Comments by "LRRPFco52" (@LRRPFco52) on "The Infographics Show"
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Every assertion in this video is incorrect so far, and I’m only at 3:06. The program goes back to 1983, and was joint UK/USMC/USAF for the SSF/ASTOVL way before JAST or JSF. The silly mission profile they represented in the beginning? Yeah, Israel started doing strikes with F-35s into Syria in 2017, USMC in 2018, and USAF in 2019 and nobody stopped. Video post date is Oct 2020. Numerous articles from USMC, USAF, and Israeli news document this in detail, to include availability rates, numbers of bombs dropped, sorties flown, different mission sets accomplished in single sorties, how USMC F-35Bs working off an LHD in the Red Sea covered targets from Syria to Afghanistan, and how once the UAE saw what the F-35 is capable of, were willing to make a peace deal with Israel so they could be cleared to buy F-35As as well. The future referred to in this video is years old already, with far more complex mission sets, threats, and responses.
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@ClamBake7525 They humiliate the F-15C in A2A. They beat F-22A in A2A in LFEs since 2017, according to both Raptor and F-35A pilot interviews.
They do F-117A's job better than it ever could, and it has a stellar record of 2000 combat sorties with only 1 loss.
They do all the Viper models' jobs better than they can whether it be D-SEAD, CSAR, strike, A2A, and CAS.
They have ISTAR capabilities that smoke the U-2S, RQ-4, and MQ-9.
They have exponentially better SA than any AWACS has ever had, with superior data transfer and connectivity.
They have EW/EA capability Growlers wish they had.
C Model has 100nm+ more combat radius than the Tomcat did, plus it networks with Poseidon, RQ-4C, E-2D, Super Bug, and Surface Warfare vessels with an integrated fleet air defense/maritime patrol/AS swingrole, omnirole set.
I did a detailed analysis of the individual capabilities and mission sets of legacy fighter, strike, EW, and various aircraft platforms, and JSF simply matches or exceeds them all even in their specific domains.
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Have you done a cost analysis on what it would have been if we funded, produced, and maintained the following:
ASTOVL
Supersonic STOVL Fighter (to replace the UK and USMC AV-8 Harrier IIs eventually)
Common Affordable Lightweight Fighter (to replace F-16s)
Agile Falcon (Currently flown by Japan, each airframe was $171 million-more than F-22 Raptors)
Advanced Tactical Aircraft (Navy stealth flying wing-$2 billion was spent on R&D for it, cancelled)
A/X- US Navy stealth program after the ATA was cancelled
Because the DoD and Congress did a cost analysis on what it would have been to not only fund these, but to cut these down to 3 and see how that worked out. Turns out that even with 3 of the above programs eliminated, it was going to be astronomical to fund the independent service-driven programs, so it was suggested, “What if we go with a common avionics and propulsion and as many subsystem common component approach, while each of the services gets its own airframe design?”
Thus was born JAST and eventually JSF. This was really the best way to go when looking at cost and efficiency.
None of the proposed airframes and separate avionics systems would have added a practical benefit overall because different radars and engines would create separate supply chains with spiraled costs, and radars and engines are 50% of the aircraft cost.
By combining efforts and buying power, they ended up with the world’s most advanced, most capable AESA radar that exceeds the capabilities of the F-22’s bigger AESA, with the world’s most powerful fighter engine, and the lowest radar cross section and tiny IR signature of any other fighter in the world. They also carry more internal fuel than any other single engine fighters out there by a huge margin, to the extent that combat radius is superb with the JSF series.
Things are not what they seem on the surface of the ignoverse.
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@pauloaz496 I just looked up 2024 DoD Comptroller hourly rates for fixed wing:
F-35A $17,525
F-35B $16,309
F-35C $13,310
USN F-16A Adversary $29,160
USN F-16C Adversary $21,981
F/A-18C $31,120
F/A18-E $17,584
F/A-18F $22,266
F-5F $17,580
F-5N $19,252
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The US will continue to be the dominant super power, as it has the largest economy, no threat nations on its borders, the largest and most experienced military with the largest Navy patrolling the sea lanes, the most dominant space-based assets, the most demand for products from abroad, while having the most healthy domestic production and consumption, the largest arable farmland for food cultivation, the largest population that lives in low population density, with cities evenly distributed across the land, with the most connected river network in the world, with the most deep sea ports connected to that river network.
The EU isn't a union, but a bad idea of unifying historic enemies who don't speak each other's languages and don't share the same regional threats, with the majority of the most powerful EU members militarily allied with the US.
Brazil is a weak collection of city states on the coast, who aren't connected geographically because of the terrain.
China is its own worst enemy because it can't deal with the interior, which is what has always plagued China. Their military force projection capability has never been tested, and they are barely able to maintain internal security with their military, while facing a huge crisis in living conditions between those on the coast, and those in abject poverty.
Russia is on the verge of fragmenting due to interior erosion and lawlessness, compounded by the coming demographic winter Japan is already well into.
No matter how you look at each scenario, it just doesn't work out for any other nation currently.
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