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This topic is for discussion of the expected announcement of a contract award for the US Navy F/A-XX and will be renamed once the chosen contractor is Northrop Grumman named.
Note, however, that NG stock went up by 2.4% today.
I do think it will be Boeing as well, for a number of speculative reasons. We will see. Note, however, that NG stock went up by 2.4% today.
According to reports, the U.S. is getting ready to announce the contract award for its second 6th generation stealth fighter, and this time, it’ll be a carrier-capable jet meant for service aboard the U.S. Navy’s aircraft carriers.
I heard you are ready for the "Tomcat II" made byThis topic is for discussion of the expected announcement of a contract award for the US Navy F/A-XX and will be renamed once the chosen contractor isNorthrop Grummannamed.
Since this is supposed to be a strike fighter, you would assume that the weapons bay will be as large as the F-35A/Cs. Could it be larger? Maybe.
My money is on NG, especially after they dropped out of NGAD. Son of F-23N... But yes... I do believe F/A-45 will be the name.
I don't get this obsession with reviving Northrop F-23N, NAVAIR considered it inferior to the Lockheed F-22N and it's design that had to have commonality with ATF which F/A-XX doesn't so why constrain yourself this way even if Northrop Grumman wins? Not to mention it's design from 1990.If Northrop wins, a tailless NATF?
The issue remains the USN at present cannot afford it. NGAP engines are not cheap and the USN expects to field a minimum of 300 aircraft. The benefits are clearly there but I expect the business case is not.It would make zero sense to me to not use NGAP for this, given how quickly NGAP is being developed and given that it will have to be ready for F-47, which supposedly will be ready in no more than 4 years. The additional range from NGAP is more important for the Navy than it is for the USAF. Not having sufficient range to target launch platforms left-of-launch is an existential issue for a CSG.
If the rumors are that the F/A-XX is a strike fighter, with a mission set something like: carry 2x JASSM 1000nm to an IP, then I can see it being:
1. Less stealthy than the F-47 overall (just enough to get to an IP at the edge of the defended zone)
2. More orientated toward carrying things on pylons than internally
And from 1+2, this is very close to a F-15E (and EF-111....) replacement and I can see the USAF buying an Air-Force variant in a few years.
I just really hope they adopt the F-47's engines. Don't make the same mistake with the F-14 and the TF-30s, though circumstances were slightly different. I also hope they are able to avoid having vertical tails and can develop an aircraft with broadband stealth.
It would make zero sense to me to not use NGAP for this, given how quickly NGAP is being developed and given that it will have to be ready for F-47, which supposedly will be ready in no more than 4 years. The additional range from NGAP is more important for the Navy than it is for the USAF. Not having sufficient range to target launch platforms left-of-launch is an existential issue for a CSG.
It would make zero sense to me to not use NGAP for this, given how quickly NGAP is being developed and given that it will have to be ready for F-47, which supposedly will be ready in no more than 4 years. The additional range from NGAP is more important for the Navy than it is for the USAF. Not having sufficient range to target launch platforms left-of-launch is an existential issue for a CSG.
The F110 variable cycle derivative, F110-GE-XXX or F110-GE-129EFE++, is also a good choice.I just really hope they adopt the F-47's engines. Don't make the same mistake with the F-14 and the TF-30s, though circumstances were slightly different. I also hope they are able to avoid having vertical tails and can develop an aircraft with broadband stealth.
I think it may be that the F-47 and F/A-XX have different airframe sizes or different thrust requirements, which makes it impossible for the Navy to directly use NGAP. In the case of needing to redevelop an engine(like F401-PW-400 vs F110-GE-400), choosing to derive from an existing mature engine is the best choice.Adaptive engines are by all rumors and reports a hard a pass. A poster on this site indicated cost was not the number one reason - my guess is something about the embarked aircraft environment rules three stream out. F-18 could not use conformal tanks because of issues with launch acceleration, issues with recovery deceleration, and lack of clearance to pull them off to access the plane on the hanger deck. I suspect the USN decision is also unique to carrier operations. At I guess, adaptive engines might not like to go from idle to full power sufficiently fast enough for a bolter.
I suspect a single large bomb bay for 2-4 15’ long weapons of potentially AGM-158 height and width, assuming HALO is no thicker than JAASM. External carriage arrangements for 2-4 more. Alternatively a larger number of smaller weapons of all kinds.
Hard no on USAF ever adopting; they would just buy more B-21 if they needed more strike capability. They already are building the perfect tool for that role.
A F/A-XX will likely cost 1/3rd the cost of a B-21 and have more flexible basing options (aka smaller fields less than a day's flight away from the Taiwan Strait and China) - I can see that being a very worthwhile trade-off.
Yes I said cost was #2 reason. #1 reason was something else. I know #1 but choose not to say -- not trying to be an a-hole.Adaptive engines are by all rumors and reports a hard a pass. A poster on this site indicated cost was not the number one reason - my guess is something about the embarked aircraft environment rules three stream out. F-18 could not use conformal tanks because of issues with launch acceleration, issues with recovery deceleration, and lack of clearance to pull them off to access the plane on the hanger deck. I suspect the USN decision is also unique to carrier operations. At I guess, adaptive engines might not like to go from idle to full power sufficiently fast enough for a bolter.
The USAF has no strike fighter requirement and is actively trying to reduce the number of platforms it employs.
The more I think about it, the more I am convinced that Northrop will win this contract. If Boeing was going to win, it would have been announced last week, because in all likely hood you would have had a unified Air Force and Navy design. The fact that the announcements are separated, indicates to me that the Navy and Air Force went in different directions with who they were going to select to build their next-gen aircraft.
Hegseth wanted the announcements to be separated, and wanted the AF to go first I was told.Another tidbit. I was told that Hegseth told the VCNO that the AF announcement will come first. So it should come out this coming week.
Unless of course someone in the White House objects to one winner takes both .... so I will read any delay beyond the end of March as a last minute change: NG in, B out.
Strange things like this have happened before. The team of Grumman and Beech were verbally notified that they had won the VTXTS program. A few days later, McDonnell Douglas teamed with BAe were announced as the winner. Few knew that Reagan and Thatcher had just cut a deal. The UK buys Trident C3 (D4?) missiles and the US buys a navalized Hawk trainer.
From my experience, OSD offices like CAPE or USD-A&S would have evaluated the costs and risks of one winner takes all. As I wrote on MarchI would imagine that the DOD would be uneasy about Boeing sweeping up both NGAD PCA and F/A-XX, giving it a monopoly on the next generation tactical aviation (that we know of thus far). Granted, this occurred with the 5th generation with Lockheed Martin, but this is still probably something the DOD would prefer to avoid, as it may have set conditions for some poor contractor performance.
That said, at least with NGAD PCA, the DOD having greater control of the IP compared to, say, the F-35 program might mitigate that to some extent. We shall see.
I could be wrong, but i believe you only said that Thursday, March 20, the day before the F-47 selection. You seem to have a lot of solid info, but to me it seems like you have no solid reason to believe Boeing was selected for both. Going from the apparent fact that Hegseth gave the thumbs up to CSAF and VCNO to proceed, to you believing the same contractor has been selected for both seems like a leap.From my experience, OSD offices like CAPE or USD-A&S would have evaluated the costs and risks of one winner takes all. As I wrote on March 13th, Hegseth gave the thumbs up to CSAF and VCNO. Don't know if OSD offices raised any issues with SecDef.
Yes I said cost was #2 reason. #1 reason was something else. I know #1 but choose not to say -- not trying to be an a-hole.
What about the Joint Strike Fighter?
The Navy has already confirmed they are using a derivative of an off-the-shelf engine for F/A-XX. Not new. The Air Force also isn't planning to use NGAP for the first increment of F-47.It would make zero sense to me to not use NGAP for this, given how quickly NGAP is being developed and given that it will have to be ready for F-47, which supposedly will be ready in no more than 4 years. The additional range from NGAP is more important for the Navy than it is for the USAF. Not having sufficient range to target launch platforms left-of-launch is an existential issue for a CSG.
I stand corrected, it was March 20th.I could be wrong, but i believe you only said that Thursday, March 20, the day before the F-47 selection. You seem to have a lot of solid info, but to me it seems like you have no solid reason to believe Boeing was selected for both. Going from the apparent fact that Hegseth gave the thumbs up to CSAF and VCNO to proceed, to you believing the same contractor has been selected for both seems like a leap.