So, the CCA part of NGAD isn't going to be attritable? say what?
CCA fighter wingmen drones won't be ‘attritable,’ despite 'common misconception': General - Breaking Defense
The drones will provide an "affordable mass" to augment the lethality of fighters. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall says they need to be a “fraction” of the cost of the F-35.breakingdefense.com
I'm not sure how much cheaper something with potentially F-35 range and payload is going to be than an F-35 proper... IMO they'll be lucky to get one for less than half the cost of an F-35.
Perhaps longer range missiles fired well aft of the fighter might have control handed off to F-35?
This would render any attack on something like Starlink moot.
This protects LEO assets in that missile trucks outside the theater help fighters within.
We're old...That takes me back a few years Rhinocrates.
I miss interceptors, the only country that designs and builds interceptors nowadays is Russia with the MiG-31 and the MiG-41, why did interceptors go out of fashion in the west?
The larger quantity of fighters and smaller landmass to cover probably made them redundant. As did larger fighters with greater range and drop tanks.I can see your point about dedicated interceptors Josh_TN, NGAD armed with the AIM-260 will fill that role in the west while Russia will have its MiG-41 but will only build so many as it will probably be too costly.
Historically, interceptors are very short-ranged, fast climbing, and optimized around blowing up large bombers. So you need lots of them, if you are expecting an attack by large bombers in formation.I miss interceptors, the only country that designs and builds interceptors nowadays is Russia with the MiG-31 and the MiG-41, why did interceptors go out of fashion in the west?
Not sure how much money will be saved by sacrificing supercruise. I mean, the AGM-28 supercruised at Mach 2.1 with a non-afterburning J52...So, the CCA part of NGAD isn't going to be attritable? say what?
CCA fighter wingmen drones won't be ‘attritable,’ despite 'common misconception': General - Breaking Defense
The drones will provide an "affordable mass" to augment the lethality of fighters. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall says they need to be a “fraction” of the cost of the F-35.breakingdefense.com
I'm not sure how much cheaper something with potentially F-35 range and payload is going to be than an F-35 proper... IMO they'll be lucky to get one for less than half the cost of an F-35.
I think there will be major performance trade offs to keep the CCA cheaper. It has already been suggested that supercruise may be sacrificed. I’d expect at least some versions to not have radar and other high end avionics, since that’s a major cost driver. But also I think it’s worth pointing out removing the pilot has a lot of cost savings in and of itself organizationally.
Did you notice that this patent is for HYPERSONIC aircraft?!?
Not sure how much money will be saved by sacrificing supercruise. I mean, the AGM-28 supercruised at Mach 2.1 with a non-afterburning J52...
That said, I do see probably 3 different CCA types flying:
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- One is a pure A2A type, small and probably the dumbest of the CCA types with minimal electronics. This will probably also be the first one built. It may be able to supercruise, or it may be replaced with a version that can later.
- Second is a recon/electronic attack type, and will end up expensive due to sensors. I expect that this one will be the stealthiest, and will have a little bit of space onboard for ARMs and a couple small missiles for threats that need to get blasted RIGHT NOW.
- Third is a heavier attacker, carrying 10k+lbs internally. Obviously, this one is the biggest, and will probably be even bigger than an F-35.
Does anyone have numbers for how much weight is saved by not needing a cockpit and all the other bits that go with having a pilot onboard?
I mean, you could dial the engine back to a longer term survivable power level and only cruise at Mach 1.5 or whatever. Wonder if a non-afterburning F404 would do the job?Not sure how much money will be saved by sacrificing supercruise. I mean, the AGM-28 supercruised at Mach 2.1 with a non-afterburning J52...
That said, I do see probably 3 different CCA types flying:
=====
- One is a pure A2A type, small and probably the dumbest of the CCA types with minimal electronics. This will probably also be the first one built. It may be able to supercruise, or it may be replaced with a version that can later.
- Second is a recon/electronic attack type, and will end up expensive due to sensors. I expect that this one will be the stealthiest, and will have a little bit of space onboard for ARMs and a couple small missiles for threats that need to get blasted RIGHT NOW.
- Third is a heavier attacker, carrying 10k+lbs internally. Obviously, this one is the biggest, and will probably be even bigger than an F-35.
Does anyone have numbers for how much weight is saved by not needing a cockpit and all the other bits that go with having a pilot onboard?
Well I certainly think the CCAs won't have augmented engines at any rate. One thing about the Hound Dog is that it was a pure turbojet, which is generally going to be less efficient. Second thing is that it was a version of the engine designed to operate at emergency power full time since its lifespan was measured in hours. You can probably get a supercruising UAV with an unaugmented turbanfan of some kind, but you'd probably have to design it from scratch. I suspect any engine in those weight classes have too much bypass ratio to get an aircraft through the sound barrier. The F-22's have notably less bypass and sacrifice low altitude performance; I suspect there isn't an off the shelf installation that easily can achieve that.
Yes, but it's harder to show those lifetime savings to the people paying for the aircraft.I'm sure there will be a couple types of CCAs though I won't guess their size and weights. I doubt removing the pilot from an F-35 sized aircraft has a major effect, but the smaller the aircraft, the larger the percentage of weight saved. IMO the real savings is in pilot training (and aircraft maintenance), not pilot weight.
Note that this implies exhaust above the tails, like on the F-23.
Well considering their recent track record in both defence and space I would certainly think long and hard before giving them any contract in these areas.At least this puts the the tired discussion about demonstrators already existing, my bet is on Boeing losing.
The USAF would be insane to give Boeing another big contract IMO.
Regardless of whether or not the NGAD will have a tail (I think they will eventually), what is evident in this video is that according to Skunk Works what will largely define the fighters of the next generation will be their speed.View attachment 702422
View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1673330273411366912
Interesting angle from the latest Lockheed Martin teaser, what do we think is this a V shaped vertical stab? Would love be right about it not being tailless hehe.
Oldies but goldies .We're old...That takes me back a few years Rhinocrates.
Regarding interceptor qualities, F-22 isn't universally superior to the F-15.I'd argue F-22 is an interceptor; certainly it is highly optimized for high altitude A2A work at the expensive of A2G payload and performance. NGAD is probably going to be more in the "interceptor" than "fighter" category as well.
This is true. Furthermore, specialization at interceptor metrics in fact does come at a cost of air superiority qualities.In general I think the issue with purpose built interceptors was that they were costly for an aircraft that that had only one mission and that most countries didn't particularly need that mission.
I have no idea about the V tail, but it sure looks like there are three engines.........notice three lines of exhaust shocks.View attachment 702422
View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1673330273411366912
Interesting angle from the latest Lockheed Martin teaser, what do we think is this a V shaped vertical stab? Would love be right about it not being tailless hehe.
$40M? That would be not be surprising for the first examples. The question is how many can they get. Costs typically go down with higher manufacturing rates.So, the CCA part of NGAD isn't going to be attritable? say what?
CCA fighter wingmen drones won't be ‘attritable,’ despite 'common misconception': General - Breaking Defense
The drones will provide an "affordable mass" to augment the lethality of fighters. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall says they need to be a “fraction” of the cost of the F-35.breakingdefense.com
I'm not sure how much cheaper something with potentially F-35 range and payload is going to be than an F-35 proper... IMO they'll be lucky to get one for less than half the cost of an F-35.
I have no idea about the V tail, but it sure looks like there are three engines.........notice three lines of exhaust shocks.View attachment 702422
View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1673330273411366912
Interesting angle from the latest Lockheed Martin teaser, what do we think is this a V shaped vertical stab? Would love be right about it not being tailless hehe.
I mean, an MQ-9 Reaper is $30mil, and isn't even jet powered. I'll be surprised if the first CCAs are less than $60mil.$40M? That would be not be surprising for the first examples. The question is how many can they get. Costs typically go down with higher manufacturing rates.So, the CCA part of NGAD isn't going to be attritable? say what?
CCA fighter wingmen drones won't be ‘attritable,’ despite 'common misconception': General - Breaking Defense
The drones will provide an "affordable mass" to augment the lethality of fighters. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall says they need to be a “fraction” of the cost of the F-35.breakingdefense.com
I'm not sure how much cheaper something with potentially F-35 range and payload is going to be than an F-35 proper... IMO they'll be lucky to get one for less than half the cost of an F-35.
Perhaps the "Sherman tank" version: simple construction to streamline production, easy to transport, using an existing engine(s) already under high rates of production. Then have all three manufacturers build as many as possible. One can hope.
And to up the cost further I presume they will have to have stealth coating/characteristics to avoid indicating to the enemy an area of the sky where the controlling aircraft probably is.I mean, an MQ-9 Reaper is $30mil, and isn't even jet powered. I'll be surprised if the first CCAs are less than $60mil.$40M? That would be not be surprising for the first examples. The question is how many can they get. Costs typically go down with higher manufacturing rates.So, the CCA part of NGAD isn't going to be attritable? say what?
CCA fighter wingmen drones won't be ‘attritable,’ despite 'common misconception': General - Breaking Defense
The drones will provide an "affordable mass" to augment the lethality of fighters. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall says they need to be a “fraction” of the cost of the F-35.breakingdefense.com
I'm not sure how much cheaper something with potentially F-35 range and payload is going to be than an F-35 proper... IMO they'll be lucky to get one for less than half the cost of an F-35.
Perhaps the "Sherman tank" version: simple construction to streamline production, easy to transport, using an existing engine(s) already under high rates of production. Then have all three manufacturers build as many as possible. One can hope.
You may be right, but it does appear to be 3 distinct lines of shock diamonds. Anyway, it is just art so who knows except for the artist.I have no idea about the V tail, but it sure looks like there are three engines.........notice three lines of exhaust shocks.View attachment 702422
View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1673330273411366912
Interesting angle from the latest Lockheed Martin teaser, what do we think is this a V shaped vertical stab? Would love be right about it not being tailless hehe.
Or rather two exhausts with some overlap due to the angle...
A sale to France for 16 airframes plus 8 ground control stations, ground handling equipment, and pilot training in 2013 was $1.5bn.Can we get a source for the $30 million? I have a hard time believing individual airframes cost that much; that sounds like a system cost (ground segment) or some kind of airframe + sensor payload cost.
If they don't want the CCA to be attritable, that means they want it to have all the Radar Warning Receivers, Missile Approach Warning Systems, radar and IR jammers, etc ad nauseam. Which blows "cheap" out of the water.In any case, if you largely dispense with the avionics systems and simply use CCA as a fire platform, along with adopting a cheap and plentiful propulsion method, you can probably make a much cheaper UAV. As an example, a no frills XQ-58 is <10 million. I know that isn't in the size and weight class we're looking for but the point being it is a high performance UAV with low RCS and a bomb bay, and it is a lot cheaper than 30 million. If you are willing to give the CCA just a data link, IRST, and some ejectable countermeasures rather then set it up as an independent fighter with its own sensors and jammers then it could be cheaper. The trade off would independent operations and survivability - it would need the manned platform for its firing cues and would have minimal ability to dodge once detected. IMO that's a better way to go, given the lethality of future dual mode AAMs. They might not be designed to be disposable but they certainly will take casualties once they start firing.
When it comes to air superiority where does the F-15 beat the F-22. (Please don't say top speed.)Regarding interceptor qualities, F-22 isn't universally superior to the F-15.I'd argue F-22 is an interceptor; certainly it is highly optimized for high altitude A2A work at the expensive of A2G payload and performance. NGAD is probably going to be more in the "interceptor" than "fighter" category as well.
They're definitely not saving in hardware funds even the with somewhat smaller than fighter drones. The complexities and time and money more than exceed just building a manned system. It seems to be an attempt to weaken US air power from within. Taking the pilot out of plane and relying on electromagnetic fields is frought with disaster. And we are nowhere near fully automated fighters taking off, flying a mission that might change while in the air, and returning to base. We can't even perfect the AAM to be reliable but they're selling us on aircraft 4000 times more complex for air superiority. I recall even recently a hornet needed 2 AAMs to down a 1970s mig in the mideast and 2 were needed to down a balloon over the US. Can't make missiles more reliable but speed ahead with unmanned fighters. Ok dude go smoke another joint at your pride event for the DoD.If they go for a full fighter sized UAV it sounds like what they are trying to save money on is pilots, not hardware. Or alternatively they envision CCAs operating independently from manned fighters altogether in the long run and local control is just a stepping stone on the way to geo fencing them with weapons free on the wrong side of line. I’m starting to get that feeling.
The point was, interceptor =/= air superiority, through the whole history.When it comes to air superiority where does the F-15 beat the F-22. (Please don't say top speed.)Regarding interceptor qualities, F-22 isn't universally superior to the F-15.I'd argue F-22 is an interceptor; certainly it is highly optimized for high altitude A2A work at the expensive of A2G payload and performance. NGAD is probably going to be more in the "interceptor" than "fighter" category as well.