All valid thoughts. I'll reply to a few specific points, again, just as food for thought, and having had the benefit of 20:20 hindsight from my own experience!

A couple are for clarification.
If it is 2 years until the first intake, how long until the next intake?
That is due to the current freeze on pilot recruitment, due to the redundancy of 170 student pilots. After that, it is expected the system will return to normal (ie, be an ongoing through put).

I am 18.5 years old now. I would be 20.5 when their estimated time came around, and I would be 22.5 if I went to university. The RAF have a max age limit for IOT start date of 25 at the moment for pilots. It is not a large window of opportunity.
So going to uni potentially could shorten that window?
If I went to university, I would apply to the UAS, and if that was succesful, that could earn me a little of dollar, but it would negate the need to go for a PPL (which still isn't essential, but it is something nice to have)
Yep, you'll get some flying - better flying than you would with a PPL. It can also count towards the PPL to, although now you just about get the hours for an NPPL. You'd probably break even financially with the UAS. The cash they give you will cover the beer money, socialising etc.

It's great fun though.
If I go to university, I remain a lot more employable if my master plan fails. The BA scholarship would be a viable option too! The RAF medic chap I spoke to at Cosford said that I should look for transport pilot, as an ATPL conversion and civil flying after my service is a strong possibility.
Don't tell recruitment you want to be a multis pilot - and definately don't say that's what a medic said

! I did that (how prophetic) - they want you to aim for the top - or at least pretend to. As for Uni as a back up plan; maybe at the moment it has a little more validity due to the 2 year gap, but, that said, what's stopping you going to uni later on, if a direct RAF route didn't work out? You probably go with some extra cash too. Just a thought.

I would like to go to the right university, for sure. This one seems to press all the buttons. They have a good connection with the Defence Technical Undergraduate Scheme (which could mean bursaries) and from their website, the UAS takes 100 applications and enrols 30-40 of those each year. Reasonable odds.
DTUS, IIRC, recruits/sponsors engineering candidates. Sponsorship for aircrew is very rare these days. As for the UAS, I suspect BUAS has more than 100 applicants per year. They may interview that many, but initial candidates are probably double or treble that. In the smaller UAS I was involved with, I think it was about 200/20, so 1 in 10.
[quote]It's incredibly difficult to plan so far in ahead. Particularly in this economic and political state. Jobs are not required, so you really do have to tick every single box. I may miss one opportunity at some point, but by and large I think I am headed in the right direction into an aviation career and towards a pilot for whichever airline