imatworkallday
Well-Known Member
Keys can't touch each other on the keyboard.
I recall one of my supervisors having to create a login where this actually was one of the password requirements.:insane:
Keys can't touch each other on the keyboard.
But how many T-50s can the Russians produce per one F22? If they can flood the field with airplanes that are nearly as good as our equipment, then they'll make up for detriments in quality with quantity. This is a very Russian thing to do historically.
their Su-27 knock-offs which are reportedly comparable to the newer Su-20MK.
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE65G64820100617?type=politicsNews
I love that the Russians still play such games. The last report I heard was that the T-50 won't have an engine that allows for supercruise until 2016 at the earliest. Not to mention the fact that the existing engines render the "stealthy" design useless.
The T-50 beats the F-22 in one important area: exportability. Its not the T-50's comparison to the F-22 that is scary...it's Sukhoi's desire to market it to anyone with the money that is scary. As far as the engines not being stealthy: realize that half the design of an LO engine is designing a serpentine intake that does not allow a radar to see the front fan blades. The intake is then coated with RAM to reduce radar effects. The T-50 has a serpentine intake. Sure, it has a conventional engine with a conventional augmenter and nozzle section that leads to added signature in the tail aspect. The advantage is that the T-50 will field 5 years earlier than if they'd insisted upon a ducted exhaust. They may later decide to re-engine the type.
The T-50 beats the F-22 in one important area: exportability. Its not the T-50's comparison to the F-22 that is scary...it's Sukhoi's desire to market it to anyone with the money that is scary. As far as the engines not being stealthy: realize that half the design of an LO engine is designing a serpentine intake that does not allow a radar to see the front fan blades. The intake is then coated with RAM to reduce radar effects. The T-50 has a serpentine intake. Sure, it has a conventional engine with a conventional augmenter and nozzle section that leads to added signature in the tail aspect. The advantage is that the T-50 will field 5 years earlier than if they'd insisted upon a ducted exhaust. They may later decide to re-engine the type.
EDIT:
Wikipedia says one F-22 costs 150mil, and one T50 costs 100mil.
Ohhh, and for the additional cost of the F22 program (65bil) as opposed to the Russians at 10billion you could buy 550 of the things and still not exceed the cost of the F22 program.
Quick math lesson from LT FF here.
$65,000,000,000 program.
183 jets.
65,000,000,000,000 / 183 = just north of 355 mil a copy.
Enjoy!
Yes, I'm sure there's MX and parts, etc included, but the 150 mil a pop figure is BS.
Is this T-50 going to have anywhere NEAR the radar the F-22 has?
But then you can just reset it by knowing a persons SSN and DOB. :rotfl:I just generated a statistic that the Air Force loses 3.4 million man-hours per year from airmen trying to create passwords that meet the strict requirements for such top secret sites such as mypay and afportal.
15 or more characters.
three chinese characters.
one number and special character
One backward Russian e
Keys can't touch each other on the keyboard.
Can't form a word in any language
Can't form a word backwards, inverted, or diagonally (watch the backwards russian e... it can hose you)
Oh, and you're not supposed to write down these ridiculous passwords because it's a security hazard.
Good game.
Jeesh, I'm just curious though, without the radar that's on the F-22 is the T-50 really that big of a competitor? I mean, we are starting to sell the F-22 (without the radar) to the highest bidder.
But then you can just reset it by knowing a persons SSN and DOB. :rotfl:
Since when? I was out at Lockheed this past week and asked about the program. Still no sale to Israel and even though the Japanese said they would pay almost twice the price, no sale.
The assembly line is within the last 30 machines and end of production will probably come in 2012 unless new orders are signed. The last machine will be -195 on the tail.
Is Lockheed (with the permissions of the US gov) taking orders or not? I assume if Israel and Japan were making offers that someone told them that the aircraft was for sale.
Word from the grapevine is that the radar they have is very capable.
With a single airframe, and only in the early stages of test flight, I don't think it's possible to even yardstick that capability at this time.
Until it's actually employed in test and eval against other living airborne targets, it's really impossible to know.