Turbine engines have a very narrow "power band" where they are most efficient. Different versions of the engine can have that particular band in different locations in terms of RPM.No operator/designer in their right mind will do that though.
Exactly. The F-35 and/or B-21 will do the strike and recon behind the lines.@Scott Kenny First you need to answer the question “What effect(s) are you trying to achieve?”
The A-10 was designed to autonomously find & destroy armored vehicles, close to front lines where it could be shot at by Manpads and 23mm canon. It was not designed for strike or reconnaissance behind enemy lines.
How available are those tools, compared to A10s some 25 miles (~5-6min out) behind the front lines? Also, note that my proposed bird is significantly faster than the A-10, so being 50 miles out would still mean being 5-6 minutes away.It could also be used for Close Air Support but as @red admiral says today troops on the ground (whether 1st or 2nd echelon) have many options for guided fires that can destroy a target much faster than waiting for a pair of A-10s to be vectored in.
Yes, that's true, though with more Loyal Wingman options I could see the A10 Replacement being the Drone Wrangler. Gonna have to be a 2 seater, though.Likewise, drones of all kinds are very able to find & destroy armored vehicles these days. And being attritable they can even do some deep reconnaissance (though jamming of comms link can be a problem).
I see the F-35 getting that role, honestly.Finally if the goal is to penetrate some distance at low altitude behind enemy lines to do armed reconnaissance, perhaps helicopters operating at night with ALE-style munitions are going to be even more successful given their ability to stop/hide.
Looks like Loyal Wingman drone wrangler directly over the front lines, with additional capacity to also strike targets there. Or vice versa, we can argue about which set of missions gets priority later.So what mission are we really talking about that can’t be done by other existing assets?
Key West requires UNARMED fixed wing aircraft for the Army. The USAF blocked the Army from flying M60-armed OV1 Mohawks.I'll just repeat it again, we have an aircraft designed specifically for this mission that can be modified or "fudged" to fit under Key West in the Scaled Composites ARES.
The OV-1 was a significantly larger aircraft over the 5,000lb ETOW limit. If you want to get around Key West the ARES is your best bet other than something like the Cheyenne. The USAF might be willing to look the other way if they can get rid of their A-10s.Key West requires UNARMED fixed wing aircraft for the Army. The USAF blocked the Army from flying M60-armed OV1 Mohawks.
And all the Ares was designed to do was to see if a fully composite structure could survive the recoil of a 25mm cannon. It can. There's no tooling existing for making more, and the thing flies on a 50 year old engine design that gives it a thrust to weight ratio of less than 0.5:1 at MTOW.
If you want the Army to fly it, it needs to have about half the wingspan of the ARES, no more than 20ft. That will let it land on a road cut into a forest, or one with pasture fences on both sides, instead of needing a dedicated airfield.
And you'd still need to modify Key West to allow the Army to fly armed fixed wings, probably under 10klbs MTOW.
You realize that the Cheyenne caused the USAF to design the A-10, right?something like the Cheyenne. The USAF might be willing to look the other way if they can get rid of their A-10s.
Even for action against Aks in flipflops , A10 is absolutely obsolete in . All its survivability features were meant to give it a fighting chance in AD environment. For dealing with the Aks in flipflops, you have drones, Airtractors,etc platforms that can loiter above typical threat envelope , have low cost of operation and high endurance, and massively better situational awareness than A10 can dream of and then some.And then there are Raper drones that are designed specifically to deal with poorly armed folk.Mr. T - the US spends most of its time fighting unarmed folk. That's the best argument for the A-10.
One observation from the Ukraine War: nobody actually has enough money for a "modern military." Not the US, not Russia, not EU, nor China. The required capabilities for the future will go down to a degree because the threat simply isn't there anymore.
Agreed.A10 belongs on a bone yard and will not ever have a direct succesor.
Iraq wasn't exactly "unarmed" and the A-10s did pretty well there in 2003.Strafing runs are obsolete except against unarmed folk . like Taliban
A10 was not survivable on day it was built and is much less so today , Today stand of weapons that keep the platform outside AD is the name of the game and for that purpose, you do not need any of the A10 survivability features. In a similar way attack helicopter is moving to pure stand-off weapons so old gunships are obsolete new unarmored but faster Raider-type choppers offer more survivable
I (obviously) respectfully disagree.A10 belongs on a bone yard and will not ever have a direct succesor.
“I think we all agree that Ukraine shows the A10 (and Su25) are nowhere near as survivable in the 2020s as they were in the 1980s and 90s.”Okay, to get this discussion out of the A-7 versus A-10 thread.
I think we all agree that Ukraine shows the A10 (and Su25) are nowhere near as survivable in the 2020s as they were in the 1980s and 90s.
Also, the USAF corporate offices hate the A-10, it's super slow both tactically and strategically, and it has several type-specific schools and pieces of equipment that come purely out of the AF budget instead of being split across the entire DOD budget. Oh, and it's supposed to directly support the Army, of all things. Eeeewwwwww.
But the mission still needs filled. And no, the F-35 can't do the dance at the FEBA. The F-35's job is to interdict the units while they're still in march order and not shook out into battle formations, the job the A-7 did in the 80s and 90s.
The major complaint A-10 pilots will give you is that it is underpowered. The total bombload an A-10 can carry weighs more than the two engines produce in thrust, nevermind the weight of the plane! This leads to A-10 pilots not on a leash like in Desert Storm going in and dumping most of their bombs in a marginally-effective way at altitude, so that they can get down low and maneuver right.
The minor complaint is the straight wing makes a painfully slow airplane when ferrying, as it runs into "coffin corner" at 20,000ft
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Based on all of this, the design requirements I have come up with are as follows:
(will add more requirements as suggested in the thread)
- Needs much more powerful engines, and those engines need to be ones in common use in the DOD already.
- Needs to be able to fly higher and faster.
- Uses the 25mm GAU-12 or GAU-22, which are used across the DOD and NATO and can therefore be reloaded at any base that operates F-35s.
- Other avionics also need to be used on other aircraft.
- Needs to be somewhat LO at a minimum, does not need to be absurdly LO like the B-21.
- Needs to be as resistant to battle damage as the A-10, if not more.
- Needs to be as quickly repairable as the A-10.
- Needs to have the loiter time of the A-10.
- (bonus points for figuring a way to get the Army to pay for the plane, unless we throw the Key West Agreement out entirely and let the Army fly their overhead CAS while USAF does interdiction)
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Now, the plane I am picturing has the following features:
Overall, picture an A10 with bigger engines, longer intakes that are blended into the airframe instead of being in separate pods, and thick leading edge swept wings. It will be a physically larger aircraft, between the 10klbs internal bays and the ~20klbs of internal fuel.
- Uses CFM-56s, which are in the DOD inventory as F108 engines. They're shared across a pretty large number of airframes, and are stupid reliable. Bonus is that the core is F101, so even more of the engine is shared across the DOD inventory. Specifically the 60" diameter fans, as used on P-8 Poseidons and C-40 Clippers. The other engine option is the RR F130 being used for the B-52 re-engining, but it's much less common than the CFM-56.
- Uses a supercritical airfoil wing, like that of the Boeing 787. This gives good lift at low speed, without stupid amounts of drag at high speed. Wing will probably be swept at about 35deg, so other edges will line up with that angle. The thick leading edge of a supercritical airfoil probably compromises radar LO a good bit, but is necessary for flight performance.
- Uses GAU-12 25mm, but with a fixed 3300rpm firing rate. The extra barrel helps to keep the gun from overheating during multiple strafing runs. Has roughly 1000rounds in the feed system. Gun is not on the centerline like the A-10, instead it's off to one side like the F-35A, F15, F16, etc. This allows the installation of an actual radar in the nose.
- Uses the full F-35 DAS EOTS system, but still has a tall bubble canopy more like the A-10 in case of DAS trouble. This encourages pilots to fly heads-up. Yes, stealthing this will be a challenge.
- Carries 10klbs or so internally, can add stuff under the wings for a total of about 25klbs (taking advantage of bigger engines and wing)
- OML is all edge-aligned and panels have LO shaping. I do NOT expect to use a lot of RAM on the airframe, that's expensive and time-consuming to repair. Another LO feature is the relocation of the IFR receptacle to the spine instead of the nose.
- Canopy is armored, cockpit has an A-10 like Titanium Bathtub but the Bathtub is sized for a two-seater by default. Fuel tanks are nitrogen purged, fuel lines have check valves to minimize leaks. Hydraulics are multiply redundant and the lines have check valves to minimize leaks.
- As many pieces as possible are symmetrical, so that they can be used on either side of the aircraft. The entire tailplane, for example. Rudders and Ailerons are symmetrical, Horizontal and Vertical Stabilizers are as well. Even the attachment points are symmetrical, and they're bolted to the end of the V-stab before being bolted to the H-stab.
- Because the engines are 3x the power of the A10, it carries more fuel. But because it mostly flies on internal weapons, it doesn't need triple the fuel capacity to equal the loiter time. I guesstimate 20klbs of fuel internally.
- I would actually toss the Key West Agreement entirely, allowing the Army to fly armed fixed wing aircraft for their CAS.
What else can you add to the list?
It's less the individual weapons being better now (though they are generally better able to ignore countermeasures), but rather there being a crapton more of them. When an attack on a platoon position can result in running into 3x MAPADS launchers, that says something.“I think we all agree that Ukraine shows the A10 (and Su25) are nowhere near as survivable in the 2020s as they were in the 1980s and 90s.”
It’s amazing how many people think today’s weapons are head & shoulders above late Cold War weapons or those that were planned then. I think weapon development has crawled since then.
A-10s weren’t expected to last long on a Cold War battlefield by the late 80s.
An A-10 Pilot Could Hope to Last Two Weeks Against the Soviets
Cold War planners expected to lose up to 60 A-10s a daymedium.com
The USSR had more than what Russia has now.It's less the individual weapons being better now (though they are generally better able to ignore countermeasures), but rather there being a crapton more of them. When an attack on a platoon position can result in running into 3x MAPADS launchers, that says something.
Yes , but both MAPADS and SAMs are much better now than in Cold War A10 is still the same. Not to mention fleets are smaller than in cold war so can take less attrition.The USSR had more than what Russia has now.
FM100? Yeah, each Motor Rifle company had one section of 3x Strela/Iglas in support back in the day.The USSR had more than what Russia has now.
Is that in an updated Russian TO&E or some other reference? Link?FM100? Yeah, each Motor Rifle company had one section of 3x Strela/Iglas in support back in the day.
Today it's possible to have one Igla launcher in each vehicle of a company. Not like the launchers have broken, they just make the new missile tubes talk to the old launchers.
An inference from the number of new CLUs being bought for Iglas/Igla2s/Igla3s when all the missiles are supposed to be able to talk to the same CLU.Is that in an updated Russian TO&E or some other reference? Link?
Like it or not big gimbaled optic turret (inherent to Reapers and Airtractor) and person operating it are magnitudes better than an A10 pilot alone with MK1 eyballs especialy if they need to stay out of MANPADS range
That was the standard CONOPS of the Su25 anyways. Long range attack with rockets and LGBs. Edit: Not getting close enough to do gun runs as a regular thing.Has the Su-25 proven its worth in this conflict? On both sides they're lofting rockets from long range like they're flying MLRS, not doing strafing runs or hunting tanks with Vikhrs. Where possible, they're using the MiG-29s to toss JDAMs or the Su-30s to loft FAB-1500s from outside SAM range.
Has the Su-25 proven its worth in this conflict? On both sides they're lofting rockets from long range like they're flying MLRS, not doing strafing runs or hunting tanks with Vikhrs.
I don't think it was envisioned using them at such a long range where you're firing them at your general idea of where the enemy might be versus specific targets.
I'm a pretty terrible artist to be honest.Initial design requirements and 2 pages of discussion... Aircraft design is all about compromises. Stealth shaping vs aerodynamics, internal fuel vs internal weapons, etc. No room for wishful thinking. Are we gonna see a scale sketch of the aircraft you have in mind? @Scott Kenny
Not sure how stealthy that is, and side mounted ordnance like the AC-130s requires orbiting over the airspace in a pylon turn. That's a singularly vulnerable place to be.
for millionth time a high flyer to replace the AC and A-10 thus focusing on a loitering gun ie ring fence the grunts from standoff w/ term loiter.
I'm a pretty terrible artist to be honest.
But I'll give it a try.
when one has guided 57mm MADFIRES & LDEW and plenty of time given the high altitude ur good against approaching SAMs. Bombtrucks can standoff as arsenal planes but even Swithcblades are more expensive and vulnerable than speeding metal mass and explosive..Anything fighter is SAM meat.Not sure how stealthy that is, and side mounted ordnance like the AC-130s requires orbiting over the airspace in a pylon turn. That's a singularly vulnerable place to be.
Eh? That horse left the barn somewhere around 1984. The Farmingdale factory site is now a shopping mall. Hagarstown is now an undervisited museum. With the exception of the constuction of certain replacement wing componments, the Warthog has been out of production for (gulp!) almost 40 years.Should we keep an A-10 manufacturing line open?
Admittedly, I don't think that the US should have allowed that to happen, at least not until after the collapse of the Soviet Union.Eh? That horse left the barn somewhere around 1984. The Farmingdale factory site is now a shopping mall. Hagarstown is now an undervisited museum. With the exception of the constuction of certain replacement wing componments, the Warthog has been out of production for (gulp!) almost 40 years.
Presumably only against visually laid AAA?the Automatic Maneuvering attack system supposedly had a survivability ten times greater than a conventional aircraft in the ground attack role.
..glad folks continue to bring up the "advantages like being able to use dumb weapons with accuracy rivaling smart weapons and flat turns made staffing more accurate." as every fighter needs to accomplish this, but if no DEAD then fighters still have issues. The capability is the finishing blow.I e been playing with this concept for a sci-fi project I’m working on. And my solution was something like the F-16 AFTI. Direct Force control and the Automatic Maneuvering attack system supposedly had a survivability ten times greater than a conventional aircraft in the ground attack role. It also had other advantages like being able to use dumb weapons with accuracy rivaling smart weapons and flat turns made staffing more accurate.
Airman
books.google.com
- Carries 10klbs or so internally, can add stuff under the wings for a total of about 25klbs (taking advantage of bigger engines and wing)
- Because the engines are 3x the power of the A10, it carries more fuel. But because it mostly flies on internal weapons, it doesn't need triple the fuel capacity to equal the loiter time. I guesstimate 20klbs of fuel internally.
- Uses CFM-56s, which are in the DOD inventory as F108 engines... Specifically the 60" diameter fans, as used on P-8 Poseidons and C-40 Clippers.