Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
art wrote:I think you are mixing up Gripen C and Gripen E. Gripen C uses a Volvo version of GE F404; Gripen E uses GE F414.
What is your source supporting a Gripen E cost of $100 million?
Avatar2go wrote:My understanding (from various sources) is that the earlier Gripen was around $60M, with the E model expected to be in the range of an F-35 at around $80M.
However the Gripen is far more capable than any of the primarily trainer aircraft you cited. The airframe is far stronger and more durable, and is designed for modern weapons and all the sensors & avionics that go with them. So not really a good comparison.
744SPX wrote:Well the Gripen C is an honest mach 2 airplane and the T-50 can only do 1.5, and the T-7 is an outright dog at mach 1.2, so neither of those aircraft have to use materials that can handle mach 2 heating. That might account for some of the cost.
RJMAZ wrote:The correct answer is fewer parts allowing for reduced assembly time.
"The best part is no part. The best process is no process." - Elon Musk
The Saab Gripen program started roughly 20 years before the Korean T-50 trainer. Improved CAD design and machining allows for a reduced parts count. Less assembly time allows for a lower cost.
The Boeing T-7 has pushed this even further being nearly 20 years newer than the T-50.
...
As technology is improving rapidly to make the same product built 10 years later will always be cheaper.
RJMAZ wrote:Also remember the Pareto principle or the 80/20 rule. Generally developing something 80% as good only costs 20% of the price. This applies to other things like phones. This is a key design philosophy of the LM Skunk works that allowed for rapid development.
Avatar2go wrote:I suspect it may not be valid to compare empty and takeoff weights, and conclude the airframes are structurally equivalent. As pointed out above there are materials needed for high speed flight, high g-loads, and high flight cycles at those loads.
Also at least for the T-7, the lift capability is well below the Gripen. There's not really a comparison.
kitplane01 wrote:744SPX wrote:Well the Gripen C is an honest mach 2 airplane and the T-50 can only do 1.5, and the T-7 is an outright dog at mach 1.2, so neither of those aircraft have to use materials that can handle mach 2 heating. That might account for some of the cost.
The Gripen C is mach-2 at high altitude only. What part of the plane do you think gets heated at altitude at Mach 2?
I don't think this is a concern, but I'm willing to be educated.
744SPX wrote:that is because of the stealth coatings/materials inability to handle high mach temperatures and not because mach 2 is "unnecessary"
kitplane01 wrote:I have not noticed that an F-16 or F-15 cost twice as much as a Rafale or Typhoon, even though the second group was developed almost 40 years later.
kitplane01 wrote:Nor does a 787 seem to cost half that of an A330, even though it's 25 years newer
kitplane01 wrote:My point is that aircraft do not seem to be rapidly declining in price.
(Of course I know the newer planes are more capable, but there's not *that* much more capable.)
RJMAZ wrote:The F-15 started development in the 1960's so you are comparing fighters before they were designed in CAD.
744SPX wrote:kitplane01 wrote:744SPX wrote:Well the Gripen C is an honest mach 2 airplane and the T-50 can only do 1.5, and the T-7 is an outright dog at mach 1.2, so neither of those aircraft have to use materials that can handle mach 2 heating. That might account for some of the cost.
The Gripen C is mach-2 at high altitude only. What part of the plane do you think gets heated at altitude at Mach 2?
I don't think this is a concern, but I'm willing to be educated.
Aerodynamic heating is most definitely a concern at altitude, especially the nose, cockpit, and wing leading edges. There are plenty of resources on this topic and many on this forum who could give the numbers. There is a very big reason why the F-35 design speed is mach 1.6 vs 2+, and that is because of the stealth coatings/materials inability to handle high mach temperatures and not because mach 2 is "unnecessary"
bikerthai wrote:744SPX wrote:that is because of the stealth coatings/materials inability to handle high mach temperatures and not because mach 2 is "unnecessary"
Not only the stealth coating, but the thermo property of the composite material of the skin itself.
Ironically, for an aluminum skin, even though it does not handle skin temperature above 250F well, the thermal conductivity pulls the heat from the high temperature at any hot spot.
Even though the F-35 skin high temperature composite has a theoretical operating temperature of 350F or there about, the low thermal conductivity of the composite keeps the heat at the surface and exacerbate the heat concentration at the furnace.
bt
kitplane01 wrote:"Since the incident, the Marines have instituted a policy requiring F-35B pilots not to engage afterburners for more than eighty seconds cumulatively at Mach 1.3, or forty seconds at Mach 1.4. Navy F-35C pilots have fifty seconds at Mach 1.3 to ration. ...
To “reset” the afterburner allowance, they must then allow three minutes non-afterburning flight for the tail area to cool down to avert damage"
Why does the F-35A not have the same problem?
And BTW, I don't think the problem is aerodynamic heating. Its heat from the afterburner.
kitplane01 wrote:short bursts of time before there is a risk of structural damage and loss of stealth capability
bikerthai wrote:kitplane01 wrote:short bursts of time before there is a risk of structural damage and loss of stealth capability
Not sure, but just because they call it after "burner allowance" it does not involve aerodynamic heating cause by excessive speed when using afterburners.
bt
kitplane01 wrote:This would be done why?
Climb high. Start the afterburner. Get to Mach 1.6. Start the clock. Turn off the afterburer and go into a dive. Stop the clock. Continue the dive maintaining speed. The clock does not run.
889091 wrote:Does the Raptor have a similar limitation on 'burner time'?
744SPX wrote:Keeping the enemy blind to your existence is more important than being able to run away fast. It's hard to outrun a missile.All the more amazing that the (essentially) all aluminum B-58, designed and built in the 1950's, could cruise at mach 2+ while carrying a full external weapons load until it ran out of fuel.
There is a very real price to pay for stealth coatings and materials.
johns624 wrote:kitplane01 wrote:This would be done why?
Climb high. Start the afterburner. Get to Mach 1.6. Start the clock. Turn off the afterburer and go into a dive. Stop the clock. Continue the dive maintaining speed. The clock does not run.
johns624 wrote:Keeping the enemy blind to your existence is more important than being able to run away fast. It's hard to outrun a missile.
RJMAZ wrote:With the USAF 6th gen I could it flying at 70,000ft and then being able to rapidly turn 90 degrees at 9G and be at Mach 2.5 within 30 seconds. Most SAM systems could be outrun. The turning and acceleration would make it more difficult to hit than an SR-71 in my opinion despite it flying 30,000ft lower.
LyleLanley wrote:So you’re saying it can accelerate in a 9g turn at ~ Mach 2.0? At 70,000 feet? Cruising, I’m assuming? Some materials it’s made of. Unubtanium?
RJMAZ wrote:You ignored half my statement. Basically, it's better to not have to outrun a missile because your intact stealth keeps them from seeing you.johns624 wrote:Keeping the enemy blind to your existence is more important than being able to run away fast. It's hard to outrun a missile.
It is actually pretty easy to outrun a missile.
In a tail chase example with a fighter running away at Mach 2. A missile with a Mach 4 top speed might only average Mach 3 across its entire flight. So if the chasing fighter launches an AMRAAM missile at 50 miles away, the missile has to travel nearly 150 miles by the time it hits the target. The AMRAAM has successfully been outrun.
While in a head on engagement with both fighters flying towards each other at Mach 1 let's take an example where an AMRAAM missile is launched 150 miles or 3 times the distance away this time. The missile only has to fly around 100 miles and AMRAAM will probably hit the target.
In this head on engagement example if one of the fighters detects a missile launched at it while the missile is still 100 miles away then all it needs to do is turn around and the missile has instantly been outrun.
The No Escape Zone NEZ of a missile is actually extremely small. This is the zone where it can't be outrun.
Ground launched missiles can also be avoided in the same way. The SAM can be launched earlier if the fighter is flighting towards it. However if the fighter suddenly turns 90 degrees after the missile is launched then the missile might run out of energy.
With the USAF 6th gen I could it flying at 70,000ft and then being able to rapidly turn 90 degrees at 9G and be at Mach 2.5 within 30 seconds. Most SAM systems could be outrun. The turning and acceleration would make it more difficult to hit than an SR-71 in my opinion despite it flying 30,000ft lower.
johns624 wrote:744SPX wrote:Keeping the enemy blind to your existence is more important than being able to run away fast. It's hard to outrun a missile.All the more amazing that the (essentially) all aluminum B-58, designed and built in the 1950's, could cruise at mach 2+ while carrying a full external weapons load until it ran out of fuel.
There is a very real price to pay for stealth coatings and materials.
744SPX wrote:Never said it was. Radar is getting better but we're talking about the present, not the future. If stealth didn't work, air forces wouldn't be paying billions for it. If speed was so important, fighters would be much faster than they are.johns624 wrote:744SPX wrote:Keeping the enemy blind to your existence is more important than being able to run away fast. It's hard to outrun a missile.All the more amazing that the (essentially) all aluminum B-58, designed and built in the 1950's, could cruise at mach 2+ while carrying a full external weapons load until it ran out of fuel.
There is a very real price to pay for stealth coatings and materials.
No aircraft is completely invisible to enemy radar. Period.
And while stealth doesn't have a whole lot of room for improvement, radars do.
RJMAZ wrote:LyleLanley wrote:So you’re saying it can accelerate in a 9g turn at ~ Mach 2.0? At 70,000 feet? Cruising, I’m assuming? Some materials it’s made of. Unubtanium?
I'm saying exactly what I'm saying. "being able to rapidly turn 90 degrees at 9G and be at Mach 2.5 within 30 seconds."
I would assume the starting speed would be Mach 1.8 which is the "supercruise" non-afterburner speed of the F-22. A 90 degree turn at 9G would take approximately 10 seconds. Afterburners would be engaged during the turn to minimise speed loss. An F-22 would only drop down to approximately Mach 1.5 doing such a turn. There is now 20 seconds remaining for the aircraft to accelerate to Mach 2.5.
This is not unubtanium. This is simply F-22 levels of speed, agility and acceleration but in an aircraft with approximately double the range. This range allows it to use supercruise for a large portion of the mission profile.
RJMAZ wrote:An F-111 with the new 200kn adaptive engines being tested would most likely be able to accelerate a full Mach in under 20 seconds.
The 6th gen fighter renderings show designs with such a large sweep angle. The design is clearly optimised for higher supersonic speeds. Surface temperature of an aircraft is more to do with the design shape than the speed. Hot spots can form on the nose, canopy, chines, leading edge extensions, canards, wing tips and leading edge of the stabilisers. The USAF 6th gen fighter renderings show none of these potential hot spots so it will be able to fly faster without coating issues. I see every design feature of a Mach 3 design but it will definitely have an operational speed limit to keep the maintenance of the coatings to a reasonable level.