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Originally posted by waynos
Well, Hockeyguy, if they are the sources that you have mentioned before then I must agree that they are usually very reliable. My sources too are usually reliable but clearly one side is right and one wrong, now how to determine which is the problem.
I am inclined to believe my sources on this because it makes sense and also ties in with every resource on stealth in general and fighter design that I have read. The Super Hornet is an upgrade of an airframe designed in the 70's with no previous regard to stealth, while the Typhoon was designed to incorporate a low RCS from the start, logically therefore I believe what I have read that ties in with that. It is true that it doesn't guarantee it is correct but in this case I have made a judgement call.
It is also true about the fighter designers art lying in the mastery of the art of compromise, Although of an earlier technology level the F-117 is compromised less by its mission than any other 'fighter' ever built, by a very long way.
I once read that one of the aims of ATF was to achieve F-117 like levels of stealth but without compromising mission capability in order to achieve it. This was where the F/A-22 benefitted from the massive strides in stealth technology and it is said to be extremely close to the F-117 in terms of low observability, again for my sins, this makes sense to me and Flight International is maybe THE most respected aviation magazine out there, straight away I will qualify that statement by adding that no, that does not mean they are 100% right 100% of the time.
I have also read that the F-35 is far less 'stealth' oriented than the F/A-22 due in the main to Americas wish for it to be the main export fighter after the F-16 is out of production, this again makes sense to me. Why sell something more (or at least as) stealthy than the F-117 on the world market? I think therefore it would be doubtful that it is as stealthy as some like to think.
The gut reaction from people seems to be along the lines of "Uh oh, thats not good". But why? To make Raptor, whose main function is as an air dominance fighter, as stealthy as an aircraft whose main function is merely to BE stealthy is a fantastic achievement!
Originally posted by waynos
It does not automatically follow at all that the Raptor will be miles more stealthy than the F-117, Like I said before, merely to make a fighter such as the Raptor stealthy to as near as dammit the same degree as the F-117, which was only designed to BE stealthy and anything else was a bonus, is an INCREDIBLE technological acheivement. Why can't you see the difference between designing the F-117 and designing a fighter of the magnitude of the Raptor?
I'll leave it at that as I am being tempted into a rant and I don't like those even if it looks like I do
Originally posted by Hockeyguy567
Waynos, you have to trust me on this, the Super Hornet and Hornet are two virtually different beasts. The Super Hornet has a much smaller RCS than the regular Hornet, I mean, for one, just look at the cost difference, 29-35 million USD for the F/A-18A-D, and $57 million for a Super Hornet. And according the AvWeekly and Janes, the SH has the smallest RCS out of all the non-stealthy aircraft, while I think it's not by much, you have to give it credit on that.
t would be fair to say that the F/A-18E/F employs the most extensive radar cross section reduction measures of any contemporary fighter, other than the very low observable F-22 and planned JSF. While the F/A-18E/F is not a true stealth fighter like the F-22, it will have a forward sector RCS arguably an order of magnitude smaller than seventies designed fighters.
...
None of the RCS reduction features employed in the F/A-18E/F are visible on any of the three Eurocanards, which raises interesting questions about the relative forward sector RCS reduction performance of these types.
In effect, the F/A-18E/F is what the F/A-18A Hornet should have been from the outset, had it not been hobbled at birth by a budget driven bureaucracy.
Waynos, you have to trust me on this, the Super Hornet and Hornet are two virtually different beasts. The Super Hornet has a much smaller RCS than the regular Hornet, I mean, for one, just look at the cost difference, 29-35 million USD for the F/A-18A-D, and $57 million for a Super Hornet. And according the AvWeekly and Janes, the SH has the smallest RCS out of all the non-stealthy aircraft, while I think it's not by much, you have to give it credit on that.
well the USAF has spent/is spending more money on the F22 than it did on the F117 so it MUST be atleast a wee bit stealthy and also i think it would be stealthier since it is newer and has used all the reaserch off the F117 and B2 projects.
Finally Devilwasp;
I fear you have totally misunderstood the point I was trying to put across.
Yes it is more modern, advanced, expensive and everything else, I never said it wasn't stealthy, never mind 'a wee bit', it is VERY stealthy. But so is the F-117. Which as I have said was designed ONLY to be stealthy. This was a luxury Lockheed didn't have with Raptor. The F-117 doesn't have to be supersonic, at all never mind supercruise, it doesn't have to be manouverable, it doesn't have to do any of the things that are not just expected, but demanded, from the Raptor. F-117 gets away with carrying just TWO internal smart bombs and nothing else. I was not putting the Raptor down, I just think that to expect it to be A LOT more stealthy than the F-117 after everything else it delivers is just greedy, on the part of us, the plane fanatics that is. I think our expectations are sometimes unrealistic.
Originally posted by waynos
Also American Mad Man, it was my understanding that the advent of the 'rounded edge stealth' capability was more a way to achieve the same, or slightly better, type of results but with more areodynamically efficient shapes, The faceted type of design being no good at all if you wanted a big bomber or a high performance fighter, allowing these types of aircraft to be created and STILL be stealthy, rather than it actually being massively more stealthy.
I mean the F-117 is very very stealthy indeed, how much more stealthy could you get? Maybe the F-117 is not as stealthy as I though it was?
If I have got this wrong it might also explain why the F-35 will be sold on the open market while many of the posters on here hold it to be 'as stealthy as the F-117'. To me this would be sheer madness as the US industry is hoping to export thousands of them over the next two decades, but that is just my opinion.
Originally posted by WestPoint23
I don�t mind the F-35 being sold to our allies as long as we don�t sell any to France Germany and Russia im kool with it. That being said i am happy the pentagon is not giving anyone the F/A-222, ally or not the USAF should be the only one with it.
Dick Mather project manager at Lockheed-Martin has this to say regarding the stealth of the F-22...
"How large the F-22 Raptor appears on radar is classified and depends on the quality of the radar. However, it can be said that the F-22 doesn't appear on even the most sophisticated radar systems until it is almost too late to shoot. "You might get your sights up and maybe get a shot, or maybe not, because that...(Raptor) is "ZOOM!" right through your field of view..." then it disappears off the screen.
Originally posted by beyondSciFi
hummm i found this site: www.aerospaceweb.org...