F-35 JSF

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MATRA

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #750 em: Maio 28, 2019, 04:43:59 pm »
Os polacos estão a ficar com uma força aérea muito interessante. De fazer inveja!

Sem dúvida, ajuda muito serem dos únicos a gastar acima dos 2% dos PIB e mais importante: SEM Cativações!!
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
G. Michael Hopf, Those Who Remain
 

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HSMW

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #751 em: Maio 29, 2019, 12:33:37 pm »
O que ajuda é ter a Russia ao lado, o apoio/interesse dos EUA e terem levado no focinho quando eram pequenos/2ªGM...
https://www.youtube.com/user/HSMW/videos

"Tudo pela Nação, nada contra a Nação."
 
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Lusitano89

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #753 em: Maio 30, 2019, 04:43:05 pm »
F-15EX and F-35A: The Future of American Air Superiority

https://warontherocks.com/2019/05/f-15ex-and-f-35a-the-future-of-american-air-superiority/

Recommendations

If the Air Force wants to address F-15C fleet health and readiness concerns while maintaining current capacity and capability, it should purchase F-15EX as quickly as possible. Completely divesting the F-15C fleet by 2030 and replacing entirely with F-15EX could achieve $300 million in savings by 2040 and ensure operational aircraft are available to support the National Defense Strategy.

If operating in highly contested environments is the primary and overriding concern, F-35As will provide the most capability, although with significantly diminished weapons capacity and future weapon integration challenges. Moreover, replacing F-15Cs with F-35As will require a multi-year installation transition period, during which current F-15C squadron readiness and fighter capacity will decrease until F-35A procurement and retraining are completed and base infrastructure is built. This course of action assumes high risk in the near term by accepting decreased fighter capacity and readiness. If all F-15C aircraft can be divested by 2030 and F-35A operation and sustainment costs continue to decrease, this approach could return on investment by 2045.

The optimal solution may include a mix of F-15EX and F-35A to replace the F-15C. This involves starting F-15EX procurement immediately to address F-15C readiness concerns and assess the viability of transitioning some, but not all, F-15C squadrons to the F-35A. If the assessment is positive, the Air Force could begin the 3–5-year transition cycle to build infrastructure supporting the F-35A and cross-train personnel at selected bases. Additional F-15EX and F-35A aircraft would then be purchased between 2025–2029 to complete the divestment of the aging F-15C fleet. While this will result in high procurement costs, the Air Force will return on its investment close to 2040 by divesting the F-15C and its high annual operating cost. The F-15EX will provide superior firepower and magazine capacity to complement the advantages of stealth provided by the F-35A and F-22. This option spreads procurement costs over several budget cycles, addresses readiness and capacity concerns, provides increased capability, allows time for F-35A basing to establish required infrastructure, and lowers annual operating costs by getting rid of 40-year-old fighters.

There are costs, risks, and readiness concerns with any choice. Fourth-generation aircraft provide unique capabilities such as large weapon capacity and external carriage for future weapons and sensors which will complement fifth-generation fighters, enabling both airframes to use their most lethal capabilities. Fourth-generation aircraft will continue to preserve finite resources by sustaining fighter capacity in a much more cost-effective way than fifth-generation aircraft can.

The F-15C has performed spectacularly over the past 40 years and helped to establish American air superiority as a certainty in modern conflict. Yet, air superiority is not guaranteed in future conflict against rising powers. F-15C aircraft need to be replaced and new capabilities developed to enable U.S. warfighters to dominate future adversaries. An initial purchase of the F-15EX will help cycle out old and expensive aircraft and restore readiness, all while improving capacity and capability. Going forward, additional purchases of F-15EXs and F-35As should be seriously considered. If the Air Force and Congress miss this opportunity and are left with a broken fleet of F-15C aircraft, they will have failed the nation, the joint force, and America’s warfighters.
 

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Major Alvega

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #755 em: Junho 05, 2019, 12:53:49 pm »


7. Todos os animais são iguais mas alguns são mais iguais que os outros.

 

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Lusitano89

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Red Baron

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #757 em: Junho 10, 2019, 02:16:56 pm »
Citar
Spatial disorientation likely cause of F-35A crash, says Japanese MoD
Kosuke Takahashi, Tokyo - Jane's Defence Weekly

10 June 2019
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Spatial disorientation of the pilot was likely the cause of the 9 April crash of a Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) F-35A Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter aircraft into the Pacific Ocean, Japanese Defense Minister Takeshi Iwaya said on 10 June.

The minister deemed it “very unlikely” that the aircraft had suffered a technical issue, arguing instead that comprehensive analysis points to the pilot having likely experienced vertigo and losing his sense of equilibrium.

In a separate statement the JASDF said the 41-year-old pilot, Major Akinori Hosomi, whose body parts were recently found at sea, may have suffered spatial disorientation when his aircraft spiralled down counter-clockwise at more than 1,100 km/h.

https://www.janes.com/article/89139/spatial-disorientation-likely-cause-of-f-35a-crash-says-japanese-mod
 

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mafets

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"Nunca, no campo dos conflitos humanos, tantos deveram tanto a tão poucos." W.Churchil

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Red Baron

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #759 em: Junho 10, 2019, 05:50:54 pm »
 

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mafets

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #760 em: Junho 10, 2019, 07:14:49 pm »
No dia que um F35 fizer isto fico convencido  :mrgreen: :mrgreen:









http://www.cavok.com.br/blog/imagens-aeronaves-a-10-realizam-pousos-e-decolagens-em-pistas-de-terra/?fbclid=IwAR0_4BAL9-yEMRKGz-FYrUvTSZg87uSTdv8sw2vMIkLsY7suoK2xAPgB_e0

Cumprimentos

Para isso existe o Super Tucano ou o Wolverine, que fazem o mesmo por um 1/3 do valor.

Essa do "fazerem o mesmo" foi uma piada certo?  :mrgreen: :mrgreen:









Além de que não foi o ST nem o Wolverine que a USAF comparou com o A10.  :-P ;)

https://www.cavok.com.br/blog/usaf-realiza-comparativo-em-voo-entre-o-f-35a-e-o-a-10/

Citar
USAF realiza comparativo em voo entre o F-35A e o A-10





Saudações
"Nunca, no campo dos conflitos humanos, tantos deveram tanto a tão poucos." W.Churchil

http://mimilitary.blogspot.pt/
 

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Lusitano89

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #761 em: Junho 10, 2019, 07:33:52 pm »
 

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Barlovento

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #762 em: Junho 12, 2019, 01:54:35 pm »
Hay dos F-35 en la Base Aérea de Albacete, participando en el actual curso del Leadership Tactical Program

https://www.defensa.com/otan-y-europa/cazabombarderos-f-35a-estan-ya-operando-tlp
 
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oi661114

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #763 em: Junho 12, 2019, 05:56:21 pm »
« Última modificação: Junho 12, 2019, 05:57:43 pm por oi661114 »
 
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mafets

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Re: F-35 JSF
« Responder #764 em: Junho 13, 2019, 11:08:35 am »
A saga continua...

https://www.aereo.jor.br/2019/06/12/f-35-pentagono-luta-contra-o-relogio-para-consertar-problemas-graves-e-nao-relatados/?fbclid=IwAR3hHbZwq4HHsMwK4cco2_H4hIj2WebuweYBFvUPdnJcsD14gcnnXpyWTpg

Citar
WASHINGTON – O site americano Defense News publicou hoje uma série de reportagens informando que nos últimos anos, os líderes do Departamento de Defesa dos Estados Unidos deixaram de citar problemas técnicos como a maior preocupação do programa F-35 e lamentando as despesas de compra e manutenção da aeronave.

Mas a realidade pode ser pior. De acordo com documentos obtidos exclusivamente pelo Defense News, o F-35 continua a ser marcado por falhas e defeitos que, se não forem corrigidos, podem criar riscos para a segurança dos pilotos e questionar a capacidade do caça de atingir partes importantes de sua missão:

Pilotos de F-35B e F-35C, obrigados a observar limitações na velocidade do ar para evitar danos à estrutura do F-35 ou ao revestimento furtivo. Picos de pressão no cockpit que causam dor “excruciante” e sinusite. Problemas com o monitor montado no capacete e a câmera de visão noturna que contribuem para a dificuldade de aterrissar o F-35C em um porta-aviões.

Estes são alguns dos problemas com o jato que os documentos descrevem como deficiências de categoria 1 – a designação dada a grandes falhas que afetam a segurança ou a eficácia da missão.

Todos, com exceção de alguns desses problemas, escaparam ao escrutínio intenso do Congresso e da mídia. Alguns outros foram brevemente mencionados em relatórios de grupos de fiscalização do governo.





Cumprimentos
"Nunca, no campo dos conflitos humanos, tantos deveram tanto a tão poucos." W.Churchil

http://mimilitary.blogspot.pt/