Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Fuerzas aéreas de todo el mundo y elementos que las componen

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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor Truquichan el Mar Sep 21, 2021 8:50 am

ruso escribió:¿Es posible que el B-2 sea más inestable en pista que otros modelos de aviones? que le cueste menos que a otros volcar en un giro mal dado, quiero decir.


Cualquier avión tiene un mal lunes en el tren de aterrizaje, pero en este caso la falta de timón a ciertos regímenes de velocidad puede que de menos margen de maniobra. Aunque le puede pasar a cualquiera. Es decir, que una vez se reduce la velocidad en la que la fuerza aerodinámica (bien en el timón o en los spoilers de las puntas de las alas) es menor para compensar lo que te pase, pues te sales con la inercia que te quede.

Inestable no creo que sea, pero algo delicado a baja velocidad si. Siendo el B2 no nos enteraremos salvo por los mentideros.
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor Pathfinder el Mar Sep 21, 2021 10:39 am

Five B-21 Raider Stealth Bombers Are Now In Final Assembly
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/4 ... l-assembly


A principios del año que viene está previsto el primer vuelo del B-21, pero la sorpresa es que Northrop está ahora mismo construyendo otras 3 uds, a las 2 que ya se conocían.

    Of course, the B-21 will be more than just a bomber. It will eventually be an optionally manned, nuclear-capable, multi-role strike and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) platform that will enable other platforms, as well as be enabled by other platforms, as part of a family of advanced systems.


    Beyond knowing that it will be a high-flying design that traces its roots to the B-2's early development, it will possess broadband low-observability (next-generation stealth technology), and it will be smaller than its B-2 progenitor, specifics remain very limited.
¡No hay golpe más fuerte que el que te da la realidad!

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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor Orel el Mar Sep 21, 2021 12:00 pm

Five B-21 Raider Stealth Bombers Are Now In Final Assembly

Cinco ya y no dos como parecía :D

:arrow: El Secretario de la USAF afirma que ciertos políticos regionales yanquis amenazan con debilitar la fuerza aérea apoyando el "alargamiento" y adquisición de aviones desfasados, no útiles para los nuevos escenarios que se plantean las FAS yanquis. (P.ej. el A-10) Se refiere a presiones políticas en favor de aviones que se fabrican o mantienen en ciertos estados, influencia de electorados regionales que apoyan ciertos aviones, etc:
Retire old aircraft or risk losing to China
Frank Kendall, secretary of the US Air Force (USAF) [Kendall served 10 years on active duty with the US Army after graduating from the US Military Academy at West Point, earned a master’s degree in aerospace engineering from The California Institute of Technology] Kendall says local politics threaten to weaken the air force by burdening it with outdated aircraft.
https://www.flightglobal.com/fixed-wing ... 50.article

:arrow: Dicho Secretario de la USAF también plantea dudas sobre el ABMS y dice que: "he appreciates innovation but believes the service must focus on developing specific, practical military technologies within a defined time". Y dicen que están pensando dejarlo en una red sólo para aviones furtivos que pueden entrar en los entornos más contestados, y no como planeaban para toda la USAF:
USAF secretary asks ‘hard questions’ of Advanced Battle Management System

Secretary of the US Air Force (USAF) Frank Kendall is forcing a reassessment of one of the service’s highest-development priorities, its Advanced Battle Management System (ABMS), after asking “hard questions” of the imagined battlefield network and receiving “answers that weren’t that good”.

The service has championed ABMS as a critical network to pass targeting information around the battlefield – shortening the time taken to coordinate and launch attacks. For example, the USAF envisions sensors on stealth aircraft spotting targets and then transmitting target data to other aircraft, perhaps unmanned air vehicles, that could take a shot.

The programme lacked a “sound business case”, according to a US Government Accountability Office report released in April 2020. The report noted that the USAF lacked firm requirements for the technology, a plan to develop technology and a cost estimate.

More than 50 companies have received indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (ID/IQ) contracts worth between $1,000 and $950 million to develop pieces of ABMS by 2025. ID/IQ contracts are open-ended agreements often used for buying maintenance services. The Department of Defense (DoD) sees the contracting method as less restrictive than conventional processes and has adapted it to facilitate rapid prototyping. Using ID/IQ contracts the Pentagon has conducted a series of ABMS demonstrations in recent years.

... :arrow: Kendall said he appreciates innovation but believes the service must focus on developing specific, practical military technologies within a defined time.

“We should not be doing demonstrations and experiments unless we can link them to true operational improvements and unless they move us down the field to lower-risk acquisition programmes,” he says. “I intend to strengthen these linkages and to use state of the art analytical tools to help do so.”
A lack of concrete goals has dogged ABMS, he says.

“This programme has not been adequately focused on achieving and fielding specific measurable improvements in operational outcomes,” says Kendall. “That means focusing on… [putting] meaningful military capability into the hands of our operational users. It does not mean [developing] one or two leave-behind, unmaintainable token prototypes that came out of experiment.”

Lieutenant General Clinton Hinote, deputy chief of staff for strategy, integration and requirements, says Kendall has “asked hard questions about our approach to ABMS and we are answering those questions. And, in some cases, our answers weren’t that good.”

For example, Kendal wants to know: Where is targeting data within ABMS collected? What bits of data need to be fused? Where will data be sent? What radio waves will be used? Where is information gathered and presented to commanders?

“Those are valid questions,” says Hinote. “He has an engineering background. He holds our feet to the fire on those questions.”

Hinote says the scope of ABMS, which previously was intended to connect the entire USAF, is likely to be refined into “a forward-edge node or forward-edge network” – possibly meaning the effort will focus on passing information between stealth aircraft, such as Lockheed Martin F-35s and F-22s, within contested airspace.

https://www.flightglobal.com/fixed-wing ... 48.article
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor 14yellow14 el Mar Sep 21, 2021 3:20 pm

Orel escribió: :arrow: Dicho Secretario de la USAF también plantea dudas sobre el ABMS y dice que: "he appreciates innovation but believes the service must focus on developing specific, practical military technologies within a defined time". Y dicen que están pensando dejarlo en una red sólo para aviones furtivos que pueden entrar en los entornos más contestados, y no como planeaban para toda la USAF:


En realidad lo que quieren es centrarse en sacar una capacidad concreta operativa para luego ir avanzando con incrementos. Ahi concretamente se refiere a la Capability Release 1. Luego vendrá la 2.

ABMS is the Air Force’s contribution to Joint All Domain Command and Control (JADC2), and was originally conceived by former Air Force acquisition czar Will Roper as a military “Internet of Things.” From its inception in 2019, the initiative was primarily aimed at testing cutting edge technology in a series of experiments called On-Ramps to allow development of new capabilities in four month cycles.

But those experiments now have come to an end as the Air Force reexamines its approach to ABMS, as well as to its game plan for experimentation.

Lt. Gen. Clinton Hinote, deputy strategy, integration and requirements, told reporters that the ABMS program is focusing for the moment on Capability Release 1 (CR-1), the first set of products to emerge from the Rapid Capabilities Office (RCO) that is now serving as the acquisition authority for ABMS. CR-1 includes equipping KC-46 tanker jets with new pods that allow them to serve as a kind of flying cell tower between the incompatible radio systems of F-22 and F-35 fighters.

Hinote said that what is certain at the moment is that CR-1 will result in “a forward edge node or forward edge network,” although “the actual things, the actual radios we use to make that happen and the waveforms we use to make that happen” are still to be determined.

Further, he said, a second set of capabilities will eventually follow once CR-1 is sorted through.

CR-2 is focusing on speeding command and control decision-making at Northern Command (NORTHCOM) to improve homeland defense
, according to Air Force officials. As Breaking Defense previously reported, NORTHCOM has been testing artificial intelligence tools to support implementation of ABMS.


https://breakingdefense.com/2021/09/air ... periments/

El ABMS es un programa mucho más ambicioso y complejo dentro del JAD2C como para dejarlo en un traductor de dos cazas... Pero poco a poco irán desplegando esas capacidades.

Un saludo! :)
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor 14yellow14 el Mar Sep 21, 2021 10:20 pm

La USAF piensa en el E-7 como reemplazo de sus AWACS E-3 mientras piensan el futuro de las capacidades AMTI basadas en el espacio.

Brown: Air Force Serious About E-7 Wedgetail
Acquiring the Wedgetail "gives us a path" while the service awaits a space-based capability, Air Force Chief of Staff CQ Brown said, as "an option to be able to get the capability much faster than if we were to start a new start from scratch."
https://breakingdefense.com/2021/09/bro ... wedgetail/

The Air Force is looking seriously at buying the E-7 Wedgetail to replace the aging Boeing E-3 Sentry Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) planes, with an eye to the 2023 budget.

Brown said, military commanders want to move the mission to track moving targets on the ground to space-based systems, as first announced by Space Force head Gen. Jay Raymond in May.

“When you look to the future, ideally you’d like to be able to look at capability that can be defensible,” he said.

But the Wedgetail could fill the gap in the meantime. Brown explained that the service’s analysis is looking at the AWACS “mission capable rates, and how much it cost to be able to maintain and keep those aircraft viable. And this is why we are taking a look at the E-7.”

Acquiring the Wedgetail “gives us a path” while the service awaits a space-based capability, he said, as “an option to be able to get the capability much faster than if we were to start a new start from scratch.”

Indeed, the commander of Pacific Air Forces (PACAF), Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach, has expressed interest in the E-7, due to concerns with the flagging readiness of the AWACS planes.


De ir a por ello probablemente trabajen en una version actualizada del E-7 con nuevo radar AESA, arquitectura abierta y preparado para integrarse con el ABMS
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor pagano el Mié Sep 22, 2021 6:13 am

Y los F117 Nighthawk tienen una segunda vida operativa https://www.defensa.com/otan-y-europa/a ... -reaparece
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor Orel el Mié Sep 22, 2021 3:54 pm

Gracias por el matiz, 14yellow
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor champi el Mié Sep 22, 2021 7:23 pm

Parece que el contrato para la remotorización del B-52 es "inminente": https://www.airforcemag.com/contract-fo ... -imminent/
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor champi el Jue Sep 23, 2021 5:08 pm

Del "National Defense Authorization Act" del FY2022: https://www.armed-services.senate.gov/i ... ummary.pdf
...
Air Force
· Extends the requirement to maintain a minimum capacity of Air Force fighter aircraft.
· Prohibits the Air Force from developing a follow-on tanker to the KC-46 until the Remote Vision System (RVS) is fully operational.
· Prohibits reduction in the Air Force's C-130 total aircraft inventory below 292 aircraft.
· Prohibits retiring any A-10 aircraft in fiscal year 2022.
· Authorizes retirement of up to 18 KC-135 aircraft and 12 KC-10 aircraft in fiscal year 2022 to facilitate the acceleration of KC-46 bed down.
· Prohibits further reductions in B-1 bombers until such time as the B-21 aircraft begins fielding.
· Directs DOD transition of F-35 program sustainment from the Joint Program Office to the Air Force and Navy.
· Authorizes $4.285 billion for the F-35A program, including an increase of:
- $85 million for the purchase of an additional F-35A; and
- $175 million for the purchase of F135 power modules and $185 million for weapons system sustainment of F-35As.
· Authorizes an additional $575 million to purchase five additional F-15EX aircraft.
· Authorizes $638.2 million for F-16 modifications, including an increase of $25 million for the procurement of additional AESA radar sets across the entire F-16 fleet.
· Directs the Secretary of the Air Force to provide a briefing to the congressional defense committees not later than December 15, 2021, addressing Air Force airborne electronic attack systems.
· Encourages the Air Force to move more rapidly in developing and adopting airborne augmented reality technologies that contribute to improved training outcomes and reduce net training costs.
·Directs the Secretary of the Air Force to provide a report to the congressional defense committees, not later than February 15, 2022, on the Air National Guard’s F-16 selfprotection capabilities against existing and projected surface-to-air and air-to-air weapons.
·Directs the Secretary of the Air Force, in consultation with the Secretary of the Navy, to provide to the congressional defense committees, not later than January 31, 2022, a report describing the feasibility of Agile Combat Employment exercises in the Pacific, Europe, and within the continental United States and Alaska.
·Directs the Secretary of the Air Force and the Secretary of the Navy to conduct a study and provide a report not later than June 1, 2022, on the efficiency of the various pilot training initiatives and pilot programs being undertaken with respect to the quality of graduates.
·Authorizes an increase of $30 million for Air Force advanced engine development.
·Authorizes $201.6 million for the Skyborg program, an increase of $75 million for the purchase of Valkyrie aircraft.
·Authorizes an increase of $20 million for F-35 continuous capability development and delivery.
·Authorizes $125 million for to accelerate the use of unmanned aircraft as augmented adversary support.
·Directs the Secretary of the Air Force to conduct a study on options for maintaining 225 bombers after 2050, and submit the results of that study to the congressional defense committees with the budget request for fiscal year 2023.
·Authorizes all other unfunded requirements as requested by the Chief of Staff of the Air Force.
...
· Requires the Secretary of the Air Force to maintain a total active aircraft inventory of 292 C-130 aircraft.
· Prohibits the reduction of KC-135 aircraft by the Air National Guard in fiscal year 2022.
· Prohibits the reduction of A-10 aircraft by the Air Force in fiscal year 2022 and modifies a required report on close air support mission effectiveness.
· Prohibits further equipping of the Air National Guard with F-35s until an increased number are fielded in the regular Air Force.
· Authorizes the Secretary of the Air Force to divest 18 KC-135s from the active duty Air Force during fiscal year 2022 to facilitate the acceleration of KC-46 bed down.
...

Ya se tiene comentado muchas veces, pero no está mal para ver cómo la política también juega un papel importante en el moldeando de las fuerzas armadas de EEUU. Por ejemplo, proponiendo compras extras, prohibiendo programas o impidiendo que se retiren ciertas unidades.
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor Orel el Jue Sep 23, 2021 6:07 pm

Ya se tiene comentado muchas veces, pero no está mal para ver cómo la política también juega un papel importante en el moldeando de las fuerzas armadas de EEUU. Por ejemplo, proponiendo compras extras, prohibiendo programas o impidiendo que se retiren ciertas unidades.

En todas partes cuecen habas, sí.
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor 14yellow14 el Jue Sep 23, 2021 6:21 pm

Esta ahi puesto pero el tema bombarderos es gordo: de 100 a 225 B-21 y un reemplazo low cost para el B-52.

Senate panel wants new bomber study, options for 'low-cost' B-52 replacement and 225 B-21s

https://insidedefense.com/daily-news/se ... -225-b-21s
A Senate panel wants the Air Force to draft a new bomber study with options for a “low-cost,” non-stealthy B-52 replacement and an overall long-range strike inventory nearly 30% larger than currently planned that would more than double purchases of next-generation B-21s -- raising the acquisition objective from 100 to 225. The Senate Armed Services Committee, in its mark of the fiscal year 2022 defense policy bill, directs the Air Force secretary to prepare such a bomber study
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor jupiter el Jue Sep 23, 2021 7:10 pm

14yellow14 escribió:Esta ahi puesto pero el tema bombarderos es gordo: de 100 a 225 B-21 y un reemplazo low cost para el B-52.

Senate panel wants new bomber study, options for 'low-cost' B-52 replacement and 225 B-21s

https://insidedefense.com/daily-news/se ... -225-b-21s
A Senate panel wants the Air Force to draft a new bomber study with options for a “low-cost,” non-stealthy B-52 replacement and an overall long-range strike inventory nearly 30% larger than currently planned that would more than double purchases of next-generation B-21s -- raising the acquisition objective from 100 to 225. The Senate Armed Services Committee, in its mark of the fiscal year 2022 defense policy bill, directs the Air Force secretary to prepare such a bomber study


Bombardero estratégico y low cost en la misma frase.....con dos webos..... los B52 terminaran retirando al sucesor del B21 :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor 14yellow14 el Jue Sep 23, 2021 8:25 pm

Hombre el Low Cost que plantean estratégico no creo que sea. Suena parecido a algo que proponian en The War Zone, una especie de bombardero basado en el P-8:

The Case For Stripping The P-8 Poseidon Down Into An RB-8 Multi-Role Arsenal Ship

A non-maritime patrol variant of the P-8 could provide the Air Force with a highly flexible platform for augmenting the bomber force and much more.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/4 ... senal-ship

Para muchas misiones en espacios no contestados tipo CAS como han estado haciendo estos últimos años el B-21 es demasiado. Para estar quemando aviones orbitando en el desierto no les hace falta ni B-21 ni F-35 ni NGAD.
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor Atticus el Vie Sep 24, 2021 11:26 am

Bombardero estratégico y low cost en la misma frase.....con dos webos..... los B52 terminaran retirando al sucesor del B21 :mrgreen:


Lo segundo no lo voy a discutir porque todo el mundo sabe que asi pasara. Pero lo primero dependera de como se lo planteen. Si partes de una celula de avion comercial y la retocas un poco, y solo le metes electronica de combate que ya este hecha para otros aviones... pues te puede salir algo decente. Que conste que a mi los B21 me parecen.... bueno, dudaba pero lo voy a decir: me parecen una gilipollez. Para atacar blancos fuertemente defendidos (y no hablo solamente de defensa de punto) se van a utilizar drones furtivos mas pequeños y misiles de crucero. Eso de plantearte darte una vuelta por encima del blanco a soltarle una bomba desde treinta kilometros me parece producto de una mente discapacitada. Y para atacar desde mil kilometros no hacen falta las alforjas del B21. Mucho mas sensato me parece el pajaro Ruso, que te llega volando mas rapido de lo que tu puedes contrarrestarle, lanzar armamento de largo alcance y largarse aun mas rapido de lo que le puedes perseguir. Y por ahi me parece que van los tiros del "estrategico low cost". Una plataforma "sencillita" que pueda llegar a casi cualquier sitio y lanzar misiles de crucero o drones de bombardeo. Aunque no creo que igualen las velocidades y resistencia de los Tu160. Y, si se da el caso, pues puede sobrevolar a los vietcong/talibanes de turno y soltarles los excedentes de armamento tonto sin problemas.

Tambien creo que seria necesario que todos reflexionaramos sobre el concepto "low cost" de los americanos. :roll:
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Re: Fuerza Aérea de EE.UU. (USAF)

Notapor elozano el Vie Sep 24, 2021 12:31 pm

14yellow14 escribió:Hombre el Low Cost que plantean estratégico no creo que sea. Suena parecido a algo que proponian en The War Zone, una especie de bombardero basado en el P-8:

The Case For Stripping The P-8 Poseidon Down Into An RB-8 Multi-Role Arsenal Ship

A non-maritime patrol variant of the P-8 could provide the Air Force with a highly flexible platform for augmenting the bomber force and much more.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/4 ... senal-ship

Para muchas misiones en espacios no contestados tipo CAS como han estado haciendo estos últimos años el B-21 es demasiado. Para estar quemando aviones orbitando en el desierto no les hace falta ni B-21 ni F-35 ni NGAD.


Fijate a los ATL2 franceses dando vueltas por el Sahel cargados de bombas guiadas. Lo del P8 como bombardero no es una mala idea. Pero tu sabes los USA son muy de mandar B1/B52 a Afganistan para reventar una pick-up cargados de tíos con turbante ( así esta la flota de B1 de reventá).
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