The F-35 Lightning: Jack of All Trades, or Master of None?

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  • čas přidán 10. 08. 2021
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Komentáře • 4K

  • @carportchronicles1943
    @carportchronicles1943 Před 2 lety +1628

    In early 2006 I worked in the Public Affairs Department aboard USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72. One of my tasks at that time was escorting a couple Lockheed engineers around the ship while we were underway so they could better understand the environment the F-35 would be operating in and the capabilities we had for servicing aircraft at sea. One thing which I remember clearly was their surprise at seeing flight deck crew members physically pushing aircraft around the flight deck by hand. Essentially, a number of flight deck crew would go up to an aircraft which needed to be moved and move it by pushing on the wings leading edges. The engineers immediately stated they would need to strengthen the wings of the Navy version to accommodate this practice. I still have the hat and F-35 pin they gave me as a thank you for showing them around the ship.

    • @keirfarnum6811
      @keirfarnum6811 Před 2 lety +133

      They probably expected high tech tugs to be used. Doh! Muscle power to the rescue!

    • @CharChar2121
      @CharChar2121 Před 2 lety +77

      That's such a cool little fact :)

    • @michaelmurdock6560
      @michaelmurdock6560 Před 2 lety +125

      @@keirfarnum6811 Carriers do have a couple tow tugs, but during the carefully choreographed chaos that is flight ops at sea they are not always available to move every aircraft.

    • @Albertkallal
      @Albertkallal Před 2 lety +69

      A very cool and yet at the same time a simple story! It just goes to show how field experience often is overlooked here!

    • @MrTarmonbarry
      @MrTarmonbarry Před 2 lety +31

      The wings could not withstand being pushed on ??
      YIKES

  • @kevinquinn7645
    @kevinquinn7645 Před 2 lety +667

    To be fair, the $1.7T figure is the through life cost of the aircraft and reflects operating 2,000 F-35s until 2077, including capital cost, fuel, weapons, spares, maintenance and wages.

    • @edding8400
      @edding8400 Před 2 lety +261

      Sir, this comment section is reserved for making hate comments, not to discuss facts and such.

    • @JZ909
      @JZ909 Před 2 lety +32

      This is true, and for a 5th generation fighter, the F-35 looks like it will be a decent price. That being said, not everything is a 5th generation fighter problem. Dropping bombs on terrorists (and we drop a lot of bombs on terrorists) can be done better by far cheaper aircraft, but while we seem to be fine spending $1.7T on 2400 fighters, we balk at buying 100 light attack aircraft, aircraft that would be far better at this task than the F-35, and could do it for a small fraction of the price.
      The other issue is that we're in an arms race with China right now. With a lifecycle of 50+ years, barring something crazy happening, China is going to have some very good answers to the F-35 well before it's ready for retirement. Already, the ballistic/cruise/hypersonic missile threat from China to F-35 basing seems to be somewhere between high and unmanageable. A new basing strategy could mitigate this, but we won't be able to shift to that if we have 1000 F-35As that don't have an ability to adapt to this new basing strategy sucking up the bulk of the Air Force's funding. The F-35B could be an answer, as well as fast, long-range, probably multi-crew aircraft, and/or UCAVs that don't require runways. The point is, locking ourselves into a 50+ year commitment to an aircraft, when we're in an arms race against a capable opponent probably isn't a good idea. We need to iterate faster than that to stay ahead.

    • @Ilamarea
      @Ilamarea Před 2 lety +1

      @@JZ909 Dude. The F35 is the last manned aircraft US will develop for mass adoption. It's the electronic-warfare system intended to act as eyes on the Loyal Wingman programs with fighter jet, unmanned drones taking over in the coming decades. The F35 does exactly what we need it to and it's been a huge success, even commercially.

    • @paulbedichek2679
      @paulbedichek2679 Před 2 lety +12

      Right,we don't care about the cost of the wages, that is to our own people.But we should realize that every penny Eu sends to Russia for coal gas and oil and every cent we send to China for batteries and solar panels strengthens our enemies and weakens us and our friends as well as harming the climate.

    • @grochomarx2002
      @grochomarx2002 Před 2 lety +1

      1.7?
      In the real world you times your lifetime cost analysis by a factor of 5, and that comes closer to the truth.
      So instead of 1.7 billion expect to pay 8.5 billion for 2,000 units or thereabouts.

  • @hazlstet
    @hazlstet Před 2 lety +174

    this quote is ALWAYS used incorrectly.
    "A jack of all trades is master of none but it still always better than a master of one"
    people dont understand how much this aircraft if capable of.
    the F35 leaped years ahead of the market had to offer and it completely changed how air control is/will be achieved.

    • @IkeVMAX4
      @IkeVMAX4 Před rokem +13

      This. Here in Finland our air force chose F-35 as the new fighter. It will replace f/a-18's .
      F-35 was clear winner against super Hornet, Gripen, eurofighter.

  • @usmcrn4418
    @usmcrn4418 Před 2 lety +32

    As an aviation Officer, in my opinion the aircraft is overall outstanding.. not perfect.. but logistically and functionally outstanding which over time DOES save money with interchangeable parts and making maintenance and the logistics of supporting the aircraft much more efficient.

    • @glareicebutts1423
      @glareicebutts1423 Před 2 měsíci

      And your opinion is actually valuable, unlike many of these keyboard warriors in these comments

  • @Beshman12
    @Beshman12 Před 2 lety +769

    Saw one live at one of the Farnborough Air Show. Zoomed in, stopped, hovered, did a 360° on the horizontal and zoomed off again. Cool stuff

    • @nogod7184
      @nogod7184 Před 2 lety +35

      That's it? A 40-year-old Harrier can do all that. And it's been doing that for 40 years.

    • @Beshman12
      @Beshman12 Před 2 lety +20

      @@nogod7184 Never seen a harrier in person

    • @andrewday3206
      @andrewday3206 Před 2 lety +98

      @@nogod7184 The Harrier is no competition for a F-35

    • @fullcircle8231
      @fullcircle8231 Před 2 lety +41

      It's an air show dumbass... they aren't gonna push the jets to their limits for a bunch of random ass civilians who want to see cool stunts in expensive military aircraft.

    • @spliffdelakong5422
      @spliffdelakong5422 Před 2 lety +15

      @@Beshman12 you're lucky. I see... actually more HEAR them daily. One seriously just flew over my house while typing this. They're fucking loud. Especially when they're practicing VTOL.

  • @myblacklab7
    @myblacklab7 Před 2 lety +1823

    "A jack of all trades is a master of none, but oftentimes better than a master of one."
    Everyone forgets the second part of this saying.

    • @Joshua_N-A
      @Joshua_N-A Před 2 lety +42

      Looks like multirole has become a specialized role itself. Wouldn't that be making training a lot longer?

    • @myblacklab7
      @myblacklab7 Před 2 lety +69

      @@Joshua_N-A For the F-35, the idea of making it a Jack of all trades seems unwise to me. We need the best fighter planes - not the best multi-role plane that can be used as a fighter.
      I just wanted to point out what the full quote is, since very few people seem to be familiar with the full quote.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Před 2 lety +39

      But it was promised to be a master of three with a price tag to match

    • @radiofreealbemuth8540
      @radiofreealbemuth8540 Před 2 lety +20

      I didn’t know this quote had a second part. Where is the quote from if you know?

    • @georgebootoo4026
      @georgebootoo4026 Před 2 lety +47

      The F35 is not 1 jet anymore, its 3. The A, B and C "variants" were suppose to share 80% of the same components, now they share less than 20%. They should have just made 3 separate jets in the first place, not only would they be even better than the f35, they would have been in service now and cheaper in the long run.

  • @usmcrn4418
    @usmcrn4418 Před 2 lety +83

    I used to work on AV-8B Harrier (the only foreign weapons system that the US military had accepted in more than 50 years), and that thing.. the F-35, is far superior and more flexible. It was a good choice and a smart investment.

    • @taiwandxt6493
      @taiwandxt6493 Před rokem +4

      I completely agree. If you look at all the facts what the F-35's capabilities and what it is meant to be, and what the program has achieved engineering wise and ironing out the flaws and problems, it literally is the best investment ever made in the long run by not just the United States but other Western Allies as well. The only thing which makes the F-35 more expensive is flight hour cost, which in of itself is decreasing. But per unit cost of the F-35 and lifetime cost is ultimately cheaper than many fourth generation aircraft currently in service in the world. And in comparison to something like the F-22, the F-35 is much cheaper to operate long term, and think about all that it provides OVER the F-22 as well. Sure it failed the affordable test compared to fighters like the F-16 but given all its capabilities and that the F-16 is getting old, I don't see how that is an issue.

  • @wlockhart
    @wlockhart Před 2 lety +34

    The Pilot's helmet is more expensive than my house.

  • @drmattconrad77
    @drmattconrad77 Před 2 lety +1884

    The trick to being a successful military contractor is to employ people in as many congressional districts as possible.

    • @thekidfromcleveland3944
      @thekidfromcleveland3944 Před 2 lety +18

      That just makes it difficult for politics to kill. That doesn't mean it'll be difficult for The Enemy to kill i.e. F111A

    • @hanglee5586
      @hanglee5586 Před 2 lety +30

      Raytheon is a huge scammer for DoD. 🙂

    • @stevedownes5439
      @stevedownes5439 Před 2 lety +36

      Whenever I hear "Industrial Military Complex" I always remember that unmentioned, inseparable component of that "special interest" group...

    • @spddracer
      @spddracer Před 2 lety +28

      This hurts my soul with its truth.

    • @ethanc1288
      @ethanc1288 Před 2 lety +3

      @@thekidfromcleveland3944 Your right, but I think all of the f111's lost during the Vietnam war were due to hydraulic failures.

  • @C2K777
    @C2K777 Před 2 lety +398

    PILOT: "F35: add lasagne sheets, milk and some recces pieces to my list"
    F35: "Lasagne sheets, milk and recces pieces, should I order those now"?
    PILOT: "F35: Let's not tempt fate, order once we've left enemy airspace"

    • @mirzaahmed6589
      @mirzaahmed6589 Před 2 lety +12

      Reese's

    • @C2K777
      @C2K777 Před 2 lety +7

      @@mirzaahmed6589 Do ya know, I knew i'd spell it wrong whichever version I picked 🤣 - TY for the correction

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Před 2 lety +2

      *lasagna
      Lasagne is the dish itself.

    • @justsomeperson5110
      @justsomeperson5110 Před 2 lety +5

      LOL This is basically how the F-35 was designed too. It's like a child throwing every random ingredient that they love into one bowl and mixing it all up, then tossing it into the oven to bake. Including the Tupperware bowl! It's a miracle that it works, at all, in the end. But it's no wonder that some people still have a problem stomaching it.

    • @trescatorce9497
      @trescatorce9497 Před 2 lety +3

      why bother to have a pilot? Make it a drone, save at least 200 million for the cockpit system, ejector seat, canopy... At least 1 ton which can be used for payloads. Then you get a video game whiz kid to handle it from Creech AFB

  • @CamoDrako
    @CamoDrako Před 11 měsíci +3

    Along with everything that is said in these comments which i agree with, the internal bomb bay is such an insane feature. Every plane with external armament is extensively hindered compared to its empty configuration, but an internal bomb and missile bay on a fighter alone makes control consistency and usability leaps and bounds above contemporary aircraft

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones Před 5 měsíci +1

      Mach 1.6 and 8g maneuvers with two AIM-120s and two 2000lb JDAMs. Show me a 4th gen fighter that can do that.

  • @RaderizDorret
    @RaderizDorret Před 2 lety +23

    Simon, you should look at the F-111. Many of the same issues with trying to get one airframe to do so many wildly different things at once and it costing MUCH more than simply developing more specialized airframes to fit the goal. With the F-111, the naval variant was canceled and resulted in the development of the iconic F-14 Tomcat.

    • @robh3267
      @robh3267 Před 2 lety

      Techs always hate working on anything new and unfamiliar, really has nothing to do with the jet itself.

    • @RaderizDorret
      @RaderizDorret Před 2 lety +1

      @@robh3267 It has nothing to do with the techs. The F-35A has a completely different mission to the F-35B which has a completely different mission to the F-35C. the F-35A's requirements could easily be taken over with better performance and range by simply adopting the F-35C for the Air Force (as happened before with the F-4 vs the F-106). Meanwhile this *exact same airframe* must be VTOL capable for the Marines' F-35B. The Air Force wanted a bomb truck that could defend itself (what the F-16 evolved into), the Navy wanted a replacement for the F/A-8 family with similar overall performance, and the Marines needed a replacement for their Harriers. That's a LOT to ask out of one basic airframe design and it is documented that the overwhelming source of the cost overruns is getting that universal airframe to do so much shit that it can't help but suck.

  • @southernyankeehomestead3230
    @southernyankeehomestead3230 Před 2 lety +595

    One thing you didn't mention about the VTOL. An inherent weakness in the harrier is when landing it's a controlled crash and taking off it still requires a bit of runway. This is because of the vectored thrust. IF or WHEN the engine sucks up its own exhaust if causes a flame out situation and a stalling of the engine. When landing the last 30 to 50 feet are very fast due to this known issue. The side effect of the F35's shaft driven fan is by sucking fresh air from above the aircraft and pushing it below it effectively creates and air curtain that prevents the engine from sucking up its own exhaust.

    • @CornPopsDood
      @CornPopsDood Před 2 lety +19

      Don’t go giving away secrets now.

    • @glandhound
      @glandhound Před 2 lety +48

      That's one one thing, the other one thing is that Lockheed bought that snappy VTOL technology from the Russians. It's not a secret, it's the Yak-41 VTOL engine... it's just that no one likes to mention it for some reason... wonder why.

    • @OptimisticNihilist15
      @OptimisticNihilist15 Před 2 lety +19

      @@glandhound I don't think any American will be very happy if they found out about it. Also military suppliers must preserve the image of nationalism and patriotism even if they don't follow it in practice

    • @southernyankeehomestead3230
      @southernyankeehomestead3230 Před 2 lety +11

      @@CornPopsDood I was very careful to only state the facts that I've seen in documentaries not what I know or what I've seen on flight decks.

    • @TherconJair
      @TherconJair Před 2 lety +5

      And the technology was bought out from Yakovlev.

  • @jhenniebaysic9318
    @jhenniebaysic9318 Před 2 lety +441

    Some correction.
    They didn't yet spend $400B for the F-35 as of now. That $400B development and procurement cost of over 2,447 F-35(all variants). At the moment from what i recall reading they spend around $150+B for buying around 800 jets and its development.
    The $1.7T cost of the F-35 include the following
    1. Development Cost
    2. Procurement of 2,447 jets
    3. Upgrades until 2070
    4. Operational cost of the jets until 2070+(includes everything from salary of crews and pilots, spare parts and the estimated inflation to that date)

    • @MrTarmonbarry
      @MrTarmonbarry Před 2 lety +6

      Mad money , and how can they set aside money for upgrades until the year 2070 ??, nobody knows what tech is coming along in the next 50 years and it will not even be around in 50 years from now

    • @Albertkallal
      @Albertkallal Před 2 lety +67

      Actually, the development costs are pegged at 80 billion. Total money spent is about 400 billion, but that includes the delivery of 600 jets (which would not, and should not be noted as development costs.
      Given that they built 3 very different airframes and 3 models?
      Well, the F16 (in adjusted dollars)? The program cost MORE then doubled, and in adjusted 2021 dollars the f16 cost 54 billion dollars.
      So the F35 had some cost overruns, but then again, 3 fighter jets, and 3 VERY different airframes?
      If only one model F35, and NOT the VSTOL model? And not the carrier model?
      The cost of the F35 program would in fact be about the same as the f16 cost to develop!!!
      I always though the F35 developer costs were high, but now, it actually looks to be normal based on past jets.
      Given the f16 was 54 billion, and they did the F35 with 3 variants for 80 billion? That's not really that much different in terms of development costs then, is it?

    • @esecallum
      @esecallum Před 2 lety +5

      @@Albertkallal STILL A TURKEY.

    • @esecallum
      @esecallum Před 2 lety +11

      Budgets are moral documents because they do not lie. The F-35 is the most expensive weapon in history, with a projected lifetime cost of $1.7 trillion. That’s more than Russia’s GDP, all spent on a single-seat plane. In fact, if this aircraft were a country, its GDP would rank 11th in the world, ahead of Saudi Arabia. Buying one costs around $110 million a copy, nearly double the price of a Boeing 737-600 airliner. F-35s are also expensive to fly. Each hour in the air costs $44,000, more than twice the cost of the F-15 Eagle, F-16 Fighting Falcon and F/A-18 Super Hornet.

    • @Spectre-wd9dl
      @Spectre-wd9dl Před 2 lety +12

      Aren't the salary's of crews and pilots already incorporated into the militarys budget someplace. Seems kind of weird because they're already in the military and getting paid no matter what they're doing.

  • @MikeHarris1984
    @MikeHarris1984 Před 2 lety +10

    I live by Luke Airforce base in Phoenix. And you can hear the difference when they are flying F-16/F-22/F35. The F22 is a loud beast, but holy crap, the F35 is an amazing machine to see in the skys and the sound is earth shattering.... LOVE IT!

  • @sebringb
    @sebringb Před 2 lety +12

    Heh, I love the snark and irony when you say, "enlightened age" while discussing a weapon of death and destruction!

  • @WChocoleta
    @WChocoleta Před 2 lety +446

    I'm sorry, but are you kidding me that the F-35 "has a less powerful engine than the Harrier"? The Pratt-Whitney F135-PW600 engine used on the F-35B has a maximum hovering thrust of 180kN, compared to around 106kN of thrust provided by the Harrier's Rolls-Royce Pegasus. Even without the lift-fan, the F135 generates 120kN of thrust, not to mention it could be further boosted by the afterburner in-flight. The F135 is actually the SINGLE MOST POWERFUL jet engine to have ever been mounted on a fighter jet.

    • @barryklinedinst6233
      @barryklinedinst6233 Před 2 lety +70

      This guy needs to research the f35 a bit better. It has had problems but the engine has more thrust than any other jet that we have. So he clearly needs a new job

    • @Joshua_N-A
      @Joshua_N-A Před 2 lety +47

      Either he doesn't do thorough research or he's still stuck in 2016 when the F-35 got beaten by the F-16 in exericise.

    • @jamplays2573
      @jamplays2573 Před 2 lety +4

      40,000lbs of thrust versus harriers 23800lbs. I think it breaks down on the f35b to 20,000lbs for the lift fan and 1,000lbs for each roll post. Maybe that would give u less thrust out the back end in vtol but without some quick research I couldn’t be sure

    • @NationChosenByGod
      @NationChosenByGod Před 2 lety

      @@barryklinedinst6233 Actually, the F-119 has more thrust than the F-135 engine.

    • @Usrthsbcufeh
      @Usrthsbcufeh Před 2 lety +7

      @@NationChosenByGod no it doesn’t lmao

  • @themanyouwanttobe
    @themanyouwanttobe Před 2 lety +272

    I laughed but I wouldn't be surprised if "looking really stupid" were actually a determining factor. Bunch of military tough guys don't want to be flying around in a death machine that looks like a meme.

    • @nathan_middleton_
      @nathan_middleton_ Před 2 lety +23

      It actually was. They were quoted as remarking about how the US had a recent history of ungainly looking aircraft, and even though some of these became very iconic, like the A-10 Warthog, it was a matter of pride that they wanted something that couldn't be mocked for its looks. Rather tragic that vanity and pride influenced a decision that should be entirely about capability.

    • @thefolder69
      @thefolder69 Před 2 lety +38

      @@nathan_middleton_ and the F-35 does still get mocked for the way it looks, being too "fat". I love it personally, but you can't please everyone

    • @justsomeperson5110
      @justsomeperson5110 Před 2 lety +13

      Say that to the A-10 pilots! :-P A plane so notorious that it's not even called by its actual name. "Thunderbolt II? Oooooh, you mean the Warthog..." But it's so fugly that you can't not love it!

    • @marsaustralis6881
      @marsaustralis6881 Před 2 lety +8

      A weapon doesn't have to look good to do its job well, so you're likely right that part of Boeing's loss was the silly first look, even though it could have changed as it evolved into an actual combat version. Granted, the lift fan concept from Lockheed is a legitimate game changer over the Harrier's old means of VTOL, and some stealth capability was also a factor at play, which forces a bit of a design change to reduce RCS.
      The A-10 is a perfect example of your statement though; it wasn't pretty, but it did, and still does, its job so well. It's also pretty cheap to maintain and deploy in comparison to other ground-attack-equipped fighters that aren't turbo-prop powered (Super Tuscano and similar), but it definitely can't handle combat in an area without suppressed anti-air defenses.
      The biggest issue with the JSF program really is the idea of trying to adapt one design into 3, instead of just going with 3 proper variants that may share some superficial design elements. The Air Force should have gotten a true F-15 successor, but didn't and had to end up splitting duties again with the F-15EX. The Navy should have had a true F-18 Super Hornet successor, but didn't. Only the Marines got what they wanted; a true successor to the Harrier that was more combat capable and could forgo stealth in favor of more ordinance.

    • @ressljs
      @ressljs Před 2 lety

      @@nathan_middleton_ I was reading in an aviation magazine about the JSF competition. Now of course this was the author's opinion, but he had a lot of experience with the Air Force. He said something to the effect that the Air Force really wants their planes to look "right" and because of that, the Boeing could have only one if the Lockheed had been a complete design failure.

  • @Electric_Bagpipes
    @Electric_Bagpipes Před 2 lety +35

    “Enlightened age”
    _glances at Afghanistan…_

    • @cherrydeathclaw
      @cherrydeathclaw Před 2 lety +5

      20 years gone to waste by one president. Hoo boy we are fucked.

    • @chrisspley99
      @chrisspley99 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cherrydeathclaw it went to waste 20 years ago when we invaded

    • @renatoigmed
      @renatoigmed Před 2 lety

      @@chrisspley99 don't fall for the simplistic rhetoric out of context. the entire US history culminated inexorably in the intervention of Afghanistan including a very important factor in this theater: the antagonism of capitalism or communism in the dispute for the dominant hegemony of the planet. Afghanistan was just another country involved in this indirect war as it was in Korea and Vietnam, but tempered with the volatility of a region permeated by permanent theocratic conflict between medieval-minded peoples.

  • @electrolysisresearch8013
    @electrolysisresearch8013 Před 2 lety +74

    The F-35 gets an extremely undeserved amount of flack. I love the F-35 and think it was an amazing plane and an amazing concept especially for the Marines, I mean that's a huge upgrade for me harrier. You got a Beyond visual range beast that is completely unmatched, and the funny thing is an F-35 is not designed to shoot down their planes, say it again for the people who don't understand LoL. It actually was replacing the F-117 nighthawk is its main purpose. A F-35 is mostly an attack plane, and it leads groups of at least three unmanned drones to penetrate enemy lines and sweep out air defense systems, so the fourth generation fighters and bombers can advance. It also is a superpowered advanced AI with the ability to do amazing electronic warfare against radar systems. The F-35 is a small one engine aircraft and has amazing range considering what it is, and people underestimate It's ability to hover in mid dogfight, that gives it a really tricky advantage at super low speed low altitude, because it can recover from a stall turn into a helicopter and shoot you down then fly off. I have been playing combat simulators for a long time with aircrafts that can hover, it gives you something else to think about. And the engine problems people complain about is really ridiculous, they just had to beef up to turbine blades after 12 years. And they were literally never even offline for maintenance, all they did is simply replace parts sooner than predicted. And the F-35 is about to get a huge engine upgrade it will have a XA101 Ramjet engine hybrid. It is a rebuild kit that drops straight into its existing engine casing.

    • @Minox_
      @Minox_ Před 2 lety +16

      Good thing Sprey isn't around anymore to spout more nonesense.

    • @CosmoE12
      @CosmoE12 Před rokem +2

      The F-35 is “capable” of hovering mid dogfight but the jet isn’t designed to be a dog fighter and with “full bags” (full fuel weight) and probably carrying some sort of armament would burn wayyyy too much fuel to make hovering mid dogfight feasible without having to land for fuel or meet a tanker VERY shortly after.

    • @Lord_Foxy13
      @Lord_Foxy13 Před rokem

      ​@@Minox_We are all very thankful Pierre Sprey has finally shut the fuck up

    • @apersonontheinternet8006
      @apersonontheinternet8006 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@MLaak86 It was never designed to be a fighter, a bomb truck, or any of that. It could never expend a single munition and still be a complete success. It is first and foremost a flying supercomputer that has integrated every single sensory pod we currently have and more with moderate defensive/offensive fire solutions all in a single stealth chassis. You are talking about a forward operating AWACS that can also handle targeting of virtually everything on the battlefield for everyone else so that the 4th gen F-15 trucks can drop their payload and go cold or vector the F-16/18's in and let them get the drop.
      If I may, I would like to point you to the Abrams-X project which shares many of the same technologies pertinent to ground force combat. Additionally, part of the Next Generation Squad Weapon program is the very little talked about Fire Control (NGSW-FC) that features a little system called Intra-Soldier Wireless. Just with these technologies alone one cannot tell me that there isn't a way to integrate these technologies at the command level and push these out to the field in real time. And this completely ignores the US Army's air conditioned helmet patented in 2013 that has underwent a few revisions to now include an augmented reality interface.
      The next generation of warfare is knocking at the door.

    • @MLaak86
      @MLaak86 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@apersonontheinternet8006 I have since come across vids explaining this reality and changed my position.

  • @GuernB2
    @GuernB2 Před 2 lety +45

    A lot of wrong information at 10:33. The F35 does not have less thrust than the Harrier, it has nearly double. The best version of the Pegasus engine only makes 23800 lbf of thrust compared to the F35's 40000 lbf. These are both single engine aircraft.

    • @damonstr
      @damonstr Před 2 lety

      F135 makes 43000 lbf, in hover mode it's actually over 44000 lbf.

    • @nucleargandhi101
      @nucleargandhi101 Před 2 lety +1

      I too wrote this comment.
      105kn vs 190Kn lol

    • @Joshua_N-A
      @Joshua_N-A Před 2 lety

      @@nucleargandhi101 I'm used to lbs, kn makes me wanna wiki.

    • @nucleargandhi101
      @nucleargandhi101 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Joshua_N-A Whole world uses S.I (Metric System). Get used to it mate.
      Also it makes more sense.
      I mean just look at the calculation of lbf.
      It's 1 lbs multipled by "g"(which is SI unit), which again is multipled by metric to imperial ratio... so that it becomes metrix.
      Why not directly use metric?

    • @ExHyperion
      @ExHyperion Před 2 lety +3

      @@nucleargandhi101 to continually piss off people like you lol, Metric to calculate everything important then use imperial online to piss off people. its a win win

  • @kbahrt
    @kbahrt Před 2 lety +79

    Simon, the image at 7:51 is actually F22s in production, you can see the two engine compartments and neck down in the center. The 35 has a single central engine.

    • @JimBrodie
      @JimBrodie Před 2 lety

      There's a lot of chatter about bringing the F22 back in some guise, but that's just that, chatter.

    • @goofyfoot2001
      @goofyfoot2001 Před 2 lety +1

      He has a fascinating egg skull

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 Před 2 lety

      its just b roll

    • @goldenhate6649
      @goldenhate6649 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JimBrodie the F22 is still the primary fighter to fighter aircraft in the US for the same reason the US used f15’s while having access to f-16’s. Also, its just cheaper.

    • @JimBrodie
      @JimBrodie Před 2 lety

      @@goldenhate6649
      I'm a div, typo.. Meant the YF-23.
      The F-22 has a fair few years under it's belt now and proved itself quite capable.

  • @TrapperAaron
    @TrapperAaron Před 2 lety +4

    The pratt whitney company used to have a skunk works in south Florida, when i was a kid we used to hunt in a small preserve (corbett area) that shared a border with pratt whitney test facility. Relatively often in the evenings you would hear the roar of a jet engine and see a blinding light, shooting flames a couple hundred feet into the air. The test pad held the rocket motors horizontally and directed the exaust vertically into the air. You could hear and see the exaust from well over a mile away.

  • @jasongarland3165
    @jasongarland3165 Před 2 lety +5

    F-35s are produced in part at the Lockheed Martin plant at JRB Fort Worth. I used to see them thunder past my apartment when I lived in Fort Worth, Texas. You really couldn't miss them because they're so loud.

  • @Destroyer_V0
    @Destroyer_V0 Před 2 lety +147

    When you consider that the US is selling this aircraft to other major allies of the US, such as australia. Who did not previously have, any sort of stealth aircraft. It is a massive boon.

    • @triumphdollysprint
      @triumphdollysprint Před 2 lety +5

      BS! sell us the f22 pls so we don't have to continue having to fund this flying pig f35

    • @triumphdollysprint
      @triumphdollysprint Před 2 lety +2

      @Andy Man no need to call me out on being misinformed my man, it was a crappy joke that wasn't intended to hurt or insult you in any way xo. I love aviation and both the f35 and f22, and I understand they are for completely different roles. it's just a shame the US won't sell us f22's, cos what new generation fighter are we going to use instead?

    • @carso1500
      @carso1500 Před 2 lety +28

      @@triumphdollysprint not even the US can buy more F-22s

    • @WalrusWinking
      @WalrusWinking Před 2 lety +2

      Lmao the US Federal government told the American people not too long ago they've already built, tested, and flown their new 6th generation fighter.

    • @carso1500
      @carso1500 Před 2 lety +3

      @@WalrusWinking it was a test bed for potential technologies that could be integrated on a potential future fighter jet, and really that was to say that using new emergent technologies (like 3D printing and AI) they could build and design new airframes far faster than before

  • @russellfitzpatrick503
    @russellfitzpatrick503 Před 2 lety +89

    I love it when 'serious' media outlets cannot disclose particular items of a newly developed jet and have to fall back on spurious quotes from 'sources', to cover their lack of information, while SW just admits "they won't tell us" .... and we all go "That's okay, we still love your channels"

    • @jeebus6263
      @jeebus6263 Před 2 lety +2

      Hollywood media is really just a show with globalist narrative.

    • @magics902
      @magics902 Před 2 lety +6

      I was really glad when he specified that the high total cost estimate was from a 3rd party and likely is the upper end.
      Most media outlets would just say the lifetime cost is 1.7trillion dollars as if it was fact.
      That number may well be true. but it's certainly not a fact yet. So specifying the origin of the number and how it compares to other estimates is really refreshing.
      Keep up the good work Simon.

  • @greengrugach1984
    @greengrugach1984 Před 2 lety +8

    That quote is actually "jack of all trades master of none is often better than a master of one" , it's a compliment.

  • @benhaliotis3577
    @benhaliotis3577 Před 2 lety +7

    I was on the USS Nimitz during some of the sea trials of the plane. It was amazing to see the power and speed of the craft.

  • @tanongnuchbua487
    @tanongnuchbua487 Před 2 lety +59

    The F135 engine in the F35 produces nearly twice the thrust of the Pegasus in the Harrier. 40,000 lbs vs 23,000 lbs. the lift system on the harrier is more efficient than the F35 however it uses a high bypass turbofan which limits the top speed to subsonic. Lift fans are less efficient but mean you can use a turbojet engine and so go supersonic. To go supersonic in a Harrier you would need to develop plenum chamber afterburners to increase the exhaust gas airspeed.

    • @garymccann2960
      @garymccann2960 Před 2 lety +1

      I disagree, A radial fan converts HP into thrust much more efficiently, It allows streamlining of the air frame, it reduces the hot exhaust exposure on landing and makes it possible to have a stealthy airframe. It has never been done because the HP transmitted to the fan is about half of the power driving a Ticonderoga class cruiser. IN other words without the fan the F35 would be just another Harrier.

    • @orneryokinawan4529
      @orneryokinawan4529 Před 2 lety

      @Andy Man it goes 1,200 mph thats nearly double the speed of sound. Wrong.

    • @willsabri4815
      @willsabri4815 Před 2 lety

      @Andy Man To be fair, there are a fair few accounts of harrier pilots going supersonic, obviously in a dive, but they still did it. I'm sure it did some damage to the airframe but they won't fall apart immediately.

    • @LRRPFco52
      @LRRPFco52 Před 2 lety +1

      The F135-PW-400 alone generates 40,500lb of thrust in STOVL mode without afterburner, while also driving the geared lift fan. It is able to generate that thrust due to additional airflow paths opened into the intake feed.

  • @pamelamays4186
    @pamelamays4186 Před 2 lety +28

    Suggestions: The Blue Angels.
    How jet fighter pilots are trained.
    The Navy hospital ships the USS Hope and the USS Mercy.
    The steel industry of Pittsburgh, PA.
    The California Mission system.

    • @MotoroidARFC
      @MotoroidARFC Před 2 lety +2

      USNS Mercy and USNS Comfort are the current US Navy hospital ships.There is a USNS Bob Hope but it's a vehicle cargo ship.

  • @midgetydeath
    @midgetydeath Před 10 měsíci +2

    That feeling you get when you do a bit of research and learn that the F-35 is a dedicated ground-attack fighter like the A-10 specialized in destroying SAMs. Yet, it's so advanced that it can do everything else better than every other fighter. It is probably outclassed only in dogfighting by the F-22 and in ground-support by the A-10.

    • @dumdumbinks274
      @dumdumbinks274 Před 9 měsíci

      It's a multi-role fighter originally intended to give the USMC supersonic fleet defence while also replacing the Harrier in the ground attack role. The A-10 is inferior in almost all metrics, including combat effectiveness, but is cheaper to maintain and operate. The F-22 has a better airframe but otherwise doesn't have any advantages over the F-35... in a direct confrontation between the 2 it could go either way.

  • @prongATO
    @prongATO Před 10 měsíci +4

    I just went to the air show at Tinker AFB and the F35 is pretty amazing in the air. It can do things with thrust vectoring that made people's jaws drop.

  • @ernestbywater411
    @ernestbywater411 Před 2 lety +46

    It's often said that with any project you have three aspects you can apply to it: speed of completion, quality of work, and low cost but you can only pick any two of them. With any project involving researching materials you can only pick one of those three options.

    • @megaprojects9649
      @megaprojects9649  Před 2 lety +12

      This holds true for so many things.

    • @Evinthal84
      @Evinthal84 Před 2 lety +7

      Ah yes, the old pick two out of the following three.
      It DOES apply to so many things.
      Women (or whatever your preference is, I'm not going to judge!): Hot, Single, Sane; if they are single and "hot", they aren't sane. If they are sane and "hot" they aren't single. If they are single and sane, they aren't "hot". Unless you find that super rare exception to the rule unicorn.
      relating it to something VASTLY similar, body armor; pick two of the following following the logic above: weight, cost, protection.

    • @jasonhackworth3502
      @jasonhackworth3502 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Evinthal84 there is a video on that.

    • @Spectre-wd9dl
      @Spectre-wd9dl Před 2 lety +4

      @@Evinthal84 haha the crazy/hot scale. Definitely good videos on this one.

    • @ressljs
      @ressljs Před 2 lety +4

      I was in the Air Force when they started building the F-35. The Air Force and Lockheed Martin were bragging up a new concept for producing the F-35 called "concurrency." That is, it was going to go into full production with the design still being refined very little flight testing. The testing and completing the design would happen while the planes continued to roll of the assembly lines. It was supposed to get the jets into service much faster and save money with this streamlined process. Even as a young lieutenant, I thought it sounded like a scam. And eventually, they had to admit that concurrency didn't work as planned and because the first few hundred produced needed a lot of retrofitting and updating, it ended up driving up the price. Of all the controversies around the F-35, I think concurrency is the worst one. What other product is sold to customers before the design is finished and it's been tested?

  • @blueskiestrevor5200
    @blueskiestrevor5200 Před 2 lety +85

    Small note here but the F-35 was not intended to replace the F/A-18 Super Hornets instead it was supposed to replace the older legacy hornets like the A-D models. The super hornets are almost an entirely different plane and are designed to serve alongside the F-35

    • @0311Mushroom
      @0311Mushroom Před 2 lety +5

      As well as the aged Harrier.

    • @bionicgeekgrrl
      @bionicgeekgrrl Před 2 lety

      @@0311Mushroom the harrier is the primary one really for the marines (as well as the Royal navy and Air force, though they retired their harriers ages ago now! ). The A10 is getting a update programme to extend it's service life as well.

    • @nexpro6118
      @nexpro6118 Před 2 lety

      It's replacing the F-16 and the A-10 and Harrier aircraft.

    • @marksman712
      @marksman712 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nexpro6118 it has failed at replacing either the F-16 or A-10.

    • @MrSteve8511
      @MrSteve8511 Před 2 lety

      Wrong...it was originally made to replace the F117... now they just make up shit that hope this aircraft can do...

  • @user-ot7mu7ny1k
    @user-ot7mu7ny1k Před 2 lety +17

    People forget the full phrase! “A Jack of all trades is master of none, but often better than a master of one.”

    • @andrewhume3090
      @andrewhume3090 Před 2 lety

      Just what I was thinking a lot of technology proves this point .

    • @michaelkottler
      @michaelkottler Před 2 lety

      Indeed. See also: Curiosity killed the cat (but satisfaction brought it back).

  • @jloiben12
    @jloiben12 Před rokem +7

    Well, it is a master of one thing, arguably the most important thing as it relates to the F-35’s purpose: it is a flying supercomputer

  • @psquared015
    @psquared015 Před 2 lety +22

    would love one on the F-22 as well if there isn't already. Probably another hard one with all the classified info but it'd be cool to compare/contrast

  • @fatroth
    @fatroth Před 2 lety +104

    A good video would be on the Americas inter waterways. How they control all the rivers, including the mighty Mississippi River. With the use of lock and dams, dikes, and levees. Then look at how much product is shipped on river giving it a advantage over any other country for farming.

    • @mho...
      @mho... Před 2 lety +4

      more a *geographics* kind of thing i think

    • @CornPopsDood
      @CornPopsDood Před 2 lety +1

      @@mho... That’s at least two, if not three videos to Simon. C’mon man.

    • @fatroth
      @fatroth Před 2 lety +1

      @@CornPopsDood well he can start a series then

    • @CornPopsDood
      @CornPopsDood Před 2 lety +1

      @@fatroth He’s probably never thought of that.

    • @OptimisticNihilist15
      @OptimisticNihilist15 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CornPopsDood I hope you do know that Simon is just the narrator and other people are responsible for writing the script, research and other aspects of the video production.

  • @pj7362
    @pj7362 Před 2 lety +2

    Nice vide man. I appreciate your candor. It's good to see you laugh even if the subject is a bit sore.

  • @jerichohill487
    @jerichohill487 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video, as always, blaze boy,
    I live in NC, I can remember back in either the late 70s or early 80s Apache attack choppers, doing emergency landings in Charlotte

    • @jjones6606
      @jjones6606 Před rokem

      Lol!!! NC is a third world hole!! You from seven devils or banner elk, rube?

  • @damianketcham
    @damianketcham Před 2 lety +89

    Let me know when you find a military project that hasn’t had cost overruns and set backs. Trust me, I won’t hold my breath. The F-16 had so many problems in the beginning and yet it is the most successful jet fighter ever produced.

    • @arcturionblade1077
      @arcturionblade1077 Před 2 lety +12

      Hasard Lee is a USAF pilot and explained this exact thing in a video on his CZcams channel.

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 2 lety +9

      There's cost overruns and cost overruns though... The F-35's really are extreme.

    • @ernestrollins383
      @ernestrollins383 Před 2 lety +4

      The U2 came in under budget.

    • @glandhound
      @glandhound Před 2 lety

      T-34?

    • @giroromek8423
      @giroromek8423 Před 2 lety +6

      France Mirage IV twin engines jet bomber. On time on budget

  • @JordanBergstrom
    @JordanBergstrom Před 2 lety +39

    Funny how people often forget or simply don't know the full quote.
    "A jack of all trades is a master of none, but oftentimes better than a master of one."

    • @thebeaner8609
      @thebeaner8609 Před 2 lety +2

      Sucks that doesn't apply to the F35 though lol

    • @casual_speedrunner1482
      @casual_speedrunner1482 Před 2 lety +12

      @@thebeaner8609 Oh, it most certainly does apply. Sure it’s expensive, but also singlehandedly better than any other aircraft out there.

    • @ivanlagrossemoule
      @ivanlagrossemoule Před 2 lety +6

      @@thebeaner8609 It does, it's just that people are 30+ years late in their understanding of modern battlefields.

    • @Spectre-wd9dl
      @Spectre-wd9dl Před 2 lety +1

      My only issue with the f35 is it relies on to many variables to be as effective as it is. Data links are great but what happens when the enemy downs the awacs/satellites or jams transmissions. What happens once the bad guys can get through the stealth. What happens when china/Russia can just track engine thermals from space satellites. It definitely excels in it's role but I don't think it will be as hard as they say to negate it's advantage.

    • @ivanlagrossemoule
      @ivanlagrossemoule Před 2 lety +6

      @@Spectre-wd9dl The F-35 has fantastic jamming performance due to its huge radar array, as well as rather effective passive sensors. If there were to be jamming, the F-35 would be more of a threat in this area than the other way around.
      How do you plan to get "through" the stealth? Unless you find a way to bypass the laws of physics, all methods of fighting stealth are impractical and rather ineffective compared to what you could do against non-stealth aircraft.
      The F-35 engine has a high bypass ratio, so combined with IR reduction measures on the nozzles, it's a lower risk than other aircraft. But here's the problem, you're looking at highly impractical and limited methods of fighting the F-35, but you aren't accounting how badly this would affect a 4th generation aircraft for example.

  • @DriveByShouting
    @DriveByShouting Před rokem +4

    I’d love to see you do an in depth video on the F-20 ‘Tigershark’.
    According to many, an outstanding fighter developed from the F-5 Tiger. It was so good that it gave the F-16 a run for its money.

    • @WTH1812
      @WTH1812 Před rokem +4

      The F-20 Tigershark is a classic example of missing the market. The military viewed it as a replacement for the F-5. In reality, it's best role was as an export product that could be affordable to smaller militaries with basic patrol and intercept needs.
      The main sticking point against the sale of the F-20 was the US military did not accept it. Who wants to buy the rejects, right?
      Even a squadron of F-20 in the US Air Force would have opened up numerous markets in Third World militaries and governments that chose foreign competitors because of the lower cost than the F-16.

  • @wigglyjiggly4498
    @wigglyjiggly4498 Před 2 lety +6

    The F-35 is superior in A2A because of it’s effective targeting range. About 30% further. It’ll get target lock on the f-22 before it comes up on radar. It can also transmit that targeting data to other F-35 aircraft. Meaning you can have one plane “take point” and guide all the smart munitions being fired from other positions. It’s exceptionally good at flanking, so despite the f-22 being faster and more agile in a traditional sense, it can’t fend off from attacks coming from multiple directions

  • @vandarkholme4745
    @vandarkholme4745 Před 2 lety +30

    18:37
    Ahh, fighter jet as a service, now that's a good business model

  • @andrewday3206
    @andrewday3206 Před 2 lety +55

    The F-35’s jet engine produces about twice the thrust of the Pegasus engine in the Harrier

    • @marksman712
      @marksman712 Před 2 lety

      no, it doesnt. it produces 125kN of thrust, the Harrier produces 105. 125=/=105x2

    • @andrewday3206
      @andrewday3206 Před 2 lety

      @@marksman712
      The F-35 produces 191kN of thrust

    • @The_real_Arovor
      @The_real_Arovor Před 2 lety

      That’s not what he meant though. The engine itself only produces around 90kN of thrust while hovering and another 80kN with the fan. So while hovering the engine alone does in fact produce less thrust than the pegasus.

    • @andrewday3206
      @andrewday3206 Před 2 lety +3

      @@The_real_Arovor
      The engine powers the fan. The engine in the F-35 is more powerful

    • @andrewday3206
      @andrewday3206 Před 2 lety

      @@foobarmaximus3506
      I am not wrong. The engine in the F-35 is far more powerful than the engine in the harrier. In fact the engine in all 3 versions is far more powerful

  • @danielbowers8124
    @danielbowers8124 Před 2 lety +1

    Having seen one of these take off from a carrier I can only say this video doesn’t come close to being able to show how cool it is when you first see this, or how loud it is. When it first sets off down the deck and then up the ramp it looks like it’s going straight into the water only to bounce back up and set off into this distance

  • @litemikeh8065
    @litemikeh8065 Před 2 lety

    Love your sense of humor and focus. Keep it up

  • @YunsAvatar
    @YunsAvatar Před 2 lety +20

    When you leave what appears to be a default title "F-35 Lightning Script" as the image for the thumbnail.
    RIP

  • @SilvesterHumaj
    @SilvesterHumaj Před 2 lety +8

    I used to assemble the forward cockpit cameras for the F35; daytime & night vision.

    • @Ntmoffi
      @Ntmoffi Před 2 lety +3

      _China would like to know your location_

    • @jeebus6263
      @jeebus6263 Před 2 lety

      Forward probably should be foremble... ass-emble sounds backwards :p

  • @DSB1234567890
    @DSB1234567890 Před 8 měsíci +5

    "People call into question the need for such a destructive aircraft in our 'enlightened' age"
    Well that didn't age well

  • @bionicgeekgrrl
    @bionicgeekgrrl Před 2 lety +2

    One of my uncles worked for a while on this project when he still worked for BAe. His specialist area being engine fuel systems. He'd previously worked on the eurofighter, tornado and the harrier (though most of the time on the harrier was as part of his raf career until he joined BAe just as the first gulf War started).
    The aims of the f35 project were certainly admirable, if probably unrealistic knowing how military projects always tend to bloat, suffer delays and over spending. However, the f35 will eventually be the primary multi role fighter for most services using it, alongside the f22 in the USAF and UAVs as well as things like eurofighter in the RAF. The f16, a10, f/a18 and harrier will all have had to be replaced by something and rather than the cost of how things traditionally would have worked, each would probably have had a protracted development programme of replacement and each having decades of support, training and development. Potentially the f35 might over its service life save on some of these potential costs by having all the requirements in one design with support and training costs likely to be smaller over time. But time will tell with that really. A project to replace the eurofighter has of course already begun, with two potential outcomes, one being joint by airbus and the other by BAe for the RAF, they may eventually merge or remain split (to some extent this happened with eurofighter, with the French going alone for the rafale).

  • @sssbob
    @sssbob Před 2 lety +74

    The f-35 puts out almost 2x the thrust of the harrier. Not the other way around.

    • @marksman712
      @marksman712 Před 2 lety

      in what fucking world is 125= 2x105, 125kN thrust of thrust on the F-35, 105kN thrust out of the AV8B

    • @marksman712
      @marksman712 Před 2 lety

      please go back to school and no dont use the afterburner thrust of the F-35, the AV8B doesnt have AB, you cant compare it

    • @sssbob
      @sssbob Před 2 lety +2

      @@marksman712 Why does it matter where the thrust comes from? Are pilots of the F-35 not going to use it if they need it? Also, please use lbs of thrust. Elon Musk says Newtons and Pascals are the 2 dumbest units of measurement he knows of.

    • @tonymante8759
      @tonymante8759 Před 2 lety

      @@marksman712 dont use the after burner.... the after burner on the f-35 can be fully engaged and it does nothing to deter its stealth so yes we are going to be using it and its going in the comparison when its a system thats used pretty anytime you would be anywhere near combat.

    • @marksman712
      @marksman712 Před 2 lety

      @@sssbob not sure why Elon Musk gets any weight in the discussion on what SI units are "dumbest" or not. He isnt an engineer or even in STEM as a professional, he is in it as an entrepreneur. He can have his opinion but it aint gonna mean fucking shit to me when it comes to actual STEM topics and it shouldnt mean shit to you either dude. Soon that alone i wont acquiesce your demand to use lbf. I also wont use it cos i couldnt tell you what the fuck a "pound" is except iirc 2.2 of them make a kg, i doubt 80% of the world would be able to actually apply what a pound scale is to anything.
      You also missed my point ENTIRELY. Which is you cant compare the thrust of 1 plane to another if youre using AB on one and not the other.

  • @StarScapesOG
    @StarScapesOG Před 2 lety +25

    Military machines are truly amazing... I just wish and pray they can see very, very little use...

  • @Oxymoron53
    @Oxymoron53 Před 2 lety +1

    I know your videos aren’t very long on this channel and I find myself wanting more information on some of the technologies of the plane. Being a sapiophile I wanna know everything. This was an awesome video Simon, you have an outstanding team however I 100% think people like u so much because of your voice and personality. I love all your channels. Hope u can continue giving us great content for years to come!

    • @FabCubeZ
      @FabCubeZ Před rokem

      welcome to the under dog club

  • @martinri4850
    @martinri4850 Před 2 lety

    Great job. Love your channel. Thanks

  • @jacobbaumgardner3406
    @jacobbaumgardner3406 Před 2 lety +24

    Some extra info about that programme cost is that the total 1.1 to 1.7 trillion is that the amount is what is expected until 2070, and has taken inflation into account, meaning the total cost is what it will be in 2070.

    • @thorin1045
      @thorin1045 Před 2 lety +2

      cool, that in 2070 simple economic firms will have access to time machines to tell us the inflation of the us dollar for the next 50 years.
      It would be much more important and useful counter argument that it is representing most of the US and other airforces planes, or at least intended to represent. In many case this project failed because few started to whisper about it ovebudget, which led to cuts in order and overbudget, and the spiral still spins.

    • @TheJTcreate
      @TheJTcreate Před 2 lety +2

      What also wasn't mentioned that this was three distinct planes for three different military branches, in one program. Given that the life cycle cost of the Superhornet program is estimated at almost 1 trillion and only serves the US NAVY and a little bit the Marines, you'd be normally looking at 2-3 trillion life cycle for three different distinct aircraft programs for three different branches of the military.

  • @criticalevent
    @criticalevent Před 2 lety +42

    Common Affordable Lightweight Figher. LOL That seems like a million years ago now.
    We want a plane that will replace these 4 excellent planes"
    -Ok, what's the budget?
    "Well ideally it should only cost as much as any one of those planes did, but feel free to make it cost as much as all 4 planes if you need to."
    -Throw in the development budget for the Osprey and Apache and adjust it all to 2021 dollars and you got a deal.

    • @csonracsonra9962
      @csonracsonra9962 Před 2 lety +1

      Yep then it will be capable of flying the title or deed to the United States on over to another country just f****** give it to them...smh

    • @92HazelMocha
      @92HazelMocha Před 2 lety +1

      And it didn’t replace any of those planes except the harrier which was already leaving service anyways.

    • @criticalevent
      @criticalevent Před 2 lety +1

      @@92HazelMocha Imagine this thing trying to do the CAS role of the A10 from 15,000 ft. The "F" will stand for "Friendly Fire".

    • @92HazelMocha
      @92HazelMocha Před 2 lety +1

      @@criticalevent Luckily the USAF saw reason, and un-retired the A10 before someone got hurt.

    • @Albertkallal
      @Albertkallal Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, the F35 looks to be the lower cost jet:
      Typhoon: 120 million per copy
      Rafale: 94 million per copy.
      F15: 88 million per copy
      F35: 77 million per copy.
      So yes, it does look like the F35 is the lower cost jet to buy.
      And the F35 being a single engine fighter also has a lower cost per hour then a F15, F18, Typhoon, and Rafale.
      So, F35 is not the lowest cost jet, but it certainly the lower cost choice compared to most well equipped 4th gen jets.

  • @Elthenar
    @Elthenar Před 2 lety +19

    The F-35 will be a jack of all trades. However, it WILL be a master of one. It is the best strike fighter in the world, today. Right now. It gives us what the old F-117 did, a stealthy ground attack plane. The only two fighters in history that could have bombed Bagdad on day of Desert Storm at the F-117 and F-35. Nothing else in service had the range, stealth, payload and hardware to drop those guided munitions.

    • @oot007
      @oot007 Před rokem

      You're rewriting history here. The F-117 dropped bombs from the safety of high altitude in Desert Storm. The plane that did all the high risk dangerous low level ground attack in Desert Storm was the British Panavia Tornado.The British pilots suffered the highest casualties in Desert Storm because they did all the dangerous missions while US pilots flew the low risk missions.

    • @Elthenar
      @Elthenar Před rokem

      @@oot007 Yeah, exactly like the F-35 would. You are trying to argue with me by reinforcing my point.
      At no time did I mention low level penetration bombing, although the F-111 did plenty of that in the first Gulf War.

    • @oot007
      @oot007 Před rokem

      @@Elthenar >"You are trying to argue with me by reinforcing my point."
      No you are wrong. You got your facts wrong by pretending that the F-117 was a ground attack plane. It did no such thing but dropped bombs from high altitude because the US was afraid it would get shot down.

    • @Elthenar
      @Elthenar Před rokem

      @@oot007 You are trying to criticize the plane for doing exactly what it was made to do?
      Sir, how much crack do you smoke?

    • @oot007
      @oot007 Před rokem

      ​@@Elthenar You're the idiot. The F-117 was not used a ground attack plane as you stated. It dropped bombs from high altitude just like a B52 because the US didn't want to risk it being shot down if it did real ground attack runs like the Tornado. This is well documented at the time. Quit sniffing that white powder of yours.

  • @samisuhonen9815
    @samisuhonen9815 Před 2 lety +34

    With respect, we don't have the classified information about the jet yet. We have never seen it in actual combat.
    Some say it's the worst most overpriced thing ever. That it can't do shit and costs a fortune. Like it's supposedly inferior to F-16 in every way.
    Then others claim it's the messiah of jet fighters. It's able to singlehandedly fulfill any mission, ground attack or air superiority. It will never take any losses. It's just so great that in every exercise it blows the minds of supervisors and analysts.
    We just won't know what's true until we see one in actual combat. However, the most convincing information about the fighter, is that Finland is acquiring like 60+ of them. And if you know anything about Finnish defense spending, the people responsible are very careful with the funds they have. The current Finnish fighter fleet is F-18 hornets. If the people responsible for the upgrade, see value in it after getting to combat test the fighter and see classified information about it, it must be good.
    And Finland is known for not overspending on overpriced shit. Finnish armed forces have zero attack helicopters for the sole reason that they saw it as an overpriced counter insurgency tool with zero value against a near peer opponent. Finland is not interested in overpriced tools for shooting Toyota's and camel farmers. The Finnish army is only interested in cost effective weapons that are capable of inflicting disproportionate damage on a modern powerful military.

    • @riko0029
      @riko0029 Před 11 měsíci

      I'm about at racist towards Europe as one comes (I'm Australian, they're pissing contest is the reason I live in danger land, fuck em). But Finland is one that I actually respect, so that's the best endorsement that I could have gotten for it.

    • @virgilius7036
      @virgilius7036 Před 7 měsíci

      In Red Flag exercise in Nevada the F35 shot down 20 agressor's F16 for one lost. It's the biger kill ratio !

  • @joshualeniger
    @joshualeniger Před 2 lety +8

    I wish you would have talked about the cost of the helmet and the tech...it's alot and very game changing

    • @trespire
      @trespire Před 2 lety +3

      The helmet is developed and prodused by Elbit Systems, and Israeli company. This is the 3rd or 4th itteration of Elbit's helmet concept, innitially a "brain fart" by a few IAF pilots who said "wouldn't it be nice not to have to point the whole plane to fire a missile ?".
      It's a force multiplier.

  • @rg1062889
    @rg1062889 Před 2 lety +7

    10:52 might be the first edit messup in the hundreds of Simon's videos I've watched that's impressive

    • @dunnyzed6953
      @dunnyzed6953 Před 2 lety +1

      Standards are slipping, that’s it I’m unsubscribing!!

    • @thebeaner8609
      @thebeaner8609 Před 2 lety +1

      Not the first lol

  • @budgybottom75
    @budgybottom75 Před 2 lety +13

    If you use the quote correctly, then it does paint the f-35 as it is. A jack of all trades is a master of none, but oftentimes better than a master of one. Fits its description perfectly imo

  • @dorianlindberg1662
    @dorianlindberg1662 Před 2 lety

    Awesome video thank you Simon!

  • @TrySomeFentanyl
    @TrySomeFentanyl Před 2 lety +35

    People seem to forget that the capabilities are being kept a close secret. I promise they didn’t make a shittier aircraft 20 years after the last lmao

    • @scottym.9077
      @scottym.9077 Před 2 lety +5

      Depends on your definition of shitty. A 10% improvement in effectiveness (which is a stretch when you consider that it certainly isn't ideas for CAS and strike) for triple the cost isn't a very good deal. If you need to spend the money at all, one would wonder if you would be better served by adding airframes of the current aircraft rather than switching to this new airframe.

    • @kellymoses8566
      @kellymoses8566 Před 2 lety +6

      Yes, maybe the narrative that the F-35 is terrible is actually intentionally being created by the Pentagon.

    • @scottym.9077
      @scottym.9077 Před 2 lety +7

      @@kellymoses8566 I worked in military aviation for a long time. The F-35 isn’t terrible. It just doesn’t even come close to being worth the money. Especially when you consider that the F-15, F-16, F-18, and A-10 have been (and still are) globally dominant. Even if we fought a near-peer force with the most advanced aircraft (Rafales, Jf-17, Gripen, latest SU/MiG, etc), we still have enough airframes to drown any other army. It’s even questionable whether the world would win in US vs the world. The real issue is why would a nation with a major debt spending problem that is already globally dominant drive itself even further in debt in order to achieve a nominal level of improvement that it absolutely doesn’t need.

    • @scottym.9077
      @scottym.9077 Před 2 lety +3

      @Dick Izzinya make no mistake, the US has always “sent shitloads of men”. It’s part of our tactical doctrine. Our Infantry Handbook calls for a 3:1 advantage before pressing an attack. All I’m saying is, maybe don’t bankrupt the nation trying to outspend threats that don’t exist. The US Airforce is the largest airforce in the world. The US Navy is the second largest. Russia’s airforce is 1/3 the size of ours and China’s is 1/4 and we already spend more on defense than the next seven nations combined.

    • @DavyRo
      @DavyRo Před 2 lety +1

      I promise you they did

  • @bbirda1287
    @bbirda1287 Před 2 lety +6

    The other misnomer is that Common part of the program name, as they are actually 3 different jets kind of shoved into a similar box. Sort of like the F/A-18A Super Hornet is an entirely different aircraft from the F-18 Hornet, except that was just a shell game of names to befuddle congress that they were funding an entirely new jet.

    • @teddy.d174
      @teddy.d174 Před 2 lety

      I’ve read several articles over the years on this very subject, stating that they should’ve been given three different fighter designations…such as F-35, F-36, F-37.

  • @CBeckMayberry
    @CBeckMayberry Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for giving the jet's range in nautical miles 🙌🏼 This sets you apart from many other channels as one who knows what he's talking about and who he's talking to.

    • @mikestirewalt5193
      @mikestirewalt5193 Před rokem

      Nautical measurements were developed for nautical machines. Boats. When airplanes came along, the military chose to think of aircraft as flying boats and, indeed, many were. So, in the military world, at some point, nautical miles were chosen as the unit of measurement for aircraft. Digging up the history of just how and when this decision was made would make an interesting video all on its own.
      I promise you Oliver and Wilbur did not use nautical miles to measure their speed nor for navigation. Nor did the blossoming civilian aviation industry that followed. Using NM was a military decision at some point - for reasons I can barely guess at. Everybody else, including many of those who design and fly Experimental category aircraft today, measure their speed and range with MPH. Many older commercial aircraft and many homebuilt aircraft are fitted with airspeed indicators calibrated in MPH.
      NM continue to be used for nautical applications. Using this measuring system for aircraft is as silly as using it for our automotive odometers. Using nautical miles may have had some justification for the military - probably because they already had existing nautical charts measured in NM, but adopting this system for airplanes in the civilian market was a mistake that continues to be carried on - one that will continue to force aviators to conform to the use of NM while, in their heads, converting everything to SM or KM in order to think of what the "real" distance is. It's a dumb convention that has never been corrected and is now widespread, although not certainly by everyone who flies.
      Most electronic navigators allow for the choice between NM, SM and KM, so using NM in the aviation workspace is no big deal, but I still think it's silly. The history of how this situation came to be would make an interesting CZcams video I think.

    • @CBeckMayberry
      @CBeckMayberry Před rokem

      @@mikestirewalt5193
      1 nautical mile is the meridian arc length of one minute of latitude. So it still measures something arguably more specific and useful for navigation than a statue mile or kilometer on virtually any navigational chart.
      The Wright Brothers used feet per second for their airspeed units as I believe I have read or seen in their letters in museums.
      The leap from nautical measurements to aviation is not much of a mystery. Sailing used knots to measure velocity through a fluid, much like the air. Knots were also used to measure wind speed for this purpose. So it is a logical leap to borrow that practice along with long-range non-overland navigational practices used by seafarers.
      Whether or not continuing to use knots in aviation applications is "useless" or "dumb" is a matter of opinion-an opinion this GA and USAF pilot happens to disagree with. And many other credible and intelligent pilots will agree or disagree.
      The F-35 is a military aircraft. And it measures all of its airspeeds in either knots or Mach. And that's a fact that this video does well to represent.

  • @mmabagain
    @mmabagain Před rokem

    What timing. I am currently working on F-35 parts as I listen to this.

  • @StarScapesOG
    @StarScapesOG Před 2 lety +10

    How about an episode on Bagger 293? It is a very impressive machine, in the way of it being mind boggling in scope.

  • @somersice
    @somersice Před 2 lety +62

    I served on the first US ship to deploy with those. On one hand, looked really cool, on the other, the technician’s absolutely hated working on it

    • @Albertkallal
      @Albertkallal Před 2 lety +13

      Well, can't be all that bad. That single engine fighter takes less maintains and less ground crews to run and maintain then a F18a.

    • @finscreenname
      @finscreenname Před 2 lety +4

      How does all that tech like the salt air?

    • @Albertkallal
      @Albertkallal Před 2 lety +10

      @@finscreenname
      Well like all marine and Navy aircraft? Substantial corrosion resistance has to be built into the airframe, and even the engine turbine blades. So both Navy f35C model and the Marines f35b models are thus designed to operate at Sea and in salt water conditions for their rated life. Same goes for navigation and avionics systems .

    • @pacakes54
      @pacakes54 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Albertkallal absolutely not true.

    • @Bagledog5000
      @Bagledog5000 Před 2 lety +3

      @Grand Master
      I'm betting the Komet or one of the early helicopter designs are worse.

  • @josiah1583
    @josiah1583 Před 2 lety +7

    I have no knowledge of the F35 contract specifically, but I do know these larger acquisitions contracts tend to be firm fixed price with incentive fees. So I would say its probably the opposite of what you said. Running over budget likely cuts into/eliminates their profit and running late loses them their incentive fees.

    • @fukkitful
      @fukkitful Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah wouldn't be a very good contract if they didn't agree on a price. Basically handing them a blank check.

    • @josiah1583
      @josiah1583 Před 2 lety +1

      @@foobarmaximus3506, do you have insight into the F35 contract? I would be very interested to learn more about how it is structured if I am incorrect.

  • @MayBeSomething
    @MayBeSomething Před měsícem +1

    A for Army, B for Boats, and CZ for Clouds.
    There. I helped.

  • @SamIAm10262
    @SamIAm10262 Před 2 lety +12

    I love these stories.

  • @infernosgaming8942
    @infernosgaming8942 Před 2 lety +23

    You know what's hilarious? Congress has tried to "cut costs" by unifying the branches' fighters before with the F-111 Aardvark. The Aardy was loved by the airforce after some kinks were smoothed out, but the Navy hated it, and so decided to keep its fleet of F-14s. When will they learn that every branch just needs its own aircraft?

    • @starexcelsior1135
      @starexcelsior1135 Před 2 lety +7

      F-111 flew way before the F-14 was designed. The problem was that the Air Force wanted a large bomber type fighter while the Navy wanted a fleet defense fighter. The Air Force had more say in its design so the F-111 was a fighter bomber. Unsurprisingly a fighter bomber isn’t the best at intercept and defense missions.
      The fact that you have to go around 50 years back for an example of a multi role aircraft not working says something. There are many fighters used successfully by many air forces and navy’s across the world, the Rafael is one. It’s not the concept of a multi service fighter that’s bad, it’s the purpose of the aircraft that often conflicts with the different branches. Of course the navy wasn’t happy with the F-111, the navy needed something to primarily shoot down aircraft, the F-111 was designed as a bomb truck.
      If there had been two programs odds are that we would have two over budget and behind schedule programs instead of one.

    • @jamesharding3459
      @jamesharding3459 Před 2 lety +3

      The F-4 Phantom is a perfect counterexample. It was far and away the best combat aircraft in service until the F-18 entered service several decades later. Nowadays, when weapons systems and electronic warfare matter infinitely more than kinematics, it's even more possible to give both services the same airframe, and still have it be the best aircraft of its type in existence -- as the F-35 is.

    • @drcruelty
      @drcruelty Před 2 lety +2

      Partially inaccurate. The F14 was designed because the F111 could not do what the navy wanted. The navy needed a fighter/interceptor, and the F111 really wasn't capable of the fighter role. Given its size and weight, I'd be surprised if the F111-B could even match the existing F4s in the fighter role. They cancelled their participation in the F111 program and issued a new contract for what became the F14 and was actually able to perform in either role. So they didn't "keep" them, they were actually designed as a result of.

    • @jamesharding3459
      @jamesharding3459 Před 2 lety

      @@darrel7589 The F-4 was marginally inferior to the Tomcat as a pure interceptor, but unlike the Tomcat, it had capabilities other than slinging missiles from long range - something that is non-negotiable in a carrier aircraft. The Tomcat was, in short, a fine interceptor but a terrible carrier aircraft.

    • @jamesharding3459
      @jamesharding3459 Před 2 lety

      @@drcruelty The Navy needed a newer fighter, yes. But the F-14 was only ever capable of being a fighter, and carriers do not exist to serve as mobile fighter bases. They exist to actively strike at enemy forces, and that requires strike aircraft. And covering your deck in unreasonably large Tomcats does not allow that. Hence my statement that the F-14 was a perfectly good interceptor, but a poor carrier aircraft.

  • @jasonhumphries9434
    @jasonhumphries9434 Před rokem

    I saw one of these bad boys take off from the deck of HMS Queen Elizabeth when she first came home from the States with her squadron of F35’s. Another awesome video Simon. Good job 👍

  • @MissyChelle
    @MissyChelle Před 2 lety

    Speaking as one that literally lives next to the runway of AFB#4 (L/M FtWTx) you can not imagine the window shaking the vertical takeoffs and landing can do! How the house doesn’t just crumble at the next gust of wind amazes me. Where as this would usually be the reason for people to complain, I don’t. I’ve grown up in the area for 5 decades now and I assure you, it a minor inconvenience and not near as annoying as the B-52’s deafening air noise used to make. I accept this as the reassurance of my personal freedom. Plus none of the houses have crumbled when the wind blows.

  • @almighty3946
    @almighty3946 Před 2 lety +7

    I absolutely love all Simon’s nine channels. What’s next on the list of interesting things you never knew about?

    • @sandybarnes887
      @sandybarnes887 Před 2 lety +4

      Next for you is finding which channel of Simon's you're missing.

  • @oopswrongplanet4964
    @oopswrongplanet4964 Před 2 lety +50

    GAO: "the F-35 will also replace the A-10"
    Everybody else: "NO!"
    Warthog: "Brrrrrrrrt"

    • @TerryTerius
      @TerryTerius Před 2 lety +11

      I still think it the A-10 may need some form of replacement, regardless of how cool it is. Given it can only really operate in areas that don’t have modern anti-air defenses, I imagine there is a more affordable platform that can be created that will have similar if not greater capacity.

    • @oopswrongplanet4964
      @oopswrongplanet4964 Před 2 lety +2

      For close air support of ground troops in danger close situations what is needed is something that can fly low and slow and literally put eyes on target. Anything that can handle the situation will be vulnerable to modern anti-air defenses.
      The pending A-10 upgrade presumably includes improved ECM; it is already hardened about as well as can be expected and still be able to fly. Apaches are a close 2nd, but are not fixed-wing.
      "In combat, second best is not good enough."

    • @shantanusaha9746
      @shantanusaha9746 Před 2 lety +2

      USAF: Okay, we'll keep the A-10 around for show and for use in places that don't have MANPADS. We'll use the F-35 for everything else.

    • @TerryTerius
      @TerryTerius Před 2 lety +5

      @@oopswrongplanet4964 i’m aware, my point wasn’t that a new platform with similar capacity would be capable of surviving modern air defenses. My point was that the A-10 has fallen into that role because it can no longer fulfill its original purpose, and it is too expensive for what it actually does now.
      So you need something specifically designed for the kind of low-Ish threat CAS the A-10 handles, and there are already cheaper platforms that can do that. It is an aging platform, and regardless of the deserved affection it has it’s eventually going to need to be replaced by something. I get it, the A-10 is great but at the end of the day something has to give there.

    • @happychimpy
      @happychimpy Před 2 lety +1

      You can't put a price on maintaining moral in a combat situation and the A10 is worth it's weight in gold for that alone. Its a ridiculous, ugly underdog compared to these sleek ultramodern jets - and people love them for it. Oh and it goes brrrrrrrt like some kind of ultra loud kids toy that happens to demolish everything in front of it.

  • @erictheblue7256
    @erictheblue7256 Před 2 lety

    I'm still LOL with that quick face draw on the X32.😂

  • @dulio12385
    @dulio12385 Před 2 lety +37

    And once again the A-10 is laughing, "You can't kill me..."

    • @joedufour8188
      @joedufour8188 Před 2 lety +6

      It says as it gets blown out of the sky from a fighter far out of their radar range.
      I'm no fan of the pointless F-35 project(a project some dummy thought up and convinced other dummy's that it would save money when it did the exact opposite) but I will give credit where credit is due.

    • @badmojomagic
      @badmojomagic Před 2 lety +6

      @@joedufour8188 That's not what the A-10 is for, and the F-35 can't do that job, which is the point. It can't do any other job, either, apparently, as they just asked for an upgrade for the F-15, extended the life of the F-16, and announced that the F-18 will be in service for at least 10 more years.

    • @joedufour8188
      @joedufour8188 Před 2 lety +2

      @@badmojomagic Apparently you missed the OP which completely justifies my comment and makes yours look like it was made by someone with little to no reading comprehension skills.

    • @badmojomagic
      @badmojomagic Před 2 lety +7

      @@joedufour8188 OP: "And once again the A-10 is laughing, "You can't kill me...""
      You can't kill it because the F-35 can't do its job.
      Reading comprehension FTW

    • @Ozzypup1
      @Ozzypup1 Před 2 lety +4

      @@badmojomagic I think part of the reason for this also has to do a lot with money. For the price of one F35 you can get a couple of other planes. And with the way the military is trying to cut spending its better to get a few things for your money instead of just one. Not to mention Ive had this thought say your told you can only spend X amount on something would you rather have 50 planes or somewhere between 100 and 150 planes? Id think if there was a war it would be better to have more planes.

  • @midiandirenni8315
    @midiandirenni8315 Před 2 lety +29

    We get the F35 but not the F22 Raptor? Come on Simon...

  • @michaelw6277
    @michaelw6277 Před rokem +2

    What’s wild about the F-35 is that any country who buys them has to stay on the USA’s good side. Unlike Iran and their F-14s you can’t just keep F-35s flying with duct take and JB Weld… without access to the software suites required to maintain them they’re basically really expensive bricks.

  • @everkief8365
    @everkief8365 Před rokem +5

    PBS FRONTLINE did a great documentary on the process of deciding between the Boeing or Lockheed submissions for this new plane. Its a great doc, covering much of what Simon has covered here but more in depth and more critical of the decisions made at the time. Basically everyone involved in the process knew beforehand that neither plane would individually be able to best serve so many varied purposes, but the money was given by congress and The Armed Forces was more than happy to spend it all and more! Who the hell believed this plane could actually replace the A-10!?

  • @michaelhouse6606
    @michaelhouse6606 Před 2 lety +47

    Jack of all trades, master of none. Though oftentimes better than master of one.

    • @jovee6155
      @jovee6155 Před 2 lety +11

      Too bad plenty of people forget the 2nd part

    • @snugglecity3500
      @snugglecity3500 Před 2 lety +7

      The F35 is a very capable aircraft. It is most likely the most capable BVR fighter flying today. Its stealth and sensors allow it to penetrate enemy airspace and act as a sort of forward AWACS. The F35 EWS is even more powerful than a Growler.

    • @MrMadsci7
      @MrMadsci7 Před 2 lety +2

      And, IMO, quite applicable here. It’s unfortunate that the majority of its usage will probably involve human rights abuses because it really is a technological marvel.

    • @snugglecity3500
      @snugglecity3500 Před 2 lety +2

      @@MrMadsci7 it wont involve human rights abuses. The USAF said that they want a cheaper airframe to be used on missions where the cost of the enhanced capabilities of the F35 arent needed. Most likely it will be an F15 or something new. An aircraft based on the P51 has been comsidered for that role.

    • @arnaudsurribas2963
      @arnaudsurribas2963 Před 2 lety

      Rafale jet fighter is an actual effective, reliable, cheap to operate, easy to maintain, highly disponible Jack of all trade.

  • @bryanrussell6679
    @bryanrussell6679 Před 2 lety +40

    10:31 in what world does a Rolls-Royce Pegasus engine of the AV-8B Harrier with 23,800 LBF thrust have more power than the F35 with it's F135-PW-600 putting out 27,000 LBF dry, or 41,000 LBF wet? The F135-PW-100 in the A and C models is even more impressive at 28,000 LBF dry and 43,000 LBF wet, respectively. The F135 series may be the single most powerful afterburning turbofan engine made. The F22 Raptor's F119-PW-100 may be the second most powerful with 26,000 LBF dry and 35,000 LBF wet, but you get two of those with your plane. And of course there are plenty of commercial non-afterburning turbofans that make a lot more thrust than these. But those engines are HUGE!!!
    Edit: So it seems that the Russians have the most powerful afterburning turbofan engine that makes 55,000 LBF of thrust in full afterburner. This engine is what powers the supersonic Tupolev Tu-160 Blackjack. It's a faster and larger version of the US's B1-Lancer, the Bone.

    • @tomk3732
      @tomk3732 Před 2 lety +2

      Actually there is weight per thrust - in it the F135 is the leader till article 30 engine gets into serial production - it is both a bit lighter and has a bit more thrust. The ratio for Tu-160 engine (not modernized) is just over 7. while F135 is over 9. 1980s Su-27 engine is over 8. The current best Su-35 is under 9. The production engine for Su-57 will be almost 10 or around 10. But its not in serial production yet.

    • @quinndenver4075
      @quinndenver4075 Před 2 lety +2

      The tu-160 and b-1b have nothing to do with each other they simply look relatively similar

    • @quinndenver4075
      @quinndenver4075 Před 2 lety +1

      @@tomk3732 the Russians have a bad habit of underachieving in the engine department recently

    • @tomk3732
      @tomk3732 Před 2 lety

      @@quinndenver4075 Hardest part of 5th gen jet is the engine. But Russians are catching up. Russians were behind the US in this department since WWII (roughly) and breakup of Soviet Union did not help.

    • @quinndenver4075
      @quinndenver4075 Před 2 lety +1

      @@tomk3732 I’m not really seeing a lot of evidence that they are catching up. They are still trying to reach the level of the f119 which is 20+ year old U.S technology.

  • @videowilliams
    @videowilliams Před 2 lety +5

    That's a nice and non-judgemental look at an aircraft many people love to hate. For now it seems that pilots love it, commanders are glad to have new planes, and only the taxpayers have their doubts. I'm into fighter jets but some of its advantages seem so abstract and complex that we really will not know how well it works until it's forced to the front line of a real war.

    • @jeebus6263
      @jeebus6263 Před 2 lety +1

      I doubt it's really replacing any of the platforms they originally claimed it would, however each branch (air, marine, navy) would probably have wanted a stealth program if these weren't combined...

    • @videowilliams
      @videowilliams Před 2 lety

      @@jeebus6263 Good point.

  • @ekuche8335
    @ekuche8335 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent video.

  • @MrDlt123
    @MrDlt123 Před 2 lety +61

    "Hey, Im going to design a guitar that is also a bass, drums, violin and vocalist."
    20 years later: $25,000 Banjo.

    • @knoahbody69
      @knoahbody69 Před 2 lety +2

      The same thing was said about the F4, but it was used for two decades or more.

    • @MrDlt123
      @MrDlt123 Před 2 lety +1

      @@knoahbody69 Yes, and it was also said of the RAH-66 Comanche. Just because the F-4 had a modicum of success doesn’t mean the F-35 will do the same.

    • @stevechurch4728
      @stevechurch4728 Před 2 lety +1

      looper pedals with inbuilt drum machines for under $50 that work fine and foot pedals that are great mimics for other musical instruments for around $75. all they have to do is work when need arises, if they can do that, job done. same with military equipment, work when need arises.

    • @JZ909
      @JZ909 Před 2 lety +2

      ​@@knoahbody69 The F-4 made its operational debut in 1961, and it's still in service in a few places. That's 60 years. In the U.S., it was used for 35 years before being relegated to being a target drone. It was truly a great aircraft.
      However, it flew alongside a lot of specialized aircraft. A-4s, A-6s, A-7s and F-111s for strike, EA-6s, EB-66s and later EF-111s for electronic warfare, A-1s, OV-10s and later A-10s for FAC/CAS, and AV-8s for VTOL once that requirement came about. Also, when the F-4 had to do something more specialized, they built specialized variants for those missions, like RF-4s for recon, and F-4Gs for SEAD. The F-35 has to do all of this, and it's expected to do it without major changes to the airframe.
      I think the replacement of dedicated strike aircraft by multirole fighters in the 1990s was a pretty dubious decision, as they are objectively worse at conducting strikes in a lot of ways. Trying to replace COIN aircraft, like the A-10, dedicated electronic warfare aircraft, and possibly even recon aircraft with a single fighter is a little bit ridiculous IMO. It's going to very suboptimal at a lot of these roles, and the Air Force is already making plans to buy cheaper aircraft, because the plane is prohibitively expensive for what they need it to do.

    • @wongtong754
      @wongtong754 Před 2 lety

      Horrible analogy

  • @stevestrickland4036
    @stevestrickland4036 Před 2 lety +3

    A great video--as always, thanks--but also probably one of the first in which some of the background music really became distracting, even overpowering Simon's voice at times.

  • @danielhenzphotography
    @danielhenzphotography Před 2 lety

    I followed the Development when I was young and read so much about it and was fascinated by it and still am.

  • @lukehall2478
    @lukehall2478 Před 2 lety

    That open door in the video was quite annoying 😂 Love your work man!

  • @conradchikwanda3510
    @conradchikwanda3510 Před 2 lety +26

    you should make a trilogy: Russia's Su-57 and China's J-20.

    • @sandhilltucker
      @sandhilltucker Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah it would be best to worst lol

    • @apex_blue
      @apex_blue Před 2 lety +2

      Those are joke with the radar cross section of a tire it’s as stealthy as the French raffle which is a 4.5 gen which causes the argument that are they even 5th gen which I say no.

  • @urthetshirtguy
    @urthetshirtguy Před 2 lety +4

    Having had the "honor" of working on the JSF program while working for Lockheed, the aircraft is impressive. Nevertheless, many thought if you get on the JSF program then you'll be set until retirement. Thankfully I found other employment. Blood pressure went down 20 points!

    • @pacakes54
      @pacakes54 Před 2 lety +2

      On my way out in feb, opted for a job working on crj's instead. maybe hearing will improve also.

  • @bkingk8
    @bkingk8 Před 2 lety

    I remember providing tech support to a government official back in 2003, i had to ignore the document on the screen and was not allowed to use any screen capture software because the document was an F35 review /report / not for general distribution type of document.
    Was a cool experience for the second year of my tech support career.
    Edit: Qld State Gov, department of premier and cabinet tech support role

  • @mattgale5724
    @mattgale5724 Před 2 lety

    Simon love the video keep them up, probably a bit late to the party but could you do a video on either the Euro fighter typhoon or the Tranis drone please.

  • @redheadsg1
    @redheadsg1 Před 2 lety +22

    Replace A10 .... lol xD I think that quiet bomber/tank buster is impossible to replace because as i said its quiet, small, cheap and don't forget that sweet 30 mm gun.

    • @collinbetten5631
      @collinbetten5631 Před 2 lety

      Its kinda slow tho, frogfoot is faster

    • @PrinceAlhorian
      @PrinceAlhorian Před 2 lety

      @@collinbetten5631 but you can shoot down a frogfoot with a well aimed pea shooter

    • @danieladriananayasolorzano9749
      @danieladriananayasolorzano9749 Před 2 lety +4

      In the normal planes:Look my plane have a gun.
      In the A10: look, my gun have a plane (the GAU 8 AVENGER2)

    • @killian9314
      @killian9314 Před 2 lety +6

      Ah yes.. the 30mm gun that can't score a tank kill to save it's life... i mean, it's a beautiful plane but the cannon is a gimmick, it's severely outdated for peer conflicts... since the cold war itself.

    • @joshuahoggard583
      @joshuahoggard583 Před 2 lety

      @@collinbetten5631 doesn't matter. It's not what it was designed for.

  • @markstott6689
    @markstott6689 Před 2 lety +10

    Please do the De Havilland Mosquito. I don't care if it's relegated to Side Projects.
    The F-35 is a special plane. Not quite as good the F-22 but a damned sight cheaper. I wonder how Russia's 'Checkmate' will compare?

    • @garyleibitzke4166
      @garyleibitzke4166 Před 2 lety +2

      Also, the F-35 has capabilities in most cases far beyond the planes it's replacing. Replacing 4 planes with one at less than 4 times the cost. I worked on some of the electronics before I retired and it's incredibly capable.

    • @glandhound
      @glandhound Před 2 lety +1

      Well, the F-22 is just a fighter while F-35 is multirole. What I wonder is how Freestyle compares to Lightning.

    • @patrikjakobsen2142
      @patrikjakobsen2142 Před 2 lety

      Same. Wonder how good Russia can make the checkmate when it only cost 1/4 of a F-35. If its almost as good that just proves that lockheed is ripping of the US government, but we have to wait and see

    • @jb76489
      @jb76489 Před 2 lety

      Well the checkmate wont ever be adopted so I’d say the f35 will be the winner

    • @ExHyperion
      @ExHyperion Před 2 lety +1

      @Grand Master 241-2 kill/death ratio in war games. f-22 is definitely a fighter of high capabilities

  • @m1k3droid
    @m1k3droid Před 2 lety +2

    As of September 2021, US and foreign nation orders for F-35 fighters count at 2,500 planes to date (including 300 already delivered to the USAF). Lockheed will be producing 156 planes per year 2023, and will retain that production rate for the forseeable future. Divide that by the 1.7 trillion dollars and that they expect to produce this plane until 2050 we can expect to see the total lifetime production of this plane to reach 7,500 planes over the coming 50 years. Current retail price of the plane is actually about $72 million, making it cheaper than the latest versions of the F-16 and F-15EX as well as the Gripen and Rafale.

  • @kevinmccarthy8746
    @kevinmccarthy8746 Před 2 lety +1

    The F22 has a much smaller radar signature they said. The size of a bubble bee? on you radar screen. That was or is a kind of scuttle but that I heard over the years.

  • @saladinbob
    @saladinbob Před 2 lety +10

    Apparently the UK has abandoned the F-35 in favour of the BAE Systems Tempest which is meant to go into service in 2035, but given the UK's record on bringing things in on budget and on time (I'm looking at you Wembley stadium) will probably be closer to 3035 and Britain will have gone bankrupt in the meantime.

    • @jb76489
      @jb76489 Před 2 lety +8

      Yeahno, tempest is replacing the typhoons, not the F35B

    • @apex_blue
      @apex_blue Před 2 lety

      Yeah I have no idea why, they are making themselves wait like at least 10 more years before they get the tempest best case scenario

    • @MalfosRanger
      @MalfosRanger Před 2 lety

      Those F-35Bs look nice on HMS Queen Elizabeth.