You're assuming any of our hardware works.
Go home Russia, you're drunk.
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I got curious about Russia and looked it up. It’s a town called Oymyakon (pop 500) that’s in between two valleys, which causes the unusual climate. It only has liquid water because the pressure is enough to keep it flowing without freezing.
And a few weeks ago they had temps of -140F.
Also its over in Siberia so hard to compare to the rest of Europe.
And the SU-57s they flew over Syria and Ukraine a couple of years ago as a big show of force didn't even have weapons systems installed (they weren't ready), nor do they have the engines they were designed to work with (they stil aren't ready).
One additional thing to note on Russia. Their air force fighter pilots get 1/4 - 1/2 the yearly flight time US Air Force pilots get. Sure, they love their big demonstrations at air shows or over Syria, but the fact is their air show pilots are just that - Ivan 6-Pack can't fly like that. And the SU-57s they flew over Syria and Ukraine a couple of years ago as a big show of force didn't even have weapons systems installed (they weren't ready), nor do they have the engines they were designed to work with (they stil aren't ready).
China gets more air time than Russia, but not a whole lot (and still, much less than US fighter pilots).
Except the US still has the F-22 that gets flown basically every day (and I can vouch because I see them every day).So basically, Russia's F-35.
Well, they're years behind even that. The F35A seems to be doing fine, it's mainly the C variant that's at issue. And the weapons systems and telemetry aren't at issue in the 35.So basically, Russia's F-35.
Well, there's a reason both the US and Russia are still maintaining and updating 4th gen fighter fleets. For one, you don't always need stealth or the capabilities of 5th gen fighters. The USAF is still updating the F15 and looking into possibly updating the F16 as well. The Navy plans to use the F/A18 alongside the 35 for at least many more years. They're substantially cheaper to produce and require a fraction of the maintenance.I assume if there is ever a great power air war again the side with the oldest operational post-WW2 aircraft will win, since the other side will have their entire air fleet grounded after a couple sorties by being finicky, broken, or out of some tiny but necessary part.
It'll be like Battleship, with us pulling exhibits from Udvar-Hazy because nothing else can get off the ground.
Well, they're years behind even that. The F35A seems to be doing fine, it's mainly the C variant that's at issue. And the weapons systems and telemetry aren't at issue in the 35.
Is the Su-57 behind the F35 in capabilities, or just in the production cycle?
Also, are we reaching a ceiling where the marginal return on pushing avionics is so low it's better to just pump out a few more of the existing generation? Is the 5th generation the last generation that's really worth it (except as a jobs program obviously)?
Also, are hypersonic air-to-air missiles just going to turn all of these into incredibly expensive fireworks the instant anyone uses them? Seems like we might have that WW1 situation where all the cutting edge capital ships never leave port because one $15 sub can kill them.
In actual news, the USS Abraham Lincoln is deploying with USMC F35Cs, so I guess that confirms they're operational.
https://news.usni.org/2022/01/03/abr...eid=2b9555b06e
The "C" variant is the carrier model. No VTOL. "B" is VTOL, and I think is operational? So this makes all three versions fully combat-ready. That's good!
Are the VTOLs for the Marines? I get the impression they are for extraction, not insertion (you can't parachute out).