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What happens when/if jamming upsets communication with the CCAs?
They become sentient and kill their masters.
What happens when/if jamming upsets communication with the CCAs?
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NGAD seems to be dead : US reevaluate 6th Gen fighter jet development
NGAD seems to be dead : US reevaluate 6th Gen fighter jet developmentwww.armyrecognition.com
Remember UAVs data hacked in Iraq, around 2009.
And the RQ-170 reportedly hacked and detained by Iran in 2011.
There is always a weakness, somewhere.
"The practice was uncovered in July 2009, when the US military found files of intercepted drone video feeds on the laptop of a captured militant"
US fixed drones hacked by Iraqi insurgents: Pentagon https://phys.org/news/2009-12-drones-hacked-iraqi-insurgents-pentagon.html
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Iran–U.S. RQ-170 incident has defense industry saying 'never again' to unmanned vehicle hacking
THE MIL & AERO COMMENTARY, 3 May 2016. If there's anything that continues to haunt U.S. military unmanned vehicle development, it's the December 2011 Iran–U.S. RQ-170 incident...www.militaryaerospace.com
Getting half-way through a project, cancelling it and starting something else always makes things cheaper.![]()
NGAD seems to be dead : US reevaluate 6th Gen fighter jet development
NGAD seems to be dead : US reevaluate 6th Gen fighter jet developmentwww.armyrecognition.com
So this is a tough spot for me. Because what I recall from my other carrier friends looking big picture is that support equipment commonality is a big issue. With a large majority of the ship's needing full F-35 retrofits from LHDs and CVNs, I would be quick to guess with high accuracy that if F/A-XX is still moving ahead, I have an odd feeling that LM may be preferred or will have to share their systems commonality ship side to support the F/A-XX program. Call me wrong if anyone wants. I just know from experience, aircraft maintenance out to sea is much more tedious than shore side.So is F/A-XX still going ahead?
I agree with this possibilityI would throw another theory in the mix - maybe it's not that they have newfound confidence in CCA but that they realize CCA might not live to the hype which means number of NGAD need to increase, and with current cost projection, it's just not sustainable.
From the wording, it doesn't seem that unit price has gone above the 300 mil they had always quoted. But suddenly now they're saying that unit price isn't sustainable. I think they trying to hollow out couple of capabilities to see if they can bring cost down and buy more airplanes than previously planned.
It's hard to imagine an AF so unsure about NGAD, after years of funding, research, and studies would have coherent concept of operations for CCAs.If you're trying to respond to a developing attack 500 miles away you're going to need a teleporter to get the CCA's there at the same time as NGAD. Defense doesn't always give one the luxury of planning every detail that offense does.
I would throw another theory in the mix - maybe it's not that they have newfound confidence in CCA but that they realize CCA might not live to the hype which means number of NGAD need to increase, and with current cost projection, it's just not sustainable.
From the wording, it doesn't seem that unit price has gone above the 300 mil they had always quoted. But suddenly now they're saying that unit price isn't sustainable. I think they trying to hollow out couple of capabilities to see if they can bring cost down and buy more airplanes than previously planned.
Don't get me wrong, I'm still on the "if its boeing i aint goeing" bandwagon, but if what you're saying ends up being the case; then they gotta throw the murderous Boeing executives a bone and give the NGAD contract to them.So this is a tough spot for me. Because what I recall from my other carrier friends looking big picture is that support equipment commonality is a big issue. With a large majority of the ship's needing full F-35 retrofits from LHDs and CVNs, I would be quick to guess with high accuracy that if F/A-XX is still moving ahead, I have an odd feeling that LM may be preferred or will have to share their systems commonality ship side to support the F/A-XX program. Call me wrong if anyone wants. I just know from experience, aircraft maintenance out to sea is much more tedious than shore side.
My personal hopes around the whole situation regarding F/A-XX is (Northrop) Grumman has my highest hopes as the successor. They have a strong strong lineage of historic Naval aircraft. I mean, looks like they enjoy Easter egging what they have in the background of their commercials. Seems promising.Don't get me wrong, I'm still on the "if its boeing i aint goeing" bandwagon, but if what you're saying ends up being the case; then they gotta throw the murderous Boeing executives a bone and give the NGAD contract to them.
This Lockmart monopoly simply can't go on for much longer.
Possible, but Kendall seems really infatuated with CCAs. He recently flew in the AI enabled F-16 and came away impressed.I would throw another theory in the mix - maybe it's not that they have newfound confidence in CCA but that they realize CCA might not live to the hype which means number of NGAD need to increase, and with current cost projection, it's just not sustainable.
From the wording, it doesn't seem that unit price has gone above the 300 mil they had always quoted. But suddenly now they're saying that unit price isn't sustainable. I think they trying to hollow out couple of capabilities to see if they can bring cost down and buy more airplanes than previously planned.
Nice update on CCA increment one schedule, disclosure of radars as sensors (but no specifics), AMRAAMs as missiles, as well as indications the two options may be complementary:
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CCA Contract Expected in Fall; First Versions Under Construction
The Air Force is expected to award one or two Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) contracts this fall, toward fielding hardware in two years.www.airandspaceforces.com
Not sure that's wise. Sounds like when they removed the gun form Phantoms too soon. How will AI deal with complex stand-off situations and difficult RoEs decisions?
All well and good, unless communication is jammed.
Those issues plus you still have a stand-in backup fighter in a worst case scenario.What would make that apply to a standoff system but not a stand-in quarterback? Range and power levels? Laser communication vs EM?
This is interesting too.
" It may be that CCA is moving so rapidly that an autonomous version of NGAD—which would likely be far less costly than a piloted version—could be possible on the timelines required by the Air Force. "
Those issues plus you still have a stand-in backup fighter in a worst case scenario.
You still have a need for the air dominance mission, CCA can't do that , high speed interception of ennemy high speed fighter , visual identification of threat , air policy for that you need supersonic speed ; high altitude patrol etc..... an autonomous NGAD could do that, and the B-21 could be the mothership of the NGAD UCAV , flying very high and behind and why not with the long range new SM-6 missile the B-21 could be like a stealth AWACS with weapon , and the sword could be the NGAD.My guess is that if something like that happens, it would be because the "quarterback" crewed supervision function gets moved to a different, non-fighter platform, or at the very, very least a ground station via ABMS/JADC2. In that case, the decision wouldn't involve removing humans from the kill chain, or even necessarily from the playcalling process at all, just removing them from the immediately on-site aircraft.
But I'd suspect that if human crews and the quarterback function were to be removed from the next gen of fighters, much of that supervising function would then migrate to a crewed tanking/communications/battle management node that would still be approximately in the high altitude line-of-site of the fighter platforms a few hundred NM away, or in times of greater danger, further but still close enough for RQ-180, E-7, B-21, or BACN signal relay, so that space ops don't have to be assumed to work.
I'm saying all this, by the way, while still very much hoping for a 100-120,000 pound crewed sixth gen fighter. I'm just saying that IF they ditch that, THEN...
You still have a need for the air dominance mission, CCA can't do that , high speed interception of ennemy high speed fighter , visual identification of threat , air policy for that you need supersonic speed ; high altitude patrol etc..... an autonomous NGAD could do that, and the B-21 could be the mothership of the NGAD UCAV , flying very high and behind and why not with the long range new SM-6 missile the B-21 could be like a stealth AWACS with weapon , and the sword could be the NGAD.
Nice update on CCA increment one schedule, disclosure of radars as sensors (but no specifics), AMRAAMs as missiles, as well as indications the two options may be complementary:
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CCA Contract Expected in Fall; First Versions Under Construction
The Air Force is expected to award one or two Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) contracts this fall, toward fielding hardware in two years.www.airandspaceforces.com
Nice update on CCA increment one schedule, disclosure of radars as sensors (but no specifics), AMRAAMs as missiles, as well as indications the two options may be complementary:
![]()
CCA Contract Expected in Fall; First Versions Under Construction
The Air Force is expected to award one or two Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) contracts this fall, toward fielding hardware in two years.www.airandspaceforces.com
Kinetics performance is a need too," An industry source said AFRL also planned an Off Board Weapon Station (OBWS) program that would partner with the OBSS as a hunter-killer two-aircraft system—but that has been subsumed into the CCA effort. "
In this 'hunter-killer two-aircraft system', jam-resistant communication is a must. Imagine these two guys below can't talk each other.
View attachment 734066
" An industry source said AFRL also planned an Off Board Weapon Station (OBWS) program that would partner with the OBSS as a hunter-killer two-aircraft system—but that has been subsumed into the CCA effort. "
In this 'hunter-killer two-aircraft system', jam-resistant communication is a must. Imagine these two guys below can't talk each other.
View attachment 734066
An autonomous NGAD will not cost less than a manned NGAD. I haven't any doubt that the NGAD will probably have an optionally manned option like the B-21 eventually will, though. Although, I do enjoy laughing at all of the bed wetters here pissing themselves over NGAD being resized. They're the same people who were crying that the new bomber wasn't going to be a hypersonic super cruising multi-MOAB carrying death machine, because it had to be more affordable. Oh, how they had the vapors over that. As a result, we've all seen what a big failure the B-21 is. (<= Sarcasm for the sarcastically challenged.)This is interesting too.
" It may be that CCA is moving so rapidly that an autonomous version of NGAD—which would likely be far less costly than a piloted version—could be possible on the timelines required by the Air Force. "
To entirely commit yourself to CCA without having any combat experience with them would be wildly reckless.
There's no reason to expect CCA development to go any better than autonomous cars. We were, what, a few years away from autonomous cars a decade ago?
My guess is that if something like that happens, it would be because the "quarterback" crewed supervision function gets moved to a different, non-fighter platform, or at the very, very least a ground station via ABMS/JADC2. In that case, the decision wouldn't involve removing humans from the kill chain, or even necessarily from the playcalling process at all, just removing them from the immediately on-site aircraft.
But I'd suspect that if human crews and the quarterback function were to be removed from the next gen of fighters, much of that supervising function would then migrate to a crewed tanking/communications/battle management node that would still be approximately in the high altitude line-of-site of the fighter platforms a few hundred NM away, or in times of greater danger, further but still close enough for RQ-180, E-7, B-21, or BACN signal relay, so that space ops don't have to be assumed to work.
I don't think it's bistatic radar, sounds more like multiple radars looking at the same point in space, and correlating what they see. For example an enemy aircraft could hide in the noise floor by lonesome, but CCA1 sees it from 3 o'clock, CCA2 head on, CCA3 from 10 o'clock etc. Based on an onboard database of aircraft polar RCS plot, they calculate what the return from a given angle at a particular point in space would look like, and correlate the result from each CCA. If the results are consistent with each other, then that means it's very likely it's an enemy aircraft. Also considering the noise of radars is random and uncorrellated, illuminating the enemy with multiple radars improves the SNR by the square root of the number of radars, which is something.This part
" CCAs fanned out on a wide front, as many as six each controlled by a single crewed fifth-generation F-22 or F-35. The dispersed formation will create a large synthetic aperture radar net which can more precisely spot and target an adversary’s fifth-generation aircraft, allowing friendly forces to more quickly engage them and buy back some of the “first-look, first-shot” capability lost in recent years. "
sounds like bistatic operation.
View attachment 734064
The elimination of the cockpit, ECS, ergonomics factors, OBOGS, HMI, aircrew courseware/training, salary, simulators etc. is bound to save some. The question is whether it's a good idea in general. It's turning into the 'Top Gun Maverick' storyline policy debate - drones vs pilots.An autonomous NGAD will not cost less than a manned NGAD.
to buy into the Navy's FA-XX program for the manned component of NGAD, thus sharing development and reducing costs for both programs.I hope not, but IMO the Air Force might end up delaying the NGAD/PCA, without cancelling it outright...and then spend the next four years (25-28) developing the CCAs, F-35 block 4 and ECU, and the upgraded Raptors, but without much in the way of further investment in a crewed sixth gen fighter beyond NGAP, which might still be allowed to run to completion.
Then, with some of those costs in the rearview mirror, more info about both the domestic funding environment and Chinese plans, and finalized CCAs and NGAPs, the administration after next, starting in 2029 and definitely making its mark with the budget prepared in spring 2030, could make the final decusion