China Unveils Yet Another Stealth Jet: Shenyang J-31
Posted: Mon Sep 17, 2012 2:52 pm
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That must be how they planted that sporadic virus in F-22 OBOGS.And if you wonder about the detail similarities of the shape to the F-22 and F-35, remember this quote from 2010:
In the past year (2009) alone, Lockheed Martin found “six to eight companies” among its subcontractors “had been totally compromised – emails, their networks, everything” according to Lockheed Martin chief information security officer Anne Mullins.
I sat in the seat of the F-35 simulator a year ago and I said to the engineer operator, it would not take much and this could fly unmanned. He got a big a$$ grin on his face and said "SHHHHHHH"GIThruster wrote:I think L-M, Boeing, N-G all do constant R&D toward future weapons systems. You won't ever see a 6th get fighter though. We already have next gen UCAV's replacing the old F-117's and you can bet they're all a generation past the F-22. There's no reason to ever put a pilot in a fighter plane again.
Sad but true.
It only makes sense as the airframe now exceeds the capability of the pilots as far as G loading goes. Put the pilot in a INU or van at the base and nobody can beat him.kunkmiester wrote:F-22s replaced the F-117 at Holloman, I got out a couple years too early for it. UCAVs might be in the next black project to be revealed though.
Agreed about passive radar. And in a related vein, the Russians have been doing beaucoup work on radars that crack stealth. I've long thought that stealth is a wasting asset, and that the refusal to sell the F22 as widely as the F15 was lunacy. But that ship has sailed.Skipjack wrote:And then you add passive radar into the mix and stealth seems like yesterdays news. The it will be maneuverability and speed again and maybe active defenses (lasers?). And of course having a huge fleet of UAVs that are expendable and can serve as a first wave to detect and subsequently take out an enemies launchers and other defenses can help (they might not see the radar, but they would still see where the rockets came from, I guess).
That is the beauty of the new JFS 35 if it is transitioned to UAV. The iIR view is 360/360 (due to the miracle of modern electronics so pilots eyes are still on board but the body is in a safe local. (IDK how much of the ir system is available to the public so I can not expound of it capability's. suffice to say it is awesome.) But i could easily see a pilot winning a hairball dogfight and him being safely at the airbase when the action is going on.Stubby wrote:in the 60s they said planes would not need guns any more and then they found their new fangled machine aka AAMs didn't work very well. Their K/D ratio went from 10:1 in Korea to 3:1 in Vietnam.
A-8 Crusader was having more success the F-4 Phantom until they put an external gun pod on the Phantom.
All this to say this nothing beats the human mind and the Mark 1 eyeball on site. The unmanned is great until your enemy figures out a way to render them useless.
And thirdly, war should not be sanitary. If it is perceived as the horror it is, than more effort will be spent to avoid it in the first place.
I also got a run in an F-22 sim. It was pretty darn cool as well.paperburn1 wrote:That is the beauty of the new JFS 35 if it is transitioned to UAV. The iIR view is 360/360 (due to the miracle of modern electronics so pilots eyes are still on board but the body is in a safe local. (IDK how much of the ir system is available to the public so I can not expound of it capability's. suffice to say it is awesome.) But i could easily see a pilot winning a hairball dogfight and him being safely at the airbase when the action is going on.Stubby wrote:in the 60s they said planes would not need guns any more and then they found their new fangled machine aka AAMs didn't work very well. Their K/D ratio went from 10:1 in Korea to 3:1 in Vietnam.
A-8 Crusader was having more success the F-4 Phantom until they put an external gun pod on the Phantom.
All this to say this nothing beats the human mind and the Mark 1 eyeball on site. The unmanned is great until your enemy figures out a way to render them useless.
And thirdly, war should not be sanitary. If it is perceived as the horror it is, than more effort will be spent to avoid it in the first place.