Cdn Blackshirt said:
Thanks for bringing up the Kuwaiti and USN orders - I was wondering if those deals being signed on their own may have derailed Trudeau's end-around.
Does anyone have any idea about how those other orders are likely to delay first availability (as opposed to what availability would have looked like prior to the other signed deals and what Trudeau and team thought would be possible)?
Did first delivery get bumped by 18-months? 24-months? Or even more?
So it doesn't really affect us. No matter what, it will take us 24 months at a minimum from contract signature to the first delivery of aircraft. We will go through the traditional FMS process (if we go DCMS that is will be an epic disaster), which will entail US congressional appropriations process, that will likely add an additional year to the cycle, then it take two years for it to be manufactured. So we're probably looking at a 2020 initial delivery, and perhaps a one to two year delivery cycle.
Currently the St Louis Line operates at two aircraft per month, which covers what the current demand is (USN and Kuwait). Prior to 2015 they were at three a month, they restructured to two, but I believe they can spool up easily back to three if necessary. A lot of this depends on what the USN does... its been purchasing Hornets through the unfunded liabilities process, which circumvented the normal budget cycle. Whether that practice continues is a better question... but it won't materially affect the Nevertheless, we're likely to see aircraft URF costs of about 85~95 million for a Block II F/A-18E/F, if not higher if diminishing manufacturing sources effects really start to take hold.
CTD said:
I think you nailed it on the spot.
The US Navy has mentioned this in one of their briefs about the shortfalls of the F35 and when they look to the future of Air platforms. Why they are hesitant to purchase more F35 if they even take delivery at all. It is interesting that they are looking past manned Jets in the near term, let alone 20-30 years from now. I believe they are already using unmanned refuelers on trial right now.
No... I think you have the wrong read on the US Navy. There is a heavy institutional bias against new aircraft, particularly if its a joint one. You saw it with the F-111B, the A-4 transition to the A-7, the A-7 transition to the F/A-18A, the F-14 transition to the F/A-18E and now the F/A-18 to the F-35.
And the UCLASS program was a very poorly run program... so much so that it was direct review by congress that required the Navy to report on its progress every month. The navy didn't know what it wanted, figured out that getting a high level capability was far too costly, so it opted for the most limited mission possible: air to air refuelling.
Where a doctrinal difference may emerge between the Navy and the USAF/USMC on the F-35 is what role that fighter will play in the overall operations. The USAF/USMC are increasingly looking at the F-35 as a key decision-making node on the battlefield, while de-emphasizing the role that widebodies and other traditional C2 nodes play. The USMC is actually further ahead in this thinking: they are looking at their burgeoning UAV fleet and will have the F-35B tie into them, partly because they don't have these traditional C2 nodes to rely on. They've been working on this for quite awhile: they had a number of personnel billeted with the F-22 community over the past decade to gain a fuller sense of how a fifth generation aircraft operates and how to apply that to the F-35B's operations.
The US Navy has been more reserved in its view, with the F-35Cs seen more as a strike-reconnaissance platform, while the E-2D and the Fleet will still have a stronger role to play in C2. Thus its need isn't there. However its an open question whether they will retain this view, or shift once they are exposed to the benefits of the USAF-USMC approach become apparent.