#Egypt is set to receive the last batchs of the S-300VM surface-to-air missile systems by the end of 2016.

As the U.S. Air Force sets its sights on a more survivable next-generation tanker that will be able to support strike assets operating in increasingly dangerous battlespace, Lockheed Martin believes it has the answer: a fuel-efficient, hybrid wing-body aircraft that will be able to take off and land on short runways for maximum operating flexibility.
Gen. Carlton Everhart II, chief of Air Mobility Command (AMC), recently kicked off an effort to study a next-generation “KC-Z” tanker—one that may look very different than the large-bodied, commercially based KC-10s, KC-135s and KC-46s of today. As adversaries such as Russia and China develop sophisticated surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) and anti-aircraft weapons designed to foil U.S. forces’ ability to penetrate their air space, the tanker of 2035 and beyond is increasingly vulnerable, Everhart says.
Ahead of an official Air Force study on the future tanker, expected to launch within the next six months, industry is already gearing up to solve this problem.
If you ask Kenneth Martin, Lockheed’s principal engineer for advanced mobility, the new battlefield necessitates a lower-signature—if not fully stealth—refueling aircraft that moves away from the commercial-derivative tankers of years past. The future tanker fleet will need to be able to operate 500-250 mi. from the threat, outside the reach of modern SAMs but well within range of enemy radars and air-launched missiles, Martin calculates. This means the next-generation tanker will need to have a lower radar cross-section than conventional refueling aircraft, but it does not need to be “quite as pointy and as sharp” as an F-35 or an F-22, he said.
Lockheed’s vision builds on the company’s Hybrid Wing Body (HWB) concept for a more fuel-efficient future airlifter, which combines a blended wing and forebody for aerodynamic and structural efficiency with a conventional aft fuselage and “T” tail for air drops. The next-generation tanker may compromise with an “H” tail configuration, which would give the operator robust flight control and stability compared to a pure blended wing-body configuration, like a B-2 stealth bomber, or the V-shaped tails on the F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighter, Martin said.“It’s still going to probably look a lot like an airlifter,” Martin said. “It’s not going to be a pure flying-wing, delta-wing sort of airplane because it still needs to be an efficient, everyday AMC asset.”
Where HWB has large over-wing nacelles designed for fuel-efficient, very-high-bypass engines, Lockheed’s next-generation tanker proposal may feature embedded engines for a reduced radar cross-section, Martin said.
“We like the location on our Hybrid Wing Body, the over-the-wing location, for a number of reasons: it keeps the engines away from the ground, [Foreign Object Debris], ground operations; also for a tanker moving the jet wash higher on the airplane is very conducive to a nice benign refueling environment so I think the engines will end up in a similar location,” Martin said. “Now, whether or not it is two big engines or four smaller engines that are mounted in ducts is still something we’re working on.”
Similarly, Martin’s team is still assessing to what extent the next-generation tanker will need stealth coatings, which add cost and maintenance, and advanced defensive or offensive countermeasures—lasers, for example.
“We have not determined at this point how much of those techniques versus how much of inherent aircraft survivability works,” Martin said.
But the tanker’s vulnerability problem is not limited to its airframe—the very act of refueling provides a target for enemy radars. Martin believes automating the refueling process will enable quicker, safer operations.
“If we believe Google and all those companies will all be driving self-driving cars, it seems to us the technology is being matured across the entire [science and technology] community to allow significantly more automation,” Martin said. “We’re committing very hard to, if not eliminate the boom operator, the boom operator becomes a systems monitor and could even be a copilot that’s basically monitoring the process.”
Martin is also looking to tackle the age-old problem of basing. Large, commercially derived tankers take up large ramp spaces and require lots of infrastructure for care and maintenance. But the number of bases worldwide that can accommodate that type of aircraft is limited. That’s why Martin is pushing for a platform that will be able to take off and land in spaces that are about half what a KC-10 or KC-135 requires, which will allow the Air Force to more effectively distribute its tanker fleet across the globe.
“If there’s only 10 or 15 bases in the entire region where you can take off and land it does become a limitation on where that aircraft can operate,” Martin said, adding that the idea is to eventually enable tanker operations from smaller, regional airports. “What this does is open up some options for both distributing our forces, so putting tankers at more locations, which has some inherent reduction in vulnerability to attack. It also allows us to fly the tankers with significantly more options for diverting in case of emergency or unforeseen things.”
To get to a short-takeoff-and-landing (STOL) tanker, Lockheed’s proposal will draw on the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Speed Agile concept demonstration project, a decade-long collaborative effort with NASA, Boeing and Lockheed to develop technology for a stealthy, STOL airlifter that would be able to deliver loads directly to the battlefield. Speed Agile, which supported the U.S. Army-Air Force joint future theater lift program, ended in 2012 without transitioning to a development program, following the demise of the Army’s Future Combat Systems. But Martin still counts Speed Agile a success, noting that Lockheed was able to perfect and verify in large-scale wind-tunnel tests many aerodynamic and propulsion integration tools the company is now looking at for next-generation tanker.
For now, Martin is working with NASA to define a path forward for an ultra-efficient, subsonic demonstration program, which he hopes will feed into a fully fledged, next-generation tanker vision.
“We would like to take that technology and fly it, the aerodynamics, the propulsion and the structural integration technologies,” Martin said. “I think that really gives us the basis and the low-risk position, technology-wise, to move forward to something that’s not, quite honestly, another derivative airliner tanker.”
Poland's former president told a local radio station that a deal with Airbus to procure roughly 50 helicopters had been a "gentleman's agreement" in an effort to make up for France being pushed to abandon its deal to sell Mistral helicopter carriers to Russia, according to a report from Radio Poland.
Aleksander Kwasniewski, speaking with Radio ZET, described the circumstances surrounding the ongoing negotiations that broke down for Airbus H225M Caracal earlier this month. Airbus is considering taking action against the Polish government owing to the breakdown of negotiations, and Polish officials are proceeding with attempts to finalise a deal with Lockheed Martin's Sikorsky for rotary-wing aircraft.
US Air Force’s Space Plane Has Been in Orbit for 500 Days, But Why? © Flickr/ James McCloskey
MILITARY & INTELLIGENCE 22:28 11.10.2016
The US Air Force’s unmanned X-37B space plane has now spent more than 500 days orbiting the Earth, without statement or explanation. The 29-foot unmanned plane is part of the Air Force's orbital program. Launched May 20, 2015, it is the program's fourth flight (hence its other name, OTV-4 for Orbital Test Vehicle-4). The first OTV took flight in 2010 and spent 224 days in orbit; two others brought the total number of OTV days in orbit before 2015 to 1,367, according to the Air Force. The full purpose or intent of the program? The US Air Force remains mum. The Air Force will only say in its program factsheet that the initiative is to "demonstrate technologies for a reliable, reusable, unmanned space test platform for the US Air Force. The primary objectives of the X-37B are twofold: reusable spacecraft technologies for America's future in space and operating experiments which can be returned to, and examined, on Earth." The Secure World Foundation, a Colorado-based private foundation dedicated to the peaceful, sustainable use of space, found in its 2010 fact sheet on the X-37B program that "none of the potential missions posited by the US military appear to justify the program’s existence, especially on a cost basis …" This has led to speculation that the spaceplanes are intended to be used to capture satellites, as was mused in a 2014 Guardian article, or even that the American military is testing space-to-earth weapons. Secure World found suggested that it is most likely that the plane is an on-orbit sensor platform, containing "various sensors used for intelligence collection of the Earth from space, potentially including radar, optical, infrared, and signals/electronic intelligence (SIGINT/ELINT) suites to flight-test and evaluate new sensors and hardware." Brian Weedon, a consultant with Secure World and former Air Force officer who wrote the fact sheet, put it more bluntly in an interview with ABC in 2014. "What I think is more practical [than other theories] is that it's setting up technology for surveillance," he said. Experts speaking with Air and Space Magazine in 2015 generally concurred. Any technology the Air Force is testing on its spaceplane must have military applications, the magazine noted, possibly for communications, navigation, surveillance or anti-satellite and counter-anti-satellite operations. Most likely among these are advanced surveillance sensors, the magazine suggests. “I think that’s probably what they’re not telling you, that there are payloads in there that might be part of the design for future reconnaissance satellites,” said Director and Senior Fellow in the Strategic Technologies Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies James Andrew Lewis in the article.
Making World’s Largest Space Plane and More “The idea of being able to launch an unmanned research platform that can stay up there for months on end provides you with all kinds of capability, both military and civilian,” said Chris Hellman, a policy analyst with the National Priorities Project, an American budget watchdog group, to the Christian Science Monitor in 2010. The idea of American eyes being able to hover at low orbits over any part of the planet has security experts and arms control advocates concerned, the story noted. NASA has revealed that on this particular mission, it is carrying a materials experiment as well as facilitating a solar sail demo by the Planetary Society and giving nine CubeSat nanosatellites a lift, according to the Daily Mail. Space.com reports that Aerojet Rocketdyne claims that it tested a new thruster onboard the plane, and that the Air Force is also testing a new propulsion system. NASA began the X-37B program in 1999, then transferred it to Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in 2004 to test an Approach and Landing Test Vehicle. The Air Force took over after 2006. ... 1257
Read more: https://sputniknews.com/military/201610 ... -500-days/
Textron AirLand has begun production of its self-funded, light-attack Scorpion jet ahead of a planned first flight of the production-representative version later this year, though the company is still searching for a buyer.
Textron is seeing new interest in the Scorpion jet since clinching an agreement with the U.S. Air Force to assess the airworthiness of the aircraft, said Chief Executive Officer Scott Donnelly during an Oct. 20 earnings call. The limited production run will support the Air Force’s accreditation process and improving manufacturing processes while Textron continues discussions with potential buyers, Donnelly said.
Textron pulled the trigger on a small initial production run earlier than planned in order to take advantage of the buzz generated by the Air Force certification program, Donnelly said.
“The level of activity with customers has stepped up considerably and it’s the right time for us to step up and demonstrate this aircraft and its performance capability and get much more aggressive about the marketing and test flights,” Donnelly said. “Waiting a year or spreading it out over longer period of time won’t help us given the opportunities that we see out there in the not too distant future.”
Donnelly declined to name the interested parties, but the Air Force itself has signaled it is open to potentially buying an inexpensive, commercial-off-the-shelf light-attack jet to augment its close-air support fleet as the A-10 Warthog begins to reach the end of its service life.
Marking another milestone for the program, Scorpion also recently completed its first weapons exercise, demonstrating the aircraft’s close air-support capability by successfully firing Hydra-70 unguided 2.75-in. rockets, BAE Systems’ Advanced precision Kill Weapon System and AGM 114F Hellfire missiles. Textron is planning first flight of a production-configured aircraft by the end of the year, Donnelly said.
Textron was the first to enter into a so-called cooperative research and development agreement for the new accreditation program, which the Air Force hopes will make military aircraft without a U.S. military customer more attractive to international buyers. Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James also hopes the effort will spur innovation and boost the industrial base at a time when new military aircraft contracts are scarce, she told Aviation Week in a recent interview. The Air Force is working on reaching a similar arrangement with Lockheed Martin for its FA-50.
The effort appears to be working as planned. The Scorpion, designed as a high-performing but inexpensive light-attack and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance platform, was secretly designed and built at a Cessna Aircraft facility in Wichita, Kansas, and officially rolled out in 2013. Despite the price tag—Textron kept costs low by using common commercial off-the-shelf technology and components developed for Cessna business jets—Scorpion still does not have a customer. The company had planned to offer Scorpion for the Air Force’s T-X trainer replacement competition, but it seems it has now dropped out of the running as it likely can’t meet the requirements.
Textron has had to reach deep into its own pockets to fund the initial production run and weapons tests, but the company believes the investment will be worthwhile.
“Is that a sure thing? No. Do we see that the opportunity is real and that we think that there is a real future for this thing, and someday could be a profitable line of business for the company? I’ll have to say the answer is yet or we wouldn’t have made the decisions to go ahead and take some pressure on earnings and pressure on cash to really take that final step and bring this thing to the market in a very real, credible way,” Donnelly said.
Interesting configuration...brar_w wrote:
At Mach-10, Taiwan's Hsiung Feng-III 'Anti-China' Missiles could be faster than the BrahMos
Saturday, October 22, 2016
By: ChinaTopix
Taiwan looks to double the range of its formidable Hsiung Feng III (HF-3) hypersonic anti-ship missile so this missile can destroy invasion forces of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) that might invade Taiwan before 2020.
The exact top speed of the HF-3 is unknown, but some experts believe to be in excess of Mach 10 (12,000 km/h). The HF-3 can carry a nuclear warhead.
A speed this fast would make the HF-3 faster than India's BrahMos (touted as the world's fastest anti-ship cruise missile) with a speed of Mach 3 (3,700 km/h) and China's 3M-80MBE anti-ship missile, also with a speed of Mach 3.
China's acquisition of Russia's SS-N-22 Sunburn naval anti-ship missiles (from which the 3M-80MBE is derived), was the major reason Taiwan developed the HF-3.
The effectiveness of the HF-3, however, is limited by its short range of 150 kilometers, not enough to cover the 180 kilometer-wide Taiwan Strait separating Taiwan from mainland China. An invasion force from the PLA can traverse the strait in a few hours.
Taiwanese media reports the Republic of China Armed Forces is developing an HF-3 extended range (ER) version of the HF-3. Tests of this ER missile, which will likely have a range exceeding 300 km, are to be completed by late 2017.
The new version should enter mass production by 2018. Its longer range means this ER missile can be deployed in the mountains around Taipei to cover the entire Taiwan Strait.
The extended range will also allow the HF-3, which can also be used to destroy land targets, to reach farther inland from the coast of mainland China to attack PLA missile, amphibious and air force units in Fujian threatening Taiwan.
Taiwan published a report in 2015 that said China plans to attack Taiwan before 2020,
The new version might also retain the current HF-3's warhead, a 225 kg Self-Forging Fragment, which is a special kind of shaped charge designed to penetrate armor at standoff distances.
HF-3 is in large scale volume production under project Chase Wind and is deployed on most missile boats of the Republic of China Navy, as well as mobile land platforms.
The HF-3 also arms the ROC Navy's new Tuo Chiang-class corvettes, which are fast, twin-hull and stealthy multi-mission warships. The navy has one operational Tuo Chiang with 11 more on order.
This class is armed with a total of 16 anti-ship missiles: eight subsonic Hsiung Feng II and eight hypersonic Hsiung Feng III nuclear warhead- capable missiles.
From the configuration its difficult to believe M6 capability, let alone M10. You simply cannot use Ramjet beyond M4-5. The losses are so large in reducing speed to subsonic for combustion, its too much to make it viable. Even on brute rocket force I really doubt it can reach those claimed speeds for such low range. And I am not even talking about the aerodynamic heating it will have at sea level, it will simply vapourize unless they have use unobtainium on outer body.Philip wrote:Is this report correct,in that the Taiwanese missile is a hypersonic one? That it is supersonic is well known,but looking at the pic of the missile (in the link) its current config may result in the breakup of the missile at such high speeds. What Taiwan really needs is a covert N-programme and acquisition of N-warheads with which ti strike Chinese cities,mainly located on its coastline,the major ports.A N-capable Taiwan would scare the daylights out of the megalomaniac dragon and prevent once for all the invasion of Taiwan. Even bio and chem weapons could be used byu the Taiwanese if China invades. A few thousands of these missiles could sink a substantial part of the PLAN's amphib/naval forces and derail any Normandy style invasion..
What to do with 201 powerful fighters that have practically no airframe life limit? For about half of those Japanese F-15 Eagles, the answer is to give them an upgrade that, among other things, equips them with an advanced indigenous air-to-air missile. For the rest, a local version of a long-reaching European weapon may be in the offing, although Tokyo could opt to retire some of the F-15s without further improvement.
Japan and Britain are studying an adaptation of the MBDA Meteor that would feature the Mitsubishi Electric seeker of Japan’s AAM-4B missile. The seeker has an active, electronically scanned array (AESA), which should offer greater detection range than a convention radar seeker. Combined with the Meteor’s long reach, it could greatly improve the ability of Japan’s F-15s to safely engage in air combat, despite the aircraft’s lack of stealth.
Integrating the weapon, the Joint New Air-to-Air Missile (JNAAM), with the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning, which Japan and Britain have ordered, is also under study.
While stressing that no decision to proceed to full-scale development has been made, one possible result from the studies could be a finding that a larger diameter is needed, say officials of the Japanese defense ministry. MBDA is likely to argue for retaining the current diameter, however, since changing it would entail embarking on the costly development of a new missile.
Japan and Britain are assessing the likely performance of JNAAM in separate but coordinated studies, say Sadaharu Ono and air force Maj. Kazuyuki Sakamoto of the ministry’s Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Agency. The two countries are also looking at the expense and time that would be needed to develop it. The work is in a second phase of technical feasibility assessment, according to the British Ministry of Defense, which adds that it should be completed by mid-2017.
Though Japanese officials do not name the F-15 as a possible carrier, availability of the JNAAM could clearly become a factor in Tokyo’s decision, due within a few years, on what to do with the Eagles that are not now slated for upgrading. U.S. Air Force assessments show structural aging will impose no practical limit on the service life of Japan’s F-15s, which were built by Boeing predecessor company McDonnell Douglas and, mainly, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.
The temptation to keep all the F-15s going must be strong, especially since the U.S. Air Force will operate the type until the 2040s and Boeing is still selling new F-15s, with an order from Qatar imminent. Budget limits could force retirements of some Japanese Eagles, however. An executive of a company that is closely interested in the fate of the aircraft expects that 40 will be retired without upgrading.
The AAM-4B is a key element of the current upgrade program, which has targeted 102 modernizations between 2004 and 2022. JNAAM would presumably succeed the AAM-4B. Alive to that possibility, MBDA displayed a model of a Meteor-carrying F-15 at the Japan International Aerospace Exhibition, held here Oct. 12-16. Boeing also sees potential in upgrading Japan’s F-15s. At the show, it promoted its concept of F-15s carrying 16 AIM-120 Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missiles.
...
The AAM-4B’s AESA seeker should, among other advantages, offer greater transmission power than a conventional antenna of the same size. That could mean it can pick up a target at greater range, allowing its launching fighter, freed from having to track the target, to turn away early. Greater detection range also allows a missile to search for a target in a larger volume, creating more opportunities for a shot.
The Anglo-Japanese studies on JNAAM are working on the basic concept of fitting the Japanese seeker to the Meteor. From a technical point of view, this can be done, says Sakamoto.
But the AAM-4B has a diameter of 203 mm (8 in.), inherited from the Raytheon AIM-7 Sparrow, from which it was derived. The Meteor body has a 178-mm diameter, so the antenna size—and therefore transmitted and received power—would be smaller, reducing detection range. The antenna is fixed, so compared with a mechanically scanning antenna, it loses effective aperture size unless the target is dead ahead.
Even if Japan wants the JNAAM, Britain may not. One factor could be the choice of transmission frequency, a key issue in the design of an active-radar missile that influences its ability to discriminate an intended target from others. Japan’s choice of frequency for the AAM-4B seeker may not be the same as the one chosen for the Meteor.
Yes, but structurally more robust because one was designed primarily for the strike role, the other as a air superiority fighter.brar_w wrote:There are different grades to structural strength within the F-15 family. The E's are significantly more structurally robust than the C's for example and this gets reflected in their service life estimates as well. The US fleet is receiving new wings soon, and the C's have already flown to about 1.5 times their initially intended service life. With the new wings you could expect the Es to go well past 20,000 hours till perhaps 2040, the C's till the mid 30's as well.
There is also a 254 mm diameter (10 inch) X-Band active seeker equipped ESSM Block 2 that Japan could look to integrate for aerial use by early next decade when it would be available for their ships (they signed the Block2 agreements). By that time the US will probably also decide and be moving towards an air-air type arsenal plan setup from a pure stand-off missile shooter perspective. Think AAAM rather than a meteor but with a larger diameter.
http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/m-152.html
Just a quick addition, Northrop Grumman has contractually agreed to supply 22 B-21's at a cost equal to or lower than $ 550 million per aircraft (adjusted for inflation by production year). The USAF has also, along with the contract to develop the aircraft agreed to buy 22 in the first LRIP order.The U.S. Air Force’s decision to award the design and development of its next-generation stealth bomber to Northrop Grumman over a competing team led by Boeing and Lockheed Martin came down to the significantly lower price tag of Northrop’s bid, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO).
Northrop’s proposed cost for the new bomber’s engineering, manufacturing and development (EMD) phase was “substantially lower” than Boeing’s due to “Northrop’s corporate investment decisions,” according to the GAO’s heavily redacted ruling on Boeing and Lockheed Martin’s protest of the 2015 contract award. Northrop’s lower EMD costs were driven by the decision to absorb significant company investment, as well as lower labor rates and labor escalation rates compared to Boeing’s, GAO wrote. The exact values of the bids were redacted.
Both competitors significantly underbid government estimates, with the Air Force determining the final cost proposals were “unrealistic” for the design and engineering work required to build a new stealth bomber, according to GAO.
“Both offerors submitted cost proposals that I believe reflect aggressive attempts to achieve the lowest evaluated price in this competition,” according to the source selection decision document (SSDD) quoted by GAO. “Neither offeror substantiated that it could accomplish all necessary EMD efforts at its proposed cost for EMD.”
But it seems the Air Force was willing to accept some risk both on cost and schedule to get a better upfront price. Both initial EMD proposals were originally deemed “unacceptable” in terms of capability; after some negotiation, both proposals in their final forms were accepted, although weaknesses and related risks still remained. The Air Force flagged four weaknesses in Boeing’s final proposal, and ten in Northrop’s, GAO wrote.
The Air Force is clearly aware of the risks of choosing to go with the lower-priced bid, and in fact may even expect that Northrop’s B-21 “Raider” may not be able to stay on schedule, according to GAO.
“There exists some level of Air Force expectation that disruption of schedule may occur,” GAO wrote. “However, the Air Force nonetheless concluded that Northrop could still successfully execute its [redacted] approach with a [redacted] that would not appreciably increase the risk of unsuccessful contract performance.”
Northrop’s bid had a “substantial cost/price advantage,” the Air Force ultimately determined, according to GAO.
GAO also offers a scathing critique of Boeing’s protest, which the agency officially overturned in February. Boeing argued that the Air Force failed to consider risks inherent in Northrop’s approach that should have disqualified them; GAO found this claim was unsubstantiated. Further, Boeing alleged that the Air Force unreasonably rejected the company’s cost-cutting measures and used bad historical data to evaluate their proposal; GAO also found no basis for this.
In fact, despite Boeing’s claim that their proposal was unfairly penalized, the company’s bid was still much lower than most new aircraft programs, GAO notes. Boeing’s offer would represent the second lowest-cost new aircraft development effort in recent history—much lower than the B-1, B-2 or F-22, and higher only than the C-17, GAO wrote.
“Significant structural advantages in Northrop’s proposal—specifically, its labor rate advantage and decision to absorb significant company investment—also strongly impacted the outcome,” GAO concluded. “Northrop’s significantly lower proposed prices for the [Low Rate Initial Production] phase created a near-insurmountable obstacle to Boeing’s proposal achieving best-value, or to Boeing’s protest demonstrating prejudice in the cost realism evaluation.”
The B-21 will be procured using a two-part structure: a cost-plus contract with incentives for the EMD phase; and a firm fixed-price arrangement for initial production of the first five lots of aircraft. The Air Force plans to buy about 100 new bombers, at a capped unit price of $550 million.
“The GAO decision contains a detailed analysis of the source selection evaluation which led to the award of the B-21 contract to Northrop Grumman in October 2015, and confirms that the Air Force followed a deliberate, disciplined, and impartial process to determine the best value for the warfighter and the taxpayer,” Air Force spokesman Capt. Michael Hertzog II said in an email.
Northrop spokesman Randy Belote also stressed that the GAO ruling confirms the Air Force made the right decision.
“The public version of the opinion, from which classified and proprietary information has been removed, makes clear that the GAO performed a rigorous and deliberate review of the U.S. Air Force’s extraordinarily thorough selection process in which it chose the most capable and affordable solution,” he said.
The first Airbus Helicopters H225M medium-twin rotorcraft equipped to carry the MBDA AM39 Exocet anti-shipping missile was rolled out by the company's Helibras subsidiary in Brazil on 25 October.
The ceremony, which took place at Helibras's Itajuba facility, saw the unveiling of the first of five such helicopters to be developed for the Brazilian Navy (Marinha do Brasil: MB) under the H-XBR programme.
Speaking to reporters at the event, the head of the H-XBR programme for Airbus Helicopters, Didier Cormary, said that, with 50 H225M helicopters on order for the wider Brazilian armed forces, the Operacio MB configuration for the navy is not only the last major configuration to be developed for the Latin American country, but it is also the most potent. "This configuration has teeth," he said.
As Cormary explained, the Operacio MB configuration consists of two AM39 Block 2 Mod 2 Exocet missiles; a chin-mounted Telephonics APS-143 surface-search radar; missile approach warning sensors (MAWS); a nose-mounted FLIR Systems Star SAFIRE III electro-optic/infrared (EO/IR) sensor turret (as featured on other Brazilian variants); and a Tactical Console workstation in the main cabin.
"The [Operacio MB configuration] can launch one or two Exocets, and can fly asymmetrically with one missile on one side and the air-to-air refuelling probe on the other - this is quite a feat [for such a large weapon system as the 655 kg Exocet]," Cormary said.
While both Chile and Saudi Arabia have configured Super Puma helicopters to carry the Exocet, Cormary explained that this was done about 20 years ago and involved less advanced helicopters, systems, and technologies. Also, while the MB itself has previously fitted Exocets to its now-retired Sikorsky Sea King helicopters, these were older Block 1 Mod 1 missiles.
Work to develop the Operacio MB configuration began in 2013, when the purchase order was signed by the Brazilian government.
Costly F-35 Bankrupts US Navy's Hope for a Sixth-Generation Fighter Jet
Monday, August 01, 2016
By: Sputnik
The massive cost overrun on the $337 million per aircraft F-35C fighter jet has so hamstrung the US Navy’s budget that their plans for an F/A-XX sixth generation fighter jet may be nothing but a pipe dream.
The United States Navy’s tactical aircraft plan for the post-2030 threat environment is in disarray as officers remain skeptical about the performance capabilities of the F-35C, but the cost override on the fifth-generation fighter jet may force the military branch to discard plans for the F/A-XX sixth-generation fighter jet program.
After spending over $1.5 trillion in US taxpayer money, the Pentagon budget will only enable the US navy to field a handful of Lockheed Martin F-35C Joint Strike Fighters after the aircraft’s budget bloated due to an unprecedented number of design and software problems that set the fighter jet several years behind schedule.
"They’re looking at it in a very short-sighted way. They’re still skeptical because the expense hasn’t come down to the degree they wanted," a source told The National Interest. "Already the aircraft squadron buy of the new airplane is smaller than the Hornet squadron they’re supposed to replace – 10 aircraft versus 12 – simply because they can’t afford it."
The Navy’s budget is weighted down by a flat top line such that if an aircraft is more expensive than the military branch predicted, they are forced to simply purchase fewer fighter jets even though the majority of the cost is on the design and development side, not the wholescale production.
"In a flat budget environment, there is no additional money coming so you have to take the cut in your overall number of assets," explained Jerry Hendrix to reporters with The National Interest, director of the Defense Strategies and Assessments Program at the Center for a New American Security.
The overwhelming cost of the F-35C, a mind boggling $337 million per aircraft, has pushed the US Navy to the point that if there was a way for them to abandon the Joint Strike Fighter Program, it would do so immediately according to The National Interest’s anonymous US Navy source.![]()
Preferably, the Navy would like to bypass the obscene costs of the F-35C altogether and transition directly towards the development of the F/A-XX sixth-generation fighter jet before cost overruns kill the program entirely.
"They would really like to delay [purchasing the F-35C] until they get to F/A-XX because they think it’ll be designed more according to their liking," the source explained. "But the fact is that the F/AXX is just a dream on a piece of paper right now and it’s a dream they’re getting push back on from DOD [Department of Defense] leadership."
Interestingly, even if the US Navy should get around to developing the F/A-XX, the National Interest source explains that it is just a slightly modified version of the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet which he explained is due to a mass of Super Hornet pilots in key positions of the US Navy’s operating structure.
Philip wrote: By: Sputnik
May discard? What does this mean, they won't be producing any fighter for ever because of the F-35C? Leaving Sputnik's Earth-2, however, the USN is at the Analysis of Alternatives stage and will logically embark on a program once that is finalized. The FA-XX has nothing to do with the F-35C's but everything to do with the 600 odd F-18E/F's the US Navy operates (with more coming) that would require replacement in the 2030's and beyond.but the cost override on the fifth-generation fighter jet may force the military branch to discard plans for the F/A-XX sixth-generation fighter jet program.
Noob question: How much do you think the factor of "keeping Northrop afloat" weighed in, on this decision of giving B21 to Northrop, in a larger context??brar_w wrote:USAF’s Bomber Decision Came Down To Cost - Lara Seligman Aviation Week
In areas that are likely to receive high pentagon investment both with current procurement trends and the third offset, Northrop Grumman as a company is actually better positioned than Boeing. Think unmanned, think rapid prototyping, think open mission systems, think large scale hardware-mission system integration, directed energy and cyber etc. Northrop Grumman has the systems largely ready, developed, competitive or prototyped and is looking towards higher orders or more R&D on them. Things like Global Hawk, Triton, E-2, F-35, JSTARS (Northrop has been flying its sensor for a while now), IBCS, and its other unmanned products. Boeing is at a stage where a large number of their big ticket programs are going or gone. Programs like the C-17, Super Hornet, and some weapons programs. They are going to rely on a lot of commercial derivatives like the KC-46 and 737 based AEW aircrafts. I won't be surprised if they make a very aggressive bid for General Atomics in a few years since they are good at providing affordable sollutions through sustained production and don't do so well when it comes to winning competitive R&D programs (ATF, JSF, J-UCAS, and now the LRS-B all lost)."keeping Northrop afloat"
This could also help explain why Lockheed is suspected to have flown a company designed prototype when they bid as a sub on the NGB and intended to (and did) do the same on the LRS-B.The F-35′s cross section is much smaller than the F-22′s. “The F-35 doesn’t have the altitude, doesn’t have the speed [of the F-22], but it can beat the F-22 in stealth.” - Mike Hostage Commander, Air Combat Command (Retired January, 2015)
There have been no plan to replace the A-10 capability. The media created something when they thought that there were actually plans to replace it in the first place. They created an F-35 and will simply recapitalize outgoing squadrons with it as and when that happens. The USAF has tried in the past to develop an A-10 replacement and it has failed to get out of the drawing board because of cost. F-35 only fills the outgoing squadrons with new aircraft not replace the capability on a like for like basis.Plans to replace the A-10 have been controversial and aviation experts have argued it makes little sense to stop using the plane.
"Why build a replacement for something that needs no replacement and is already the best in the world at what it does?" FoxTrotAlpha's Tyler Rogoway wrote in April.
The difference b/w the two systems that are funded are the range, payload and the tactical nature. The plans of using conventional ICBMS or similar systems for PGS are not funded at all. The two program that are funded have to do with TBG (bomber launched), and air breathing scramjet (HSSW). There is currently no funding to completion for the type of ranges the article seems to be suggesting.Hilborne says that both China and Russia are developing their own air-launched hypersonic weapons, but have revealed little about their programmes, in sharp contrast to the USA's transparency over its PGS effort.