Quirky
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 3,650
- Points
- 1,260
Drallib said:The Block III is "stealthier" than previous F/A-18s. How much more and how effective is the question...
Also, how much stealth does the F-35 sacrifice when it does carry weapons externally? And if the F-35 got noticed or engaged, would it be able to put up a fight?
I listened to a podcast called "The Fighter Pilot Podcast" and the host Vincent Aiello (retired Navy F/A-18 pilot) interviewed an F-35 pilot who talked about the jet open and honestly. Because of the design of the aircraft for it's stealth capabilities meant they had to shape and size things a certain way. Because of this, when the F-35 went toe-to-toe with 4th-Gen Fighter Jets, it didn't measure up the best. If the F-35 is never spotted, terrific. But as soon as it's spotted and say it uses it's 4 to 6 missiles in "stealth-mode", not very good :not-again:
And by the internal weapon bay being limited, it can carry either; a) 4x AIM-120 or b) 2x AIM-120 with 2x JDAM.
Obvious choice? Maybe not... poor choice of wording on my part. And yes, regardless of which aircraft the RCAF recieves, there will be training and logistical changes, but the changes to an F-35 will be more of a change. Although, now I wouldn't use this point as an argument anymore. In the grand scheme of things this greater change in training and logistics is a small price to pay.
Hmm... after some further reading, if you want Stealth ability, you can have it. If you want "beast mode" you can have it too. Maybe have a couple F-35s penetrate defenses in stealth mode and a couple further out in "beast-mode".
Another questions... if Canada does go ahead with the F-35, do you think the B variant (STOVL) is the appropriate choice? Or would the A variant (CTOL) be a better option. Doesn't the F-35A have more range?
You are asking questions that have been beaten to death on this forum and this tread. The answers are there if you search for them.
Furthermore, the F-35 will be the obvious choice considering the international partners already flying it, operationally in some cases. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_Martin_F-35_Lightning_II#Operators What will the super hornet support look like in 20, 30, 40 years? We would be the only country still flying the things. The only reason why Canada hasn't bought them is politics, that's it. The RCAF already chose the F35 years ago.