What does it say? I can't access the article.
Try opening the link at the bottom of #105, works for me.
I suspect that would be drowned out by the large number of lighter but cheaper alternatives. Anduril has already ground launched their version.Thanks, I can see the article now.
Something the US might want to revisit is doing an AGM-109 Tomahawk variant.
I wonder what next month will bring.President Donald Trump gave Zelenskyy until Nov. 24 to sign on or risk losing American intelligence and military support.
The Twenty-second Amendment (Amendment XXII) to the United States Constitution limits the number of times a person can be elected to the office of President of the United States to twice
His approval rating is circling the drain at the moment. His chances of a second term are not good.
Oh yeah, I forgot about that. TFFT.He's in his second term. He doesn't get any more, despite what he claims.
Plenty of decisions, plenty of reversions.incredibly indecisive
"I love deadlines. I love the whooshing noise they make as they go by." - Douglas AdamsPresident Donald Trump gave Zelenskyy until Nov. 24 to sign on or risk losing American intelligence and military support.
Trump can't cut anything. If Ukraine collapse during his tenure its on him, and that would be another dot on his impeachment paper. If there is one of course.the administration seems incredibly indecisive concerning all things Ukraine, up to and including the Tomahawk system
If Ukraine collapse during his tenure its on him,
No weapons system is free of potential failure. Still interesting to see in pictures though
So they should have popped up to 5000ft AGL and detonated at altitude.Probably a mission abort or used as intel/damage assessments to relay imagery to C3 with no target left or any found at location (the missile would route away from designed target and get lost elsewhere to not compromise intel).
The sad thing is that those warheads could be re-used against coalition forces if found by nefarious actors.
Maybe they've been left there to tempt nefarious actors and then they explode.Probably a mission abort or used as intel/damage assessments to relay imagery to C3 with no target left or any found at location (the missile would route away from designed target and get lost elsewhere to not compromise intel).
The sad thing is that those warheads could be re-used against coalition forces if found by nefarious actors.
I noticed that the thread has been re-titled Block iv/v .... thanks moderator!Is this thread specifically Block IV or does it include Block V? There is a separate Block V thread, but Block V stuff seems to have ended up here anyway. Re-title, merge? @seruriermarshal
A comprehensive write-up on the complexities and considerations on operating cruise missiles ....... people always failed to see that behind the mission success, that there is a large complex of support infrastructures .....
A comprehensive write-up on the complexities and considerations on operating cruise missiles ....... people always failed to see that behind the mission success, that there is a large complex of support infrastructures .....
The USN is indeed buying upgrade kits to convert Block IV to Block V. But in addition to this, the Navy (and the other services) do indeed buy new missiles. RTX never stopped producing new TACTOMS. Production transitioned from Block IV to Block V during FY22.USN buys are actor blk V upgrade kits that are installed on blk IV when they come in for inspection and recertification. They are not new missiles.
Which is presumably why Ukraine didn't just ask for them just last year?TLAM is just such a luxurious capability (derogatory). It is primarily used for risk-free strikes against weak nations. It is observable, it can't do much to stop itself from getting shot down, and so it isn't going to penetrate a decent IADS.
1,000 effectors per year is nothing in a real war. Ukraine would shoot a thousand per day if they had them.
Yet it costs $2.5M per, and I don't think that cost is going down any time soon. The production increase is going to require CAPEX. $2.5M per shot, $2.5B per year so we can bomb Nigeria and Yemen.
1. Why would the USN operate such missile?That forward swept wing photo might indeed be popeye rather than tomahawk.
Notice the rear fins. It seems to feature 4 fins, rather than 3, as used by block 4 and 5.
I'm not convinced that terrain-hugging is a meaningful advantage anymore. I mean, fifty years ago the B-1 was nearly canceled as a terrain-hugging bomber because airborne radar rendered that mission obsolete. A terrain-hugging aircraft is, strictly speaking, less detectable than the alternative; but if it can still be detected 50-100km away, does that make enough of a difference? Tomahawk will probably be detected en route to target by enemy air forces, or passively detected by an acoustic network, and a lot of them will be shot down by fighters using simple heat seekers.Which is presumably why Ukraine didn't just ask for them just last year?
In reality turane hugging missiles are always going to be a huge pain to deal with and the tomahawks huge range allows it to go around enemy sam sites and lot of the time (or force enemy's to procure truly obscene numbers of sam systems, and if russia doesn't have enough sams for that then only china may be able to afford something like that and they aren't focused on sams to nearly that extent. )
1. well obviously the working theory then is that the photo in question of a missile in flight is NOT a USN missile but Israeli one. (despite perhaps erronously labeled images)1. Why would the USN operate such missile?
2. I could not find any reference for forward swept wings on a Popeye Turbo. I've seen photos of mockups with backswept wings.