guard was battered silly by US Armored Forces at the Battle of Medina and the Battle of 73 Easting. The Republican Guard was absolutely mauled. Only during a Republican Guard counter attack were some elements able to escape annihilation.
You need to really look up those two battles and stop yourself.
As far as your analysis of the F-35 we can simply say we've heard it all before. Every weapons platform has it's critics.
You are aware that the F-35 is not the Raptor aren't you?
"It was the 1991 Persian Gulf War that highlighted the limits of the Abrams' specialized design and Army doctrine. Charging through the Iraqi desert west of Kuwait, the Army's VII Corps struggled to keep four armored and mechanized divisions synchronized (tanks and other vehicles moving together) for a simultaneous attack on the Iraqi Republican Guard. Synchronization meant frequent stops and slow downs to keep a common pace among thousands of vehicles. The Corps could only move as fast as the slowest element if it was to stay together. Most telling, when units halted to refuel, the Abrams' tanks were empty while other vehicles, including tracked Bradley Fighting Vehicles, had quarter- and even half-filled fuel tanks. The pace of the battle was slowed in a way the corps commander didn't believe he could change. The Abrams drank too much gas and Army doctrine said that synchronization was vital. He couldn't abandon the Abrams and he felt desynchronizing his force would result in friendly fire. The "slow" pace of VII Corps is blamed by some for the escape of Republican Guard elements in the last days of the war."
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Sorry Kreskin, but again with all due respect that is simply not the case as the versions used in Iraq were still of the gas turbine variety and they needed to stop frequently for refueling with one notable occasion enabling the escape of the entire Republican Guard armour while they were being refueled due to them having used speed at the cost of fuel consumption to get with in range of them.
Big change from this...
I do not recall anyone saying they performed without flaw. They performed way above... FAR ABOVE... expectations of some critics. Before it all kicked off our tanks were doomed to flounder according to many "experts".
The more I research these two particular aircraft the less I like our chances in any kind of encounter if all our eggs are in the F-35 basket..Just how do you show stealthy aircraft aren't flying?
Simple; count the ones on the ground undergoing attempts to make them operate as designed.Just how do you show stealthy aircraft aren't flying?