US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
I have to tell you, that I am not surprised to learn that during the last eight years certfication and other programs necessary to keep your fleet and new recruits at the top of the game were sacrificed for expediency and short term costs.

I had heard horror tales from service people I know about the Obama administration cutting back drastically on training, maintenance, logistics, and now we see even on certification.

idiots.

As any dunce would know, the cost of not doing it will ultimately rise up and cost ten times what doing it actually costs.

Sad day...but hopefully things are changing now...I sure hope they are.
 

Mike North

New Member
Registered Member
I have to tell you, that I am not surprised to learn that during the last eight years certfication and other programs necessary to keep your fleet and new recruits at the top of the game were sacrificed for expediency and short term costs.

I had heard horror tales from service people I know about the Obama administration cutting back drastically on training, maintenance, logistics, and now we see even on certification.

idiots.

As any dunce would know, the cost of not doing it will ultimately rise up and cost ten times what doing it actually costs.

Sad day...but hopefully things are changing now...I sure hope they are.
If the problem is known it can be fixed. My question is, can they bring training and certification back up to speed and still maintain operational tempo. 7th fleet are a busy bunch. Lots going on in that area. I have less hope for fixing the dunces in Washington however. They only seem to get dumber. Same in my capital i'm afraid. They save money today at huge expense later.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
If the problem is known it can be fixed. My question is, can they bring training and certification back up to speed and still maintain operational tempo. 7th fleet are a busy bunch. Lots going on in that area. I have less hope for fixing the dunces in Washington however. They only seem to get dumber. Same in my capital i'm afraid. They save money today at huge expense later.
Well, they need to also figure out that so many carriers...so many ships...so many troops and aircraft can oinly be used so often.

Bush started this...cutting into normal rotational periods to r=try and get more. You can ony do that for so long. You do it too much and personnel tire out...equipment tires out.

Thyen you compound that by cutting into actual maintenance and spare parts and all...and it is a recipe for dosaster.

Many people have been complaining and warning of this...now we see ships running into each other, and dozens of good operational aircraft having to be used for spare parts, etc.

it is rediculous and we can hope that the people in the know will at least have their voice back and that someone with an ounce of actual management experience (because the same types of things are important to every major, profitable corporation that makes any actual [product) so that we start to fix these things and get back to where our military used to be.

We can easily do it if enough people make enough noise and if we have leadership that will listen.

We hve been through this before. Frd and Carter ed to Reagan where a lot of the problems were addressed. Clinton led to BUsh where intially things were fizxed...but then after the mid terms when the DNC made up some ground, BUsh did not hold the line and things began to decline again...and then went into a nose dive with Obama.

The people realized there were significant problems and that Hillary was not an answer so they elected Trump (brely) and we shall just have to see.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
L-3 selects Gulfstream for Compass Call platform

  • 08 SEPTEMBER, 2017
  • SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM
  • BY: LEIGH GIANGRECO
  • WASHINGTON DC


L-3 Communications selected the Gulfstream 550 Conformal Airborne Early Warning (CAEW) aircraft to host the US Air Force’s existing Compass Call technology, a move that its rivals Boeing and Bombardier attempted to thwart over the past two years.

The USAF awarded an undefinitised contract action (UCA) to L-3 for the re-host programme, the service announced this week. Contract terms, specifications and price of the UCA are not agreed upon before contract performance begins, a USAF spokeswoman said in an email.

The Compass Call “crossdeck” programme will transition mission equipment from the USAF’s existing fleet of Lockheed Martin EC-130H aircraft, which serves as a communications eavesdropper and jammer for the service, onto new Gulfstream business jets.

Last year, the USAF’s fiscal year 2017 budget request proposed to shift Compass Call’s electronic attack hardware to the G550 airframe. The FY17 budget had then designated the platform as the EC-37B. The USAF currently operates a fleet of G550-based C-37s for VIP transport. The US Navy also has acquired one G550 CAEW aircraft for test range support. Gulfstream also has sold the CAEW platform on the export market, with deliveries to Israel and Singapore.

“After their analysis and sharing that with the programme office, L-3 has decided to use the Gulfstream 550 airborne early warning aircraft as the new platform,” a USAF spokeswoman says in a statement.

Last month, the Government Accountability Office denied Boeing and Bombardier’s protest against the US Air Force’s acquisition strategy for Compass Call, which delegated the platform decision to systems integrator L-3. Boeing and Bombardier’s protests predicted L-3 would hand the platform award to Gulfstream, which is also teaming up with L-3 to compete for the USAF’s Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System (JSTARS) recapitalisation. The GAO’s 25 August decision is covered by a protective order and did not include additional information.

While Boeing and Bombardier could protest the USAF’s acquisition strategy, the companies are not able to protest another contractor’s decision.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Boeing re-inserts orders for Air Force One aircraft into backlog

  • 07 SEPTEMBER, 2017
  • SOURCE: FLIGHT DASHBOARD
  • BY: STEPHEN TRIMBLE
  • WASHINGTON DC


Boeing confirms that two passenger-carrying 747-8s added to the order backlog a week ago will be delivered to the US Air Force for the Air Force One replacement.

The USAF ordered two 747-8s that Boeing previously built for defunct Russian carrier Transaero, which filed for bankruptcy in 2015 before it could take delivery.

Boeing finally removed the Transaero orders from the backlog in June.

getasset.aspx


When the USAF finalised a deal to acquire the two aircraft, Boeing re-inserted the orders into the backlog.

Boeing now has 135 orders overall for the 747-8, including 47 for the passenger-carrying version.

Only 20 747-8s in the backlog remain undelivered, including 14 freighter models for UPS.

Boeing is building the 747-8 at a rate of six per year, leaving three years of backlog remaining.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Sunday at 8:33 AM
Aug 16, 2017

kinda update:
Navy’s Tomahawk Life-Extension to Include Maritime Strike Mode
Posted: September 8, 2017
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
sorta related:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Just
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, the Navy faced the
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
fleets with just one aging, short-range anti-ship missile, the Harpoon. Today, it’s successfully test-fired at least four very different missile types and may actually need to narrow down. There’s the converted
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
anti-aircraft missile as the lightest, fastest option and the
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
as the middleweight. Then we have two monster missiles with 1,000-pound warheads
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
: Lockheed’s new
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
(LRASM), which
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, and Raytheon’s Tomahawk – a venerable missile that’s about to get a major upgrade.

Since 1991, Tomahawks have been/ presidents’ first resort for precisely striking stationary targets on land. What they’ve lacked was the capability to precisely strike moving targets at sea, a much harder problem. A short-lived Tomahawk Anti-Ship Missile (TASM) variant was withdrawn from service in the 1990s because the Navy wasn’t sure it would consistently hit the right ship. (No one wanted to sink the future equivalent of the Lusitania by mistake).

Since then, however, Moore’s Law has helped lead to immensely improved electronics. Raytheon has invested millions of its own money in a more sophisticated anti-ship seeker, built around a new high-powered and versatile “multi-function modular processor” it aims to use on other missiles as well. A prototype Maritime Strike Tomahawk successfully struck a target in a 2015 test, and on
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, the Navy awarded Raytheon $119 million to continue its development.

The plan, Raytheon executive Chris Sprinkle told me, is to install the new seeker on a still to-be-determined fraction of the 4,000-plus Block IV Tomahawks – the latest model – as they come back to Raytheon’s Tucson factory for their regularly scheduled mid-life checkup. The missiles are meant to last 30 years, he explained, and bringing them back in for maintenance and upgrades at the 15-year mark was always part of the plan. The oldest Block IV missiles, built in 2004, were already scheduled to come in for overhaul next year, when they’ll all get new radios and navigation hardware. The marginal cost of installing a new seeker on some of them at the same time will be, well, marginal.

Incumbency is Tomahawk’s great advantage in its competition with LRASM. The US and
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
navies have bought more than 10,000 Tomahawks since the missile entered service in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
They’re battle-tested, and they can launch from both ships and submarines. Upgrading the proven Tomahawk from land-attack-only to anti-ship is less costly and risky than buying a new missile like LRASM.

But incumbency is a double-edged sword. Underneath all the upgrades, Tomahawk’s basic technology was designed in the early 1980s. LRASM, by contrast, derives from the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM), which had its first flight test in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
. That makes the JASSM/LRASM family almost 20 years younger, even though it’s almost 20 years old.

Sure, Raytheon can update Tomahawk’s electronics, and the new processor will allow the missile to download
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
iPhone-style, Sprinkle said. That’s all crucial for a precision weapon. But Raytheon can’t do much about the Tomahawk’s basic shape, which is not designed for stealth the way JASM and LRASM are. In an era of increasingly sophisticated anti-missile systems that can
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
or
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
incoming weapons, that matters. How much? That’s classified.

While LRASM has some edge in stealth, Tomahawk has an advantage in range. The exact details are classified, but LRASM’s range is officially “over 200 miles” while the Tomahawk’s is over 1,000. That’s roughly 400 percent more.

With range like that, said Sprinkle, you may not even need to go to sea to fight an enemy fleet: “We can reach out and touch you, probably, from port.” The Tomahawk’s tremendous range was designed to strike targets deep inland from ships at sea, almost anywhere on earth – “I think there’s some spot from Tibet you can’t reach with the Tomahawk” – so enemy fleets would have nowhere to hide.

Of course, like everything else, range comes with a price, in this case weight. A Tomahawk with rocket motor weighs in about
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
lbs, compared to LRASM at about 2,500 lbs, almost a third less. Lighter missiles are easier to accommodate on both the warships that would fire them and the
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
that would bring them to the battle fleet in a prolonged war.

There is a potential place for both missiles in the inventory: the stealthier
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
for the best-defended targets, the longer-ranged
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
for those furthest away. But judging from Sprinkle’s comments, Raytheon is not counting on a compromise. It wants to win.
source:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Fatal Nevada Crash Involved Foreign Aircraft Type
Sep 11, 2017
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
| Aerospace Daily & Defense Report
  • nttr.jpg

    Photo: Nevada Test and Training Range

    LOS ANGELES—A Sept. 5 accident at the Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR) that killed a U.S. Air Force test pilot appears to have involved a foreign aircraft type operated by the service’s secretive Red Hat unit.

    The fatal incident came to light when an Air Force spokesman at Nellis AFB announced that Lt. Col. Eric “Doc” Schultz died of injuries sustained in the crash of his aircraft on the range about 100 mi. northwest of the base. The spokesman said the aircraft was assigned to Air Force Materiel Command (AFMC), but did not specify the type involved or the circumstances.

    Given the approximate location provided by the Air Force, it appears the accident occurred midway between Groom Lake and Tonopah Test Range airfield, both of which are operated by Detachment 3, Air Force Test Center (AFTC). The site is responsible for test and evaluation of classified “black” aircraft as well as foreign types which are flown by the Red Hats for tactics assessment and dissimilar training against front line Air Force units.

    Sources indicate Schultz was the Red Hats squadron commander at the time of his death. The Red Hats became an unnumbered unit within the Detachment 3, AFTC test wing after the 413th flight test squadron (formerly 6513th test squadron) was deactivated in 2004. Over recent years the unit has operated a variety of Russian-developed combat types, including the MiG-29 and several Sukhoi-developed models such as the Su-27P, one of which was recently observed flying in the vicinity.

    Schultz was formerly involved in
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    testing based at Edwards AFB, California. He was an exceptionally experienced pilot with more than 2,000 hr. flying numerous aircraft. A graduate of the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot’s School, Schultz had also served as director of operations and exchange officer at the Canadian Forces Flight Test Center. He also flew an
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    fighter in more than 50 close air support combat missions in Afghanistan. In addition,

    Schultz served in systems engineering for the Airborne Laser program.

    Prior to his military career, Schultz was the senior scientist and business development manager at the Pratt & Whitney Seattle Aerosciences Center. He also flew as a rotary wing flight test engineer at the Naval Air Warfare Center.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

A Flanker or a Fulcrum are the likely type. Some F35 Critics were Pushing this as a F35 accident being covered up.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
US Navy tightens unmanned tanker requirements

  • 11 SEPTEMBER, 2017
  • SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM
  • BY: LEIGH GIANGRECO
  • WASHINGTON DC


The US Navy solidified parameters for its unmanned MQ-25 Stingray, setting up a spartan platform that will satisfy not much more than carrier suitability and air refueling requirements.

Following years of fluctuating requirements and various UAV incarnations, the navy appears to have nailed down its vision for MQ-25 in its final requirements documents. The service is focusing on the MQ-25’s basic ability to operate from a carrier and adjusted the mission focus for air refueling, according to a Government Accountability Office report released this week. The Joint Requirements Oversight Council (JROC) validated two requirements this July and the service is capping MQ-25’s development costs at $2.5 billion, with funding projected to jump from $89 million in 2017 to $554.6 million in 2022.

Although the navy has identified an intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capability as part of MQ-25’s portfolio, the Pentagon directed the navy last year to shift its focus away from ISR and toward an unmanned carrier based air refueling aircraft. That move reflected a crackdown on MQ-25’s development, which has seen several iterations since the programme’s inception early in the last decade.

The navy originally set out to acquire an unmanned tanker but by 2013, the programme had evolved into the Unmanned Carrier Launch Airborne Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) platform. Three years later, the service restructured the stealthy UCLASS into the Carrier Based Aerial Refueling System, which the navy designated MQ-25.

Four companies are bidding for the contracts to develop and produce the MQ-25 fleet: Boeing, General Atomics-Aeronautical Systems Inc, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman.

As the navy reins in its capabilities for MQ-25, the service is also constraining the programme’s development schedule to a maximum of eight years after the start of development, which is scheduled for summer of 2018. The navy plans to limit technology risk during development by mandating the aircraft carry proven subsystems.

“If a technology is identified that does not meet this criteria, the navy plans to push that technology into the future and include it only when it reaches the specified level of maturity,” the GAO report states. “As we reported in March 2017, failure to fully mature technologies prior to developing the system design can lead to redesign and cost and schedule growth if later discoveries during development lead to revisions.”
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
was glad to see
"As the navy reins in its capabilities for MQ-25, the service is also constraining the programme’s development schedule to a maximum of eight years after the start of development, which is scheduled for summer of 2018. The navy plans to limit technology risk during development by mandating the aircraft carry proven subsystems."
inside:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
instead of that concurrency ...
 
Mar 9, 2017
Saturday at 9:09 PM

now briefly went through the photo gallery inside Who Has the Edge in the U.S. Air Force J-Stars Competition?
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
but
Future of JSTARS recap program in question as Air Force explores other options

14 hours ago
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

The future of the JSTARS recap program appears to be in limbo as the U.S. Air Force reevaluates the path forward for replacing its aging battle-management surveillance system.


In a
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, members of Georgia’s congressional delegation expressed concern about the potential cancellation of the JSTARS recap program, which seeks to replace the Air Force’s inventory of E-8 aircraft used for ground surveillance as well as command and control.

“[W]e were recently informed that the Air Force wishes to explore alternate intelligence and surveillance platforms instead of continued pursuit of the recapitalization of the E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System (JSTARS) fleet,” wrote Sens. Johnny Isakson and David Perdue, and Reps. Austin Scott, Sanford Bishop and Tom Graves.

“While the rationale has not yet been made known to us, cancelling or delaying would be ill-advised and directly impact our combatant commanders who employ this asset in theater,” they wrote.

In a response to Defense News, the Air Force said it continues to move forward with source-selection efforts for the JSTARS recap, but left the door open on whether the program would be canceled in the fiscal 2019 budget and resurrected in a different form.

“The Air Force remains in source selection for a follow-on to JSTARS as we continue to evaluate alternative approaches for battlefield command and control that could be more effective in high-threat environments,” spokeswoman Capt. Emily Grabowski said in an emailed statement.

“In the meantime, we plan to continue to continue flying the current JSTARS fleet through fiscal year 2023. Although we are exploring options, there are many steps still to be taken before any force structure proposals are included in the FY 2019 budget.”

Just hours after the Air Force acknowledged it was reviewing its options, Perdue and Isakson introduced an amendment to the Senate version of the FY18 defense authorization bill on Tuesday afternoon. If adopted, the language would prohibit the service from cancelling the JSTARS recap program unless the defense secretary certifies that the new approach would not result in a capability gap.

It also would keep the Air Force from using FY18 funding to retire the existing E-8 fleet.

The Senate is currently debating the defense bill on the floor, but leaders have not determined which, if any, amendments will be up for consideration.

The JSTARS recap program, which was once called the fourth-largest aircraft modernization priority by former Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh, began as a way for the service to quickly replace rapidly aging aircraft that were seen as having little service life left.

Three companies — Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Northrop Grumman — are competing for the prime contractor spot, while both Northrop and Raytheon are building sensors that could be integrated on board any JSTARS recap variant. Each prime contractor has also been joined by a large team of defense industry heavy hitters: Lockheed partnered with Bombardier, Raytheon and Sierra Nevada Corp.; Northrop teamed up with Gulfstream and L3 Technologies; and Boeing has opted to keep its partners private.

After later studies showed that the legacy JSTARS fleet had a longer lifespan than previously anticipated, questions began emerging about whether the JSTARS recap was the right answer.

In the Air Force’s Air Superiority 2030 study released last year, the service said it would move forward with an Advanced Battle Management System analysis of alternatives in 2018. This AOA would explore “options for non-traditional concepts including networking planned and purpose-built sensors into architectures that enable BMC2 [battle management, command and control] functions in the highly contested environment” — perhaps laying out the groundwork for the service to cancel the JSTARS recap and begin acquiring a more advanced, disaggregated system.

The Georgia delegation dismissed this work as a waste of time and money. Congress has already spent more than $265 million on the JSTARS recap program, the lawmakers wrote.

n recent history there has been no less than five studies to look at alternatives,” they added. “All have resulted in the same answer: the JSTARS recapitalization program that is currently underway.”

Although the Air Force plans to operate the legacy JSTARS through the early 2030s, Isakson, Perdue, Scott, Bishop and Graves expressed concern that a capability gap would result if the JSTARS recap is canceled and a new program is started.

“Another analysis of alternatives would surely lead to an even greater capabilities gap that would be devastating to our troops on the ground and our nation’s ability to meet operational requirements,” they wrote.
 
Top