• Etterra@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Ah yes. “Better.” Although the only time I ever hear about the Ruskies’ newest “better” tank is when gets blown up by a missile.

    While I (American) am not a fan of the F35 - mostly because it costs so goddamn much money that could be better used for shit like infrastructure or healthcare - the Abrams remains a solid, proven platform. It’s starting to show its age a little, but it’s still MUCH cheaper and more practical to minority iterate than start from scratch. Whatever guy posted that was probably one of these ‘Tankies’ I keep hearing about.

    • SSTF@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      The US is planning for a new tank roundabout 2030. While right now it notionally is going to be an Abrams derivative, it is almost certainly going to be a completely overhauled new design and not a retrofit of existing tanks like what has been happening to Abrams.

      Just something to point out to people who complain about the U.S. gifting stocks of vehicles to Ukraine. The U.S. was planning to get rid of them anyway.

      The F-35 is an expensive program, and has undeniably had cost overruns, but from some of the poking around it seems the issues have also been exaggerated or different issues have been conflated, so without doing a deep dive, it is hard to say if the program is worth the bang or not.

        • SSTF@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          I suppose the question is really if the dollars are being spent in the most efficient way to get the result. I don’t know, because that’s complicated and probably needs more digging than I can do for an NCD comment. I do know that much of the discussion is muddled by the three models of F35 all essentially being their own subprograms. Which makes it hard to follow certain news articles or critiques when they jump from model to model to make their points.

          • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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            3 months ago

            If it makes you feel better, the package to modernize A-10’s costs more per plane than a brand-new F-35. The F-35 has also become fairly cheap to maintain per flight hour over the past couple of years due to economies of scale. It’s now comparable to the F-16 in that regard.

            Also, the controls and avionics are being adopted in the upgraded F-15s that will be produced soon

            • SSTF@lemmy.worldOP
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              3 months ago

              I’m team anti-A-10 for sure. The only reason that thing is still around is because the big gun is so thought terminatingly cool that it short circuits peoples’ ability to be rational. There’s an embarrassing Congressional hearing about retiring A-10s and a Senator (McCain I think) was arguing against the data with “But if big gun plane go away, where will big gun be?”

              I suspected, vaguely, that a lot of F35 costs would trend down now that the R&D was done, and there is production ramping up.

          • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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            3 months ago

            The f-35 project is over budget and chock full of stupid expenses.

            It still remains worth every penny for the US given it is a beyond peer platform, so is the f-22.

            At the end of the day being able to win without question will almost always be worth the cost even if it was more than necessary.

              • Estiar@sh.itjust.worksM
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                3 months ago

                F-22 isn’t in production anymore and it would be very expensive to start up production again. Much of the capacity to produce F-22 has been taken up by other programs such as F-35 meaning that they would need new capacity.

                They actually had the opportunity to produce more F-22s with the Japanese government offering to buy and put forward a lot of money to produce more, but the US didn’t see the need for more of an air superiority platform

                F-22 specializes in Air Superiority or clearing the skies. It wasn’t made for air to ground (even though it can do it today) In Afghanistan, there wasn’t a need for more air superiority

              • Zink@programming.dev
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                3 months ago

                The US keeps the F-22 to itself already, but the F-35 is basically the NATO multirole fighter jet so the US has plenty of those too.

      • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 months ago

        Just something to point out to people who complain about the U.S. gifting stocks of vehicles to Ukraine. The U.S. was planning to get rid of them anyway.

        the vast majority of materiel we’ve sent to ukraine thus far has been old pre-modernization stock, or older, modernized stock in the case of some of the abrams i believe. It’s literally just shifting some budget to procurement to get us new stuff, while shipping some of our older kit to be used in battle, which is productive. There is almost no downside in us doing this, aside from the fact that we have to ship it to ukraine, which kinda sucks.

        the F35 has been incredibly expensive thus far, but produced in significant numbers and fielded for a similar amount of time as something like the f16 it will completely absolve it’s development costs over time. It’s also important to remember that the f-35 is quite literally the most advanced air warfare platform that exists right now, which kind of follows the price tag.

        90% of the complaints about the f35 on the internet have been “it bad at dog fighting” and “it expensive” and, that’s about it. As for dog fighting, it’s literally not designed to dogfight, so it should be no surprise that it’s not very good at it.

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 months ago

            if the f35 enters a dogfight, the other fighter is probably already fucked. I can’t imagine that would ever be a concern of yours, as an f35 pilot, especially with all of the fancy link tech they have.

            • Zink@programming.dev
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              3 months ago

              Yeah you’re thinking along the same lines I was. If the situation ever occurred that an F-35 was in close combat with an enemy aircraft, shit has gone very sideways.

              Though you’re also right that with the interconnected platform of the thing, in reality the dogfighting F-35 would just have to distract the enemy for a moment while somebody dozens of miles away fires a missile.

              • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                3 months ago

                yeah, i also wouldn’t be surprised if f22 in the position of potential resistance would be escorted by fighters as well.

                If you’re trying to target any sort of lock on an f35 that isn’t pure vision based targeting, you’re pretty SOL unless the pilot can’t fumble with the switches correctly lol.

        • SSTF@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          Economy of scale almost always does. Part of something to dig into is if a projected lifetime program cost accurately bakes that in. It seems intuitive that people against the program will do everything they can to minimize the effect in order to pump up the projected cost, while supporters will do the opposite and give unrealistically optimistic costs.

          I don’t know specifically if that has happened with F-35 discussion, but I always suspect such manipulation as a baseline.

      • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        The US is planning for a new tank roundabout 2030. While right now it notionally is going to be an Abrams derivative

        Are you referring to the M10 Booker or the M1E3? The M10 is it’s own design, while the M1E3 (which should become the M1A3 on adoption) is a refresh of the Abrams, and it’s not an either/or.

        If you look up The Chieftain on Youtube, he’s speculating the M1E3 will focus on integrating all of the add-on modules that have become standardized of the past couple of decades. This will likely reduce the weight of the tank from a whopping 72 tons to make it possible to address future threats while keeping the overall weight low enough to cross bridges.

        Some people are speculating that the M1E3 will get an auto-loader, but the couple of tons those weigh is significantly more than a hyperactive 18yo, so we’ll see how that works out

        • SSTF@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          I was referring to the M1E3. My point was that it has so many goals to hit that it seems likely not going to be able to be refurbishments of existing M1s, but completely new builds. Therefore existing M1s like those going to Ukraine were destined for retirement anyway. This is something to bring up for people who have been decrying the “waste” of equipment being sent there. Much of it is nearing the end of the life cycle anyway.

          (And the Army assures me that the M10 is not a tank! )

    • a9cx34udP4ZZ0@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      The thing with the F-35 is you’ll never actually hear about it being “better” because there is no dogfight. It shows up, you die, that’s it. In the real-world it would be like one guy showing up to a boxing ring to fight, and the other guy dropping a nuclear bomb on the stadium. The whole point of 5th gen fighters is that they don’t engage, they have so much technology that they blow up the opponent before the opponent even knows they showed up.

      Meanwhile, Russia’s “5th gen” fighters can’t get near the airspace because they both don’t have the proper smart munitions, and don’t have the physical capabilities to fly into an area blanketed in US AA weapons.

        • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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          3 months ago

          Back in 1989, when Saudi Arabia was looking to buy new tanks and did some tests, the Osorio performed better than the Abrams on most tests, was cheaper and was declared the winner of said tests. However, the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait happened shortly afterwards and the Saudis opted for the M1 Abrams due to politicking. Unfortunately for Engesa, the company behind the Osorio, the Brazilian Army was never interested in such a large tank

          sauce - https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/brazil/osorio.htm

          • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            I did some digging and couldn’t find any statistics proving the Osorio superior except in proposed cost.

            Do you have any actual comparison data as to why the tank performed better?

            • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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              3 months ago

              That source claims it had better accuracy:

              In the firing tests, the Osorio managed to hit a target every 4 seconds, traveling 70 km per hour, with a total of 16 strikes during a 32-second course. The results were repeated by the Saudi crew. In the same course, the Abrams M-l made 12 strikes.

              It was also ~10 tons lighter than the Abrams, thus easier to transport.

              The real deal best source would be finding Saudi documents of that test, which is very unlikely for us to have access to.

              • frezik@midwest.social
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                3 months ago

                The real deal best source would be finding Saudi documents of that test, which is very unlikely for us to have access to.

                War Thunder forums, this is your calling.

              • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                Huh, interesting. Offensive firepower seems better at face value, but I wonder if there were other factors. Weight may be a ”problem” on the surface, but weight is also armor, so if the Abrams were better able to take a hit then I’d assume that is part of the calculation.

                Maybe it’s decision making that militaries have always faced - lighter, faster, more maneuverable but not able to take damage, vs. heavier, less maneuverable, but able to take a hit or two and potentially keep fighting.

              • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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                3 months ago

                I’m guessing the tradeoff is less armour and other survivability features. The Abrams is designed to remain survivable even if the ammo cooks off IIRC, which must add an insane amount to both the weight and the cost.