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65 posters

    Is Russia safe from F-22 and Β-2?

    GarryB
    GarryB


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    Post  GarryB Sat Mar 10, 2012 3:29 am

    With that logic, against 30K feet targets KS-19 should be only a 'sky denial' value at average, at best it might score a kill or two. May be cluster shells breaking and spreading wide into pieces and then exploding might increase a probability of hit.

    You and your cluster shells.

    Cluster shells would not be effective.

    Think of it in terms of capacity, you are trading a large heavy projectile for lots of smaller projectiles to increase the chance of a hit. In the case of a shotgun you wouldn't want a solid slug load for shooting at rabbits because the accuracy needed to hit a small fast object with one large blob of lead makes the chances of a hit very low. Also that huge blob of lead would make a real mess of the rabbit. The solution is instead of one blob of lead you use hundreds of small lead balls where one ball hitting the rabbit in the leg or whereever will not be effective, but because all the balls are thrown together and lots of hits at once are likely and your point of aim can be off by 30cm or more and you can still hit the rabbit with lots of the balls of lead with enough force to kill it then it makes sense to use the pellet load rather than the solid slug.

    For a dangerous target like a wild pig or bear then a solid slug becomes the ammo of choice.

    The problem with your ides of using cluster shells in anti aircraft artillery is that while in theory it should have all the benefits of a pellet load against rabbits in reality there is simply not enough shell capacity to have lots of little explosives that will spread out in the sky and create the area effect you are hoping for.

    The most effective use of cluster munitions is found in bombs, where a 500kg standard bomb creates an enormous amount of damage near the centre of the explosion but its effect reduces rapidly as you move away from the centre.

    If the target is soft and could be killed by a 2kg HE fragmentation device then it makes sense to put 200 2kg HE bombs in a 500kg bomb shell and release the bomblets over the target area so they spread out before exploding.

    Despite only totalling 400kgs of HE the 200 bomblets will kill far more people out in the open and exposed than the 500kgs in the 500kg bomb.

    The problem is area too... release the bomblets from too high up and they will spread too far apart and lots of people in the group on the ground will not be hit... drop them too low and they wont spread out far enough to cover the whole target group so again it will be less effective.

    Even with a 100mm anti aircraft gun you will have the problem that the cluster mines are either very small in number, or individually too small to damage the target aircraft, and the problem of when they are released becomes an issue to.

    At the end of the day just having proximity fused HE shells is the best solution found so far.

    However, will a modified or upgraded guided KS-19 vrs Jdams flying at subsonic speeds and in the proximity of 3-5 Kms offer little more potentials? Iran has modfied KS-19 and boast of precision hits by Safir, but then ME countries like to thump their chests even before production lines are in place.

    With guided shells the cost increases... I still say that Pantsir-S1 or TOR offer mobility and capability you are simply not going to get from any gun that uses conventional propellent.

    EM guns might change this, but until they are viable the best choice is missiles.

    Can a KS-19 type platform be first used to lobby an Igla at say 20K feet and then manpad fires in and does its 15K feet chasing? Similar to your idea of UCAVs armed with Iglas

    The KS-19 is a high velocity weapon and the shells accelerate to mach 3+ in just the length of the barrel... I don't think a MANPAD would survive that.

    A better solution could be an AAM or MANPAD with a booster rocket to make it two stage. The problem would be that it would need to acquire its target after the first stage has burned out. The Morfei is a short range SAM based on the 9M100 short range AAM that uses a sophisticated IIR seeker and full thrust vector flight controls and is lock on after launch.

    Another option is the fact that the Pantsir-S1 missile and the Hermes ASM have a unified design so a MMW radar homing or IIR homing missile could be loaded into a Pantsir-S1 and fired at high altitude targets in a fire and forget mode.

    Tripoli was in the hands of the rebels. So who made the difference? We all know the answer, so no point in argument.

    Without ground forces air power is nothing... look at Kosovo... it was almost ineffectual.

    Using precision guided munitions, Air Forces can take out tanks, artillery, BMDs and then what is left?

    Using precision guided munitions in over 2 months NATO took out perhaps 12 Serbian tanks... and that is with uncontested air control.

    One place I read that Israel Air Force is confident of destroying main tank divisions of Syrian Army in 3 days using air assets. Going by the past performances of IsAF, I would not throw a denial or rebuttal to those claims.

    The USAF was going to save the people of Kosovo in a couple of days... a week tops, and who would argue with the USAF?

    Again here are the main tasks cut out for the RuAF:

    Sorry, but that is rubbish.

    The main tasks for the RuAF are to protect Russian territory from hostile external forces and to cooperate with the Aerospace Defence forces and the Army.

    They don't need that crap you are suggesting, what they need is improved hardware in terms of aircraft and weapons, to improve training systems and procedures, to replace obsolete equipment and sensors, and to raise the standard of their C4IR to the level where they can perform the mission stated above.

    The difference is in the doctrine to fight. West prefers air force to minimize losses on its side. Russia and China probably prefer the ground based offensives and more so because they like to keep the costs under control.

    Well I would say that the West prefers air power because it makes it easier to fight around the world on the territory of other countries. Russia and China have no global empire to maintain and therefore are focused on protecting their own territory, for which an Air force is largely optional, though can greatly reduce losses and improve the effectiveness of ground forces.

    For firing on missiles and bombs, which don't do a lot of maneuvers in the sky, this is still quite effective weapon. Do't forget, ships still have large cal. guns, which are also used in air defense role.

    But they are big labour intensive systems... can you really see them replacing MANPADS and Medium and long range SAMs?

    With the advances in radar location, fire control, shell technology etc, why not fire a large number of 100mm shells into the general area where a high flying aircraft is located and fill that part of the sky with shrapnel?

    Well the Italians have gone for a 76mm SPAAG, and GLONASS guided artillery shells offer potential for possibly hitting aerial targets... They really need a big change, like an EM powered gun that fires heavy shells at very high velocities... like 4-5km/s and then it might become viable.

    Most likely for ships before land based...

    I bet the demand for the KS-19 type should be much higher, given the low cost of operations and low cost per kill of Plane or Jdams type entries in the envelop of the radar.

    But the point is that it will still be firing quite a lot of shells for each kill. It will require lots of men to man the systems. And of course as soon as it opens up its position will be easy to plot.

    The thing you need to understand Victor is that there are no easy cheap solutions... the West has carefully developed its capability to steal resources from the damn natives for hundreds of years and spent an enormous fortune honing its abilities, making it globally mobile... taking over islands here and there for bases.

    The whole six month Libya operation cost NATO $1B to $1.5B tops.

    To turn a functioning country into a shthole... I hear the leaderships first law will be to legalise polygamy...

    West does not like to lose men and extra costs incurred in war fighting is considered a consumption boost to the defense industry which creates more jobs and fuels further economic consumption.

    Which is why Russia doesn't need to worry too much about F-22s because it has the capacity to inflict ENORMOUS casualties on NATO.

    But to fire on bombs and missiles it need tracking radar for quicker lock on and tracking.

    a 360 degree AESA with 4 faces would offer continuous 360 degree target detection... and you could put a hemisphere IIR optical sensor for complete radar and optical coverage. With such a vehicle passing data to Pantsir-S1, TOR, and BMP-4s (Armata, Boomerang, Kurganets-25, and Typhoon based IFVs) equipped with either 57mm guns or 45mm guns with laser guided shells a single shot against a bomb would suffice as the guidance will allow for deviations from the time the shell leaves the muzzle of the gun to impact.

    The 57mm shell would offer the best performance.

    Note Phalanx uses armour piercing shells because Soviet anti ship missiles had angled armour plates to protect their warheads, most other CIWS used HE shells to try to detonate the warhead of the incoming missile. This was the most effective way to destroy such a weapon...

    Guns and missiles are not in competition, but supplement each other. Russia have two combined systems, Tunguska and Pantsir, which have both missiles and two twin 30 mm guns.

    Guns can be very capable and compliment Missiles and can work together to make defences more effective.

    The Shilka is a devastating system in the ground to air role and the ground to ground role and the Tunguska is just a step better.

    Congratulations to whomever sold the idea of JDAM to victor... you really did an outstanding job... Twisted Evil
    medo
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    Post  medo Sun Mar 11, 2012 11:54 am

    But they are big labour intensive systems... can you really see them replacing MANPADS and Medium and long range SAMs?

    Where did I say guns would replace MANPADS and SAMs? They could supplement each other in cluster.
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    Post  medo Sun Mar 11, 2012 12:45 pm

    Big guns are hardly cheap and big shells are a threat to things on the ground... what goes up must come down remember and pumping hundreds of shells up... well a fraction will be duds and come down intact...

    True and I don't think anyone will go in reintroducing 76 mm or 100mm guns. Iran is special case here. But guns with cal. 30 mm, 35 mm, 40 mm and 57 mm could be very useful as ICV guns as well as AA guns or in dual role. Swedes made their CV-90 with 40 mm gun, search radar and higher elevation to do AA role and support armored units and they do well together with RBS-70/90 and BAMSE.

    After all, more and more helicopters are equipped with DIRCM complexes, which work against MANPADS, but DIRCM is useless against gun rounds.
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    Post  coolieno99 Sun Mar 11, 2012 10:51 pm

    Nice summary of Russian air defense systems.

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    victor7


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    Post  victor7 Mon Mar 12, 2012 4:36 pm

    Big guns are hardly cheap and big shells are a threat to things on the ground... what goes up must come down remember and pumping hundreds of shells up... well a fraction will be duds and come down intact...

    the point is to have a system within $2M each that will provide cover against PGMs against wide range points not just very valuable ones. Systems like Pantsirs/Tor/Spyder are there but they range from $15M to 25M each. One can buy good 10 upgraded T-72s for $15M and these 10 tanks can win a small to medium size battle for you. But they would only last 10 min. also if they are exposed to PGMs launched from 40K ft.

    The system using guns will also be much resistant to saturation and decoy type attacks given the large number of shells available. Inexpensive, quantity response, added layer or cluster defense is the main point.
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    Post  GarryB Mon Mar 12, 2012 11:58 pm

    One of the faults in combat of MANPADS is that they have such short range that they pretty much need to be located right next to what they are defending. For infantry units that is not a problem, though it often means that when your MANPADS teams are engaging the enemy aircraft the enemy aircraft are engaging the thing the MANPADS teams are supposed to be protecting.

    In fact the older model MANPADS could only get a good lock on the tail pipe of an aircraft so they could only engage the target after it has attacked and is leaving.

    With a gun based defence you would have to buy thousands of systems if you just want to protect all of the land you occupy.

    The light portable nature of MANPADS means wherever you have troops you can have a few gripstocks and a couple of dozen missiles, so in a battlefield you end up with a good coverage of missiles so enemy air power cannot rest.

    With separate KS-19s the cost of buying enough to get the coverage you want... you end up spending more than with SAMs.

    Just think for a few moments about the coverage you would get from one KS-19... sure you might get 150 guns for the price of a Single S-400 battery, but an S-400 battery can reach higher and several orders of magnitude further.

    With its long range missiles a single S-400 battery can protect a circular area 800km across... you couldn't cover that with 1,000 KS-19s or any EM gun equivalent.

    The secret to success with your idea is to make the gun multi purpose... look at the German 88 during WWII. It was nothing unusual, just a high velocity flak gun, and at the start of the war it would be far to big and cumbersome to even consider it for an anti tank role where tiny 37mm and 45mm guns were standard and new 50mm and 57mm guns were being introduced.

    A new gun that is useful in enormous numbers because it is used for other roles makes sense.

    A new 45mm gun or 57mm gun for BMP type IFV in new Russian Brigades becomes a possibility. To get the velocity to penetrate armour of current IFVs they will need mass and velocity and with guided shells they wont reach 40K feet, but they will certainly be a threat well above the threat height of 30mm cannon.

    Perhaps the next gen guns using EM might be in the 50-60mm calibre range and use enormous velocities to achieve acceptable penetration performance while retaining the shell capacity to be effective against soft targets.

    Once the impact velocity goes above about 1km/s you don't need to waste space with a large HE charge.

    With a standard shell the HE filling is important because the more HE you put in the better the blast effect on target, but HE is not very heavy so the more HE content the lighter the shell and the faster it slows down.

    Having more metal in the shell increases mass which improves sectional density which means it has more weight to push through the air in front of it so it maintains a higher speed and gets to the target faster and with more momentum.

    A shell travelling at 4-5km/s doesn't need to explode as such, a very tiny HE charge in the centre to break up and spread the metal the shell is made of either just before impact (with a complex accurate and therefore expensive and large timing mechanism, or a small cheap simple impact fuse).

    The large expensive and complex fuse increases hit probability by spreading the fragments before impact to spread the damage and increase the chance of a hit with a small target... it also makes the ammo more expensive and delicate.

    The small impact fuse is small and cheap and simple, but requires a direct hit to function. The spreader charge will greatly increase internal damage to the target compared with a simple solid shot, and the velocity of fragments will still be very high because of the high impact speed.

    At the end of the day it works out cheaper to have a few expensive long range SAMs than thousands of cheaper guns... especially in terms of manpower... The Russian military is shrinking, not growing.

    The system using guns will also be much resistant to saturation and decoy type attacks given the large number of shells available. Inexpensive, quantity response, added layer or cluster defense is the main point.

    Actually the risk of firing large numbers of high velocity shells at very low firing angles would make gun engagement of low flying cruise missile type weapons rather a dangerous practise as your shells will likely do a lot of damage to the surrounding territory.
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    Post  victor7 Tue Mar 13, 2012 1:03 am

    With its long range missiles a single S-400 battery can protect a circular area 800km across... you couldn't cover that with 1,000 KS-19s or any EM gun equivalent.

    That's a good point. System speculated was more for protection of 5x5 km area where a small battle is taking place i.e. tactical vrs strategic. Also, main target is the PGMs that have entered the 5x5 envelope not the planes that have fired them and even from 20kms away. Also, intercepting PGM at the height of 2-3kms I think half a dozen Iran's Meshabh-1 type systems might be sufficient. I bet other nations have more accurate and lethal deals to kill off the PGMs at low altitude.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesbah_1
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    Post  GarryB Tue Mar 13, 2012 1:30 am

    For the requirements you have outlined I would say a TOR battery is the ideal choice, despite its initial cost, the missiles are very cheap... they have no expensive seekers and are very simple command guided weapons.

    The thing is that while the vehicles are expensive the radar and optics on these vehicles would be critical to shooting down low RCS targets like bombs and missiles, so you you might get your guns cheap but they only replace the missiles which are also very cheap. The radars and all weather day and night optics will be the same price for both systems so I rather doubt the gun option would be cheaper than the missile option.

    More importantly the TOR system is highly mobile and can be track or wheel mounted or mounted in a shelterised trailer for protecting fixed things like airfields etc.

    Don't get me wrong, I like gun anti aircraft artillery and I think it was a stroke of genius to combine the auto cannons of the Shilka type vehicle with the guided missiles of an SA-13 like vehicle to result in the Tunguska which is better than both vehicles... the two twin barrel 30mm cannon are more powerful, have a higher rate of fire, has a longer range than the Shilkas four single barrel 23mm cannon, and the SA-19 two stage SAM has better range and speed and lethality than the SA-13 and its missiles are cheaper too. The SA-13 has a range of about 5km, while depending on the model the SA-19/SA-22 has a range of 8, 10, 12, and 20km. The sensors on the Tunguska are better than the sensors of the Shilka and SA-13 combined, so you end up with a vehicle able to replace two vehicles with much better performance than either or both together.

    In comparison the US equivalent is a Bradley with a 25mm gatling and Stinger missiles. The Tunguska outranges this system in guns and missiles which is not actually that important, what is important is that the Linebacker is barely able to outrange the ATAKA ATGM of the Hind with 6km range Stingers vs 6 km range ATAKA ATGMs, and with the new Russian helos getting 8km range Kristantema and 15km range Hermes it will be even more inadequate.

    For the Tunguska the 8km missiles vs 8km range Hellfire was close, but the 10km range missiles solved that and the new 20km range missiles on Pantsir-S1 give it even more standoff range against western anti tank helos and attack aircraft.
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    Post  GarryB Tue Mar 13, 2012 1:40 am

    BTW that Iranian system looks interesting but shows the weakness of wiki...

    Mesbah uses 4 Iranian built Russian ZU-23-2 installed on a rotatable mount. Each autocannon has its own feed magazine. Each ZU-23-2 has a reported fire rate of 2000 rpm. But surprisingly the whole system is reported to have a rate of 4000 rpm instead of 8000. This is probably because developers wanted it to save ammunition. The mount can rotate in different angles but the exact degrees are unknown.[2]

    As seen in the drawing the mistake the person doing this write up has made a mistake. The ZU-23-2 has two single barrel 23mm cannon which is seen in the designation of ZU-23-2.

    The Mesbah doesn't use 4 Iranian built Russian ZU-23-2, it uses two of them, because a ZU-23-2 has two single barrels and the Mesbah clearly has 4 barrels.

    The ZU-23-2 has two barrels with each barrel firing 1,000 rpm the same as the standard Russian model, so with two guns the ZU-23-2 mount fires at 2,000 rpm. The Iranian system with 4 barrels will of course fire at 4,000 rpm.

    This is basically a towed version of Shilka except Shilka has liquid cooled barrels to enable it to maintain a high rate of fire.

    I would think that the electronics and sensors in that trailer could be crammed into a relatively large vehicle based on the Shilka to make a much more mobile system would be better... or the Tunguska could be used with its more powerful 30mm cannon with a higher rate of fire of 5,000 rpm to a longer range.

    In fact Pantsir-S1 would add 20km range missiles able to engage even medium altitude flying threats...
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    Post  victor7 Tue Mar 13, 2012 1:55 am

    Iran is mass producing Mesbah and Sair (KS-19 based AAA) but then they have little choice as under sanctions they cannot go around the globe on arms shopping.

    It would be however very tough to find a $2M replacement or even a near replacement for a $25M Tor or $15M Pantsirs. Laughing

    The site below lists Mesbah at $5M each.

    http://s9.invisionfree.com/21c/ar/t9008.htm
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    Post  GarryB Tue Mar 13, 2012 2:12 am

    But that is the point, if there was a cheaper and simpler alternative I am sure they would have tried it.

    It has been reported that the SA-8 was quite successful in dealing with cruise missiles, you don't need some super S-400 missile to deal with such threats and the Russians have kept in service a lot of older systems with suitable upgrades to make them cheaper to keep in service and to improve certain performance characteristics for certain roles.

    The produced so 100,000 SA-1s and still use them today as target missiles that pretend to be modern threats for which they are cheap because they have already been paid for and using them as targets is more useful than simply scrapping them.

    Such upgrades are also useful to develop because there are a lot of countries around the place that use these systems and would also like to upgrade with optical guidance channels and increased target engagement capability.

    Most attacks these days will not be by a single aircraft launching a single weapon so the ability to engage as many separate targets at one time becomes very useful to any SAM battery.

    It would be however very tough to find a $2M replacement or even a near replacement for a $25M Tor or $15M Pantsirs.

    But a KS-19 battery wont be $2M dollars, well it might for the guns only, but you will need something like an 18 gun battery, which means 18 guns and 18 large trucks to tow those guns... the trucks alone will likely cost about 8 million for the 18 trucks alone, plus 2 million for the 18 guns which is being generous, so you basically have the guns and the vehicles that move them around the battlefield, but you also need command and control vehicles, and to be effective you will need a search radar vehicle and a tracking radar vehicle and these vehicles will be several million dollars each.

    You also have to keep in mind the vulnerability of the setup because there is no way a KS-19 could reliably shoot down a HARM, so the setup is vulnerable to SEAD aircraft without jammers and decoys and other systems that add cost and more vehicles.

    Pretty soon you will find the cost of moving such a system will become expensive and slow...

    In comparison the TOR battery will have up to 8 launch vehicles each able to engage about 4 targets each, with their own search and tracking radars, able to hit ARMs like HARM... and be able to fire while moving which is something the KS-19s will never be able to do...

    I think if you do the calculations the price different does not justify the performance difference and the TOR, while certainly expensive to buy is also a very capable self contained system able to work as part of an AD network or as a separate battery, and the low cost of the missiles means it will be cheap to actually use in combat and in peacetime for exercises.
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    Post  ahmedfire Tue Mar 13, 2012 3:28 pm

    The Impact of Russian High Technology Weapons: Transforming the Strategic Balance in Asia

    Surviving the Modern Integrated Air Defence System
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    Post  ahmedfire Tue Mar 13, 2012 3:40 pm


    Anti-Stealth Sensors to Tackle Chinese and Russian LO Designs

    With first flight out of the way, the discussion about China’s new J-20 stealth prototype is switching to the aircraft’s mission (fighter or, more likely, long-range strike), sensors (strike missions would require a high-resolution long-range radar) and communications (which would demand high-speed datalinks and sophisticated integration).

    Conventional radars have only one-half to one-third of the range of an active, electronically scanned array (AESA) radar. Moreover, the movement of a conventional, mechanically-scanned radar antenna provides a tell-tale glint of radio frequency (RF) reflections to enemy aircraft with advanced radars. Such reflections slash at the effectiveness of a stealth airframe. China is known to be pursuing newer radar technology.

    “It’s too early to tell the true status of the Chinese AESA program,” says a Washington-based intelligence official. “We’ve seen lots of press and airshow info on the program, but that doesn’t automatically translate into a robust development or give us an accurate look at where the PRC is as far as fielding one anytime soon.

    “Like the [high-performance] engine, it’ll be a challenge to take the step from older radars to one designed for a 5th-Gen fighter,” he says. “Again, though, the J-20 is just the first or second — depending on whom you believe — prototype into a very long development program.”

    A two-seat J-10 fighter acted as chase plane for the J-20 during the flight

    Photographs show the J-20 flying at shallow angles of attack and with its undercarriage extended. An observer posting minute-by-minute reports of proceedings to the Global Times, apparently from the fence at Avic’s Chengdu facility, said at 12:50:08 local time (04:50:08 GMT) that the aircraft had begun moving, following a second later with “accelerating” and at 12:50:16 “flying”. The landing was reported 18 minutes later.

    Two passenger aircraft, one a 737, arrived at the Chengdu facility less than an hour before the J-20’s takeoff, presumably carrying important officials. The Chengdu plant is part of the Avic combat aircraft division, Avic Defense.

    “Chinese military [sources] are saying that the first test pilot for the new Chinese fighter is Liang Wanjun,” the analyst says. “He has previously test flown the J-7, J-10 and JF-17. Liang has a total of 2,300 flying hours, joined the PLAAF in 1982 and became a test pilot in 1998.

    It is unclear whether the J-20 is a prototype or only a technology demonstrator. Either way, it is not the only program for an advanced combat aircraft.

    The deputy chief of the air force, He Weirong, said in November 2009 that in 2017-19 China would field a “fourth-generation” fighter, which in China means an aircraft of the F-22’s technology level. He was not referring to the J-20, however, because a month later a prominent news report in English quoted the People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) as saying that the 2017-19 fighter would be an improved J-10. It is possible that the 2017-19 fighter is a supercruise version of the J-10 since the Chinese navy has expressed the need for an aircraft that can maintain fuel-efficient, long-distance, supersonic flight, a necessity for keeping enemy forces away from the coast of China.

    The Chengdu J-20 design has struck most analysts and observers as familiar and somewhat different that the Lockheed-Martin F-22 and F-35 as well as the Sukhoi T-50.

    “The J-20 is reminiscent of the Russian MiG 1.42 both in terms of planform, and also with regard to the rear fuselage configuration,” says Douglas Barrie, senior fellow for military aerospace at London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies. “The most obvious difference is the greater forward fuselage shaping as the basis for low observable characteristics, along with the different engine intake configuration. The MiG program was cancelled by the Russian government around 1997.”

    Others note that the planform also has a resemblance to Sweden’s SAAB Viggen.

    Another issue that will continue to surround all stealth designs is how long will current stealth designs offer invulnerability as air defenses adopt even larger and more powerful AESA radars. From the early days of AESA development, a key goal was to build a radar that can detect a very small object like a cruise missile at a distance great enough to target and shoot it down or a larger object like a fighter with a very low observable treatment.

    Airborne detection of stealth aircraft may have already been accomplished in a series of tests done at Edwards AFB, Calif. in the second half of 2009. Those with insight into the research say Lockheed Martin’s CATbird avionics testbed –a 737 that carries the F-35 joint strike fighter’s entire avionics system — engaged a mixed force of F-22s and F-15s and was able to target the F-22s.

    “The F-35 mission systems suite is the most sophisticated and powerful avionics package of any fighter in the world,” said Dan Crowley, Lockheed Martin executive vice president and F-35 program general manager at the time of the tests.

    His clue about the fighter’s anti-stealth capability is in a reference to confronting new, sophisticated, foreign aircraft.

    “The F-35′s avionics include on-board sensors that will enable pilots to strike fixed or moving ground targets in high-threat environments, day or night, in any weather, while simultaneously targeting and eliminating advanced airborne threats,” Crowley said.
    http://justinwrites.wordpress.com/2011/01/11/anti-stealth-sensors-to-tackle-chinese-and-russian-lo-designs/


    Radar system to detect F-22 fighter: development in progress

    Omni-directional radar warning system to alert pilots have been locked pursuit of missile systems, this equipment is very useful. In the early-the-horizon air combat, many targets have been hit by a missile when the machine did not know what happened because it did not receive a warning or simply no set of equipment. If there is omni-directional radar warning and played a role in the target machine to make at least know to avoid, out of action, the measures taken to interfere with, ultra-horizon air combat power will be greatly reduced. Fighting in the development of the Chinese military planes for the F22 when the anti-stealth radar warning system has made significant progress.

    It is said that the old U.S. Air Force F-15, F-16 can not lock on the F-22A alarm led to the F-22A simulated aerial combat 144:0, 241:2 results. The U.S. Navy and Air Force rivalry is, F/A-18 will be able to make an effective warning, said to have thus also simulated air combat "kill" of an F-22A. Therefore think that the old U.S. Navy F-22A found a trick to deal with, they claim that EA-18 is entirely possible to eat set F-22.

    All U.S. Navy does not go into details about whether or bragging, but their reasoning at least plausible explanation. If a Chinese F-7 able to F-22A locking alarm, although it probably cannot be said that you can reverse the situation, but it can increase the air of uncertainty. An F-22 containing the bomb was a few, and contains a number of oil is, if the F-22 in order to eliminate an F -7 to Kuangzhui one or two hundred kilometers, fired three, four missiles, then the combat effectiveness of his is being reduced.

    In fact, the old America's F-22 is also aware of this truth. His passive receivers Alarm System ALR-94 feature is very powerful, APG-77 radar, stealth can be achieved, that is, to track the F-22 occurred in the possibility of radar detection of its position as one in a million.

    This possibility is not without. In this world, no unable to crack the ultimate technology, that does not comply with dialectics. If the F-22A to do this, then he opened up a new era in human history of philosophy, and unfortunately he could not. F-22A on the expression of such self-contradictory, on the one hand, APG-77 is so advanced RF management is almost impossible to detect on the other hand, ALR-94 radar warning receiver is so powerful, completely may miss any radar detection, this paradox explains everything just are no absolutes.

    Judging from the current situation, intercept F-22A's radar signal and make a timely warning, is a national anti-stealth technology development.

    Previously, countries could not find out the radar stealth F-22 to do the tricky and radar technology, which has a relationship to the level of development. This is like World War II, if engaged in less than ENIGMA cipher machine, then the password is difficult to decipher German. Now, the countries active phased array radar technology matures, narrowing the gap with the United States, on this basis, is gradually being worked out related to omni-directional radar warning system. Further, if this radar, the development of omni-directional warning to the United States ALR-94 level, you can combine the optical detection of the F-22 implementation of striking back.

    Alarms for the F-22A technology development to what extent, in all countries are confidential, and that the outside world is not easy to detect. Saw the EA-18G the United States itself has such a capacity, a wind gust of France, Europe's EF-2000 from a technical point of view a very strong indicator. In this regard, the old United States is also a guilty conscience and a variety of models with other countries to confront the exercise, in addition to showing off there thoroughly meaning.

    In this respect, China is also more or less said to have made a little progress. Since the bet made four generations of machines, whether talking about the other Jian Shi B, or a few, I think, have the right F-22A radar warning is a fundamental capability.
    http://china-arsenal.blogspot.com/2009/12/radar-system-to-detect-f-22-fighter-in.html




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    Post  victor7 Tue Mar 13, 2012 4:45 pm

    Thanks for the info, Good read indeed!

    It seems US radar tech is really advanced to that of Russian and Chinese. Russians have to find a way to increase the IRST ranges in parallel to radar tech upgrades.

    Btw, according to one of the above links, Ranets E is another option to kill of PGMs at a distance via EM attack. The PGMs can be EM hardened as a result when the theatre presents Ranets E as a defense.
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    Post  medo Tue Mar 13, 2012 6:24 pm

    I'm sure no one here think, that AA guns could replace long range or medium range or any other SAM in IADS. AA guns could supplement SAMs, not replace them. AA guns could be used as last defense line in defending important object or, if guns are self propelled, to protect ground forces units. With modern FCS with day/night optics and laser range finder, digital ballistic computer and data connected with IADS, AA gun battery doesn't need to use radar, but could work in passive optical mode only and in that way they are immune on any jamming and SEAD missions with anti-radar missiles, because they could not lock anti radar missile on radar which is all the time off.
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    Post  victor7 Tue Mar 13, 2012 6:43 pm

    The counter to non radar defenses is soon coming though: Hypersonic PGMs which are also Stealth. Guess the game of measures and counter measures will keep going on.

    However, for now optical/irst based point defenses for the terminal stage of PGMs is the weapon sought, especially if it can be cheap, mobile and resistant to jamming. Tor/Pantsir are there but not cheap. If a country is not in NATO crosshairs and its immediate enemies do not possess PGMs based air force mechanisms then probably they can bypass point defense in wide range deployment if they cannot afford them. Even Russia will only be having 200 Pantsirs by 2020s.

    Guess detecting stealth at long distances and firing a long range successful missile is ever so important. This will kill off the PGMs and their stealthy taxi ride.
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    Post  GarryB Tue Mar 13, 2012 10:22 pm

    It seems US radar tech is really advanced to that of Russian and Chinese. Russians have to find a way to increase the IRST ranges in parallel to radar tech upgrades.

    That is the mistake the US makes...

    Just because the Russians have developed IRST technology and long range IR guided missiles to go with them doesn't mean they will ignore advances in radar technology.

    The Russians have invested a lot of money into AESA technology, the results of which will likely enter service over the next decade or so, but if it is clear that the AESA in the F-18 can detect F-22s then the AESA in the Mig-35 and the PAK FA should also be able to do the same.

    The S-400 uses a huge AESA BTW...

    I'm sure no one here think, that AA guns could replace long range or medium range or any other SAM in IADS.

    Agreed, but I think to be viable these guns need a mix of guns and missiles to maximise performance and to compliment the features of the gun in terms of minimum range engagement low cost of shells etc.

    If you are going to spend a fortune on sensors and optics then having the combination of range and accuracy of a missile with the blunt force trauma of shells would work best.

    The other alternative is to make them multipurpose guns for direct fire support and AA defence... perhaps a twin 57mm or twin 45mm guns in a turret with vertically mounted 9M100 Morfei IIR lock on after launch missiles with a two way datalink so you can designate targets and launch missiles that get locks while on their way to the targets...

    Later EM guns with enormous increases in muzzle velocities while reducing the ammo to projectiles without rather large propellent shell cases attached will make the vehicle safer in terms of flammable content and greatly increase the amount of on board ammo it can carry...
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    Post  GarryB Tue Mar 13, 2012 10:28 pm

    The counter to non radar defenses is soon coming though: Hypersonic PGMs which are also Stealth.

    Hypersonic means easy long range detection in IR, and if the defences are non radar then stealth is meaningless.

    Even Russia will only be having 200 Pantsirs by 2020s.

    We already established the chance of a NATO attack on Russia is low.

    Besides in addition to Pantsir Russia also has enormous numbers of other systems from the Igla-S, through the new MANPADS called Verba, TOR, BUK, Vityaz, Morfei, and S-400s and S-500s, plus rumours of other systems using laser beam riding guidance perhaps based on SOSNA...

    In fact that would be a good little system... the trailer mounted SOSNA-R, which has 4 ready to launch laser guided two stage missiles with a range of 8km and a single 2A38M twin barrel 30mm cannon firing 2,500rpm.
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    Post  victor7 Wed Mar 14, 2012 12:42 am

    We already established the chance of a NATO attack on Russia is low.

    Chances are low but situations can change very quickly.

    Nukes and ICBMs are only parity match for Russia vrs NATO at this moment.

    Russia has become a fairly characteristics regional power now. But who wants to be superpower when variables do not support the efforts. USSR was only military superpower and that too by extension of resources from other sections of the society.

    Air Force vise US is breathing down Russia's neck. Infact with only 11 Su-35s in inventory, it can be a total slaughter when F22s and F35s are involved.

    S400 detecting stealth at 60 km distance is not impressive, far from safe.

    End of it all, nukes, icmbs, good diplomacy should be further strengthened and may be steal a march in some other exotic area of sciences which bring in force multipliers. dunno

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    Post  GarryB Wed Mar 14, 2012 12:41 pm

    Air Force vise US is breathing down Russia's neck. Infact with only 11 Su-35s in inventory, it can be a total slaughter when F22s and F35s are involved.

    As I have said several times before if there is a conflict between the US and Russia then the result of conventional weapons like tanks and fighter aircraft will be irrelevant.

    There are no Su-35s in service... by the end of this year they will deliver the first Su-35s to the Russian AF and they will go to the training centre at Lipzig (spelling) where they will create flying manuals and field support manuals and tactics for teh rest of the AF to use to operate these new aircraft.

    Next year they will likely deliver another 6 or so and then the following year they will likely make 12 and then in 2015 they will likely make 24 to make 48 delivered by 2015 and hopefully by then they will have a much larger order for the Russian AF to fill and also by then they will be making PAK FA fighters.

    Of course no more F-22s will be made, and if they are not grounded they will almost certainly still be based in the US.

    The F-35 might have entered mass production by the time the Russians start making the PAKFA, but we can't be sure... with the financial problems within NATO it is still possible for the whole program to collapse...


    S400 detecting stealth at 60 km distance is not impressive, far from safe.

    Still really don't know where you got that figure of 60km from but I doubt it is accurate.

    BTW if you got it from Auspower you might want to check it isn't 60NM which would be about 120km BTW.

    End of it all, nukes, icmbs, good diplomacy should be further strengthened and may be steal a march in some other exotic area of sciences which bring in force multipliers.

    The Russians are in the middle of a program to upgrade their conventional military strength, they don't need the capacity to fight NATO, they just need the power to serious fk them up. They already have that with a range of nuclear weapons both strategic and tactical. I personally think that to deal with most of NATO that a wider range of tactical nuclear devices is cheaper and easier to buy and maintain but can also see the sense in updating and restructuring the conventional forces as they are more flexible and useful than the blunt trauma of a nuke.
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    Post  ahmedfire Wed Mar 14, 2012 2:56 pm


    Is Russia safe from F-22 and Β-2? - Page 6 A6203aee6cc9e77c640eadd5d5d79579a8c5cf60_big

    Is American Air Power on the Verge of Collapse?

    The Australian think-tank, Air Power Australia (APA), has released another in their series of techno-strategy papers, this time analysing the advancements in Russian-built Integrated Air Defense Systems (IADS) (http://www.ausairpower.net/APA-2009-02.html), and what it means in global strategic terms for the Americans. The APA report is direct and unequivocal – Russian radar and missiles have improved to the point where the US fleet of F-15s, F-16s and F/A-18s, as well as the planned Joint Strike Fighter (JSF), are not capable of surviving against these systems and unless the Americans build another four hundred-plus F-22s, they will lose the strategic advantage they have held since the end of the Cold War.

    The result will be nations such as China, Iran and Venezuela thumbing their noses at the Americans, knowing that no President will commit to using force in the knowledge that hundreds of jets and pilots would be lost.

    The paper comes a month after APA savaged the JSF (http://www.ausairpower.net/APA-2009-01.html). APA’s Dr. Carlo Kopp, who completed his PhD in radar engineering, simulated the radar signature of the F-35 and showed exactly how vulnerable it will be to the Russian radar systems and missiles that have emerged since the specification for the JSF was drafted over a decade ago. Lockheed-Martin has not publicly disputed Kopp’s findings yet.

    The APA IADS study confirms, in tedious detail, what many of us have suspected or known for some time and what U.S. Air Force generals said repeatedly before being forcefully muzzled by the Bush Administration. That is the simple fact that the globalised economy has given Russian radar and missile designers the technology to close the gap with the US and EU designers in most areas which matter. The Russians have used this technology to digitize many Cold War missile and radar designs, and vastly improve post-Cold War designs. The new S-400 has no equivalent in the West, having outstripped and outgrown the Patriot.

    The Russians obviously spent a lot of time thinking about how the Americans busted the Iraqi IADS in 1991 and the Serbian IADS in 1999. Like chess players, they looked at what the Americans used, where they were going, and figured out how to checkmate the mighty US Air Force.

    Russian industry is now building and marketing short-range missile systems specifically built to shoot down American HARM anti-radar missiles and cruise missiles. They are also putting electronic countermeasures and decoys on their radars to prevent missiles and smart bombs from hitting them. Further, the Russians are currently testing a 400 km range missile, the 40N6, so they can shoot down or drive off American jamming aircraft like the Prowler, Growler and Compass Call. These same missiles can be used to keep the Rivet Joint and AWACS electronic reconnaissance systems out of useful range.

    In strategic terms, the Americans are now in real trouble. China is fielding around 500 Russian Flankers and the latest Russian IADS. Iran is fielding the SA-20, and already has the SA-5, upgraded Chinese SA-2s and, some people claim, the HQ-9s – cloned SA-20s. Further, the US aerial tanker fleet is 40-years-old, and the fighter fleet was mostly built twenty-five years ago – many of the F-15s are now older than the pilots flying them. Iraq and Afghanistan have bankrupted the U.S. defence budget and now Wall Street has bankrupted the U.S. economy.

    The only modern and credible fighter the Americans have is the F-22, and it is the only way they can recapitalise their collapsing fighter fleet in the next decade, with an aircraft which can actually survive the first day of an air war. The F-35 is not an F-22 and can never become an F-22. The F-35 is, first and foremost, an export fighter program.

    We should not mislead ourselves about the seriousness of this matter. Leading American analyst Dr. Richard Hallion, in a recent interview commented: “Today, if NATO wanted to establish an air exclusion zone over Georgia, it could not do so with any aircraft other than the 5th Generation F-22 Raptor...”.

    Who is most to blame for American air power now teetering on the edge of collapse?

    Clearly it has been the Bush Administration, who considered the EU fighter industry a more important enemy to kill than exported Russian Sukhoi fighters and Almaz SAM systems. Rather than sticking with the conservative US Air Force plan for 700+ F-22s, they chopped the number down to 180 aircraft. Why? To force every American service and every American ally to buy into the F-35 monopoly.
    Where does this leave us Europeans? We have, since the start of the Cold War, depended on the Americans to provide the fighter top cover, the SAM suppression and the standoff radar jamming none of us were prepared to fund. We, much like the Americans, overindulged in the peace dividend and downsized several times over.
    The mighty collective NATO air forces are now a pale shadow of what they were in 1989.

    If the Obama Administration decides to follow the Bush Administration policy to terminate F-22 production, the strategic consequences will be just as grave for America’s NATO allies as they will be for America.

    http://defpro.com/daily/details/236/

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    Post  ahmedfire Wed Mar 14, 2012 3:01 pm


    Aguy named planeman in militaryphotos forum made avery informative thread ,it's name was "Defending Mother Russia " , i advise to search and read it .
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    Post  victor7 Wed Mar 14, 2012 5:28 pm

    After USAF which is the second largest and capable air force in the world?
    It is the US Navy. That should give a good reason for US air force to take a breather. The lead that they have is so vast that slight slow down or even decline won't hurt much.

    Vrs Russia their F22s/F35s lose meaning after nuke attack on the base. Vrs rest of the world or rather non-allied world, USAF can win hands down.

    The Russian doctrine is more to do with Air Defense vrs American which is Air Offense. No wonder, other than Washington DC, US does not have SAMs on duty for protection. In the air defense area, I think Russia is still confortable. Take out half a dozen US satellites and their GPS guided bombs go on extended holidays.

    However, Russia has 3 years of time before BMDs start to show up near its western borders and sea coasts. These have to be cancelled out otherwise Russian nuclear deterrent will be 'mostly' meaningless i.e. second strike capability vastly neutralized.

    Wonder Russia should start to put missiles in Cuba, even covertly as these days cruise missiles are merely the size of a shipping container. No need to have missile crisis all over again, unless US can penetrate Cuban intelligence to find them out.
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    Post  GarryB Thu Mar 15, 2012 12:17 am

    The mighty collective NATO air forces are now a pale shadow of what they were in 1989.

    This is just silly.

    In 1989 NATO was 16 nations against the Whole Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact.

    Now NATO includes most of the Warsaw Pact and parts of the former Soviet Union.

    NATO might have reduced spending a little, though the Americans certainly only increased it, but the Russians went through about 3 economic collapses.

    Vrs Russia their F22s/F35s lose meaning after nuke attack on the base. Vrs rest of the world or rather non-allied world, USAF can win hands down.

    Did the USAF win in Somalia? How about Vietnam? Kosovo perhaps?

    I think you overestimate the capability of air power.

    However, Russia has 3 years of time before BMDs start to show up near its western borders and sea coasts. These have to be cancelled out otherwise Russian nuclear deterrent will be 'mostly' meaningless i.e. second strike capability vastly neutralized.

    There is no evidence at all that the US ABM system has any capability against the Russian strategic nuclear deterrent.

    Its ability to deal with decoys is zero because it deals with objects in space, so a balloon will move exactly the same as a warhead covered with a balloon and will have the same radar and thermal signature...

    Wonder Russia should start to put missiles in Cuba, even covertly as these days cruise missiles are merely the size of a shipping container. No need to have missile crisis all over again, unless US can penetrate Cuban intelligence to find them out.

    Russia is bound by an agreement signed after the Cuban missile crisis not to base nuclear weapons in Cuba, but the Kh-101 armed with a conventional warhead with a range of 5,000km could be based there in large numbers perfectly legally...
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    Post  victor7 Thu Mar 15, 2012 1:01 am



    http://stratrisks.com/geostrat/4642
    I think you overestimate the capability of air power.

    http://stratrisks.com/geostrat/4642

    The link above is going to give much boost to winning wars from airpower alone. Especially items #6, 7 and 8. Once air superiority is in place, rest is a matter of good surveillance, it seems.

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