"chat" event tonight with a Caribou and Hornet pilot

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Sifor

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For those who are interested, the RAAF is running some "chat" event tonight with a Caribou and Hornet pilot. On facebook, link here. Unfortunately I doubt they'll answer the kind of questions I and other aviation enthusiasts will be interested in......probably only soft questions like "how does it feel to break the sound barrier!1!!?" will be answered....

In any case, worth mentioning in a thread like this...
 
The questions to the bou pilot will be more along the line "what's it like to break the road speed limit" I suspect!
 
Re: Ask The Pilot

Heh, as expected. My question:

F-35 JSF – a concern for America and her allies?
Since America has discontinued production of the F-22 Raptor in favour of the F-35 JSF, are you concerned that for the first time America and her allies will experience a capability gap given that Russia and China are both making fast progress on Raptor-equivalent aircraft? This is no fault of Australia since by convention we purchase our aircraft from the US, however the raw performance of the JSF compared with the existing Russian Sukhoi Su-35 and the future 5th Generation PAK-FA (T-50) along with the newly displayed Chinese J-20 makes anyone with aviation knowledge uneasy. Both existing and planned Chinese and Russian aircraft are far superior in raw performance compared with the F-35 JSF: supercrusing, proper stealth (the rear of the JSF has a heat signature that lights up like a Christmas tree), thrust vectoring, range, speed and manoeuvrability. While the F-35’s avionics package will be second to none, it seems rather useless when due to the airframe it is unable to be employed effectively.

If I may, in your opinion why has America gone down the JSF path? Yes it is a multirole aircraft, however it is designed for CAS and other roles the existing F-16 fulfils yet it is being marketed as a “one size fits all” aircraft capable of effectively satisfying all roles from air superiority through to interception, strike, interdiction and CAS. America has always, up until now in my opinion, employed a variety of mission-specific aircraft to build the US Air Force as it stands today. They had the F-15 (now F-22) for air superiority and interception, F-16 for CAS and basic multirole and the Hornet family for carrier operations. Now it appears as though due to the limited Raptor numbers the JSF is going to be used to fulfil all the mission roles. Personally I see this as a critical flaw which will be to the detriment of Australia’s air power. If I recall correctly during the legacy Hornet acquisition Australia decided not to acquire the F-16 Viper principally because it has only one engine and considering we are a country surrounded by water this presents an obvious concern. I assume this method of decision making was not employed during the JSF decision making.

Unfortunately for us here in Australia we really had no choice but to go with the US F-35 JSF as there were no real alternatives available. Even if we had access to the Raptor it would be foolish to believe the F-22 could fulfil all the roles, the same goes for having only the JSF. Ideally, in my opinion, the RAAF should have had a mixed structure with both F-22 and F-35 aircraft complementing each other. Perhaps there is sense in the old saying "don’t put all your eggs in the one basket"....

And the response....

wow, that's a post! I'm the wrong person to answer your question, why don't you check out the Defence Materiel Organisation website?

Why am I not surprised.. I knew the Hornet pilot would never say "yeah I agree, the JSF is s**t" but I was hoping to receive some answers as to why the JSF is good for Australia..

All the questions are now about recruitment. *bangs head on desk*
 
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Re: Ask The Pilot

The questions to the bou pilot will be more along the line "what's it like to break the road speed limit" I suspect!
While going backwards
Heh, as expected. My question:And the response.... Why am I not surprised.. I knew the Hornet pilot would never say "yeah I agree, the JSF is s**t" but I was hoping to receive some answers as to why the JSF is good for Australia.. All the questions are now about recruitment. *bangs head on desk*

Well he can hardly say, for the same reason we got the heaviest tank available that required us to upgrade 80% of bridges in northern Australia and the decks of our second hand yank landing ships. So John could suck up to George.
 
Re: Ask The Pilot

Well he can hardly say, for the same reason we got the heaviest tank available that required us to upgrade 80% of bridges in northern Australia and the decks of our second hand yank landing ships. So John could suck up to George.

Defence has always been plagued with problems... just take a look at the current situation involving the new Navy ships which IIRC are flawed with problems. Stuff ups occur on both sides of politics...
 
Re: Ask The Pilot

Defence has always been plagued with problems... just take a look at the current situation involving the new Navy ships which IIRC are flawed with problems. Stuff ups occur on both sides of politics...
Oh I'm not sure which are the "new" ships. I know the the heavy lift part of the fleet have been trouble, including the 2 30 year old ships we got from the yanks, refurbished at great cost, then strengthen the decks and that are now basically scrap.Oh, you mean the ones being built. Contractor stuff up? But weren't they selected during howard's term. I can't remember. But I do suspect that the M1s were selected against the advice from Defence. I will stop my rant there, but I do have detailed reasons.
 
Re: Ask The Pilot

Given the costs and the capabilities of the JSF, it almost feels like the Super Hornet is a bargain...

I don't know if you can really answer this question here, but with more airlines acquiring A388s (and to a lesser degree, 748s, would you ever consider working for a different airline?
 
Re: Ask The Pilot

Given the costs and the capabilities of the JSF, it almost feels like the Super Hornet is a bargain...

Which is why we've got the option to purchase more Super Hornets if the JSF runs into more problems.
 
Re: Ask The Pilot

Why am I not surprised.. I knew the Hornet pilot would never say "yeah I agree, the JSF is s**t" but I was hoping to receive some answers as to why the JSF is good for Australia..

A pilot (other than one posted to Air6000 NACC) is unlikely to be able to satisfactorily answer that question, as an official response, in a public medium. (Sure, they'll have their own personal/professional opinion). DMO and Government are absolutely the right people for him/her to be deferring to. Any other answer he/she could give would be a cut and paste from a publicly released document, and then you could be complaining about receiving a cookie-cutter response.

A Facebook Q&A session is never going to have the same focus as a Q&A session like an aviation enthusiast's forum would have...
 
Re: Ask The Pilot

A pilot (other than one posted to Air6000 NACC) is unlikely to be able to satisfactorily answer that question, as an official response, in a public medium. DMO and Government are absolutely the right people for him/her to be deferring to. Any other answer he/she could give would be a cut and paste from a publicly released document, and then you could be complaining about receiving a cookie-cutter response.

A Facebook Q&A session is never going to have the same focus as a Q&A session like an aviation enthusiast's forum would have...

While I was looking for a pilots perspective given that he is actually involved in the F-35 procurement, I do acknowledge that everything and anything he said on Facebook during the chat is taken to be an official response of the RAAF.

I guess only an "off the record" chat at the local pub would yield a response I am after.
 
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