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We really need to resurrect the NGAD & F/A-XX speculation thread or move some of these to the Possible Configuration thread.
We are dealing with beancounters here remember.It is ridiculous. How much does software weigh??
Can you gib a link for this?
No we are not. We are dealing with forum members trying to create useless, ridiculous measures.We are dealing with beancounters here remember.
Given the life cycle of other US made, air launched munitions like the AIM-9 or AIM-120, I'd say the AGM-158 will be around up into the 2050s.Regarding the F/A-XX, a 4 JASSM load in the IWB might require a flying wing, especially considering the constraints of carrier operations. Why plan around JASSM anyway since it will probably be replaced in the 2030s with a different form factor?
The plan was to spend $439 MM in FY26 for NGAP/Adv. Engine Development. $330 would be a $100 MM reduction. But we don't know how much NGAP funding is in the reconciliation bill and how much of that gets attributed to the program's FY26 funding. It could all be wash..It could also mean that the NGAP program has been adjusted post NGAD source selection and NGAD delays..perhaps to shave some schedule and make a selection earlier..Wait for the J books.For example, the Air Force appears to be slowing funding for next-generation engine technologies: The Next Generation Adaptive Propulsion program, which was originally intended to design a powerplant to fly in the F-47, would see its funding fall to $330.2 million.
I second the motion.We really need to resurrect the NGAD & F/A-XX speculation thread or move some of these to the Possible Configuration thread.
It is open, people just not using it.We really need to resurrect the NGAD & F/A-XX speculation thread or move some of these to the Possible Configuration thread.
I thought ITEP got cancelled.what a randomly positive article cutting across ITEP, NGAP and TBCC-RDEs. nerd Christmas in June
did you read the article? its almost fantastically positive. itep back from the dead, but implemented faster. skipping steps with xa102.I thought ITEP got cancelled.
If the AF agrees to skip development steps on the GE XA102, P&W will be allowed to skip the same steps on the XA103.did you read the article? its almost fantastically positive. itep back from the dead, but implemented faster. skipping steps with xa102.
You mean this part? "company officials said that though the Army halted work on the T901 engine,"did you read the article? its almost fantastically positive. itep back from the dead, but implemented faster. skipping steps with xa102.
The ITEP is not yet back on the table. They said the army leadership appears to be more open this time so they thought if they could accelerate the development of ITEP, it would be attractive enough to the army to put it back on the table.itep back from the dead
No, this part: "(The House appropriations committee earmarked $175 million for ITEP in its version of the FY26 budget.)"You mean this part? "company officials said that though the Army halted work on the T901 engine,"
Latest Exhibit: Digital Engineering has already become a Crutch.The evidence I'm aware of is that "digital engineering" appears to make development programmes of similar difficulty go slower than when we used paper and slide rules. It does seem to reduce technical risks though.
Experience of the individuals and team seems the key thing. Knowing what are problems and how to address them translates to both avoiding these in future, and gives confidence in addressing new problems.
If the AF agrees to skip development steps on the GE XA102, P&W will be allowed to skip the same steps on the XA103.
I bet that discovery led to some impressive use of profanity... And an absolutely disgusting amount of extra testing to figure out.Any time you leave out some of the testing, it increases risk. If you are not ignoring previous lessons learned, and your design /simulation tools, those risk increases can be tolerable.
One example is individual compressor blades in a disk slots, vs integrally bladed disks. With separate blades, you are mostly concerned with the aero, mechanical, and vibratory characteristics of that individual blade. However, with integrally bladed disks, the vibratory response of each blade can be slightly different and can effect the vibratory response of the all the other blades of that disk and the disk itself, since there is no damping at the blade to disk attachment. We have seen cracking on a disk feature that is driven by the vibratory response of the blades, and have broken blades due to blade to blade vibratory coupling. Trimming of a corner of specific blades can stop the resonant response of the whole system. There are many advantages to integrally bladed disks, but they can also add a whole lot of challenges if there is insufficient testing.
Latest Exhibit: Digital Engineering has already become a Crutch.
When you gain the ability to naval gaze that's what you do.I am not an engineer, but something that always bothered me with the "digital engineering" concept was that US (and every other country) built dozens of aircraft types without ever using computers. If you look at the post-World War II era the US was designing dozens of aircraft and producing them in volume without the aid of computers. I think digital engineering is just used as an excuse because nobody really wants to admit that the US has lost most of its talent and industrial base and is no longer capable of designing and building at the pace and scale they could in the past.
Because a century series aircraft didn't need the kind of wiring, electronics and sensor integration a modern fighter needs. Because post WWII planes weren't fly-by-wire and even F-14s, 15s, and 16s didn't have as complex of subsystems that a modern 5th or 6th gen fighter does. Because cold war era aircraft didn't exactly have the level automation modern aircraft do either.I am not an engineer, but something that always bothered me with the "digital engineering" concept was that US (and every other country) built dozens of aircraft types without ever using computers. If you look at the post-World War II era the US was designing dozens of aircraft and producing them in volume without the aid of computers.
You think the US is the only one using digital engineering? You think China with its strong manufacturing and designing capability isn't using "digital engineering"?I think digital engineering is just used as an excuse because nobody really wants to admit that the US has lost most of its talent and industrial base and is no longer capable of designing and building at the pace and scale they could in the past.
While I agree with the complexity issue I think, for me anyway, I could live with lower numbers and/or longer design cycles if they could meet the already extended design development deployment times with “working weapon systems”Because a century series aircraft didn't need the kind of wiring, electronics and sensor integration a modern fighter needs. Because post WWII planes weren't fly-by-wire and even F-14s, 15s, and 16s didn't have as complex of subsystems that a modern 5th or 6th gen fighter does. Because cold war era aircraft didn't exactly have the level automation modern aircraft do either.
You can't possibly expect to compare two things when they are of wholly different complexities.
You think the US is the only one using digital engineering? You think China with its strong manufacturing and designing capability isn't using "digital engineering"?
Like AI, digital engineering is a tool. It's not going to guarantee you don't make catastrophic mistakes. Whether someone uses this technology or not has little bearing on the pace, scale or capability of the industrial base.
Right now, the pace of our aerospace programs isn't indicative of a lack of talent, ability or capacity. If you want examples of what lack of talent, ability and capacity does look like, have a look at any Indian aerospace program, or have a look at the current state of shipbuilding.
Personal opinion but one thing to consider is the risk appetite of that generation. Accidents and death were a feature of test programs in a way that just isn't acceptable today by any of the parties, Govt, OEM, public etc.I am not an engineer, but something that always bothered me with the "digital engineering" concept was that US (and every other country) built dozens of aircraft types without ever using computers. If you look at the post-World War II era the US was designing dozens of aircraft and producing them in volume without the aid of computers. I think digital engineering is just used as an excuse because nobody really wants to admit that the US has lost most of its talent and industrial base and is no longer capable of designing and building at the pace and scale they could in the past.
I am not an engineer, but something that always bothered me with the "digital engineering" concept was that US (and every other country) built dozens of aircraft types without ever using computers. If you look at the post-World War II era the US was designing dozens of aircraft and producing them in volume without the aid of computers. I think digital engineering is just used as an excuse because nobody really wants to admit that the US has lost most of its talent and industrial base and is no longer capable of designing and building at the pace and scale they could in the past.
Personal opinion but one thing to consider is the risk appetite of that generation. Accidents and death were a feature of test programs in a way that just isn't acceptable today by any of the parties, Govt, OEM, public etc.
I'm not saying accidents and deaths were ever acceptable but the people running those programs, from test pilots to Govt to program managers, all pushed the boundaries in ways that are not done today, including flying earlier than programs would today with significant less testing. You only have to read the biographies from that era to comprehend what they were willing to do compared to what is done today.Accidents and deaths were never accepted, and often led among other factors to cancelations of some programs. We now just have solid ways to avoid such outcomes and improved safety standards written with the blood of people that couldn't enjoy these same standards they helped to create in the past.
I understand where you are coming from, but how do we know its specifically these tools that cause us to not meet your goals? When was the last aircraft that was designed the old fashioned way? and how would we know how long a modern 6th gen aircraft designed the old fashioned way would take? We don't really have comparable benchmarks here to measure up against.When you constantly are “boasting” of these incredibly efficient computer/paperless systems yet never meet your targets the very strong defense advocates, like myself, are like what’s the point it seems to be getting worse not better.
Well see - that's what I mean. Digital engineering testing out many different configurations and allow greater optimization to happen across the system and thats a good thing. But are we using it to do optimization or are we using it to gold plate things? Or like Emobirb said are we trusting DE when we should be trusting and verifying too? The problem isn't on relying on digital engineering, but in the way we use the tools and run our programs.Take Sentinel, NG bragged how they could run through 10,000 iterations to design the “perfect ICBM” and then last week announce two year (TWO YEAR!!!) delay to first flight. Seriously?
Yes but the latest delay is the actual flight test of the missile nothing to do with the silos or launch infrastructure.I'm not familiar with the sentinel program, but I thought that it was because now we need new silos for the missiles (which who would have thought that decades old silos and facilities just arent' going to accomodate a modernized system very well).
Because a century series aircraft didn't need the kind of wiring, electronics and sensor integration a modern fighter needs. Because post WWII planes weren't fly-by-wire and even F-14s, 15s, and 16s didn't have as complex of subsystems that a modern 5th or 6th gen fighter does. Because cold war era aircraft didn't exactly have the level automation modern aircraft do either.
One of the big advantages that the Chinese have is that their labor force is paid less than a third of what is paid in the US and they have the same capability. I was just through this on another project.This argument doesn't make any sense. Just look at smartphones. They have gotten exponentially more complex in terms of both hardware and software yet are produced in huge volume. Apple doesn't introduce a new iPhone expecting to produce less than the previous version because it has a better screen, more powerful processor, IR face scanning, etc.
The post-World War II US population was far more geared to manufacturing and because of World War II was very experienced in manufacturing weapon systems. This is what gave them the ability to design numerous aircraft, ships, nuclear bombs, ICBMs, Apollo Program, etc all simultaneously and at a massive scale. That talent base doesn't exist today in the US and digital engineering isn't going to make up for that.
I am sure China uses digital engineering as well, but guess what? They have a massive talent pool of machinists, engineers, assembly line workers, etc that allows them to produce at a rapid pace and at scale.
Yeah, I guess, but just because they are paid less doesn't mean they are less knowledgeable or skilled. According to The Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), in 2023 China accounted for 29% of world manufacturing output in value added terms and 35% in gross terms. Eight of the top ten research institutions in are in China according to the Nature Index and they lead over all in research produced.One of the big advantages that the Chinese have is that their labor force is paid less than a third of what is paid in the US and they have the same capability. I was just through this on another project.
They also don't kill people when the face scanning fails to work.This argument doesn't make any sense. Just look at smartphones. They have gotten exponentially more complex in terms of both hardware and software yet are produced in huge volume. Apple doesn't introduce a new iPhone expecting to produce less than the previous version because it has a better screen, more powerful processor, IR face scanning, etc.
Sorry how is a smart phone production remotely comparable to a fighter jet in any way shape or form?This argument doesn't make any sense. Just look at smartphones. They have gotten exponentially more complex in terms of both hardware and software yet are produced in huge volume. Apple doesn't introduce a new iPhone expecting to produce less than the previous version because it has a better screen, more powerful processor, IR face scanning, etc.
I do agree that to some extent our woes are caused by a a smaller workforce, but this is just... outlandish and extreme conclusion to draw. You seem to have conveniently forgotten that the post WWII america also had an entire world war's worth of wartime economy to build a workforce so adept at making weapons. We (thankfully) haven't had that kind of war time economy since then. Naturally, the pool of people to draw on will dwindle. Selling our soul to China certainly didn't help either.That talent base doesn't exist today in the US and digital engineering isn't going to make up for that.
That large pool of x y and z professionals very well does make their unit price cheaper, but even so, their 5th gen fighter fleets and projected 6th gen fighter fleets aren't going to be anywhere close to cold war inventories of staple fighters at the time.I am sure China uses digital engineering as well, but guess what? They have a massive talent pool of machinists, engineers, assembly line workers, etc that allows them to produce at a rapid pace and at scale.
Really? Do you know that for a fact?
- It certainly is a less demanding task than it was for Boeing to redesign the nacelles back in 1958 (using slide rules, pencils, and paper) for the TF33 turbofan/B-52H upgrade from the J57 turbojet/B-52G.