Zondaracer
Well-Known Member
But the SUPER HORNET (F/A-18E, F/A-18F, EA-18G) cost well over $50 million each. Yes under $70 million a piece. But multiply the cost by the hundreds of aircraft's needed. The aircraft's on ordered and/or in production, or that have been produced. Not to many UAV's are flying or needed.
You don't need as many UAV's. You don't need as many manned pilots. You don't need as many maintenance time (man hour, labor hours, parts, phase maintenance). Because they stay in the air longer, fly further, can fly over a target/threat/station for hours on end with un-comparable fuel economy.
You need to compare apples to apples. The F/A-18 do uniquely different missions from the RQ-4. Granted, the F/A-18 and other fighter aircraft can get us some non traditional ISR, but that's not its main purpose. Compare it to the U-2... how many U-2s are needed for the mission? How many U-2s go up on the ATO each day? How many pilots does a U-2 mission require?
Look at the predator... how many pilots are required to carry out a mission? Well... there are two at any given time, and they rotate through during the mission, plus there are pilots at the recovery and launch... so I'm not an expert on Predator missions but you've easily got half a dozen pilots operating a Pred mission, not to mention sensor operators and all the folks behind the scenes keeping the whole mission operational. Also, it seems that the JFACC can't get enough predators. Look at the ATO one day and you will see how many predators are out there at any given time.
Like I said, RPAs have a purpose and fill a useful role, but they aren't the end-all to military aviation, or civil aviation for that matter. At least not any time soon.