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The Military Transportation Technology

Air Force Says F-35 Glitches Mean the A-10 Will Keep Flying 'Indefinitely' (jalopnik.com) 325

The A-10 aircraft "is just too effective to get rid of," wrote one defense blogger -- especially in light of ongoing issues with the F-35. schwit1 quotes Jalopnik: Strategists have feared that the jet will be axed in favor of funding the F-35, but the U.S. Air Force recently confirmed that it plans to keep the A-10 flying "indefinitely." While the Air Force is theoretically supposed to be diverting the A-10's operating expenses to feed the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the people in charge are now planning to keep the plane running...

Air Force Materiel Command chief Gen. Ellen Pawlikowski told AviationWeek in a interview, "Our command, anyway, is approaching this as another airplane that we are sustaining indefinitely." While the beancounters and product planners are trying to push the A-10 off the board, Materiel Command is going to keep on keeping the planes in peak condition, which will give the A-10 it's best chance of proving its worth over and over again. And it seems to be working -- the A-10 posted a 5% increase in its availability rate from 2014 to 2015, and the Air Force seems to keep postponing its demise.

In Congress one representative has even suggested an operational testing "fly-off" between the two aircraft -- a jet-vs-jet competition to determine whether any more A-10s get retired.
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Air Force Says F-35 Glitches Mean the A-10 Will Keep Flying 'Indefinitely'

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 30, 2016 @12:37PM (#53179351)

    And spend the money on something useful instead.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 )

      The F-35 is useful! It was supposed to be a pork barrel project and it fulfills this role absolutely perfectly, what the hell is your problem?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 30, 2016 @12:39PM (#53179357)

    BRRRRRRRT!

    • A-10 Warthog. The very best there is. When you absolutely, positively got to kill every mother****er in the room, accept no substitute.
  • The Warhog is so different that I can't imaging that they really can share the same mission profile. So, when they do get the F-35 up to specs, we'll have two very different high performance tools.

    In the short run, a problem. In the long run we'll do well.

    • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Sunday October 30, 2016 @01:00PM (#53179441)

      That's the problem - the F-35 was supposed to do *everything* - air superiority, close air support, attack, amphibious assault - and it wound up doing nothing particularly well. So, yeah, it has a different operational envelope than the A-10, and that's the problem. It isn't as good as an A-10 for ground attack, it isn't as good as an F-16 for air superiority, and it isn't as good as an F/A 18 in STOL situations.

      • This. (and compared to f-22 the air superiority deficit is even more pronounced)

        And combine it with the fact that it's big selling point the stealth capability is problematic in field repair conditions so would likely be compromised in field use.

        • by Loki_1929 ( 550940 ) on Sunday October 30, 2016 @03:04PM (#53180033) Journal

          The F-22 clears the skies of everything that flies. There isn't another jet even on the drawing board that competes with it in the air, but it also costs a fortune to fly it and since we screwed ourselves out of production (it'd take years to restart production on them), you don't want to risk them any longer than you have to. So against most adversaries with marginally effective air forces, you send F-15s all day. Against China or Russia, you send F-22s, force them to ground everything they care about keeping, and then fill the skies with F-15s to clear out everything they don't care as much about. After that, you just need effective ground attack and/or close-in air support options (depending on your decision to send ground troops).

          This obsession with the F-35 is remarkably foolish. Remarkable for the fact that nobody with a decision capacity seems to comprehend the simple premise of using a mixture of high-end and low-end, role-specific equipment to do all the jobs that need doing as effectively as possible. Nothing beats the A-10 at doing what the A-10 does and it's cheap as Hell. Nothing beats the F-22 at doing what the F-22 does, but it's expensive as Hell. Once the expensive stuff has made operations reasonably safe by clearing the greatest threats, you pull it and start pumping the cheap-but-hugely-effective alternatives into the field. The only gap I see in the US Air Force's existing lineup is a long range, high-stealth, high speed ground strike aircraft capable of flying right into downtown Moscow and dropping a JDAM down Putin's chimney (or more likely, into hardened C&C centers).

          Put that in development and start churning out more A-10s, F-15s, and other similarly effective tools. Nobody will be able to match the top-end tech and nobody will be able to overwhelm it with sheer numbers (e.g. WWII).

          • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

            "There isn't another jet even on the drawing board that competes with it in the air,"

            What are you basing this on?

            I thought the Russian Su-35 [wikipedia.org] was perfectly comparable to the F22. It's also in production and being marketed to other countries. Of course it's hard to compare on specifications alone, but this comparison [nationalinterest.org] discusses various aspects, though being a US site ultimately states that the F22 would come out on top.

            Now please don't misunderstand me, the very last thing we need is an actual showdown over Sy

            • by lgw ( 121541 )

              That article is pretty bad - a lot of hype and self-contradiction.

              What matters today, where the F-22 dominates, is the range you can get missile lock-on vs your opponent (assuming you have modern performance in general). The F-22 is excellent in that narrow aspect of stealth - it can get missiles off and turn away before anything else can get close enough to lunch missiles. It's very very good at that one goal.

              The Su-35 is a more-modern F-15 or F/A-18 with better performance. It doesn't outperform the F-

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Sunday October 30, 2016 @01:46PM (#53179657)
        Nothing has ever proposed to do what the A-10 can do. The F-35 was just supposed to get sufficienlty similar results. Just not doing so flying so low and slow that the pilots can recognize individual targets, ensuring fire solely on the enemy. "Air strikes", as we learned in Vietnam, don't care who they hit, they just hit the target area. So cal in one too close, you are dead. Call in your own coordinates, not the enemy, and you are dead (yes, it's happened). But such errors with an A-10 are often less, as the A-10 pilot is low enough and slow enough to be able to visually verify a target. The tactics of the ground troop have adapted to the A-10. If they know they can call in support, they try to engage the enemy first. Get them into a defensive group. Close and moving. Then the A-10 mows them down. With explosives-based air support from an aircraft outside visual range, you call in coordinates of the enemy, and bomb them from afar. This reduces the kills, includes more civilians, and is generally worse than the tactics used with an A-10 nearby.

        A-10 works with corrdinated ground and air attack. Most other air support is mutually exclusive with ground support (except on massive fields of engagement we haven't seen in 50 years).
    • The thing is, the US airforce has been trying to get rid of the role that Warthog was designed to fill because ground support is not glamorous.

      So over the years they have tried to say that a fighter is as good as a dedicated ground attack craft in ground attack and the ground attack craft role should be scrapped and further that no new ground attack aircraft should be designed. Thus they are trying to push the f-35 into that role now as "It is as good as a dedicated aircraft"

      This has resulted in the Warthog

    • Looking at the "mission profile," it appears as if all the military building programs are trying to be all things to all soldiers. We still use B-52 bombers because the new bombers don't work. And frankly, if we want bombers that drop shitloads of ordnance, they need to be big. And that means they'll probably be slow.

      And 40 of them won't be invisible. Maybe radar won't see them but citizens with smartphones certainly will.

      And our current fleet of slow-moving loud B-52s still strike fear into the popul
      • >(And we already have attack helicopters so what's with the military's VTOL fetish?)

        It is mostly the marines that want VTOL so they can fly off their helicopter carriers and possible improvised bases.

        The marines managed to buy Harriers earlier on despite everyone else saying "No no no!!!".

        So the f-35 planners decided that they could also fill the marine tick box in their "This is why you should buy this plane" checklist by creating the monster known as F-35B.

      • "citizens with smartphones certainly will. "

        That kind of just blew my mind a bit to realize where we are with tech. Completely ubiquitous computer penetration. If a human is present, odds are good that they have a computer, a camera and a means to transmit, or at least store. Not to mention the ability to edit in-the-field on even the cheapest pocket computers. Livin in the future.
    • The A-10 shares more in common with the Super Tucano than with the F-35.
  • Cost matters (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Sunday October 30, 2016 @01:09PM (#53179483) Journal

    Cost of an A-10: ~$18.8 million

    Cost of an F-35: ~109 million

    Cost of an F-35 not being able to support ground troops adequately: $1,000,000,000,000,000,000

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Cost of an A-10: ~$18.8 million

      Cost of an F-35: ~109 million

      Cost of an F-35 not being able to support ground troops adequately: $1,000,000,000,000,000,000

      Ah, I see you are a graduate of the RIAA/MPAA school of cost estimation ;-)

    • Cost of an A-10: ~$18.8 million

      Cost of an F-35: ~109 million

      Cost of an F-35 not being able to support ground troops adequately: $1,000,000,000,000,000,000

      The problem is that the A10 is simply a much better plane than the F35. I doubt that the one size fits all aspect of the 35 will allow it to ever have competency in any of it's planned missions.

      http://www.motherjones.com/moj... [motherjones.com]

      Weirdly enough, they admit that the A10 cannot be touched by the F35 in close support roles. So soldiers, no more proficient close support for you. Collateral damage I suppose. Since when do we march forward into a brave new future purposely giving up in a area that is exactly w

      • The problem is that the A10 is simply a much better plane than the F35. I doubt that the one size fits all aspect of the 35 will allow it to ever have competency in any of it's planned missions.

        Exactly. The F-35 is a jack-of-all-trades, and apparently a master of none.

    • Cost of an A-10: ~$18.8 million

      Acquisition cost of an A10: ~ zero. They aren't building any more. Yes, there will be upgrades, but even the upgrades are not going to cost as much as the cost to build a new jet.

      What about running costs? The cost to fly an F35 for one hour is much, much higher than that of an A10.

      • Cost of an A-10: ~$18.8 million

        Acquisition cost of an A10: ~ zero. They aren't building any more. Yes, there will be upgrades, but even the upgrades are not going to cost as much as the cost to build a new jet.

        What about running costs? The cost to fly an F35 for one hour is much, much higher than that of an A10.

        I agree completely, and you're making my point for me. Did you perhaps misread what I wrote?

  • ...but, for my life, i can't figure how they want to replace the A-10 with it. There's simply no way a F-35 can fill in for CAS roles.

    If the airforce wants a cheap close air support aircraft, they should really evaluate the Super Tucano. At $10 milion a pop they can write an entire fleet off as losses in the F-35 program.

  • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Sunday October 30, 2016 @02:08PM (#53179787)
    The Warthog will continue being the great plane it has always been indefinitely.

    The 35 is trying to be too many things at once, which means it won't be good at any of them.

  • by cfalcon ( 779563 ) on Sunday October 30, 2016 @02:46PM (#53179947)

    Most of the F-35 stories are moderately garbage, usually able to be traced back to someone with an axe to grind. See: any of the stuff about dogfighting tests. Then read a bit more and find out what conditions they were held under, how many OTHER tests are left out (4v4, etc), and check out who wrote the original thing, and which pieces they cherry picked.

    The A-10 complaints, however, are not like this. The A-10 is beloved by many whose lives depend on it, and seems to have capabilities that the F-35 does not, at least according to the fiery defenders you find on the net (who I don't see reason to doubt). I will not be surprised if some of the A-10 missions are rightfully replaced by F-35s. I would be surprised if they ALL were, however. The original desire for scrapping the A-10 came from excellent F-35 performance on some air force tests (and a desire to save money long term), but that seems unlikely to apply to every A-10 mission.

    When you have a bunch of infantry bitching about something, it is probably worth listening to the bitching. And they seem to love the A-10. I mean, that seems pretty compelling.

    • The problem is the people bitching (the infantry on the ground - Army and Marine Corps) are not the ones deciding (Air Force brass). During WWII, warplanes were run by the U.S. Army Air Corps. Shortly after, a decision was made to separate it out into its own branch - the U.S. Air Force. Unfortunately, that separation removed a crucial feedback element from ground troops to close air support requirements. (The Army eventually got a concession to be allowed to fly its own aircraft for close air support,
  • by Brentyl ( 685453 ) on Sunday October 30, 2016 @03:24PM (#53180109)

    It ain't pretty. It ain't fast. It ain't a lot of things. What it *is*, though, is a mechanically-simple, easy-to-maintain aircraft that does exactly what it means to do, does it well, and is not inconvenienced in the slightest.

    It can absorb a ridiculous amount of abuse from bad guys, it can loiter on-scene longer than any comparable aircraft, it can get low enough and slow enough to see exactly who to kill (not the good guys, not the civilians), and it does all this with lower operational costs than most other aircraft out there.

    I drive a pickup truck. An Audi R8 is much sexier, but for daily operation, not worrying if I get dinged in the parking lot, and getting ish done, I'll stick with the truck.

    • The R8 is a bit excessive, but the A8 will get up a severely sketchy driveway. (Or if the ZF slushbox blows, it will back up it... don't ask)

  • We got rid of our harriers, at least you've still got your A-10s

  • The A-10 is one of my favorite planes. I'm happy they're keeping it in service. It will become very useful in the coming years after TheCloud has destroyed most of humanity and the last of us are fighting against it. :S
  • by PortHaven ( 242123 ) on Monday October 31, 2016 @08:49AM (#53183581) Homepage

    The thing is nearly half a century old....it needs to be retired.

    But we need a replacement. And we need to do it the same as the first one. A good solid design, without enormous costs.

    Frankly though, I think the replacement should feature the following.

    a) be built around the same cannon round.

    b) maintain protective armor

    c) incorporate vectored thrust/limited VTOL or slow flight options (akin to the quinjets) to enable the craft to focus it's cannon for prolonged engagement)

    d) have a small storage compartment for supply drops. Not large, but it should allow the A-10 replacement to drop supplies to units on the ground ranging from medical supplies, ammo, ordinance weapons, etc.

  • by trybywrench ( 584843 ) on Monday October 31, 2016 @09:24AM (#53183781)
    If the B-52 is still in use surely the A-10 can be kept around too. Both planes are very good at what they do and seem to be pretty easy to keep in the air and ready to fight. It's still amazing to me when I go to air shows and there's an old, but upgraded, B-52 sitting there right next to the shiny F-35 and F-22's. I think the B-52 predates color TV.

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