Alek Ituin, on 14 February 2017 - 10:55 PM, said:
I kek at your F-22/F-35 fanboyism. When your sooper-dooper stealth interceptor gets routinely trashed by a fighter bomber with an ECM pod, something is wrong.
Even the Me-262 scored consistent victories against Allied aircraft while the pilots were re-writing the rules of aerial warfare to account for an entirely new type of aircraft. You can only blame so much failure on new tech and a lack of established tactics. At a certain point you have to concede that the F-22 and F-35 are both lowest-bidder garbage forced in to being via backroom politics.
Case in point: The YF-22 vs YF-23 prototype testing. The YF-23 was a clearly superior aircraft in damn near ALL aspects, not to mention being clearly superior for its intended role and usage, and still lost to the then YF-22 because somebody at Lockheed knew how to really slob a politician's knob.
That's only part true. I am not going to deny that politics wasn't in play (cause, I remember, the YF-23 team had previous f-ed up another project, which skew the confidence of the higher up)
BUT, just judging from performance issues, the YF-22 was a superior subsonic fighter. So it's not true that the YF-23 won on all performance scale. If you watch documentary from Discovery Channel, that's part of the reason why the bid swung toward YF-22... simply because it handled more like a traditional dogfighter.
Now, it can be argued that the YF-23 has more untapped potential because of the revolutionary airframe, but that's really another issue all together.
Edit: Saw this after I made my reply:
Alek Ituin, on 14 February 2017 - 11:24 PM, said:
15:1 where and since when? Every single time I've read about F-22's going in to red flags, they get thrashed by EFT's with ECM pods.
Also, the F-35 is a clusterf**k, struggling to maintain performance with aircraft decades older than it, while being 10x more expensive and capable of doing... nothing that it was supposed to do. Sure, an F-22/F-35 could sneak up on a MiG-29K or Su-37... But then its 6 buddies will hunt your arse down. An F-22 MIGHT be able to take another 1 or 2 down and/or MAYBE escape, but that F-35? It's so bad as an aircraft I'd be surprised if it could even turn around before it got shredded.
Shove the F-35's avionics in to a YF-23 or X-29/Su-47 airframe and you'd have an argument for its superiority. But from the published specs, they're either REALLY good at underselling the F-35, or it is REALLY f**king bad as an aircraft. Lockheed are so hit-or-miss it could honestly be either one.
That's a complete lack of understanding of modern air combat. If you are fighting a scenario like you described, you are fighting your war wrong.
Also, you know those modern airplanes can do multi tracking and multi lock-on right? And EVEN if they encountered a fighter group far outnumbering them, the correct response is not to go all Ace Combat and try to kill all of them by him/herself. It's through vastly superior intel sharing, and basically use itself as a spotter for the 200 + I Love America that's going to be fired from multiple sources (including your ammo carrying fighters, drones, ships, land-air system, etc)
That's the value of F-22 and F-35, not a one man bravado fighter jet.
PS you know everytime they do redflag testing (does it even do red-flag? well, whatever mock program they run), they have to literally nerf the F-22s and F-35s so that other planes have a chance right? Also, it's probably a good idea not to reveal your whole hand when engaging in a multi-country exercise. If you are afraid that you are going to lose your freedom because of the Russians or the Chinese, you can sleep soundly at night knowing that as soon as that kind of fight breaks out, all of their traditional airforce will be trashed in like 2 weeks.
(Now, whether we can intercept all the nuclear warhead and prevent saying bye bye to planet Earth... again... another issue all together)
--------------
PS 2 why are we talking about this again?
Edited by razenWing, 14 February 2017 - 11:36 PM.