Been away awhile, and have been doing a lot more research into this. I'm significantly less pissed off about the F-35 than I used to be.
Anyway.
Okay, a couple of things here. The F-35 vs F-16 thing that's getting a lot of press right now was a BFM flight test, not a serious DACT fight. This was information gathering for automatic flight controls more than anything else. Plus, the test pilot in the F-35 was a career Strike Eagle driver. As in, he's used to flying a plane that's configured heavy and at a severe disadvantage in a dogfight, now performing BFM after against light turnfighter piloted by a Lockheed-employed career F-16 pilot, i.e. an ungodly number of hours in the F-16.
So, your new jet is being flown by a guy who's relatively new to the jet, against a guy who probably wears the Viper about as comfortably as his underwear. Using BFM. Yeah, determining a winner isn't the goal here.
For
another source:
The article talks about energy bleed rates, high-Alpha maneuvering, and the F-35 pilot’s “only winning move” to threaten with the nose at high angle of attack. What does that sound like?To me, it sounds like a Hornet fighting a Viper. Of course, a Hornet is not going to do well against an F-16 in a sustained rate fight. Its strength is to get slow and use its angle of attack advantage, much like the F-35 did here. It also bleeds energy rapidly and struggles to get it back once bled down. The fact the heavier, drag-encumbered F-35 had this problem is not surprising to me–despite its monstrous amount of available thrust, and it doesn’t mean much in the grand scheme of things.
And the heavier F-35C can do this.
Langenator wrote:Termite wrote:When you try to design a fighter plane to be a "jack-of-all-trades", it is a master of nothing.
Especially when one of the things you're trying to make it do (STOVL) is known to entail massive performance compromises in things like range, speed, etc.
At least the Harrier has that 'viffing' trick it can use in a dogfight. I'm not sure the F-35 can do that, either.
The F-35B has been the single biggest stumbling block to the JSF program. But there's one thing the Harrier can do that the F-35B won't: pop stall.
Greg wrote:I really don't want to read more Sprey (did I mention I don't particularly care for him?) but FYI that first assertion you list is actually a pretty common conclusion of people who've actually looked at surface combat in the Pacific War. Particularly early on, when USN doctrine was especially bad.
Have a look at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Tassafaronga
You have a force of Japanese destroyers on a transport mission, surprised and ambushed by an (on paper) enormously superior American force, heavy on the cruisers. The Japanese lose a destroyer, and the Americans wind up nearly annihilated.
US heavy cruisers from the 'treaty' period were particularly helpless against Japanese destroyers, as their main armaments couldn't hit one, and their secondary armament wasn't particularly DP (they were really just heavy aa guns).
Yeah, it's not one I really care for. There was so much going on with differences in not only design philosophy, but tactics and training (IJN's borderline obsession with night battle, for one thing, superior torpedoes for another) on top of rapidly developing post-Treaty technologies, that it's an exceedingly simplistic conclusion to draw.