may18 wrote:trouble is though (correct me if im wrong)
the range is poor, its non stealth, and its strike capabilities are very questionable, basically the RAF who have had extra software to enable an a t g role, but its not exactly what the plane was designed for (its a cold war interceptor). It cant supercruise without reheat, and as the f-22 can launch from 100 miles away, it would be downed before it even saw the f-22.
Main gripe btw, is the pathetic range, i guess its because it was origonally envisioned as a short range interceptor?..for the cold war scenarios
Seems that figures for the Typhhon are pretty readily available, inclusing all important mission profile:-
Ground attack : lo-lo-lo 325 nm (601 km)
Ground attack : hi-lo-hi 750 nm (1389 km)
Air combat : 10 minute loiter at dest. 750 nm (1389 km)
Air combat : 3 hour CAP 100 nm (185 km)
Ferry range (2 External Tanks) 2000 nm (3706 km)
Everyone else seems to be holding their cards pretty close to their chests! Regardless of this, in terms of it's size and mission, these figures really aren't pathetic at all. And this is just tranche-1, if later tranches get the conformal tanks, look for significant increase with minimal drag penalties.
Where do you get your info on supercruise? I've never seen anything official to suggest that the Typhoon can't supercruise, outside of some Lockheed Martin disagreement on what constitutes "supercruise". There is no doubt that in terms of outright performance the F-22 is the supercruiser to match, but Typhoon is perfectly capable of it, LM just insist on moving their own goalposts every time someone else gets near them. Figure i Have seen for Typhoon supercruise is mach 1.3/4. Not too shabby! BTW May, if an aircraft has to have reheat engaged to be supersonic, by definition it isn't supercruising! Another small bone of contention is that some aircraft need to use reheat to break the high-drag transonic regime, but past that can come out of reheat and cruise on dry thrust happily. LM would have you believe again that this isn't true supercruise.
Thus by their definition the best supercruiser of the lot (Concorde!) isn't really supercruising because it used reheat to break the barrier. They're talking rubbish of course!
Stealthy? It was never designed to be. It has certain low observable characteristics from certain aspects (notably the front) which means that in a normal engagement, even with F-22 as the opponent (as if!) it stands a pretty good chance of getting close. The USAF has, so far, decided to stick with AMRAAM for F-22. . what's the use of detection at 100M if you have to close another 40 before you are in the launch parameters of your primary weapon? You better be pretty sure that the other guy with CAPTOR or AMSAR and Meteor (Typhoon and Rafale in this case) really *can't* detect you from 70 miles, or you're playing a very dangerous endgame against a fast, maneouvrable ramjet powered long range AAM with high terminal energy for maneouvring and possible re-engagement. Your odds just shortened somewhat. . .
As for limited strike capabilities. . well, initial Tranche-1 aircraft yes, are optimisied for AA use (as with the Rafale), but it's worth noting that even with the change in designation to F/A-22 the Raptor has extremely limited strike capabilities as a baseline model. With the use of the 1760 databus on the Typhoon adding more modes and weapons on a rolling programme shouldn't be a big issue. . .it just needs time. I think a twin seater Typhoon with AMSAR, next generation targetting and PGMs (Paveway IV, Storm Shadow) and conformal tanks will be a Strike Eagle killer. But that's in the future (as it is for the Rafale and F/A-22)
The Tornado F.3 was a cold war interceptor. . the Typhoon (or ACA as it was then, back in the halcyon days of 1982!) was designed from the get go as a *fighter*. It may be ten years late due to politics (and/or the Germans) but we're getting a world class aircraft and no mistake. . .