United States Military Aviation

This is such an awesome aircraft. Probably just as awesome an aircraft would be the AC-130 gunship.
Wish we had a separate aircraft for CAS.

What fixed wing aircraft in service is preferred by our services for CAS roles ?
It used to be the MiG 27 & Jaguar though I suspect the latter is now tasked exclusively for it apart from heloshelos, given the Rafales will serve as DPS role in the near term future.

The upgrade for the MiG 21 for A2G role didn't materialise according to PKS. I think Hawk would be a good AC for this role.
 
It used to be the MiG 27 & Jaguar though I suspect the latter is now tasked exclusively for it apart from heloshelos, given the Rafales will serve as DPS role in the near term future.

The upgrade for the MiG 21 for A2G role didn't materialise according to PKS. I think Hawk would be a good AC for this role.
The Hawks are excellent, I think. My only complaint is that its a single engine aircraft and that it probably doesn't have an armour like the Jags.

Though with modern weapons, gun runs might as well be redundant.
 
Gorgeous snaps of F-22 and F-16s flying over Alaska earlier today (22/7/19).

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B-21 to Fly in December 2021; More B-52s to Come Out of Boneyard

B-21 to Fly in December 2021; More B-52s to Come Out of Boneyard
7/24/2019

––JOHN A. TIRPAK



The B-21 Raider is expected to make its first flight in December 2021. Staff illustration by Mike Tsukamoto.

The new B-21 Raider stealth bomber is making good progress and should fly in December 2021, USAF Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Stephen “Seve” Wilson said July 24.

Wilson, speaking at an AFA Mitchell Institute event in Washington, D.C., said the service continues to analyze its capacity for long-range strike. The Air Force still believes it is short, and is reviewing alternative force mixes.

Speaking on deterrence and the need to modernize the nuclear command, control and communications network, Wilson said he was at Northrop Grumman’s facilities in Melbourne, Fla. in the last few weeks, “looking at the B-21,” and said the company is “moving out on that pretty fast.” Wilson said he has an application on his phone “counting down the days … and don’t hold me to it, but it’s something like 863 days to first flight.”

That would put the first flight of the B-21 in December 2021. The Air Force has said from the beginning that the first B-21 would be a “useable asset” but has also said it doesn’t expect an initial operating capability with the B-21 before the “mid 2020s.”

Northrop Grumman CEO “Kathy Warden and her team are focused on software integration and making sure … we’ll have the software ready for the plane when it’s delivered,” Wilson said.

The Air Force is “focused on the development of the new bomber as well as modernizing the B-52,” with new engines and radar, “and we’re exploring the force structure between the B-1 the B-2 and the B-52,” Wilson noted. “The general consensus is, we don’t have enough long range strike capacity, and that came out in ‘The Air Force We Need,’ ” study the service published last September.

“We continue to look at what that force will be for the future across the bomber force, what mix it will be.” He maintained the service needs “at least 100” B-21s.”

Air Force Magazine asked Wilson why the service has not advanced the planned number of B-21s, given the acknowledged shortfall in bomber capacity. The Air Force said in “The Force We Need” that it requires another seven bomber squadrons. Increasing the planned buy would also have the effect of reducing the unit cost, by amortizing development over a larger number of units.

“That’s exactly what we’re looking at,” Wilson replied, as well as “what the right balance” will be as B-21s come online. The service has yet to decide if it will extend the B-1 and B-2 bombers—slated to retire in the early 2030s—to increase the bomber fleet or simply go for an all B-21 and B-52 fleet. “But we can’t have four bombers” Wilson said.

Asked if the Air Force will have the new bomber plan by September, or in time for the fiscal 2021 budget, Wilson said only “it may take some time” before the Air Force reaches a final decision. He acknowledged that Air Force Global Strike Command boss Gen. Timothy Ray has openly questioned whether the B-1 and B-2 should be retired as the Air Force has planned.

Wilson also said that while the Air Force “isn’t going to get any new B-52s,” AFGSC might still take “one or two more out of the boneyard.” He noted that Ray has “already brought one B-52 out of the boneyard.”
 
https://news.yahoo.com/air-air-kill-confirmed-historic-180000281.html

Air-To-Air Kill Confirmed in a Historic First for the MQ-9 Reaper Drone


Dario Leone

,
The National Interest

17a1be3fd9eea5952124d8e2154d45db


By United States Air Force photo by Senior Airman Larry E. Reid Jr. - First MQ-9 Reaper makes its home on Nevada flightline ([1]), Public Domain, File:First MQ-9 Reaper at Creech AFB 2007.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
Dario Leone

Security, Middle East

Nice.
Air-To-Air Kill Confirmed in a Historic First for the MQ-9 Reaper Drone

The MQ-9 Reaper is larger and more powerful than the MQ-1 Predator, and is designed to execute time-sensitive targets with persistence and precision, and destroy or disable those targets.

The MQ-9 has made its first air-to-air killby shooting down another droneusing a heat-seeking missile in a test.

The test was carried out in November 2017, Col. Julian Cheater, commander of the 432nd Wing at Creech Air Force Base, Nevada, told Military.com.

“Something that’s unclassified but not well known, we recently in November … launched an air-to-air missile against a maneuvering target that scored a direct hit. It was an MQ-9 versus a drone with a heat-seeking air-to-air missile, and it was direct hit … during a test,” he said.
 
Air-To-Air Kill Confirmed in a Historic First for the MQ-9 Reaper Drone

Air-To-Air Kill Confirmed in a Historic First for the MQ-9 Reaper Drone


Dario Leone

,
The National Interest

17a1be3fd9eea5952124d8e2154d45db


By United States Air Force photo by Senior Airman Larry E. Reid Jr. - First MQ-9 Reaper makes its home on Nevada flightline ([1]), Public Domain, File:First MQ-9 Reaper at Creech AFB 2007.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
Dario Leone

Security, Middle East

Nice.
Air-To-Air Kill Confirmed in a Historic First for the MQ-9 Reaper Drone

The MQ-9 Reaper is larger and more powerful than the MQ-1 Predator, and is designed to execute time-sensitive targets with persistence and precision, and destroy or disable those targets.

The MQ-9 has made its first air-to-air killby shooting down another droneusing a heat-seeking missile in a test.

The test was carried out in November 2017, Col. Julian Cheater, commander of the 432nd Wing at Creech Air Force Base, Nevada, told Military.com.

“Something that’s unclassified but not well known, we recently in November … launched an air-to-air missile against a maneuvering target that scored a direct hit. It was an MQ-9 versus a drone with a heat-seeking air-to-air missile, and it was direct hit … during a test,” he said.

Great Achievement

We in India still do it the Old Fashioned way
We use the MiG 21 🤣
 
Great Achievement

We in India still do it the Old Fashioned way
We use the MiG 21 🤣
As the target drone?:D

Having said this jokingly, I realise that the US uses QF-16s, and prior to that QF-4s, as target drones, which are both better than MiG-21s.:ROFLMAO:
 
Good look sneaking up with an AWACS about. Plus the F-16 has superior all-round visibility and JHMCS.

Its been demonstrated during exercises it is possible. And more over if the Mig 21 is on the other side of a mountain range flying low, AWACS being really deep inside enemy territory, cannot detect until the Mig crosses the mountain range. That is what happened which, also explains the 3 pilots captured, the used R73, multiple sightings on more than 1 pilot inside POK and finally the radar signature.
 
Its been demonstrated during exercises it is possible. And more over if the Mig 21 is on the other side of a mountain range flying low, AWACS being really deep inside enemy territory, cannot detect until the Mig crosses the mountain range. That is what happened which, also explains the 3 pilots captured, the used R73, multiple sightings on more than 1 pilot inside POK and finally the radar signature.
A good AWACS operator will see the MiG-21s taking off before they even get there. Are we talking about Pakistanis flying the F-16s here?
 
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A good AWACS operator will see the MiG-21s taking off before they even get there. Are we talking about Pakistanis flying the F-16s here?

Yes, I am talking about the Feb 27th attempted LOC violation where IAF Mig21 brought down a PAF F16. I am not saying Mig 21 is better than F16 or F16 is not a good fighter. F16 is an awesome fighter. But a lot depends on the tactics, situation and training. And during the incident IAF was able to down a F16 due to various factors, unfortunately our Pilot ended up behind enemy lines after getting shot down while trying to get back. But, lets say if it was a head on interception between F16 and Mig21 both of them supported by AWACS then Mig 21 has no chance.
 
American Flankers and F-16s dogfighting. Bad pictures, but that's what happens when you try to take photos of aircraft within the Tikaboo Valley, part of the Groom Lake complex, otherwise known as Area 51.

It's always cool to see what the American get their hands on. The amount and depth of foreign tech they have access to is incredible.

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AFRL achieves record-setting hypersonic ground test milestone > Air Force Materiel Command > Article Display

AFRL achieves record-setting hypersonic ground test milestone
By Todd Barhorst, AFRL Aerospace Systems Directorate / Published August 05, 2019

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PHOTO DETAILS / DOWNLOAD HI-RES 1 of 1

The AEDC Aerodynamic and Propulsion Test Unit at Arnold Air Force Base supports recent testing for the Air Force Research Laboratory Medium Scale Critical Components Scramjet program. The Northrop Grumman-produced engine was successfully operated at conditions above Mach 4 and has set the record for highest thrust produced by an air-breathing hypersonic engine in Air Force history. (U.S. Air Force photo)

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WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio – An Air Force Research Laboratory and Air Force Test Center ground test team set a record for the highest thrust produced by an air-breathing hypersonic engine in Air Force history.

“AFRL, in conjunction with Arnold Engineering Development Complex and Northrop Grumman, achieved over 13,000 pounds of thrust from a scramjet engine during testing at Arnold Air Force Base,” said Todd Barhorst, AFRL aerospace engineer and lead for the Medium Scale Critical Components program.

The 18-foot-long Northrop Grumman engine endured a half hour of accumulated combustion time during the nine months of testing.

“The series of tests, ran in conjunction with AEDC and AFRL, on this fighter-engine sized scramjet was truly remarkable,” said Pat Nolan, vice president, missile products, Northrop Grumman. “The scramjet successfully ran across a range of hypersonic Mach numbers for unprecedented run times, demonstrating that our technology is leading the way in delivering large scale hypersonic platforms to our warfighters.”

“The plan for a larger and faster hypersonic air breathing engine was established 10 years ago during the X-51 test program, as the Air Force recognized the need to push the boundaries of hypersonic research,” Barhorst said. “A new engine with 10-times the flow of the X-51 would allow for a new class of scramjet vehicles.”

An evaluation of the nation’s test facilities concluded that none could test an engine at this large of a scale in a thermally-relevant environment. To address the issue, AEDC’s Aerodynamic and Propulsion Test Unit facility underwent a two-year upgrade to enable large-scale scramjet combustor tests over the required range of test conditions. The AEDC team also successfully leveraged technology developed by CFD Research Corporation under the Small Business Innovative Research program. This technology proved crucial in achieving most of the required test conditions.

“Our collective team has worked hard over the past few years to get to where we are today,” said Sean Smith, lead for the AEDC Hypersonic Systems Combined Test Force ground test team. “We’ve encountered numerous challenges along the way that we’ve been able to overcome thanks to the dedication and creativity of the team. We’ve learned quite a bit, and I’m proud of what we’ve accomplished. These groundbreaking tests will lead the way for future hypersonic vehicles for a range of missions.”

“After years of hard work, performing analysis and getting hardware ready, it was a great sense of fulfillment completing the first successful test of the world’s largest hydrocarbon fueled scramjet,” added Barhorst.
 
Lockheed Martin Wins $32M Deal to Modify F-35 Aircraft Program

Lockheed Martin Wins $32M Deal to Modify F-35 Aircraft Program


Zacks Equity Research

ZacksAugust 20, 2019

Lockheed Martin Corp.’s LMT Aeronautics business segment recently secured a contract for procurement of modification kits and special tooling to support modification and retrofit of delivered F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter jets. The deal has been awarded by the Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland.

Valued at $32.1 million, the contract will cater to the U.S. Air Force, Marine Corps, Navy, non-Department of Defense (DoD) participants and Foreign Military Sales (FMS) customers. Work related to the deal is scheduled to be over by June 2025. The entire task will be carried out in Fort Worth, TX.

A Brief Note on F-35 Program

The F-35 Lightning is a supersonic, multi-role fighter jet that represents a quantum leap in air-dominance capability, offering enhanced lethality and survivability in hostile, anti-access airspace environments. Currently, it is being used by the defense forces of the United States and 11 other nations, chiefly owing to its advanced stealth, integrated avionics, sensor fusion, superior logistics support and powerful integrated sensors capabilities.

What Favors Lockheed Martin?

The F-35 is Lockheed Martin’s largest program that generates more than 25% of its total sales. At the company’s Aeronautics division, the program fueled annual revenue growth by 19.6% in 2018. Keeping up with this trend, we may expect the latest contract win to help the Aeronautics unit deliver similar or even better performance in the upcoming quarters.

The production of F-35 is expected to improve in the years ahead, given the U.S. government’s current inventory objective of 2,456 aircraft for the Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy along with commitments from the company’s eight international partners and overseas customers, and rising global demand for military jets.

With 341 production aircraft in backlog as of Jun 30, 2019, and considering the aforementioned inventory of the U.S. government, we may expect the F-35 program to consistently act as a key catalyst for the company.
Such developments reflect solid prospects for Lockheed Martin’s F-35 program, which are likely to boost the company’s profit margin.

Price Movement

In a year’s time, shares of Lockheed Martin have gained 17.3% compared with the industry’s 2.4% rise.