Posted on 08/16/2007 7:57:48 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
RAAF Super Hornet buy excites interest
Mark Dodd
August 17, 2007
AUSTRALIA'S $6 billion purchase of 24 F/A-18F Block 2 Super Hornets was open and transparent, and senior Boeing officials said yesterday they had a clear corporate conscience over the deal.
The Howard Government's controversial decision to buy what its makers describe as the world's best multi-mission warplane has prompted renewed interest in the Super Hornet from other countries, according to Hornet program vice-president Bob Gower.
The deal was covered by a government-to-government foreign military sale agreement, the first involving the Super Hornet, and Australia paid the same price for the advanced aircraft as its main operator, the US Navy, Mr Gower said yesterday.
"Australia is not actually buying from Boeing. It is buying this warplane from the US Navy, so Australia is getting the US Navy's pricing.
"From Boeing's perspective, the information provided to Australia about the F/A-18F was unprecedented."
The RAAF "had as much visibility into this platform as the US Navy".
Other nations were increasingly watching what Australia was buying for its defence force and how equipment was being used, Boeing integrated business development 's vice-president Mark Kronenberg said. "Australia is a bellwether customer. It's transparent. It's a model of how we like to do business internationally. Our customers look at what Australia does," he said.
The Australian aircraft - the first four of which will be delivered to Amberley in January 2010 - is a carbon copy of the US Navy's Super Hornet except for an automated aircraft carrier landing system.
(Excerpt) Read more at theaustralian.news.com.au ...
L-R; Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, Chief of the Defence Force; Air Marshal Geoff Shepherd, Chief of Air Force; Minster for Defence Hon Dr Brendan Nelson MP; and Group Captain Steve Roberton at the announcement of the acquisition by Australia of 24 F/A-18F Block II Super Hornet multi-role aircraft at RAAF Base Fairbairn.
Better hope there’s no recalls from the communist parts makers...won’t that be embarrassing.
If they are allies, why not send them the Raptor? We have new technology on the drawing board already.
The Raptor is not cleared for export.And,the Australians don’t have the financial muscle to operate effective numbers,the way the Japanese have.
Also, $$$$$
Nobody gets the Raptor, not even allies. Would take an act of congress to ok a deal.
F-35
F/A-18
ping
And what parts makers would those be? Are you saying a communist country, through a state-run corporation, is supplying parts for these aircraft to Boeing and the USG?
And where are they going to find the tiny pilots to fly it?
Post or FReepmail me if you wish to be enlisted in or discharged from the Navair Pinglist.
This is a medium volume pinglist.
Actually it doesn't. You have added the recent production contract to the number authorized by congress. The contract only brings the number for which there are production contracts up to the already authorized 183.
And what parts makers would those be? Are you saying a communist country, through a state-run corporation, is supplying parts for these aircraft to Boeing and the USG?Are there Chinese manufactureres making parts for Boeing Aircraft?...Yes
Are the Chinese communists?...Yes.
Interesting. Here are my thoughts on it.
http://elpwarpigs.blogspot.com/2007/08/super-hornet-circumstance_17.html
The Navy had two choices when the F-14 was close to retirement. Go out and fully bid and compete for a new aircraft, a process that you pointed out with the F-22 is one that would have taken over a decade, or "enhance" an existing aircraft. Boeing and the Navy billed the SuperHornet not as a new aircraft, but as an enhancement to the Hornet line, thereby bypassing the competitive bid and flyoff process.
[T]he Naval/USMC versions [of the F-35] have less range and payload to boot.
Obviously the USMC version is heavier and has less internal fuel because of the lift fan. The Navy version is heavier because of it's beefed up internal structure required for carrier operations, but with it's longer wing it has about the same range as the Air Force F-35A.
Where the Navy really made a bonehead move is in removing the internal gun from both models to save weight. They opted instead for a semi-stealth external centerline gun pod, ala the early F-4s.
the YF-22 first flew in 1991 (and many knowledgeable people still think Northorp's YF-23 was the superior of the two contestants)
Myself included, and I'll never understand why the Navy didn't jump all over the YF-23 to replace the Tomcat.
I recall talking to an Aussie Colonel at Maxwell AFB's war college in 1990 about their future plans, and even back then he said McDonnell-Douglas was pushing for a souped-up hornet to replace F-111's eventually
Given the F-111C/G's role as a long range maritime interdiction aircraft, the F-15K would have been a much closer match to the F-111 in range and payload, and head and shoulders above the F/A-18F.
Australia has also said that the F/A-18F is an interim replacement for the F-111s, with the F-35A as the ultimate replacement.
Where Australia is hurting when compared to their Asian neighbors is in fighter aircraft. Others in the Pacific rim are buying Su-30MKIs and F-15Ks. The F/A-18F has too short a range and is too slow, the F-35 is faster but still range limited.
2 points-several countries incl. Japan,Italy,India & China manufacture parts for Boeing’s passenger jets.These are solely for Boeing’s commercial section & have nothing do with it’s defense business.
Right.
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