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GCAP's a trilateral project, the UK can't unilaterally add partners.If the UK actually welcomed Germany and Spain into the program, that’d be a real slap in the face for Japan.
GCAP's a trilateral project, the UK can't unilaterally add partners.If the UK actually welcomed Germany and Spain into the program, that’d be a real slap in the face for Japan.
Does the UK really have the chops to run GCAP and FCAS in parallel?![]()
Spain’s Sánchez backs Germany in FCAS fighter jet dispute with France | Euractiv
France, Germany and Spain are partners in the €100 billion fighter jet programme, though Spain and its lead contractor Indra have so far stayed out of the Franco-German disputewww.euractiv.com
Several media reports that Germany and Spain are considering asking Sweden or the UK to join as FCAS partners to replace France.
Sweden would be an outstanding potential partner![]()
Spain’s Sánchez backs Germany in FCAS fighter jet dispute with France | Euractiv
France, Germany and Spain are partners in the €100 billion fighter jet programme, though Spain and its lead contractor Indra have so far stayed out of the Franco-German disputewww.euractiv.com
Several media reports that Germany and Spain are considering asking Sweden or the UK to join as FCAS partners to replace France.
That's something I've said all along. With this amount of bickering and acrimony ever since the start of the project, is there any conceivable way that the partnership would hold up until 2040 and beyond?“Frankly, if Germany wants to leave, let it leave. We know how to do this. France has the teams, the [technological] building blocks, the experience as an integrator… We’re not going to spend five more years bickering over every comma. Given the atmosphere today, imagine tomorrow. Better to cut cleanly now,” a French industry source close to the matter told us, speaking on condition of anonymity.
I suspect they'd prefer to go through RR-Deutschland!For RR that's easy could go through MTU
Exactly this. I’m really scratching my head and trying to understand what leverage Germany thinks it has.Cutting Airbus a slice of the GCAP action would seem to be a bridge too far. Nobody would be happy with the slither of workshare left once the pie is redistributed and why should they get a prime slice of the action when the Japanese industry, BAE and Leonardo have been doing all the hard yards so far?
Saab and Airbus sounds cool, but as everyone says "France can't fund it alone", could Sweden stump up the kind of cash necessary to replace France?
Dassault and the DGA have both denied this so we should stop repeating this lie. It’s a straw man argument that‘s been leaked to the press in Germany as a negotiating tactic to make Dassault look greedy and a bad partner.if Dassault wont back down on its demand of an 80% workshare
The engine will be an issue without Safran ... maybe they could simply buy the GCAP engine ?
Dassault and the DGA have both denied this so we should stop repeating this lie. It’s a straw man argument that‘s been leaked to the press in Germany as a negotiating tactic to make Dassault look greedy and a bad partner.
The reality is that Dassault has asked for final *decision rights* as the design lead on NGF, not workshare, which will still be allocated to each country per the original agreement.
I suspect they'd prefer to go through RR-Deutschland!
It offers money wich consdering the uk (and to a lesser extent Japan's) economic problems over the last few years would probably convince a lot of politicians.I agree, I don't really see the motivation for any of the GCAP countries (UK, Japan, Italy) to join another program unless it offers something significantly different, such as a smaller lighter aircraft, an advance trainer, a bomber, etc.
Germany (in particular), Sweden and Spain (in addition to Belgium perhaps) would be more than able to get the necessary funds. Airbus, Saab and MTU at large are certainly capable enough together to do the heavy lifting with regards to research and development.Saab and Airbus sounds cool, but as everyone says "France can't fund it alone", could Sweden stump up the kind of cash necessary to replace France?
France couldn't develop a jet on it's own that would warrant being considered a generational leap over the current crop of 5th generation jets. Dassault could probably pull off a 5th Gen fighter + CCA though. Which may be better for everyone involved, including France tbh.So what will happen to France in that case design their own fighter as they did with Rafale? I could see that as a possibility no matter the cost, that would leave Europe having no less than three 6th Generation fighters to compete against each other in terms of oversees sales.
Hmm why not? Do you mean that Dassault doesn't have the technical know-how (but Airbus DS, Airbus ES and Saab do)?France couldn't develop a jet on it's own that would warrant being considered a generational leap over the current crop of 5th generation jets.
Why?France couldn't develop a jet on it's own that would warrant being considered a generational leap over the current crop of 5th generation jets.
Looking at NGAD and F/A-XX (run on a much larger budget by far more capable players in the aerospace business with decades of experience with design, development and manufacturing of low observable and advanced aircraft) it does in fact take untold billions. It does take untold billions to even conclude the R&D portion of a project of such scale. And then it takes time on top of that. And with something like GCAP and then a rival FCAS on top of that, time isn't something a French indigenous development would have in such a competitive environment.Why?
Current crop was born around problem 2000(either well before or right after).
Making something substantially different doesn't take untold billions, it takes applying solutions from wider industry and adjusting to shifting landscape of war.
Especially since significant part of necessary capabilities comes in due course(as rafale development) anyway..m
This is what y say time ago FCAS is born dead, France is in a economic and politic crisis and partners start to lose patience. French president is unable to take big decision on anything so FCAS will go in new horizon. This is sad for the French Air Force who will lose credibility in the futur Rafale, is a plane of the end of eighties I dont see it facing the new 6 th gen fighters of China and Russia in a near futur.![]()
Spain’s Sánchez backs Germany in FCAS fighter jet dispute with France | Euractiv
France, Germany and Spain are partners in the €100 billion fighter jet programme, though Spain and its lead contractor Indra have so far stayed out of the Franco-German disputewww.euractiv.com
Several media reports that Germany and Spain are considering asking Sweden or the UK to join as FCAS partners to replace France.
Mostly funds. I think Dassault could do the necessary research and development to gain access to the technologies and technological maturity required for something that's a generational leap.Hmm why not? Do you mean that Dassault doesn't have the technical know-how (but Airbus DS, Airbus ES and Saab do)?
Or do you mean that France will be unable to fund the R&D on its own?
PAK DP is on roughly the same timeline as FCAS, a 2040s aircraft. Another reason why I somewhat question the necessity for a genuine 6th generation fighter for continental Europe (while it makes sense for the UK and Japan, which have to face the PLAAF and PLAN in the Pacific).This is what y say time ago FCAS is born dead, France is in a economic and politic crisis and partners start to lose patience. French president is unable to take big decision on anything so FCAS will go in new horizon. This is sad for the French Air Force who will lose credibility in the futur Rafale, is a plane of the end of eighties I dont see it facing the new 6 th gen fighters of China and Russia in a near futur.
Not a lot of historical evidence to support your point of view IMHO.Mostly funds. I think Dassault could do the necessary research and development to gain access to the technologies and technological maturity required for something that's a generational leap.
But...
That takes further funding and also eats several years of time.
At this point, the question is outright who's milking whom and for what.Looking at NGAD and F/A-XX (run on a much larger budget by far more capable players in the aerospace business with decades of experience with design, development and manufacturing of low observable and advanced aircraft) it does in fact take untold billions. It does take untold billions to even conclude the R&D portion of a project of such scale. And then it takes time on top of that.
Everything here becomes moot, when we compare previous such competition - aka eurofighter(the commitee fighter), saab(the sensible, aka loser in any competitive setting), and rafale(the overambitious, should've continued with mirage). May even throw in J-10 and F-18E, as they're contemporaries from weapons market.And with something like GCAP and then a rival FCAS on top of that, time isn't something a French indigenous development would have in such a competitive environment.
Yet France had AESA on its fighter before China, and still flies daily on an engine half generation ahead of China(and perhaps several times better life etc), twenty years after it was fielded.I'm also sure China poured untold billions and years upon years into their multiple next generation efforts. Thing is though, the US and China are super powers, industrial nations of a much vaster scale, they have a much larger pool of qualified engineers, workers and researchers to pull from.
Whatever is the name of next thing in Russia, PAK DP is almost certain not to be next generation Russian effort (and frankly is likely dead).PAK DP is on roughly the same timeline as FCAS, a 2040s aircraft. Another reason why I somewhat question the necessity for a genuine 6th generation fighter for continental Europe (while it makes sense for the UK and Japan, which have to face the PLAAF and PLAN in the Pacific).
Not a lot of historical evidence to support your point of view IMHO.
If you compare Rafale <-> Eurofighter, Rafale was developed in less time and at half the total R&D cost. There are significant efficiencies when you have clear design leadership, a single assembly line, an experienced supply chain, and can pick the "best athlete" suppliers as opposed to farming out work along national lines to inexperienced suppliers who have to reinvent the wheel (often with worse results).
So yes there's an additional financial burden to go it alone, but if anything Dassault will be able to go faster and more efficiently, which should offset some of the extra cost and might even (arguably) yield a better 6th gen aircraft.
We don't know whether turks will pull it off, but Kaan is in fact proper 5th gen with all key avionics features; check what they've shown over last two years.The Rafale benefited enormously from the development of the Mirage 2000 and 4000. This project is a far bigger leap to essentially a 6th generation fighter. Dassault would struggle with the development costs. I suppose that if they adopted the Turkish approach of a stealthy airframe with 4.5 generation avionics and sensors it might be a cost effective approach but not as cutting edge as what they are envisioning now.
The problem is not Dassault the problem now is money , France will have no money to go alone on a 6th gen fighter , the president is unable to make a program like this going well.The Rafale benefited enormously from the development of the Mirage 2000 and 4000. This project is a far bigger leap to essentially a 6th generation fighter. Dassault would struggle with the development costs. I suppose that if they adopted the Turkish approach of a stealthy airframe with 4.5 generation avionics and sensors it might be a cost effective approach but not as cutting edge as what they are envisioning now.
Perhaps this will be the opportunity the Indians have been waiting for. A way for them to get "into the business". Ties to Dassault already exist, in a way after all.The problem is not Dassault the problem now is money , France will have no money to go alone on a 6th gen fighter , the president is unable to make a program like this going well.
We already discussed for several pages why the Rafale cannot really be compared to a next generation fighter. So arguing on that basis is rather futile, the Rafale is an archaic and unsophisticated concept by comparison, as is every jet of it's generation. Aircraft like the Rafale, Eurofighter, F-16 etc. are not nearly as complex, system intensive, software heavy and sensor laden. The material science alone is a whole different ballpark. In essence, it's entirely possible for one to built a kit car in the backyard and drive around in it, but it's not comparable to the design, cost and engineering of an F1 car. This is more or less the gaping vastness that seperates such old aircraft from what is to come and currently only flies in form of demonstrators and perhaps select early prototypes.Not a lot of historical evidence to support your point of view IMHO.
If you compare Rafale <-> Eurofighter, Rafale was developed in less time and at half the total R&D cost. There are significant efficiencies when you have clear design leadership, a single assembly line, an experienced supply chain, and can pick the "best athlete" suppliers as opposed to farming out work along national lines to inexperienced suppliers who have to reinvent the wheel (often with worse results).
So yes there's an additional financial burden to go it alone, but if anything Dassault will be able to go faster and more efficiently, which should offset some of the extra cost and might even (arguably) yield a better 6th gen aircraft.
France's defense equipment budget is about 40% of the 3 FCAS countries. If they can cut the waste by going it alone and reduce the R&D cost by half (as was the case with Rafale vs. Eurofighter), then the extra financial burden of a purely French NGF will only be 25% relative to what they were going to spend.The problem is not Dassault the problem now is money , France will have no money to go alone on a 6th gen fighter
Assuming we're working on known principles for NGFA as established for NGAD (we have them somewhere deep in that thread).@Ainen I think you're massively overestimating the capabilities and funds of Dassault/France and massively underestimate the development of a genuine next generation fighter (something the very best and richest pull off in the 2030s, a joint program of second tier aviation players in the mid 2030s and something France expected at the earliest in 2040 with all the funds and resources of three large industrial nations pooled together).
I thought I remembered someone saying that earlier in this thread and its alarming that this might end up being the case - or not as they envisioned.This is what y say time ago FCAS is born dead
Wouldnt being flatter (as compared to a "less flat" planform of the same height but smaller area and same properties otherwise) be worse against L band/ VHF/ UHF band radars?being flat(i.e. broadband stealth)
Hell if they use the same digital engineering stuff Boeing supposedly used to push out an NGAD demonstrator, they could get something flying and iterate up in the air in time for 2040.