Lisunov to kill (or any other shit puns I can think of)
US needs to face up to the threat of mass-fleets of soviet Messerschmitt Me 163s
USAF tanker gets up close and personal with RAF Typhoon
DOOMSDAY!
$337 million for a F-35C: What to make of Wheeler’s F-35 cost quotes
Calculating the cost of a modern military aircraft is very hard. With so many different ways to arrive at what the unit price actually is and so much opacity and misinformation surrounding the actual figures, observers could be forgiven for giving up. But one man with enough confidence and patience is Winslow Wheeler, a staff member at the Project On Government Oversight.
His article on the popular website ‘War is Boring’ caused a stir this week with the following statement:
—A single Air Force F-35A costs a whopping $148 million. One Marine Corps F-35B costs an unbelievable $251 million. A lone Navy F-35C costs a mind-boggling $337 million. Average the three models together, and a “generic†F-35 costs $178 million.—
Were these figures accurate and representative? DoD Buzz put the question to Kevin Brancato, a senior defense analyst at Bloomberg Government, who noted that they “appear to be correct, but emphasized that the vast majority of the differences between the unit cost of the variants in fiscal 2015 is due to spreading nonrecurring and support costs over fewer aircraft.† Including non-recurring costs in a year where relatively few aircraft have been purchased will arrive at large numbers, but the point remains that these numbers are still correct. The same cannot be said of the optimistic figures quoted by the pro-F-35 lobby that factor in ‘best-possible’ sales numbers. It’s hard to recall the last fighter or bomber that was purchased in the kinds of quantities discussed in their early lives. This is especially true of stealth aircraft which are notoriously expensive to produce, and maintain; USAF originally envisioned a force of 750 F-22s and received 187. USAF wanted 132 B-2s and got 21. Who knows, maybe the F-35 will buck this trend and USAF will receive the 1,763 they currently want, but this seems very unlikely. The Navy who are less keen on the F-35 than the air force are also likely to trim their order for 260. For the USMC to buy and maintain a fleet of 340 F-35 B-models and 80 F-35 C-models would be an astonishing exercise in generous DoD funding. The result of the likely reductions in orders will be higher unit prices and it is entirely plausible that the best mid-life figures may not be a million miles from Wheeler’s rather shocking observations.
Picture credit: War is Boring
The F-35 is the worst current example of military procurement but it would be interesting to apply Wheeler’s rules to other programmes (it’s hard not think of Dasault’s Rafale with a total project cost exceeding €45.9 billion and only 132 aircraft produced). But the F-35 is such an extreme example, with so many far-reaching secondary considerations (the ‘middle of the end’ for any notion that Europe can decide which wars it wants to fight being one of them), that it is only right and fair to keep it in the crosshairs.
The only hope that can come from the F-35 programme is that maybe one day its failures will prompt reforms to the chronically flawed US military procurement process, a system that has cost many tax-payers (not just in the US) billions of dollars unnecessarily.
You can find out about the worst carrier aircraft hereÂ
“Never fly the ‘A’ model of anything†: Expect amends to this article over the next few days.Â
The US Army’s Ring-Wing Transformer: The strange story of the Convair Model 49
In the 1960s the US Army were growing sick of dependence on inappropriate USAF aircraft for the close support mission. Aircraft like the Republic F-105 Thunderchief were simply too fast and too vulnerable to support troops on the ground effectively. Instead the US Army wanted the versatility and forward-basing possibilities of a vertical take-off platform with the ability to hover. To excel in the tough close support role the type would need to be heavily armed and armoured. This need was expressed formally as the Advanced Aerial Fire Support System or AAFSS.
Convair, a company famed for its adventurous designs, responded to the Army’s AAFSS requirement with typical ambition. Drawing on their experience with the tail-sitting XFY-1 ‘Pogo’ they proposed a two man ‘ring’ (or annular) wing ducted-fan design quite unlike anything else in service, though somewhat similar to the experimental SNECMA C.540 Coléoptère. The concept was bizarre in appearance but Convair believed it was the perfect configuration for an aircraft combining a helicopter’s unusual abilities with some of the offensive features of a military ground vehicle. One of the greatest challenges was creating a cockpit that tilted so the pilot was not facing the sky in the take-off/landing and landed support parts of its mission. This necessitated  a complex hinged forward fuselage giving the type its distinctly ‘Transformer’-like looks.
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Two co-axially mounted contra-rotated rotors were to be powered by either Pratt & Whitney’s JFTD12 or Lycoming’s LTC4B-11 (GE’s T64 and Allison’s T56 were also assessed as candidates). The duct would generate more thrust from the engine than would the open rotors of a conventional helicopter design, which was a good thing as it was expected to weigh in at around 21,000 Ib (9526kg) fully-loaded.
The untold story of Britain’s cancelled superfighter, the Hawker P.1154, can be read here.
Armament for this monstrous machine would include a central turret with a XM-140 30-mm automatic cannon with 1,000 rounds or a launcher for 500 (!) WASP rockets and two remotely-controlled light machine-gun turrets with 12,000 rounds of ammunition or a XM-75 grenade launchers with 500 rounds. Addition to this already awe-inspiring arsenal were four hard points on the nacelles which could carry Shellelagh or BGM-71 TOW missiles, or even the M40 ‘106-mm ‘ recoilless gun! The weapons could be fired during any part of the flight profile (note the ‘hover firing’ position). The steel armour would be impervious to 12.7-mm rounds, but there was little or no provision for defences or countermeasures against surface-to-air missiles.
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The risky Model 49 lost the AAFSS contest to the remarkable Lockheed AH-56A Cheyenne which was in turn cancelled. The thirty year journey to produce an indigenous fire support aircraft for the US Army eventually led to today’s widely feared AH-64 Apache.
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Have a look at 10 worst British military aircraft, Su-35 versus Typhoon, 10 Best fighters of World War II , top WVR and BVR fighters of today, an interview with a Super Hornet pilot and a Pacifist’s Guide to Warplanes. Was the Spitfire overrated? Want something more bizarre? The Top Ten fictional aircraft is a fascinating read, as is The Strange Story and The Planet Satellite. The Fashion Versus Aircraft Camo is also a real cracker. Those interested in the Cold Way should read A pilot’s guide to flying and fighting in the Lightning. Those feeling less belligerent may enjoy A pilot’s farewell to the Airbus A340. Looking for something more humorous? Have a look at this F-35 satire and ‘Werner Herzog’s Guide to pusher bi-planes or the Ten most boring aircraft. In the mood for something more offensive? Try the NSFW 10 best looking American airplanes, or the same but for Canadians.Â
The flying adventures of Jayne Mansfield
Lest we forget how dead animals helped stick warplanes together
As the dreadful summer of hate rolls on, we are feeling a little moribund at Hush-Kit’s deluxe headquarters (situated in a hollowed-out volcano in the Quantocks); in our current mood we were drawn to these World War II posters offering the macabre service of turning bones into bombers and explosives.
According to the Canadian War Museum “Propaganda constantly encouraged Canadians to reuse and recycle so that salvaged material could be turned into war material, including explosives.” In the top image “they are asked to save leftover cooking bones to be processed into glue for aircraft like the poster’s Wellington bomber.” In the lower image (origin unknown) a Bristol Blenheim encourages citizens to donate their cooking bones to make aircraft glue to make warplanes to divide humans into their constituent parts.
Let’s all hope for a more peaceful autumn.Â
Info for top image: Designer and printer unknown
Published by the Bureau of Public Information on behalf of the National Salvage Office
Commercial colour print, 1940-1941 Canada
CWM 19920196-001










































