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Quoting Baron95 (Thread starter): The primary reason being their aparent inability to field stealth technology. |
Quoting Moo (Reply 1): We don't need it. Its that simple. ... However, we have not been losing conventional aircraft at such rates that stealth is a must - the attrition rate is perfectly acceptable as a trade off to lower costs. |
Quoting Stitch (Reply 3): The EU's weapons systems were designed to keep the Warsaw Pact out, not to go deep into WP territory. As such, stealth was not a design requirement/factor. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 5): Here is the only link I could find for a somewhat serious European Stealth fighter effort; http://www.nitrocandy.com/meet-the-e....html |
Quoting ArniePie (Reply 6): http://www.f-104.de/exponates/english/exp_lampyridae_eng.html |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 5): And stealth (like Sonar, Radar, Jet engines, self-guiding missiles) is a game changing technology. |
Quoting Moo (Reply 9): Its only game changing if the other side has it - and in Europes case, unless the bad will between France and the US *really* escalates, the other side doesn't have stealth capability. Ipso facto, its not worth us spending the extra money. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 12): It doesn't seem like the reason is cost or lack of need. That is what is so puzzling. |
Quoting F27Friendship (Reply 10): that's not entirely true. You can bet on it that everything on the drawing boards now has stealth in it. |
Quoting TristarAtLCA (Reply 11): And as to saving money, if it is true that 2 F22s can take on a squadron of F15s and win easily. Isn't a $150M F22 in fact much more cost effective than 3 $50M F15s? |
Quoting Baron95 (Thread starter): Why Can't Russia/Europe Field Stealth Planes? |
Quoting XT6Wagon (Reply 14): strangely enough, most stuff in the pipeline doesn't overtly use stealth. |
Quoting XT6Wagon (Reply 14): Lets say you are China then. You have the money to develop a stealth plane. You have the ability to develop a stealth plane. What you lack is the need to spend the money to do so. |
Quoting XT6Wagon (Reply 14): Your 3 real threats, Russia, India, |
Quoting XT6Wagon (Reply 14): Not to mention small forces of stealth aircraft would suffer the ME262 problem of it doesn't matter if you are better than they are if there is a hell of alot more of them. The P51 in service was the better plane in P51 Vs ME262 matches because one on one wasn't the issue. It was that everywhere the ME262 turned there was another P51 diving in on it. |
Quoting RayChuang (Reply 17): If I remember correctly, BAe did a lot of radar cross-section testing with the Eurofighter Typhoon. As such, they were able to significantly reduce the RCS of the fighter, especially reducing the radar reflection from the engine inlets. |
Quoting Moo (Reply 13): The US budgeted defence spending for 2008 is projected to be $623Billion USD |
Quoting XT6Wagon (Reply 14):
Fighters only carry so many missiles, and can only be in one place at one time. |
Quoting F27Friendship (Reply 18):
Typhoon has a lot of reduced RCS measures, just as a moder Super Hornet and F-16 also have. There is a lot you can do before you have to redesign the overall geometry ( a la F-22, B2) |
Quoting XT6Wagon (Reply 14): Everyone else near you is small frys who couldn't hope to hurt you with conventional military units. |
Quoting UH60FtRucker (Reply 19): The FY08 DoD budget is $481.4billion. Your figure wrongly adds the GWOT Supplemental Spending Bill to the grand total. While it all goes towards defense spending, in the context of this thread, it cannot be considered. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 20): and even if Russia send in 250 fighters (10 x 1), I'd doubt very much that any would get through. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 20): Listen. Even against Iraq, a third world country, spent by years of war with Iran, the US could not send F16s, F18s, F15Es in there in the first day of the air war. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 20): The volume of airspace that a pair of F22s can cover is *HUGE*. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 20): Listen. Even against Iraq, a third world country, spent by years of war with Iran, the US could not send F16s, F18s, F15Es in there in the first day of the air war. F117s were the only manned aircraft over the Iraqui capital. |
Quote: There are passive radar systems like the Czech Vera-E which can easily detect stealth bombers including the F-117 within a range of 450 km. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 20): the US AWACS are said to not be able to pick up the F22s untill they are way within missile range |
Quoting Pelican (Reply 23): Nonetheless the numbers seem to be valid for his comparison considering that those European numbers are also including the money for ongoing operations, aren't they? |
Quoting Oldeuropean (Reply 21): There are passive radar systems like the Czech Vera-E which can easily detect stealth bombers including the F-117 within a range of 450 km. |
Quoting Oldeuropean (Reply 24): Yes, but I wouldn't be suprised when e.g. Iran has by now passive radar systems to detect those F-117s. |
Quoting Oldeuropean (Reply 24): It's 450km for normal and up to 200km for stealth planes. |
Quoting Caspritz78 (Reply 29): The point Europe doesn't have stealth planes is that we have a different military doctrine. The US military doctrine was always to bring the fight to the enemy. Never let the enemy come close to the US. A reason why the US Navy is the largest Navy in the world and has more aircraft carriers than all other nations together. That's the same reason why the US Air force was so interested in stealth planes. Strike the Enemy deep in its own territory. |
Quote: In Europe during the Cold War we didn't have the luxury of bringing the war the enemy. The Russians and their tanks were standing in our front yard. That's why for example the German Army was build and equipped to stop tanks. Compared to the size of our forces we had a lot of tanks and support troops that made sure the tanks were able move around. Our infantry was mainly anti-tank troops. Europe had no use for Stealth Fighters/Bombers and still hasn't. |
Quoting Atmx2000 (Reply 30): The Navy is essential to protecting the supply routes for the distant bases and providing additional fire power to hot spots |
Quote: Page 10: Maritime forces will defend the homeland by identifying and neutralizing threats as far from our shores as possible. Page 12: Forward Presence. Maritime forces will be forward deployed, especially in an era of diverse threats to the homeland. |
Quoting Atmx2000 (Reply 30): For the same reason, the US had vastly more air lift capacity than any European country. |
Quoting Oldeuropean (Reply 21): There are passive radar systems like the Czech Vera-E which can easily detect stealth bombers including the F-117 within a range of 450 km. |
Quoting Oldeuropean (Reply 24): Yes, but I wouldn't be suprised when e.g. Iran has by now passive radar systems to detect those F-117s. |
Quoting TristarAtLCA (Reply 25): The problem with your theory is that when detection equipment removes the advantage of stealth, |
Quoting Burkhard (Reply 33): Stealth only helps against direct radar reflexes. In an area with so much electronic noise as Europe, a F22 or F35 is as bright a spot as a Tornado or F15. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 32): Detection is nothing. SR-71s were routinelly detected by radar - and adversaries could do squat about it. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 32): It can lobby Slammers at any fighter that comes up twice that far. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 34): Send a non stealth fighter head on to intercept? In the scenario, a Slammer-D can prob be used up to 100nm away. Turn-on your SAM radars? An F22 can send a couple of JDAMs or 8 SDB to that site from 50nm away. |
Quoting TristarAtLCA (Reply 35): The F-22 is a supreme aircraft currently in a class of its own but you simply cannot assume this will not change. And however advanced, it is still just an aircraft. |
Quoting Pelican (Reply 23): I wouldn't consider Japan as a small fry... |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 20): Well the F22 can carry 8 missiles and a cannon internally in stealth configuration |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 34):
Turn-on your SAM radars? An F22 can send a couple of JDAMs or 8 SDB to that site from 50nm away. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 32): Detection is nothing. SR-71s were routinelly detected by radar - and adversaries could do squat about it. An F22 flying at 50Kft and supercruising at M1.5+ can lobby cheap guided munitions (like the SDM, JDAM) over 50 nm away. It can lobby Slammers at any fighter that comes up twice that far. It can detect SAM launches turn and supercrise way in most scenarios except if it is basically right on top of the SAM when launched |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 34): Having said that, even assuming you are correct and you can detect the F22, what are you going to do about it? |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 34): What can Europe or Russia do to SHOOT DOWN a M1.5+ supercruising fighter with a tiny RCS a tiny infrared cross section, a huge AESA radar, armed with Slammers with 50-100nm range, backed up by data linked battlefield data, etc, etc, etc. |
Quoting Caspritz78 (Reply 31): Quote: Page 10: Maritime forces will defend the homeland by identifying and neutralizing threats as far from our shores as possible. Page 12: Forward Presence. Maritime forces will be forward deployed, especially in an era of diverse threats to the homeland. I think only the British Navy has a similar doctrine. Many other Navys are more for sea border protection. |
Quoting Caspritz78 (Reply 29): In Europe during the Cold War we didn't have the luxury of bringing the war the enemy. The Russians and their tanks were standing in our front yard. That's why for example the German Army was build and equipped to stop tanks. Compared to the size of our forces we had a lot of tanks and support troops that made sure the tanks were able move around. Our infantry was mainly anti-tank troops. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 36): However, I think they will have a Stealth fighter in 15 years. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 32): Why couldn't the typhoon had been designed with a stealth geometry like the F35 for 10% higher costs or a stealth geometry+materials/coatings of the F22 for 20% more? That is the question. |
Quoting Pelican (Reply 39): So why then stealth? In this scenario stealth is not needed and this thread was about why the Russians an Europeans don't field stealth planes and not about the F22 which isn't just because of stealth superior. |
Quoting Zak (Reply 38): the weapons you mention have no independent propulsion. i would love to see the speed and the profile flown to a JDAM 50nm. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 43): Just run your high school physics and calculate what a 1,000lbs aerodynamic JDAM balistc trajectory would be when launched from M2.0 and 65K ft in a lobby zoom. |
Quoting Baron95 (Reply 20): So if France or the UK have say 60 F22, with say 50 mission capable at any one time, and they get them in the air in alternating waves of 25 (25 on station, 25 rearming), that is 200-400 missiles in the air at any one time. Coverage and number of missiles is not your problem. |
Quoting Scbriml (Reply 28): It's not widely known, but the UK does have a large fleet of the World's most advanced stealth fighters and bombers. You just haven't seen them yet! |
Quoting TristarAtLCA (Reply 45): But no aircraft can launch a munition at M2 at the moment |
Quoting Zak (Reply 44): 24!=50 nm |
Quoting Zak (Reply 44): germany had a stealth fighter 20 years ago and decided its not worth it. a good infrastructure and healthcare and social network beats having 100s of bns in research and subsidy for stealth |