este hilo va especialmente dirigido al 'Ayatollah del radar en banda X' y a sus acólitos

Que empiece la lucha...

The SPY-1D(V) radar upgrade is the newest improvement to the SPY-1D. The SPY-lD( V) littoral radar upgrade will supersede the SPY-1D in new-construction ships beginning in FY 1998, and will deploy in DDG 51 Flight IIA ships starting in approximately 2003. The third variant of this radar, known as the Littoral Warfare Radar, will improve the radar's capability against low-altitude, reduced radar cross-section targets in heavy clutter environments and in the presence of intense electronic countermeasures. The SPY-1D radar system is the multi-function, phased-array, three-dimensional (range, altitude, and bearing) radar which conducts search, automatic detection, and tracking of air and surface targets. The SPY-1D also provides mid-course guidance for the SM-2 missile, and has also demonstrated a capability to track theater ballistic missiles. The AN/SPY-1D(V), under development for installation in some Flight IIA ships, is an improved system with better performance against targets in clutter, additional moving target indicator (MTI) waveforms, and greater ability to counter deceptive Electronic Attack measures.
The F-22's combat configuration is "clean", that is, with all armament carried internally and with no external stores. This is an important factor in the F-22's stealth characteristics, and it improves the fighter's aerodynamics by dramatically reducing drag, which, in turn, improves the F-22's range. The F-22 has four under wing hardpoints, each capable of carrying 5,000 pounds. A single pylon design, which features forward and aft sway braces, an aft pivot, electrical connections, and fuel and air connections, is used. Either a 600-gallon fuel tank or two LAU-128/A missile launchers can be attached to the bottom of the pylon, depending on the mission. There are two basic external configurations for the F-22:
Four 600 gallon fuel tanks, no external weapons: This configuration is used when the aircraft is being ferried and extra range is needed. A BRU-47/A rack is used on each pylon to hold the external tanks.
Two 600 gallon fuel tanks, four missiles: This configuration is used after air dominance in a battle area has been secured, and extra loiter time and firepower is required for Combat Air Patrol (CAP). The external fuel tanks, held by a BRU-47/A rack are carried on the inboard stations, while a pylon fitted with two LAU-128/A rail launchers is fitted to each of the outboard stations.
Mildran escribió:Yo no soy un Ayatollah (ese es Eco_tango seguro) , yo solo soy un pobre mullá
Y ahora dispararé mis SM-2
1º) Es un enfrentamiento Absurdo
2º) El F-22 no tiene en la actualidad (ni en principio está prevista su integración de momento) armamento antibuque, con lo que no tiene nada que lanzarle, salvo que decida lanzarle un JDAM, pero para acercarse a menos de 30 km de un burke es tener tres pares.
3º) En el futuro podrá llevar misiles antibuque, pero deberá hacerlo en los pilones externo, con lo que va a cantar un poquito.
Este es el 1er capítulo.
EW3 12/26/2006 9:37:04 PM
Yimmy, the Aegis is an easy thermal target at night. Not sure what the F-22 has for IR sensors but it would be easy to find and track the ship. (The SDB II is supposed to have IR sensors when it comes out) You are right about the Aegis as having excellent ESM sensors and it would be an interesting match against an LPI radar on the F-22. The hardest thing I think would be keeping the Aegis in EMCON. Skippers just hate sailing around at night without radar.
dj - you are right about the SDB, it does seem a bit puny. But they can arry 8 of them. If they achieve 6 hits then they will likely hit something critical. If that doesn't sink your boat then the F-22 can carry two GBU-32 1000pounders (thats a 8000 quarter pounders at McDonalds!) Two 1000lb bombs amidships will likely put the Aegis off of it's mission. May not sink her, but will put the hurt on her. Imagine a 1000pound bomb in the aft VLS cells by the engine room.
Ships are basically very vulnerable targets, loaded with places like fuel bunkers, ammo lockers, VLS cells etc.
french stratege 1/25/2007 8:19:55 PM
The probleme is not the aircraft but amunition.Any modern fighter can take an aegis ship with modern antiship missiles with the right numbers.And an Aegis ship would detect the F22 at 50 km as it pop up from horizon but could not shot it before launch its weapons and rego low level masked by horizon.
The Aegis ship could still shoot the weapons and a F22 do not carry antiship stealth supersonic missiles.
If it would carry 2 harpoon (not possible) in bay, 2 missiles are not enough to saturate defense unless a failure of system.
The F22 can not destroy the ship and the ship can not destroy the F22.
bosqui escribió:Yimmy, the Aegis is an easy thermal target at night. Not sure what the F-22 has for IR sensors but it would be easy to find and track the ship. (The SDB II is supposed to have IR sensors when it comes out)
The weapon is scheduled to be in the hands of the warfighter for the first time in September 2006. Initial integration of the SDB is with the F-15E. Follow-on integration may occur with the F/A-22, F-35, UCAV, F-16 (Block 30/40/50), F-117, A-10, MQ-9, B-1, B-2, and the B-52. The F-22A is going to be the "day one" weapon system in the future. Right now it can only carry two, 1,000 pound Joint Direct Attack Munitions, but with small diameter bomb it will be able to carry eight. That's a four-fold increase and will improve the effectiveness of the aircraft in the early hours of a conflict. The B-2 is set to carry between 64 and 192-216 SDBs on one mission.
bosqui escribió:¿...Y esta munición está indicada para buques de guerra?
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