All of us, every single man, woman, and child on the face of the Earth were born with the same unalienable rights; to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. And, if the governments of the world can't get that through their thick skulls, then, regime change will be necessary.
Thursday, April 09, 2015
And then 12 hours after Israel (and after all our allies) joined China’s Asia Development bank, Putin made an offer to Israel …
‘Help us fix this for airframes, after all you
people designed one of China’s main deployed jet aircraft, the J-10′ …
(just imagine)
RCD, from War is Boring:
Russia’s Stealth Fighter Is in Serious Trouble
Just
a short time ago, Russia planned to have 52 advanced T-50 stealth
fighters by the end of the decade. At least, that was the plan.
Now
the T-50 program appears to be in serious trouble, and Russia may cut
back the fighters to a fraction of the planned strength.
The first
sign something was very wrong appeared last month. On March 24. Yuri
Borisov, Russia’s deputy defense minister for armaments, told
theKommersant newspaper that the military is drastically cutting its
number of T-50s. Instead of 52 stealth fighters, Russia will build
merely 12 of them.
That’s hardly anything.
The Kremlin has
produced five T-50 prototypes so far — and one was heavily damaged in a
fire. Meanwhile, India is co-developing the plane with Russia, and New
Delhi’s funding helps keep the project alive. But now Indian Air Force
officials have also stopped talking to their counterparts in Moscow.
Which
all puts a spotlight on Russia’s problems building so-called
fifth-generation fighter jets — which the country needs to compete with
the best the United States and China have to offer.
It’s easy
enough building prototypes, but developing a truly capable
aircraft — all during a major economic recession — isn’t so simple.
That’s especially the case when talking about more than a handful.
“Given
the new economic conditions, the original plans may have to be
adjusted,” Borisov said. “It is better to have the PAK FA kept as a
reserve, and later move forward, while squeezing everything possible for
now out of the 4+ generation fighters.”
He was referring to
Russia’s modern — but non-stealthy — Su-30 and Su-35 multi-role
fighters. Borisov said these fighters will fill the gap left by the
T-50’s dwindling production run.
In theory, the T-50 will serve as
Russia’s competitor to the U.S. F-22 and F-35 fighters. On the surface,
the T-50 appears to be a capable and deadly jet. It’s big, fast and has
a long range. At air shows, the blended winged-body plane has
demonstrated a high degree of maneuverability.
It has huge,
mean-looking twin engines — set wide apart for stability — and a 50-foot
wingspan. The T-50 has a large internal weapons bay and stealthy, radar
avoidance features. If there are technical problems, Russia doesn’t
disclose them.
Officially, Russia’s economic turmoil is
responsible for the production cut. The plane’s total development cost
is unclear — anywhere from $10 billion to $30 billion. India has already
spent about $5 billion. But all is not well on the technical front,
either.
Because we know the Indians will disclose problems with the aircraft.
For
more than a year, the Indian Business Standard newspaper has reported
on New Delhi’s misgivings. The Indian version of the T-50 is known as
the FGFA.
“The FGFA’s current AL-41F1 engines were underpowered,
the Russians were reluctant to share critical design information, and
the fighter would eventually cost too much,” the paper reported, based
on briefings from Indian Air Force officials in December 2013.
A
month later, more bad news leaked to the press. India wanted a bigger
share of the project. But the engine was still bad, it still cost too
much, the plane’s radar was “inadequate” and its “stealth features badly
engineered.”
Then in June, a T-50 landed at the Zhukovsky testing
grounds near Moscow … and its engine caught fire. Russian officials
said the damage was minor — but photographs depicted much of the rear
fuselage blackened by the blaze.
“What added to the controversy …
was Russia’s refusal to share any details of this failure, to the extent
that a technical evaluation team of the Indian Air Force that
reportedly was present at the site was refused access to inspect the
damaged platform,” Monika Chansoria of the Center for Land Warfare
Studies in New Delhi told Defense News.
India and Russia should
have continued negotiations for the development contract. But now New
Delhi is incommunicado with Moscow. The Russian defense ministry wanted
meetings with their Indian counterparts between February and March.
India didn’t respond.
“[Indian Air Force] marshals fear the FGFA
undermines the rationale for buying the Rafale fighter from France, an
$18–$20 billion contract that is sputtering through so-far unsuccessful
negotiations,” the Business Standardreported.
Russia media outlets
suggested the drop in oil prices is largely responsible for scaling
back the T-50. The Kremlin is short on cash and might not be able to
justify spending billions of dollars on a fancy new stealth fighter — or
at least 52 of them.
If so, once the Russian economy improves,
the T-50 could return to its original schedule — albeit a bit later than
expected. That’s probably the best-case scenario.
The worst case
involves serious — but mysterious — technical problems. And if India
goes farther and ditches its share of the program, the T-50 will go from
having major issues into being a catastrophe.
It would mean
billions of dollars of hoped-for investment washing down the sink — and
the loss of Russia’s largest potential buyer on the international
market.
The Russian air force largely dates to the Soviet era
— and it’s getting older every day. Russia simply can’t replace its
aging fighters fast enough or build the most advanced jets at the same
rate as Washington or Beijing.
But Russia can make evolutionary
improvements to existing designs, such as the Su-30 and Su-35. Which is
all to say that building a more revolutionaryaircraft such as the T-50
might be one step too far.
No comments:
Post a Comment