Demon Lord Razgriz wrote: |
between the Rafale & the Super Hornet, I'd have to with the Rafale, but just by a hair.
If you're serious about looking at it from a national perspective, at the very least you'd look up the Wikipedia infoboxes of both aircraft and decide which is a better fit.
If you're all too aware that this is an AU, you'd go with whichever one appeals to the most tacticool aspects.
The Rafale has more development potential, as it was a clean sheet design. While the Super Hornet has a design lineage going back to the F-5! xD
Very not true. Yes, the Super Hornet is ultimately derived from studies spun off from the NA-156 (which ultimately resulted in the T-38/F-5) but at least 80% of the Super Hornet is a CAD-created "clean sheet" design. The remaining 20% is pretty much nose/cockpit shape (I'm unsure if I could even claim structural commonality).
And the nose of the Super Hornet has a better aspect ratio than the Rafale. That means it can fit a bigger radar, if you're in the Kopp Kamp.
Out of interest, why have you included the F-14 on a list of multi-role fighters?
I'm aware they managed to shoe-horn some limited air to ground capability into it, but that was all it ever amounted to.
It could carry PGMs which is about as much air to ground capability as there is anymore. But it's a moot point as the only flyable airframes left are in Iran.
Interesting article. However, I think it's way too far into the theoretical realm with little to no real-world data to back it up to put much credence into it. Also, when picking a carrier-based fighter, one must factor in the threats they're likely to face and where they'll be operating. Building a carrier battle group, that could take on a swarm of Flankers, Bears, and Backfires is just not realistic for most navies. Really, only the US Navy is the only one that could even attempt to do so. Also, as Klag pointed out, the founder of Airpower Australia has very little credibility these days, and he's been heavily critisized in the past for making statements that emperical data simply don't support.
They have also done studies to navalize Typhoon. Since they weren't smart enough to do this back when EAP itself was on the drawing board (or more likely, the other multinational partners objected to it on costs grounds, which
was smart and wise of them) they ultimately determined that it was far better to sign up on the F-35 program, or if worst came to worst, buy Super Hornets or even Rafales.
BTW, Rafale is about as close as you're going to get to an "export-optimized designed" carrier aircraft as you're going to get that's actually flying, and most of that is a consequence of being a sister design to the land-based version, which was designed for export potential. There is only one nation on Earth that has a carrier but not an indigenous carrier aircraft, and that's Brazil (India has Tejas, mind you).
That is an option, however, I think it's a very limited one since all you could get is A-D model hornets, and most navies and air forces don't get rid of their planes until there's virtually no life left in them.
A-D Hornets are still quite capable especially for a smaller airforce, and there are some remaining (though I already noted they are relatively few) - but I also just remember that they'd honestly be far more useful if they remained ground-based. You'd wear them out quickly if you launched them from a carrier. As travestytrav25 points out in the subsequent paragraph, most of these will have been land-based to begin with.