dizman Posted June 8, 2016 Posted June 8, 2016 That spitfire moving in to tip the V1 wing is pretty great, thanks for the pics! Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted June 8, 2016 Posted June 8, 2016 That museum with the Spitfire/V1 - wow, thats a really imaginative display! (for those wondering, the Spitfires wings are "clipped" to improve rate of roll at lower altitudes, important when going up against Fw190s). For those of you who like your airliners, the BBC has a new documentary series you might like, "City in the Sky" which you may be able to get on iPlayer depending on where you are. It focuses on all aspects of modern international air travel; I've only seen a few minutes but it was much better than I was expecting. Quote
David Hingtgen Posted June 9, 2016 Author Posted June 9, 2016 A new outfit for the latest T-50s: I didn't realize the LERX-thingy (technical term) had nearly that much movement range. Quote
kalvasflam Posted June 9, 2016 Posted June 9, 2016 (edited) You know, for just a split second, I thought YF-23; Wow, a lot of movement on the tail plane too. It literally looks like it builds on a pivot. Edited June 9, 2016 by kalvasflam Quote
grigolosi Posted June 9, 2016 Posted June 9, 2016 If it has a FBW system which it more than likely does, the tail plane is mounted on a bellcrank mounted to an ISA mounted in the frame fairing area. FBW makes mounting a flight control surface fairly easy. The surfaces are mounted on a pivot point (mainly the horizontal stabilator and rudderons or rudderators not sure what the Russian term for them is). But I bet those frame bearings the tail plane is mounted through are seriously stressed. Quote
electric indigo Posted June 9, 2016 Posted June 9, 2016 Here's another shot from behind Larger: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Ch9F9avWUAA79Gt.jpg:large Quote
miles316 Posted June 9, 2016 Posted June 9, 2016 How many prototype/pre-production T/SU-50 have they built? Quote
electric indigo Posted June 9, 2016 Posted June 9, 2016 Six are flying, a seventh is in testing. Quote
grigolosi Posted June 9, 2016 Posted June 9, 2016 I am curious as to whether or not they have notched the corners of the LEF's. That angle surface the LEF forms between it an the frame is a major RCS draw back. That is why the F-22 has notched LEF corners. In the photo it is hard to tell from the forward angle. I found this pic of one without the paint getting ready for a test flight. The LEF's don't seem to be notched. bUt you can get a better view of how far the LEX's move down ( it looks like about 25 degrees). Quote
Sildani Posted June 10, 2016 Posted June 10, 2016 Wow, that Dutch museum is awesome! Really good displays! Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted June 13, 2016 Posted June 13, 2016 As I'm sure we all know, the very best way to analyse a fighter aircrafts performance is through videos on the internet: Insert "F-35 can't keep up with 70 year old Spitfire" comment here... Quote
Sildani Posted June 14, 2016 Posted June 14, 2016 Eh. F-35 bashing is getting as old and tiring to read as new Star Wars movie rants. It's flawed, badly. It's stupid expensive. It has a lot of potential, though, and like most warplanes its flaws will be fixed, tactics will evolve, and it'll be at least effective, at best very good indeed. It'll never be as good as its ardent supporters claim, and never as bad as its worst detractors say. One thing for sure: it's too far gone to be canceled, and so it's what we have to work with. "The quality of the crate matters little. Success depends on the pilot who sits in it." Quote
grigolosi Posted June 14, 2016 Posted June 14, 2016 (edited) You are absolutely correct Sildani. We are to far along now to canx the program. Always liked Baron Von Richtofen............ Edited June 14, 2016 by grigolosi Quote
slide Posted June 14, 2016 Posted June 14, 2016 One thing for sure: it's too far gone to be canceled, and so it's what we have to work with. That's what Avro Canada thought in the 60s... Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted June 14, 2016 Posted June 14, 2016 I'll give the F-35 this, from the few minutes of footage that have emerged, it does seem to be pretty quick in a straight line though given that monster of an engine that shouldn't be much of a surprise. Quote
grigolosi Posted June 15, 2016 Posted June 15, 2016 (edited) Unfortunately with the restrictions they put on the airframe it will be a while before anyone gets to see what it is capable of. When I was at Edwards the F- 22 ' s were restricted from any fancy maneuvering at the airshow. All they could do was pretty much what you saw that F-35 doing in the video. Edited June 15, 2016 by grigolosi Quote
Bri Posted June 15, 2016 Posted June 15, 2016 THe two planes looked fairly impressive when I saw it at Leeuwarden AFB. I hope the F35 is the new F16 for the 21st century, but I fear it's the new F104... Quote
Sildani Posted June 15, 2016 Posted June 15, 2016 That's my point exactly. The 104, after years of teething issues, training, and retraining, became fairly effective. It most likely was never a pilot's first choice, but it wasn't a failure. It took years, though, I'll give you that. Slide: you're right, but that was a different time and country. Plus, it's probable the US pressed Canada to scrap it. For the F-35, there's no more influential country that can do that to us. Only way the 35 can be derailed now is if F-22A production is found to be feasible and cost-effective. Which is doubtful. Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted June 15, 2016 Posted June 15, 2016 Unfortunately with the restrictions they put on the airframe it will be a while before anyone gets to see what it is capable of. When I was at Edwards the F- 22 ' s were restricted from any fancy maneuvering at the airshow. All they could do was pretty much what you saw that F-35 doing in the video. Yes, I remember reading that the Typhoons early airshow performances were a bit limited as they hadn't cleared some of the limitations yet, which meant that the Rafale (which was further along in its development programme) could put on more impressive displays at the time. Quote
electric indigo Posted June 16, 2016 Posted June 16, 2016 That's my point exactly. The 104, after years of teething issues, training, and retraining, became fairly effective. It most likely was never a pilot's first choice, but it wasn't a failure. It took years, though, I'll give you that. Let's hope it doesn't take a couple of hundred crashes this time... Quote
Sildani Posted June 17, 2016 Posted June 17, 2016 (edited) Ayeahp. Let's hope not! Edited June 17, 2016 by Sildani Quote
electric indigo Posted June 21, 2016 Posted June 21, 2016 Nice shot of the chinese Z-10 attack helicopter Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted June 28, 2016 Posted June 28, 2016 (edited) So... does anyone know the flight status of the YF-19? http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-36650848 Edited June 28, 2016 by F-ZeroOne Quote
spanner Posted June 28, 2016 Posted June 28, 2016 So... does anyone know the flight status of the YF-19? http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-36650848 Impressive yet scary stuff! so in time regardless of how good a fighter you have, if you going up against a A.I. controlled fighter then you're not going to stand much of a chance being a lowly human pilot.. So you would think that in 25 to 50 years a good majority of air force fighter jets will definitely be piloted by A.I. systems!? Quote
slide Posted June 28, 2016 Posted June 28, 2016 Impressive yet scary stuff! so in time regardless of how good a fighter you have, if you going up against a A.I. controlled fighter then you're not going to stand much of a chance being a lowly human pilot.. So you would think that in 25 to 50 years a good majority of air force fighter jets will definitely be piloted by A.I. systems!? likely, but they'll never be 100% autonomous Even the US Gov't won't be silly enough to let a 100% autonomous Warplane off the leash... It'll have to request weapons-release/engagement clearances etc. someone will develop jamming tech which will render EM communication effectively useless... jamming tech is usually not far behind the latest RADAR tech, and modern RADAR is very impressive... once that happens it'll be telephone wire and carrier pigeons all-over-again... Quote
renegadeleader1 Posted June 29, 2016 Posted June 29, 2016 (edited) likely, but they'll never be 100% autonomous Even the US Gov't won't be silly enough to let a 100% autonomous Warplane off the leash... It'll have to request weapons-release/engagement clearances etc. someone will develop jamming tech which will render EM communication effectively useless... jamming tech is usually not far behind the latest RADAR tech, and modern RADAR is very impressive... once that happens it'll be telephone wire and carrier pigeons all-over-again... UNIVERSAL CENTURY GUNDAM! Edited June 29, 2016 by renegadeleader1 Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted June 29, 2016 Posted June 29, 2016 Now I've had some time to think about it, this situation isn't that unusual - A.I. controlled aircraft, tanks, combat vehicles and the like routinely match or beat human minds all the time. In video games. Apparently one problem many games developers run into is that during early builds the A.I. is often too good and needs to be dialled down a bit for the puny meat sacks to stand to a chance... Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted June 30, 2016 Posted June 30, 2016 (edited) First UK F-35B arrives in UK for airshow. It got across the Atlantic without catching fire, being unable to keep up with the tanker or being shot down by MiG-17s; however, given the current exchange rate it might be the only one we'll actually be able to afford... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-36670106 Supposedly in a recent exercise, several F-15Es were unable to intercept a flight of F-35s and prevent them carrying out their mission objectives in an exercise, though details are a bit limited (varying from "F-15s couldn't find F-35s in recent exercise" to "F-35s shot down entire rest of worlds air forces and the Kodan Armada in recent exercise"). Edited June 30, 2016 by F-ZeroOne Quote
areaseven Posted July 1, 2016 Posted July 1, 2016 (edited) You're welcome. Edited July 2, 2016 by areaseven Quote
F-ZeroOne Posted July 1, 2016 Posted July 1, 2016 That fuel probe deployment is oddly disturbing... Quote
Thom Posted July 1, 2016 Posted July 1, 2016 I wonder if it would be better to leave the pilot in the seat along with the AI. That way if jamming does occur, or some other nefarious activity, the pilot can just take over with a flip-switch. Developing a tandem relationship with our future Overlords can be a good thing! Quote
dizman Posted July 2, 2016 Posted July 2, 2016 I think part of the appeal to an AI pilot is that the aircraft can pull high g maneuvers that would knock out or kill even the best human pilot. When the time came to switch over to human flight the pilot would be a pile of mush . Quote
electric indigo Posted July 2, 2016 Posted July 2, 2016 I faintly remember some episode in "Yukikaze" going like this. Quote
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