Which varient? The VTOL or the conventional fixed wing one?
And how late is it?
Awesome news! Can't wait till the JSF takes to operational status. Get rid of the damned Bugs already ;D
Which varient? The VTOL or the conventional fixed wing one?
And how late is it?
The VTOL will be years late and over budget.
Harrier = KISS. Keep it simple stupid. One butterfly valve for puffer duct bleed, 4 nozzles connected by bike chains and drive shafts and a air motor to drive it. All mechanical.
JSF, more doors to open for VTOL than an advent calender.
Matt
Which varient? The VTOL or the conventional fixed wing one?
And how late is it?
The VTOL will be years late and over budget.
Harrier = KISS. Keep it simple stupid. One butterfly valve for puffer duct bleed, 4 nozzles connected by bike chains and drive shafts and a air motor to drive it. All mechanical.
JSF, more doors to open for VTOL than an advent calender.
Matt
Which varient? The VTOL or the conventional fixed wing one?
And how late is it?
The VTOL will be years late and over budget.
Harrier = KISS. Keep it simple stupid. One butterfly valve for puffer duct bleed, 4 nozzles connected by bike chains and drive shafts and a air motor to drive it. All mechanical.
JSF, more doors to open for VTOL than an advent calender.
Matt
Which varient? The VTOL or the conventional fixed wing one?
And how late is it?
The VTOL will be years late and over budget.
Harrier = KISS. Keep it simple stupid. One butterfly valve for puffer duct bleed, 4 nozzles connected by bike chains and drive shafts and a air motor to drive it. All mechanical.
JSF, more doors to open for VTOL than an advent calender.
Matt
Based on that logic, digital fly-by-wire and redundant systems should be an abject failure. All we need is a set of cables and brute strength to operate those flying surfaces on high performance aircraft.
You can use hydraulics instead of cables if your not strong enough. Having said, just put some pulleys on the cable.
I think the point was that the JSF is over complicating the whole hovering thing.
If they were seeking to achieve the same level of performance and/or combat efficiency/survivability as Harrier, I would agree with that. But I suspect assumptions are being made to conclude that JSF is overcomplicating things.
And on that same notion, digital fly-by-wire offers tremendous advantages over a hydraulics/cable solution. There's no comparison.
Which varient? The VTOL or the conventional fixed wing one?
And how late is it?
The VTOL will be years late and over budget.
Harrier = KISS. Keep it simple stupid. One butterfly valve for puffer duct bleed, 4 nozzles connected by bike chains and drive shafts and a air motor to drive it. All mechanical.
JSF, more doors to open for VTOL than an advent calender.
Matt
Based on that logic, digital fly-by-wire and redundant systems should be an abject failure. All we need is a set of cables and brute strength to operate those flying surfaces on high performance aircraft.
You can use hydraulics instead of cables if your not strong enough. Having said, just put some pulleys on the cable.
I think the point was that the JSF is over complicating the whole hovering thing.
If they were seeking to achieve the same level of performance and/or combat efficiency/survivability as Harrier, I would agree with that. But I suspect assumptions are being made to conclude that JSF is overcomplicating things.
And on that same notion, digital fly-by-wire offers tremendous advantages over a hydraulics/cable solution. There's no comparison.
You are right there is no comparison, but the problem with fly by wire is that designers start to get clever when designing these things. My point was when you look at the JSF VTOL, how complicated it is and how simple the Harrier is, that is what counts in combat. If our aircraft went to a war where the other side actually put a good defence, then the buzz word is going to be battle damage repair. In the civil sector I have spend days troubleshooting fly by wire snags. That is a luxury you will not have in war. It seems that every time a new aircraft is produced we are extolling its attack virtues and how stealthy it is, but at the end of the day it is not bullet proof and never will be. It just seems that fly by wire is only going to make BDR just that much more difficult.
Matt
Matt
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