This ought to promote some discussion:
http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-shows-hourly-cost-of-military-aircraft-2014-12
....and, go!!!!!
Yeah...but $1500/hr is better than $11,000/hr, which is way better than four times that.
Honestly, I'd have liked to see a low cost COIN airplane like the Tucano or the air tractor in a similar role as the A10 and we simply mass produce the heck out of them. What's better, 10 air tractors providing CAS at $1000/hr or 1 A10? I dunno, I'm not a military guy, but I'd suspect that the having a slew of light attack and drone aircraft would beat out one super airplane for the CAS mission.
Bring back the Skyraider!!
Maybe so, but you've got to admit it sure was a sexy use of $10k/hour.Complex machines are expensive to maintain and operate. News flash!
Everyone's favorite fighter, the F-14, cost $7,000 to $10,000 per hour in the late 1980s.
Depends on the monetary value you put on the pilot that dies when it gets shot down.
As said in the previous threads on A-10 retirement, even the Hog isn't going to last long in a denied environment, despite the level of hyperbole that has been laid on it in the last decade by those ignorant of worldwide surface to air threats.
Something less capable and more vulnerable than the Hog is simply going to make pilots into chum. They may be cheaper at initial purchase, but with pilots that cost multimillions to train and grow who are lost with the airplane, the real cost of the airplane rises at a breathtaking rate when there is an actual threat it is fling against.
...said nobody who had to face the possibility of flying into a modern SAM and AAA threat environment.
Depends on the monetary value you put on the pilot that dies when it gets shot down.
As said in the previous threads on A-10 retirement, even the Hog isn't going to last long in a denied environment, despite the level of hyperbole that has been laid on it in the last decade by those ignorant of worldwide surface to air threats.
Something less capable and more vulnerable than the Hog is simply going to make pilots into chum. They may be cheaper at initial purchase, but with pilots that cost multimillions to train and grow who are lost with the airplane, the real cost of the airplane rises at a breathtaking rate when there is an actual threat it is fling against.
....I actually changed my opinion in the face of better information!
Perish the thought on the internet, I know, but there ya go.![]()
And the funny thing is, this isn't anything new, as some of the hyperbole tries to make it out to be. It's been known since the Fulda Gap days, that A-10s operating near and around the FEBA against even threats back then: ZSU-23/57, SA-6/8, SA-7/14, even Mi-24; Hogs had an average life of 2 to 3 sorties against a full-on Warsaw Pact push. They, along with some of our furthest forward units, were really a speed bump. That was it's projected survival rate 30 years ago.
The great equalizer, last ditch of course, being the tactical planes with nukes such as F-16/111, and the Pershing and GLCM SRBMs that were then in Germany and England, respectively.
I was a controller at RAF Lakenheath in '76-'77. Speed bump is right. We were told that our mission was merely to hold out for 48 to 72 hours. That was our projected life expectancy facing a full-out Warsaw Pact invasion, even in England.
Depends on the monetary value you put on the pilot that dies when it gets shot down.
As said in the previous threads on A-10 retirement, even the Hog isn't going to last long in a denied environment, despite the level of hyperbole that has been laid on it in the last decade by those ignorant of worldwide surface to air threats.
Something less capable and more vulnerable than the Hog is simply going to make pilots into chum. They may be cheaper at initial purchase, but with pilots that cost multimillions to train and grow who are lost with the airplane, the real cost of the airplane rises at a breathtaking rate when there is an actual threat it is fling against.
...said nobody who had to face the possibility of flying into a modern SAM and AAA threat environment.
Any big time SAM and AAA threats we can knock out with the expensive equipment (f22, f35, and so on) and we send in tucanos and the like to work in a coin fashion like cheap helicopter gunships.
A commodity 767 costs about $11,750 an hour for an airline to operate these days..
Any big time SAM and AAA threats we can knock out with the expensive equipment (f22, f35, and so on) and we send in tucanos and the like to work in a coin fashion like cheap helicopter gunships.
I was a controller at RAF Lakenheath in '76-'77. Speed bump is right. We were told that our mission was merely to hold out for 48 to 72 hours. That was our projected life expectancy facing a full-out Warsaw Pact invasion, even in England.
But you're still going to face a potential MANPAD threat regardless. MANPADs are getting cheaper and more readily available, and the best defense against them is altitude. Altitude works directly against the design philosophy of the A-10. But I'm not a fighter/attack pilot, and never played one on T.V., so what do I know?
I mean to say though, where are we going to face that kind of threat in our next engagement - which is likely to be against more poor, illiterate rabble - rouser types?
My nostalgia for radial engines is a little hyperactive.