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F-22 Raptor Cancelled

BayaWeaver writes "Slate reports that the F-22 Raptor has been cancelled by the Senate. At an estimated price tag of $339 million per aircraft, even the powerful military-industrial-congressional complex couldn't keep this Cold War program alive in these hard times. They look very cool though and have appeared in movies like Hulk and Transformers. But not to worry too much about the future of the military-industrial-congressional complex: the F-35 Lightning II begins production next year! As a side note, in 2007 a squadron of Raptors became deaf, dumb and blind when they flew over the International Date Line."

3 of 829 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Poor Title by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1, Troll

    If we ordered one more it would cost very very slightly under 339M. Which is still freaking expensive.

    In any event, at this point since the program is stopped we can be sure that the ones we have cost 339m each.

  2. Manned flight is obsolete by Trip6 · · Score: 1, Troll

    UAVs can completely replace manned military flight within the next decade. Any further investment in manned aircraft is pure politics.

    --
    I hate being bipolar; it's awesome!
  3. Re:Poor Title by c6gunner · · Score: 1, Troll

    no it wont. it requires extensive upgrades because the RAM or the skin of the aircraft cannot survive a rainstorm. it does not have a working heads up display on the helmet. the canopy blisters and peels with exposure to sunlight. it does not communicate with other aircraft because the electronics are deficient. it requires 44 HOURS of maint for every hour in the air. the raptor is a pile of crap and will eventually be phased out.

    I see that you've been reading Pravda again ....

    Anyone who mods that comment "informative" needs to have their heads examined. It should be clear at first glance that the AC who posted it is a zealot on a personal quest. Now, if anyone has some valid criticism backed by reliable references, I'd love to hear them. So far as I know, the F-22 has had no major issues after the incident in 2007, and has performed beyond all expectations in simulated air-to-air combat exercises.