killbilly
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Pentagon to test F-35 against A-10 in 'common sense' war scenario showdown
Let the fanboy'ing commence....
Let the fanboy'ing commence....
Well, since they have different missions/capabilities I am confused as to how a true/fair performance comparison will be made. Should be interesting though. When and where is this supposed to take place exactly?
Behind the school, after the bell.Location and date not mentioned in the article.
CAS isn't a specific aircraft, it's a mission set.
Any mention of 'A-10' usually equals a popcorn worthy thread though it's a bit like watching Saw VI at this point. .
I know a guy who was in the army who thought the A-10 was an awesome airframe, but told me the majority of the time, AH-64's were normally the aircraft that'd show up to save his ass.
Honestly the only thing I can see making a case for the A-10 is the cost. If you own the skies already then what is the point of sending a $80 million+ aircraft to do a job that a much cheaper aircraft can also accomplish. That said, I imagine there are other aircraft that can do the job cheaper than an aging A-10.
The problem is, we need a 5th generation capability that the F-35 gives us. Granted, the acquisitions process that was used for it has been quite costly and not the most efficient way to do it (design while build.....you end up always playing "catch up"). The A-10 would be fine for the low to no threat Afghan scenario, but we have to also maintain the capability to fight larger scenarios against a peer or near-peer adversary. We've been spoiled to a large degree by 15 years of fighting low intensity conflicts and taking few air losses in doing it, none to enemy action (with the exception of one A-10).
I agree. Just saying that it likely wouldn't be wise to get rid of the cheaper options when they can still be used to complete the mission. Obviously it is purely situational as you have mentioned before.
Is loiter time not a big deal?I need to make a "Top 10 list of stupidest repetitive sayings/posts by idiot fanboys and basement dwellers on a Save/preserve the A-10 post/thread who have never flown a tactical jet, much less an A-10, or even remotely done anything related to CAS":
Up there with them, and repetitively done ad nauseum, are:
1. "Restart production! Build new ones!" As if it's just that easy. Or affordable.
2. "Give them to the Army/Marines!" Newsflash: the Army and Marines, while liking the A-10, don't want the A-10. Army doesn't want the cost, and expects the AF to provide the service. And it has no shipboard capability for USMC ops.
3. "I love the Brrrrrrrrrt! Just kill yourself when you write that.
4. "The A-10 is the ONLY aircraft that can do CAS! No other aircraft can." Another newsflash: Many aircraft can and have been doing CAS for a very long time now. A-10s can't and won't be everywhere at once. These other aircraft have done yeoman's work in supporting troops on the ground who've needed it.
5. "Fighter jets can't do CAS!" Fighter jets can, have, and still do CAS. In Vietnam, our primary CAS jet for the longest time in the war in the South, was the F-100 Super Sabre. Namely because it wasn't frontline to be sending into North Vietnam anymore. The F-100 units trained exclusively for CAS since they only worked in South Vietnam, and were good at it. Conversely, many USAF F-4 weren't that great at CAS, and that was because their primary mission was normally air-air, then secondarily interdiction air-ground, and thirdly CAS. Whereas USMC F-4 Phantom units were outstanding at CAS, because that's what they do for a living.
6. "CAS can only be done low and slow!!" Wrong. Low and slow is by exception, not by norm. Low and slow brings you down into the AAA threat envelope, which is how you get shot up or shot down. Hence, you only do that if the tactical situation dictates that you need to, and then all bets are off. Otherwise, medium altitude is where its at. That's why all the upgrades the A-10 has received have been ones that have optimized it for employing from medium altitude, such as targeting pods, 1760 bus for JDAM bombs, and Laser Guided bombs. None of these are things you utilize from very low altitude.
7. "The gun is needed for any kind of CAS and is th main weapon!" The gun was our secondary weapon, for most our missions. Our primary weapon for armor/vehicles was the AGM-65 Maverick, and for CAS was dumb bombs/CBU.
8. "Troops will die if the A-10 isn't around!" This one irks me. Are we saying that US troops are inept, incapable, or completely unable to operate, unless there's a squadron of A-10s overhead their position at all times, 24/7? Jeez....give US troops a little more credit than that in terms of fighting ability. Curiously, how much friendly CAS did the North Vietnamese Army have supporting them during the Vietnam War? Oh that's right, none.
9. "Ask ground troops what they want for CAS!" Truth is, it doesn't matter what they think. A standard Army ground troop knows no more about Close Air Support employment, than an AF CAS pilot knows about the best tanks to employ in mechanized Infantry warfare. When the request for support is put in, the ground commander radios or communicates what he wants/needs done. It's up to the CAS experts.....from TACPs to aircrews......to determin the best asset and weapon to apply, based on what's available at the time. It's like a restaurant: the customer orders a meal and what he wants on it. How the dish is actually prepared in order to meet that order, is up to the chef.
10. "The F-35 is a hunk of junk and can't do anything!" The F-35 hasn't had a chance to even prove itself yet, except for operational USMC ones. Even so, the F-111 had severe growing pains and a terrible start in Vietnam in 1968, losing 6 aircraft in night/bad WX to the then-new Terrain Following system. Once those issues were worked out and fixed, the F-111 became our premier all-weather strike-interdiction aircraft, kicking butt over Hanoi/Haiphong in the Christmas bombings of 1972, in Cambodia 1975, Libya 1986, and Desert Storm 1991. I see the F-35 maturing past it's growing pains similarly.
Is loiter time not a big deal?
Honestly the only thing I can see making a case for the A-10 is the cost. If you own the skies already then what is the point of sending a $80 million+ aircraft to do a job that a much cheaper aircraft can also accomplish. That said, I imagine there are other aircraft that can do the job cheaper than an aging A-10.