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B-52s: The Plane That Refuses To Die

HughPickens.com writes: Dave Phillipps has an interesting article in the NY Times about B-52's and why the Air Force's largest bomber, now in its 60th year of active service and scheduled to fly until 2040, are not retiring anytime soon. "Many of our B-52 bombers are now older than the pilots who fly them," said Ronald Reagan in 1980. Today, there is a B-52 pilot whose father and grandfather flew the plane. Originally slated for retirement generations ago, the B.U.F.F. — a colorful acronym that the Air Force euphemistically paraphrases as Big Ugly Fat Fellow — continues to be deployed in conflict after conflict. It dropped the first hydrogen bomb in the Bikini Islands in 1956, and laser-guided bombs in Afghanistan in 2006. It has outlived its replacement. And its replacement's replacement. And its replacement's replacement's replacement. The unexpectedly long career is due in part to a rugged design that has allowed the B-52 to go nearly anywhere and drop nearly anything the Pentagon desires, including both atomic bombs and leaflets. But it is also due to the decidedly underwhelming jets put forth to take its place. The $283 million B-1B Lancer first rolled off the assembly line in 1988 with a state-of-the-art radar-jamming system that jammed its own radar. The $2 billion B-2 Spirit, introduced a decade later, had stealth technology so delicate that it could not go into the rain. "There have been a series of attempts to build a better intercontinental bomber, and they have consistently failed," says Owen Coté. "Turns out whenever we try to improve on the B-52, we run into problems, so we still have the B-52."

The usefulness of the large bomber — and bombers in general — has come under question in the modern era of insurgent wars and stateless armies. In the Persian Gulf war, Kosovo, Afghanistan and the Iraq war, the lumbering jets, well-established as a symbol of death and destruction, demoralized enemy ground troops by first dropping tons of leaflets with messages like "flee and live, or stay and die," then returning the next day with tons of explosives. In recent years, it has flown what the Air Force calls "assurance and deterrence" missions near North Korea and Russia. Two B-52 strategic bombers recently flew near artificial Chinese-built islands in the South China Sea and were contacted by Chinese ground controllers but continued their mission undeterred. "The B.U.F.F. is like the rook in a chess game," says Maj. Mark Burleys. "Just by how you position it on the board, it changes the posture of your adversary."

211 of 290 comments (clear)

  1. BUFF by queBurro · · Score: 5, Informative

    Shirley, that'd be Big Ugly Fat Fucker. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    --
    sag
    1. Re:BUFF by Cornwallis · · Score: 1

      Shirley, that'd be Big Ugly Fat Fucker. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Shirley, that'd be surely.

    2. Re:BUFF by Penguinisto · · Score: 2

      Parent needs modded up. Now.

      ("...Fellow", my ass.)

      The only other valid nickname I can think it had was "Aluminum Overcast"

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    3. Re:BUFF by j33px0r · · Score: 1

      Shirley is surely to be a surly Big Ugly Fat Fucker.

      Fix'd that for you.

    4. Re:BUFF by Kilroy_here · · Score: 1

      Shirley, that'd be Big Ugly Fat Fucker. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      And stop calling me Shirley! I picked the wrong day to stop smoking.

    5. Re:BUFF by microbox · · Score: 1
      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  2. At some point by Schmorgluck · · Score: 2

    At some point they really need to send them all elsewhere. I suggest Planet Claire.

    --
    There's nothing like $HOME
    1. Re:At some point by captjc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or the Love Shack located smack-dab in your own Private Idaho. That is where I keep my Rock Lobster.

      --
      Slow Down Cowboy! It's been 1 hour, 47 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment
    2. Re:At some point by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      She drove a Plymouth Satellite.

  3. Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works? by segedunum · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Having a plane that can be kept in the air as much as possible trumps technology every time.

  4. Where did it all go right? by Richard+Kirk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There are a few examples of engineering projects where everything went right, or at least better than expected. The UK equivalent plane was the Vulcan bomber, which would have been a stealth bomber by accident: only the upright tail gives it away on radar. The AK-47 has it. The London Routemaster bus had it. The Soyuz lifter has it. The Panama canal has it too. Can you think of any others?

    More importantly, can we make everything work like that?

    1. Re:Where did it all go right? by shortscruffydave · · Score: 2

      Can you think of any others?

      Have to give a mention to the English Electric Lightning - one of the best planes ever produced by the British aviation industry. Very capable at the job it was designed for, and despite its age could still outpace most modern aircraft in a climb.

      The Chinook's a very able workhorse as well

    2. Re:Where did it all go right? by turkeydance · · Score: 2

      the underwire bra...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underwire_bra

    3. Re:Where did it all go right? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      The Vulcan bomber was never a good candidate for stealth - the engine faces were completely exposed, even tho they were embedded in the wing, so it had a larger than average radar cross section for an aircraft its size.

      My suggestion as an example would be the Heavy Press Program to produce massive forging and extrusion presses in the US in the 1950s, and most of those 10 presses are still in use today producing parts for the latest generation of military aircraft (the F-35 main structural frame is produced on the press).

    4. Re:Where did it all go right? by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      "The Vulcan bomber was never a good candidate for stealth - the engine faces were completely exposed, even tho they were embedded in the wing, so it had a larger than average radar cross section for an aircraft its size."

      Seriously? The engines are virtually invisible compared to the pod mounted engines of most civil and transport aircraft which reflect radar like a flying disco ball.

    5. Re:Where did it all go right? by stud9920 · · Score: 4, Informative

      There are a few examples of engineering projects where everything went right, or at least better than expected. [...]. The Panama canal has it too. Can you think of any others?

      More importantly, can we make everything work like that?

      The Panama canal bankrupted thousands of French investors, killed thousands of workers, and ruined Gustave Eiffel's reputation for the rest of his life.

    6. Re:Where did it all go right? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have an automotive example, so slashdot should love it: The Mercedes-Benz W126 body. Design finalized in 1978, they kept making cars based on it until 1992 worldwide, or 1994 in South Africa. It was Mercedes' first chassis made of 100% high strength steel. The car is literally 1,000 pounds lighter than its predecessor or successor, yet one of the most rigid chassis produced in the era. The handling is excellent even today, in fact it's far superior to most vehicles of any age. And they're nuts-simple to maintain.

      The Panama Canal, I'm sorry to say, is a very poor example. In spite of a retrofit which saves 1/3 of the fresh water they piss away into the ocean, they're still having trouble coming up with enough water to operate the canal... And about that retrofit, that took a damned long time.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:Where did it all go right? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      An impressive percentage of the things John Browning had his fingerprints on would appear to qualify. The M-2's 100th anniversary is coming up and it is still in active use, with some of his other designs no longer in US military service but ridiculously common.

    8. Re:Where did it all go right? by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      The F-4, F-15, F-16, C-130, Nimitz class carrier, Saturn-V, Atlas, Titan, Delta, Bell Jetranger, Chinook, and the list goes on and on.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    9. Re: Where did it all go right? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      The Vulcan did nave a much lower RCS than other aircraft of it's size. The buried engines helped because the long duct reduced the angle at which you could see the fan by a lot.
      Vulcan vs a B-1B, B2, F-117, F-35, or F-22 and the Vulcan is a barn door.
      Vulcan vs a B-47, B-52, TU-16, Bear, TU-22, or even a TU-22m and it looks really good.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    10. Re:Where did it all go right? by Catmeat · · Score: 1

      Can you think of any others?

      The Bell Rock Lighthouse. Built between 1807 and 1810.

      Proof - it's still there.

    11. Re:Where did it all go right? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      But it really sucked in range, sensors, and weapons. Great hot rod but really not a great interceptor.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    12. Re:Where did it all go right? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Yes, seriously - for its time, the Vulcans engines faces were quite large which made the radar return twinkle and spike a *lot* in comparison to other aircraft. Even the Victor had a lower return, due to the baffles the Victors intakes had.

    13. Re:Where did it all go right? by MikeMo · · Score: 2

      The C-130 and it's variants (AC-130 and KC-130) are arguably the most versatile, long-lasting and best engineered platforms out there today. The A-10 would also be in the list of best-engineered airframes not the planet.

    14. Re:Where did it all go right? by invid · · Score: 2

      The A-10 Warthog. You can't take those things down.

      --
      The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
    15. Re:Where did it all go right? by Zobeid · · Score: 2

      off the top of my head. . .

      Douglas DC-3
      Dodge Power Wagon
      Mauser 98
      Colt M1911
      Browning M2HB
      Parker 51
      Lamy 2000
      Pentax K1000
      Unix
      LP records
      The Rolling Stones

    16. Re:Where did it all go right? by Sique · · Score: 2

      Ironically, you won't see any AK-47 around except at shows of historical weapons. The gun most people call the AK-47 is actually the AK-74. Yes, switched ciphers in the model number, pointing to a major overhaul of the concept in 1970, and the new gun together with a new type of ammunition, 5.45×39mm replacing the 7.62×39mm of the AK-47, got introduced to the Red Army in 1974, hence the name. On the other hand, even the AK-74 is also more than 40 years old now.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    17. Re:Where did it all go right? by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      Yeah, no kidding.

      The B-52 is a feat of engineering which I question could be replicated these days.

      The F-35 is a bloated, over-budget plane which tries to be 10 different things and apparently does none of them well.

      Meanwhile things like the B-52 and the A-10 continue to work, fly, and do what they were built to do. Absolutely NOTHING we have now can readily replace either of them.

      I very much doubt anybody is building things which will still be operational in 60 years ... so much crap made nowadays is essentially intended to be disposable when something breaks.

      Nowadays we just focus on cheap IoT crap, apparently.

      And that we get China to make for us.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    18. Re: Where did it all go right? by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      The U-2 was actually based of the F-104.

      Um, wha? You're saying this was based on this?

    19. Re: Where did it all go right? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Yes.
      The original idea for the U2 was to take the F-104 and put a big wing on it.
      From the wikipedia.
      "Johnson's design, named CL-282, was based on the Lockheed XF-104 with long, slender wings and a shortened fuselage. The design was powered by the General Electric J73 engine "
      A lot of changes where made but yea it really was.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    20. Re:Where did it all go right? by nukenerd · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In the railway world :- years.

      1) The British High Speed Train (HST) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/..., mainstay of UK non-electrified Inter-City services for the last 40 years.

      2) London Underground "1938 Tube Stock". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.... Having spent decades as the workhorse of the extremely heavily used London Northern Line, six of them are still at work on the Isle of Wight line today. This is an ordinary work-a-day line, not a preserved heritage one, and ex-London tube stock was chosen to solve the problem of its close clearances. "1938" is when they were built, so over 75 years old and going strong.

    21. Re:Where did it all go right? by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Ironically, you won't see any AK-47 around except at shows of historical weapons. The gun most people call the AK-47 is actually the AK-74. Yes, switched ciphers in the model number, pointing to a major overhaul of the concept in 1970, and the new gun together with a new type of ammunition, 5.45×39mm replacing the 7.62×39mm of the AK-47, got introduced to the Red Army in 1974, hence the name. On the other hand, even the AK-74 is also more than 40 years old now.

      Although when the Red Army switched over to the AK-74 they ended up exporting a lot of the older AK-47s to their clients. So there are most likely still a lot of AK-47s and AKMs floating around out there, especially among irregular forces.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    22. Re:Where did it all go right? by chispito · · Score: 1

      Can you think of any others?

      VW Beetle.

      --
      The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
    23. Re:Where did it all go right? by KGIII · · Score: 1

      Nah, I own an (obviously taxed and licensed) AK-47. It was built in 1968 and is still fully functional. I've brought it to a few machine gun shoots ('snot my name, it's what they call 'em) for vets and take it out for more than just show. This one (they all seem to have a high variance) isn't entirely inaccurate. I'd feel capable at hitting a human sized target out to 300 yards and, with some stability, 500 yards.

      I do not have an AK-74 but I understand they're available for sale once in a while. I've never known anyone who has owned one and was fortunate to get the 47 from a dealer who is also a friend that needed the money and wanted to get rid of a few items. I turned down a very well priced Thompson because I'm functionally retarded. *sighs* I could have had it for $7500 and it was in fantastic shape with a couple of drum magazines and a ton of ammo. I saw a documentary recently where they had one complete with original packaging. I'm still kicking myself for turning it down.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    24. Re: Where did it all go right? by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

      Read this and you'll see the how and why.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    25. Re: Where did it all go right? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Actually, they do look very similar. Remove the point on the nose of the F-104 and note the positioning of the intakes on both, and you can see the relation. Of course, the U-2's wing and surfaces are much, much larger than the F-104, but that's what was required to turn a fighter into a long range, high altitude recon bird.

    26. Re:Where did it all go right? by Zobeid · · Score: 2

      Not quite that simple. . .

      The original AK-47 was only produced for a few years because it was quite heavy and the milled receivers sometimes cracked. An improved version, the AKM with a stamped receiver, is what's been produced in vast quantities around the world. The great majority of AKs that you see are AKMs or some kind of variant of it. The AK-74 that you mentioned introduced the smaller caliber ammo (over Kalashnikov's objections, by the way!) and was intended to fully replace the AKM, but in practice it hasn't worked out that way. I'm not not aware of the AK-74 being widely adopted outside of Russia, and maybe some other former Soviet countries.

      The term AK-47, though, has become a generic term for the entire AK family of weapons, in much the same way that AR-15 has become the common term for the whole family of guns derived from it. It's not wrong to speak of it that way. You can usually tell from the context what is meant.

    27. Re:Where did it all go right? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      But it really sucked in range, sensors, and weapons. Great hot rod but really not a great interceptor.

      Not when it was built. But in typicla British fashion, the government decided for about 40 years continuously that there'd be something much better they could buy from America juuust around the corner and so never upgraded it.

      As for range... that's irrelevent if you can never catch up with your target in the first case. The Lightning was the only plane capable of catcing the Concorde in a stern chase (standing in for Blackjack of course).

      So it was an excellent interceptor, but would have sucked at almost anything else.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    28. Re:Where did it all go right? by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      I'm sad that I had to scroll so far through the replies to get to the A-10. The A-10 is the Nokia 3310 of combat aircraft.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    29. Re:Where did it all go right? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      How about Willys Jeeps? I grew up with a 1949 Willys Jeep CJ-3A. My Dad picked it up in 1969 or so and sold it in 2001. It still ran well but it was pretty badly rusted after 30 years of Vermont winters.

    30. Re:Where did it all go right? by KGIII · · Score: 1

      Well, technically it's a M22. It's what the Chinese exported to Vietnam. There's not a whole lot known about it but it was grandfathered in under one regulation or another way back when. I'd have just been a kid when it came into the country which was probably sometime during the war. I am not really an avid firearm historian or anything but I can probably find out more information if you're really curious. I've posted pics of it online a few times in hopes of someone knowing a bit more but nobody has ever been able to determine a whole lot from the serial number.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    31. Re:Where did it all go right? by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      The Mars Rovers certainly qualify.

      --
      -Styopa
    32. Re:Where did it all go right? by Richard+Kirk · · Score: 2

      You are talking about the first French attempt, where they shipped in people as they died from malaria. I was talking about the US one, where they cleared the banks of the canal and build mosquito-proof quarters and fever hospitals whoever they went. That one worked. At the time, there was enough forest to retain enough water. Now, the surrounding forests have been felled, and there is a lot more shipping, but that isn't the original designers' fault.

    33. Re:Where did it all go right? by samwichse · · Score: 1

      How about the plain old VW beetle? A design originating in the 30's as Hitler's pet project that turned out to be rugged and reliable enough to survive into the 2000s with only minor changes.

    34. Re:Where did it all go right? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I have to say the SR-71 was an amazing piece of engineering for the period it was developed in and built.

    35. Re:Where did it all go right? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Actually the west gave up on true interceptors in the 60s. Also if you are in a stern chase you have already lost.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    36. Re:Where did it all go right? by ArcSecond · · Score: 1

      Took the words right out of my mouth. Hercules is ridiculously long-lived.

      --

      I've got a bad attitude and karma to burn. Go ahead. Mod me down.

    37. Re:Where did it all go right? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Actually the west gave up on true interceptors in the 60s.

      That's because the West didn't have any (recent) planes capable of catching a supersonic bomber in a stern chase.

      Also if you are in a stern chase you have already lost.

      That's because you can't catch the bomber. Unless you're in an English Electric Lightning of course, in which case you're fine. Anyway, the UK doesn't currently have a long range land based SAM system. We rely on missile armed Typhoons to intercept and "escort" Russian bombers instead.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    38. Re:Where did it all go right? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I'd agree, although they did turn out to be fairly dangerous. That's something I forgot to mention about the W126... it's old enough to be made out of metal, but new enough to have crumple zones. Fifth Gear crashed up a bunch of old cars and the W126 (think it was a 300SEL) was a standout.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    39. Re:Where did it all go right? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "That's because you can't catch the bomber."
      No that is because the bomber is already over your territory.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    40. Re:Where did it all go right? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      No that is because the bomber is already over your territory.

      Indeed, but John O' Groats? isn't exactly strategically valuable and they're not going to waste a bomb there to kill 300 people and make a bunch of seagulls radioactive.

      One of the reasons the UK relies more on jets than missiles is that the Russians have to cross Scotland to get here, so even if they're over our territory, there's nothing for them to bomb. The highlands are sparsely populated.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    41. Re:Where did it all go right? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      If the bomber is not using a stand off missile.
      No you want to stop them before they get to your territory not after. And really? The UK depends on aircraft more than missiles vs Russia because it has more empty space???? What map are you looking at?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  5. If it ain't broke... by pr0t0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm sure things like avionics and perhaps engines have been updated over the years. So maybe the B-52's replacement should simply be a B-52 built out of more modern materials? Call it a B-53.

    --
    I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
    1. Re:If it ain't broke... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      That's not webified enough.

      It should be B-52.0

    2. Re:If it ain't broke... by will_die · · Score: 1

      Unacceptable, does not look good on an OPR.

    3. Re:If it ain't broke... by dcw3 · · Score: 2

      The Air Force typically adds a letter to the next version. We're on the H model of the B52
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    4. Re:If it ain't broke... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Informative

      Simply updating the design with brand new materials is often as big a job as producing an all new design, as the current design is based around the strength, stiffness and capability of the material used - changing that material means revisiting every aspect of the design to ensure that the new materials characteristics handle all the stresses, loadings and movements without issue.

    5. Re:If it ain't broke... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      The engines are still the TF-33 that came with the H out of the factory.
      The TF-33 is a J-57 based turbofan and the J-57 was what was on the the A-F versions of the 52.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    6. Re:If it ain't broke... by 4im · · Score: 1

      I'm sure things like avionics and perhaps engines have been updated over the years.

      I'm positive that's a yes for the avionics. I'm less sure about the engines though. One should think that 4 engines as used on a modern 747 would out-perform the 8 old jets from the B-52 in most if not all possible categories - the only thing that comes to mind would be ground clearance.

      Btw, NATO also hasn't upgraded the engines on their AWACS planes (at least those registered in Luxembourg, flying around Europe), unlike the US did for their own. I always wonder why when I get to see them and listen to them - they're noisy, generate loads of (very visible) soot, and can't possibly be as efficient as modern engines - replacing these engines should pay off pretty quickly.

    7. Re:If it ain't broke... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Informative

      There are two reasons the USAF don't reengine the B-52 (and it has come up several times) - first is the fact that there is still a significant parts stockpile of engines already bought and paid for which are next to worthless on the open market, and secondly is the fact that by going from four engines on a wing to two, you have to drastically change the single engine out characteristics of the aircraft, which means a bigger tail to compensate etc.

      The USAF tankers and utility aircraft (E-3, RC-135s etc) have been reengined because they spend a lot more time in the air than the B-52s, and generally operate off of the standard USAF operational budget, whereas the B-52s typically operate under specialist budgets per conflict except for training flights.

    8. Re:If it ain't broke... by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      There actually was a plan and proposal to move to a 4 engine variant- I believe in late 90s if I remember correctly. It ended up being scrapped (for reasons I was not privy to) and just hasn't happened. I think the general consensus is "why mess with it if it's still working and we can still source the parts". The H model has been in production since the early 60s so the engines could certainly be replaced with something more efficient but again, why fix what ain't broken?

      Northrop Grumman just won a contract for the next generation "Long Range Strike Bomber" but the contract is already in trouble since the aware has already been protested by Boeing, which causes all sorts of troubles. Boeing did the same thing when Northrop was awarded the contract for the next generation refueling aircraft. It got so expensive Northrop pulled their proposal (after winning initially) and Boeing won the rebid. Boeing's trying the same tactic again.

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    9. Re:If it ain't broke... by Talderas · · Score: 2

      In fact the only active model is the B-52H. All B-52Hs came into service between May 9, 1961 and Oct 26, 1962. Any active B-52 is at least 53 years old.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    10. Re:If it ain't broke... by jitterman · · Score: 1

      Since we're on the "H" model, B-52.8

      --
      For conscience is the wound, and there's naught to staunch it
    11. Re:If it ain't broke... by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 2

      Haven't you heard? Minor versions are passé. That would make it a B-60.

      Or if we go at the same rate Google updates Chrome versions, it would currently be a B-412.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    12. Re:If it ain't broke... by martinfb · · Score: 1

      Or, call it the B-52 version B, or C, or M. Or better still, use a dash code: B52-201507 for the 2015 July version. If it ain't broken, just upgrade it!

      --


      Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
  6. Also, see the A-10 by Orgasmatron · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The A-10 isn't quite so old, having been introduced in 1977, but it too is uniquely successful at its job, with no practical replacement in sight.

    Ask any Army Soldier or Marine Rifleman that has seen combat and needed close air support what their favorite jet is, and you'll hear only one name.

    Rather than talking about retirement, we should be building more of these two jets. Yes, I know it would be expensive to re-create all of the tooling. In my opinion, new production lines for them should be established and maintained in perpetuity as national treasures, at least until suitable replacements are found and validated by real-world experience.

    (The C-130 should probably be included too, and would be much easier, since it is still in active production.)

    --
    See that "Preview" button?
    1. Re:Also, see the A-10 by pr0t0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Agreed 100%. There does not seem to be a leap in technology that warrants a replacement of these aircraft. The machines are workhorses, and the only thing that really needs to happen with them is to maybe make them more efficient when possible (lighter, more fuel efficient, etc).

      For fighters, I think the F-16 and F-22 are well-regarded by their pilots; and the F-18 is beast on the Navy/Marine side.

      The JSF looks like an expensive complicated mess of an aircraft. I don't really follow aircraft news, but my impression is that they are throwing dump trucks of money at it to get it to perform at levels at our below our current arsenal.

      It would be nice if aircraft design and construction had a lot less to do with politics, job creation, and greasing palms; and a lot more to do with air superiority, capability, ease of maintenance, and cost.

      --
      I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
    2. Re:Also, see the A-10 by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      You're off by a year, they entered service in '76 as did I.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    3. Re:Also, see the A-10 by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For fighters, I think the F-16 and F-22 are well-regarded by their pilots; and the F-18 is beast on the Navy/Marine side.

      There's only one fighter plane thatll be my honey-bunny shnookielumps forever and ever, and that's the F-15 Strike Eagle, the greatest airborne weapons platform ever created. Be still mah heart!

      For everything else, there's the A-10, also known as the "make-them-shit-their-pants-in-fear" plane.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    4. Re:Also, see the A-10 by Nidi62 · · Score: 2

      (The C-130 should probably be included too, and would be much easier, since it is still in active production.)

      Speaking of the C-130, if an AC-130 has a max T/O weight of 155,000 lbs and is as bad ass as it is, imagine what a gunship variant of a B-52, with a max T/O weight of 488,000 lbs, would be like. That thing would be a flying battleship. It probably can't get down to a slow enough cruising speed without stalling to be useful, but a plane packing 3 times the firepower of an AC-130 would have to be a beautiful sight.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    5. Re:Also, see the A-10 by Captain+Hook · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why these workhorses ( or the Space Shuttle, for that matter ) can't *evolve* ?

      I would guess, and it really is a guess, that having parts interchangeable between vehicles is a very worthwhile thing in a combat situation. The moment you start operating different versions of the same aircraft you need to start stockpiling and moving far more stuff around to keep the same number of vehicles in operation. That might not be a big deal when operating from homeland bases, but it starts getting really expensive if you need to do maintenance at forward operating bases.

      Why add a massive logistical headache for a small incremental improvement in performance.

      --
      These comments are my personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the other voices in my head.
    6. Re:Also, see the A-10 by avandesande · · Score: 1

      Sure we can make it but none of the paper blueprints or manufacturing techniques are used today, so the entire process will have to be designed from scratch.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    7. Re:Also, see the A-10 by Admiral_Grinder · · Score: 1

      The B-52 is about as wide as a pencil though. The guns would be sticking out both sides of the plane. I'm sure the crew would be happy to hang out with harnesses tied to the wings to man the guns.

      Or it will be the ugliest pregnant guppy ever.

    8. Re:Also, see the A-10 by inhuman_4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except the A-10 isn't successful at it's job, never has been.

      The A-10 was designed to strafe tanks during the Cold War, but never got used for that mission. They tried to use it to attack Republican Guard tanks during First Iraq War. But the A-10 proved too vulnerable to anti-air defences and the job was given to F-16s using laser guided bombs. The majority of ground attack missions in the Second Iraq War was conducted by F-16s and F-18s. The same is true for Afghanistan. The only reason the A-10 is still around is because congress won't let the USAF get rid of it. It's never been good at its job.

    9. Re:Also, see the A-10 by Snowgen · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why these workhorses ( or the Space Shuttle, for that matter ) can't *evolve* ?

      Actually they do. The current B-52, for example, is really the B-52H, which came after the B-52G, etc. Likewise the C-130 is the C-130J, though some units still fly the H model (and there's a K model for export).

    10. Re:Also, see the A-10 by Major+Blud · · Score: 3, Informative

      "but never got used for that mission"

      I don't believe that's accurate. Straight from Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      During the first Gulf War, the A-10 destroyed "more than 900 Iraqi tanks, 2,000 other military vehicles and 1,200 artillery pieces". Although 4 were shot down by missiles, it had "flew 8,100 sorties, and launched 90 percent of the AGM-65 Maverick missiles fired in the conflict.".

      Although the stats are pretty impressive, I hear mixed things from soldiers who had to rely on it for close air support. Some were displeased with it not having supersonic capabilities.....their argument was that it was better to have an F-16 or F-15E that could arrive at the battle much quicker. The other argument was that it was better to have a huge bomber, such as the B-52, that could loiter over a combat area for an extended period of time, and drop precision guided munitions as needed. The flip side is that the A-10 is much more durable than an attack helicopter, which is the Army's main method of providing close air support.

      --
      If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
    11. Re:Also, see the A-10 by bobbied · · Score: 2

      The A-10 isn't quite so old, having been introduced in 1977, but it too is uniquely successful at its job, with no practical replacement in sight.

      Then follows a rant about how the A-10 should be kept in service....

      I'm not going to debate the effectiveness of the A-10 at close air support, it was a great platform and served the guys on the ground well. We all morn it's loss. HOWEVER.... There are good reasons for the A-10's demise..

      Aircraft wear out. Airframes suffer from work hardening as they flex in flight and eventually they will start to fail. The more flexible the airframe, the quicker it wears out. The A-10 is a pretty flexible airframe and close air support requires a lot of varying loads on the airframe. You are pulling lots of G's to roll onto a target, then again to pull out of a strafing run. Carrying weapons on hard points makes it worse. Dropping gravity bombs, especially if you are lofting them (a hard pull up just before you release the weapon) puts a lot of stress on the airframe. Doing close air support well involves all of these things and more.

      The A-10 was literally worn out and we couldn't keep flying them safely. There where not enough airframes left with life left to keep the A-10 flying in sufficient numbers to be useful. Yes, we could build more airframes, but the manufacturing line has long since been shut down and the tooling gone so building new aircraft would be costly. So we literally used the A-10's up, wore them out, flew the wings off of them and didn't choose to build more.

      The reason why we didn't build more is largely political and partly practical. The military had planned the F35 as the close air support platform of the future. That's where the money went. You can argue the rightness or wrongness of that decision if you want, but if you look at the situation as it unfolded, with the planned replacement the F-35 behind schedule, sucking up *all* the spare change the pentagon could find in the couch cushions and the airframe of the A-10's in service totally warn out, it's not surprising they decided to ground it. They couldn't afford to buy new A-10's and the ones they had where no longer serviceable.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    12. Re:Also, see the A-10 by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

      Dale Brown wrote a book on that, I remember being entertained and it does seem like an interesting.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      In a somewhat similar vein there is the B1BR proposal, replace engines with the F22 reduces range but increases speed, improve the RADAR and then cram it full of A to A missiles.

    13. Re:Also, see the A-10 by jittles · · Score: 1

      But the A-10 proved too vulnerable to anti-air defences and the job was given to F-16s using laser guided bombs.

      Too vulnerable? If you mean vulnerable due to the fact that it's about 15,000 feet closer to the AA then you're right. But I think most pilots would rather be hit by an AA missile in an A-10 than an F-16. Have you seen how resilient those things are? You can land them with one engine missing, one tail missing, and up to 10 feet of wing missing - all at once. One pilot claims to have taken 3 SAM hits and still safely landed his A-10.

      Of course there was an Israeli F15 pilot who landed his plane after losing the entire wing in a mid-air collision. That was pretty impressive, too.

    14. Re:Also, see the A-10 by inhuman_4 · · Score: 2

      I think most pilots would prefer to not be shot at all.

      The problem with the A-10 is it's whole philosophy is low and slow. You can't build a flying tank. Sure can put some armour on aircraft, but it's a losing proposition. Armour is heavy, and heavy thing don't fly too well. It's also hard to upgrade the armour of a plane. Case in point is the A-10 which was designed to withstand the Soviets 23mm AA, to which the Soviets responded by upgrading their AA to 30mm.

      This is why every other plane flies high and fast. It's why everyone is investing in stealthier planes.

    15. Re:Also, see the A-10 by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 2

      C-130 stalls at 100 mph, the B52 at about 150. Not ideal for lingering over the battlefield. Plus lingering means "target", in the B52's case "very big, very expensive target". Plus its turning radius must be huge, combined with the higher speed you couldn't keep it targeted on a small piece of real estate. Just not the right tool for the job.

      --
      Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
    16. Re:Also, see the A-10 by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Just not the right tool for the job.

      Yeah, I know. It's just so nice to imagine the destructive beauty of a couple B-52s armed with artillery pieces standing off the coast of a landing beach somewhere pounding away at some fixed defenses.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    17. Re:Also, see the A-10 by jittles · · Score: 1

      I think most pilots would prefer to not be shot at all. The problem with the A-10 is it's whole philosophy is low and slow. You can't build a flying tank. Sure can put some armour on aircraft, but it's a losing proposition. Armour is heavy, and heavy thing don't fly too well. It's also hard to upgrade the armour of a plane. Case in point is the A-10 which was designed to withstand the Soviets 23mm AA, to which the Soviets responded by upgrading their AA to 30mm. This is why every other plane flies high and fast. It's why everyone is investing in stealthier planes.

      High and fast doesn't work well for close air support. For close air support you get low and fast which gives the attacking pilots very little time to engage the enemy. It turns out that low and slow can be terrible for tank engagements with heavy AA support but works out great for most ground engagements once air superiority has been established.

    18. Re:Also, see the A-10 by sjames · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, as long as they're faithful to the documented design, we know the result will be a good design for a lot less than designing a possible turkey from scratch.

      Perhaps it doesn't make the realistic "Star Wars (tm)" whooshing and beeping sounds like the F-35, but it's solid. If we can teach the Pentagon that these are NOT toys, we'll be a lot better off.

    19. Re:Also, see the A-10 by eth1 · · Score: 1

      (The C-130 should probably be included too, and would be much easier, since it is still in active production.)

      Speaking of the C-130, if an AC-130 has a max T/O weight of 155,000 lbs and is as bad ass as it is, imagine what a gunship variant of a B-52, with a max T/O weight of 488,000 lbs, would be like. That thing would be a flying battleship. It probably can't get down to a slow enough cruising speed without stalling to be useful, but a plane packing 3 times the firepower of an AC-130 would have to be a beautiful sight.

      Yes, I think the B-52 would be well suited to flying over and dropping 35 tons of shells out the bottom... :P As a bonus, you don't have to haul the propellant or casings all the way up there.

    20. Re:Also, see the A-10 by mjwx · · Score: 1

      The A-10 isn't quite so old, having been introduced in 1977, but it too is uniquely successful at its job, with no practical replacement in sight.

      Ask any Army Soldier or Marine Rifleman that has seen combat and needed close air support what their favorite jet is, and you'll hear only one name.

      Rather than talking about retirement, we should be building more of these two jets. Yes, I know it would be expensive to re-create all of the tooling. In my opinion, new production lines for them should be established and maintained in perpetuity as national treasures, at least until suitable replacements are found and validated by real-world experience.

      (The C-130 should probably be included too, and would be much easier, since it is still in active production.)

      The problem is, the B52 is without a role any more so they really should be retired.

      The heavy bomber has gone the way of the battleship, it doesn't add any value to an air force hence this is why forward thinking air forces like the UK are retiring them and up and coming air forces like India and China aren't building them.

      The B52 might look good bombing the dust of Bumfuckistan into, uh... dust, but it will be as useful as tits on a bull against any enemy that could shoot back. Its big, slow, inaccurate and shows up on radar like a flamboyantly gay, pro-choicer in the Westbro Baptist church.

      The A-10 is a different story. That should be modernised (I.E. more efficient engines, avionics, sensors) but every modern aircraft seems to be suffering from feature creep, not just the F35 but the Eurofighter and the Russian PAK FA seems to be becoming a worse project than the F35 (which has at least delivered some airframes).

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  7. B-2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Let's get this straight: the B-2 is not "so delicate" it can't go out into the rain, and that statement simply belies a common ignorance of stealth.

    It's very simple: in the rain, on radar, an aircraft, any aircraft, shows up as spot of no rain, stealth or not.

    An aircraft sized fast moving rain shadow on a properly configured radar isn't exactly that hard to figure out.

    1. Re:B-2 by BitZtream · · Score: 5, Informative

      No. Thats not the problem the post is referring to.

      The reference you're missing is that the rain actually damages the coating on impact when flying at speed.

      So the rain literally damages the stealth capabilities of the aircraft. Make a couple flights in the rain and you'll light up like a blinking christmas tree on radar even on a clear sunny day.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    2. Re:B-2 by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      There is also the issue that radar absorbing materials tend to be a pretty touchy arrangement of conductive and dielectric materials precisely arrayed to effectively absorb and not re-emit the appropriate RF. When such materials get wet, their properties inevitably change.

  8. "Flee and live..." by Flavianoep · · Score: 1

    "flee and live, or stay and die,"

    I hope they are not doing it the Conquistador's way.

    --
    Linux is for people who don't mind RTFM.
  9. Scary looking things by fremsley471 · · Score: 2

    Only time I've felt terror from above was glancing up and seen five of these flying in close formation. It turns out their air base was having a long [runway] overhaul and they did a little tour of nearby cities as they departed. Had some evolutionary flashback to being some meerkat-like creature. Also appreciated why civilian jets are called 'wide-bodied'.

  10. Contested vs. uncontested sky by Spacelord · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The thing that makes the B-52 work is that it's a simple bombtruck that can carry an insane amount of ordnance. It's achilles heel though is that it is not survivable in contested skies. It's a big lumbering airplane and if your enemy has a somewhat capable air defense, the B-52 is going to get shot down. This rules out use against countries like Russia and China, or even Iran, at least in first wave strikes. Even relatively simple SA-2 SAMs managed to take out several B-52s in Vietnam.

    Its successors all tried to address the survivability issue. The B-1 did it by adding speed and low level flying to the equation, the B-2 by adding stealth.

    Luckily, most of the US' conflicts since the Vietnam war have been with adversaries that are not technologically advanced, so the B-52 is still highly useful.

    It has this in common with the A-10 by the way, very useful plane in the current context, but not usable against an adversary with an actual air defence system.

    1. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      Not all our adversaries are going to have a capable air defense systems. It is probably worthwhile to develop strategies to attack and degrade enemy air defense systems. So B-52s and A-10s can continue to operate.

      With hindsight it might have been a good idea to create a separate aircraft with the express purpose of enhancing B-52's air defense. With modern high speed communications we could even have a couple of drones designed to follow B-52s in very close formation providing air defense alone, while leaving B-52 with its main purpose of being a bomb truck. Or even many sacrificial drones to be carried along with bombs. This is what we did back in 1944 with B-17 Flying Fortress and B-29(?) Super Fortress with long range escort fighters P-51 Mustangs. Instead of developing a long range escort air defense electronic counter measures platform, they went for all-in-one bomber with self contained air defense. It did not work then, (remember the bombers with so many machine guns they were called flying porcupines that were ridiculously easy to shoot down?) It did not work later.

      But real money is in developing new aircraft. So most defense contractors would pitch all-new, exciting projects. Not mundane cost effective ones that would be sufficient.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    2. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      The thing that makes the B-52 work is that it's a simple bombtruck that can carry an insane amount of ordnance. It's achilles heel though is that it is not survivable in contested skies. It's a big lumbering airplane and if your enemy has a somewhat capable air defense, the B-52 is going to get shot down. This rules out use against countries like Russia and China, or even Iran, at least in first wave strikes. Even relatively simple SA-2 SAMs managed to take out several B-52s in Vietnam.

      Its successors all tried to address the survivability issue. The B-1 did it by adding speed and low level flying to the equation, the B-2 by adding stealth.

      Luckily, most of the US' conflicts since the Vietnam war have been with adversaries that are not technologically advanced, so the B-52 is still highly useful.

      It has this in common with the A-10 by the way, very useful plane in the current context, but not usable against an adversary with an actual air defence system.

      Wasn't the whole point of the US Air fleet during the Cold War that we would have combined fleets on missions? You know, fighters to keep Soviet interceptors at bay and maintain a clear sky allowing bombers to come in and hit their targets, aircraft running Wild Weasel missions to take out anti-air sites and radar, and ground attack aircraft like the A-10 to take out nice big rows of T-72s in one pass. Now, though, the Air Force seems determined to go with one size fits none aircraft like the F-35.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    3. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      It certainly doesn't improve the cost per pound of explosives delivered; but B-52s have been adapted for launching cruise missiles if the situation is deemed too scary for closer approach. A lot more expensive than dropping bombs(even guided ones); but presumably cheaper than having each missile capable of B-52 level range.

    4. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      The problem with this thought process is we don't fly them the way we did in Vietnam. Those were all very low level carpet bombing runs and these days they don't fly them that way as often. We do high altitude runs (often after SOF has disabled key defense systems on the ground) and then send in the grunts.

      They've also massively improved the EW capabilities of the B-52 since then and they most definitely can survive in contested airspace. Hell they were "dodging" SAMs left and right in Iraq in '91. SA-2s, 3s, 6s, 8s, 9s, and 13s. Sure, most of those have relatively short ranges/altitude capabilities but 8s can get to 40,000 feet (12 km) at a range of 9+ miles (15 km).

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    5. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by pz · · Score: 1

      I thought the primary defense mechanism of the B-52 was to fly at unusually high altitudes, out of the reach of most SAMs. Was that the case when it was designed, but is not longer true?

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    6. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Spacelord · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's what they pretty much had to do out of necessity. Also, a rather high amount of combat attrition was calculated in.

      This multi-tiered approach has distinct disadvantages though:

      It speaks for itself that high attrition is bad. When B-52s were initially used as a nuclear deterrent, they weren't even expected to return if they would ever be used against the Soviet Union. The whole A-10 inventory was expected to be lost after about a week if the Soviets actually attacked through the Fulda gap.

      It's a two step approach, so you first have to spend a significant amount of time and effort in dismantling an enemy's air defense before you can attack actual high value targets. Stealth bombers and fighters can bypass air defenses and go in on the first wave, when you still have the element of surprise.

      Air defense systems, like the Russian S-400 SAMs, are becoming ever more sophisticated and deadly and they are affordable by countries like Iran and Syria. It looks like in the future wild weasel tactics are becoming more and more a suicide mission.

      Finally, I think it's always a good idea to have a bigger stick than your potential adversaries. Even if you never use it, it gives you more leverage just by having it. You can hate all you want on the F-35, but you can be sure that the Russians and the Chinese are paying attention.

    7. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 2

      The A-10 is a CAS plane, and it was very much designed for use against "an adversary with an actual air defense system" aka the Soviet Union, who had the most extensive air defense system in the world at the time it was designed. There was no need to redesign or replace it, because it was never intended to penetrate that air defense network - it's a front line ground attack plane, not a deep strike bomber. It's certainly expected to take a lot of fire, whether from mobile AAA or from SAMs, but that's partly why it's so armored and survivable.

    8. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Spacelord · · Score: 1

      > It is probably worthwhile to develop strategies to attack and degrade enemy air defense systems

      This is the so called Wild Weasel mission. They've been doing that since Vietnam. It's expensive, extremely dangerous, not foolproof and you lose any element of surprise.

      > drones providing air defense

      Escort fighters, drones and dragged decoys have been a thing for decades, but a drone isn't going to stop an incoming S-400, and the S-400 is clever enough not to go for the decoy but for the big juicy B-52 instead.

    9. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Spacelord · · Score: 1

      There's no such thing as "out of reach" for an S-400. It can hit targets as high as 185km. That's 600,000 (six hundred thousand) feet.

      A B-52 has a ceiling of 50,000 feet.

    10. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Spacelord · · Score: 1

      Yes, but these SAMs are becoming more and more sophisticated. An S-400 can easily reach a B-52's cruising altitude.

    11. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Spacelord · · Score: 1

      The A-10 was specifically designed to take out Russian tanks invading Western Europe through the Fulda gap. It's certainly tough, but it's not invincible. At the time, it was projected that the whole A-10 inventory would be lost to combat attrition in about a week if such an attack would actually take place, and this was against a 1970s state of the art air defense, not a modern one.

    12. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      Yes, but these SAMs are becoming more and more sophisticated. An S-400 can easily reach a B-52's cruising altitude.

      Yes, they can. How well do they work against EW countermeasures? (I don't know.) I'm just pointing out that even "contested" space is a relative thing and something can be heavily defended without being practically defended against even B-52s. There are really not many countries (that we're likely to go to war with) that have the capabilities you're talking about. That doesn't mean they are unprotected though.

      Is the B-52 the best choice in areas where they do have modern defenses? Probably not as a first wave aircraft but saying they are sitting ducks in any contested airspace simply isn't accurate.

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    13. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Spacelord · · Score: 1

      > How well do they work against EW countermeasures

      S-300/400 SAMs are said to be very resistant to radar jamming. In the Ukraine crisis, they have inflicted huge losses to the Ukrainian air force.

      > There are really not many countries (that we're likely to go to war with) that have the capabilities you're talking about

      They may not have these capabilities yet, but systems like the S-400 exist and they will certainly proliferate in the coming years. It would be a mistake to plan for the present situation only. Iran for instance, is very interested in acquiring the S-400.

    14. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by swb · · Score: 1

      Weren't a lot of the B-52 losses in Viet Nam due to dumb planning more than anything else? IIRC, the attrition rate was really high on the first couple of nights of Linebacker II because they flew the planes in predictable formations. After they handed over mission planning to theater commanders, the strategy was revised to have them fly in at random altitudes and from different directions and losses were cut dramatically. And within days after that, the NVA were out of SAMs and the USAF was running out of targets because they had so obliterated everything.

      B-52 carpet bombing is an awe-inspiring application of destruction, but we don't really seem to use it very much anymore.

      It would be interesting what carpet bombing an ISIS stronghold would do to ISIS morale and sense of invulnerability.

    15. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 1

      The systems on the A-10 have been improved since the 1970s, too. Certainly if we redesigned one from the ground up today, with the same priorities, we could do a better job - but the F-35 is not that plane by any stretch of the imagination, despite what the Air Force wants us to believe. If you had to ask me which aircraft I would want a squadron of for providing ground support, in a ground war against Russia or China? I'd definitely pick a squadron of A-10s over the F-35. They'd be more effective, nevermind that I'd probably have money left over for some F-16s on top of that.

      Conversely, I would argue that the F-35 is exactly the opposite. It's meant for the sort of missions that the Air Force wants, not what the Army needs. By that I mean single seat supersonic multirole fighter. It's meant for a loss-averse mentality in the sorts of attacks against Libya and the Iraq invasion, or what we would have done had we bombed Syria. By that, I mean a wave of strikes against the air defense network, then hitting other operational and strategic targets, and if they have to do CAS later, they'll use 2000 pound guided bombs from high altitude (which is far from ideal, especially when you have ground troops in contact with the enemy). It does well against those second and third tier air defenses, but against Russia and China? How well is its stealth capability going to protect it against an adversary that has the resources to try and figure out a way to defeat it? Because that's really the only card the F-35 is holding, since its capabilities in all other areas are pretty much awful.

    16. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      > How well do they work against EW countermeasures

      S-300/400 SAMs are said to be very resistant to radar jamming. In the Ukraine crisis, they have inflicted huge losses to the Ukrainian air force.

      > There are really not many countries (that we're likely to go to war with) that have the capabilities you're talking about

      They may not have these capabilities yet, but systems like the S-400 exist and they will certainly proliferate in the coming years. It would be a mistake to plan for the present situation only. Iran for instance, is very interested in acquiring the S-400.

      Oh, I agree, we shouldn't plan for the current situation only. That would be plain stupid. I'm just disagreeing that the B-52 (or similar) don't/won't have a place in warfare over contested space. We have learned to overcome the limitations of these aircraft through modified battle tactics and I suspect we will continue to do so. The new bomber is going to be many years in the making and will probably not be much of an enhancement as far as actual capability but, as other comments have stated, it wouldn't be worth the time of putting the proposal together if they didn't show some "whiz bang" feature that will likely impact performance negatively.

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    17. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      | If you had to ask me which aircraft I would want a squadron of for providing ground support, in a ground war against Russia or China? I'd definitely pick a squadron of A-10s over the F-35. They'd be more effective, nevermind that I'd probably have money left over for some F-16s on top of that.

      Not at all. Modern missiles are so much better than before. Improvements are in sensors and software.

      I used to think as you did---but in a permissive air space environment like Afghansitan, there's still the AC-130 which is being upgraded and preserved.

    18. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      Yes, but these SAMs are becoming more and more sophisticated. An S-400 can easily reach a B-52's cruising altitude.

      If only the B-52 had weapons that outranged the S-400, and could destroy the launchers at the beginning of the conflict.

      Oh, right they do.

      There always tons of commenters here who think this is like sending knights out to do single combat, armed with exactly one weapon, one on one.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    19. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      No longer true. When necessary, its defense mechanism is to launch long range weapons that place it out of harms way. When the enemies air defenses are sufficiently degraded, then they just fly where ever they want, carrying anti-radiation missiles as needed for self-defense.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    20. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by guestapoo · · Score: 1

      Even relatively simple SA-2 SAMs managed to take out several B-52s in Vietnam.

      B-52 is vulnerable if it is not supported by tactical airplanes and jamming systems.
      SA-2 is useless if it is not guided and jammed.

      Vietnam air war was about jamming and anti-jamming. Americans were successful at first, there were hundreds missiles of NAV were out of control and lost, and the pilots joked that the SAMs are like a big telephone pole.

      A documentary by Russian, which interviews American pilots, Soviet advisors, and Vietnamese air-defense personnels, search Google for Youtube video:
      "Dance with death" in Vietnam War

    21. Re:Contested vs. uncontested sky by guestapoo · · Score: 1

      IIRC, the attrition rate was really high on the first couple of nights of Linebacker II because they flew the planes in predictable formations. After they handed over mission planning to theater commanders, the strategy was revised to have them fly in at random altitudes and from different directions and losses were cut dramatically.

      Partially right! You are right about the route of the aircrafts were predictable because they flew from Guam, Thailand base and aircraft carriers, etc, which NAV already knew.

      You are wrong about changing the altitudes and directions cut the lose:
      1) NAV also have radars they know when, and where the USA aircrafts are flying to, i.e. Hanoi (for about several dozen of minutes)
      2) Also about radars, SA-2 could reach the altitude of B-52, changing altitude does not help. SA-2 vs B-52 was all about jamming vs anti-jamming.
      3) At the beginning of the air war, NAV lost, but then they won.

  11. It's true by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "...The $2 billion B-2 Spirit, introduced a decade later, had stealth technology so delicate that it could not go into the rain."

    I know someone who works with the B-2 Spirit bombers, and he confirms this. If it's more than a drizzle, they don't fly them (they won't even take them out of the hangar). Thank goodness our enemies would never attack us while it's raining.

    And don't even get me started on the F-35, also known as the "Little Plane That Can't". Can't fly, can't dogfight, can't turn, and can't land. Can't start the engine or takeoff if it's too hot or too cold, can't fly in the rain, can't shoot its gun twice in a row without jamming. As someone in the know once said, "It's like a $148 million garbage disposal for money." And that's the budget model, the Navy version (the F-35C) costs a staggering $337 million each.

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    1. Re:It's true by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 2

      ""It's like a $148 million garbage disposal for money."

      That's not entirely accurate. It's more like a giant funnel for directing that money to the corporate profits of Lockheed-Martin.

    2. Re:It's true by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      The B2 is Northrup Grumman's cash cow the F35 is Lockheed-Martin's.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    3. Re:It's true by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      The problem is rain erosion they do not fly training missions in the rain as it is very costly to make repairs. There is no issue flying in the rain.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    4. Re:It's true by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      The problem is rain erosion they do not fly training missions in the rain as it is very costly to make repairs. There is no issue flying in the rain.

      Those two statements contradict each other.

      "The problem is rain erosion they do not fly training missions in the rain"

      and

      "There is no issue flying in the rain"

      You mention an issue and then immediately claim it's not an issue. Hello? Do you ever read what you write?

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    5. Re:It's true by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      Those two statements contradict each other.

      They don't you just have to have a little better understanding of maintenance on planes. Baring self healing paint there is no way to protect paint from rain hitting a plane at 400mph. The reason the B2 is kept out of the rain is to keep costs down, every plane has rain erosion issues but the cost to repair the paint on the B2 is much higher then for an F15.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    6. Re:It's true by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      "The problem is rain erosion they do not fly training missions in the rain"

      and

      "There is no issue flying in the rain"

      Obviously, there IS an issue "flying in the rain". That's why "they do not fly training missions in the rain".

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  12. Peak Aeroplane by Catmeat · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The B-52 first flew in 1952,they only built them for 10 years, the youngest now flying dates from 1962. But this is a one-off. A combination of a robust design that's useful for a niche purpose, and the insane cost of a clean sheet, replacement. Note that the Vickers Valient, a similar British strategic nuclear bomber that dated from the same era, only lasted in service until the mid-60's as they were basically falling to pieces. That could easily have been the B-52, had it's designers made some bad decisions.

    It's interesting to compare this with the C-130 which first flew a little later, 1954, and is still being built. The time interval over which they have been building them is longer than the time interval between the Wright Brothers, and the first C-130 flight.

    This gives rise to the interesting thought that in certain niche areas (dropping insanely huge numbers of bombs, landing 10 tons of cargo on a remote dirt airstrip) we have reached "peak aeroplane" and did so decades ago. Essentially, spending a huge wodge of money on a clean sheet design to do those jobs will never result in benefits that justify the cost. Far better just to tweak the designs we have with a few incremental improvements.

    Civil aircraft don't seem to have reached peak as there are still improvements (in running cost) to be made, which justify new designs. "The average amount of energy consumed per mile, per passenger, fell by 74% on domestic flights in America between 1970 and 2010", according to The Economist. But presumably that will also eventually peak out in the future, eventually making brand-new civil designs pointless.

    1. Re:Peak Aeroplane by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      There is just not much need for a strategic bomber anymore, thus the old machines are still being used. Same for Russia with their Tu-95 - a quite similar airplane.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    2. Re:Peak Aeroplane by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      LMOL tell that to the troops in Afghanistan and Iraq...

    3. Re:Peak Aeroplane by Zak3056 · · Score: 1

      Civil aircraft don't seem to have reached peak as there are still improvements (in running cost) to be made, which justify new designs

      I don't know if you're talking about the bizjet fleet or the piston fleet, but if you're talking about the latter, we haven't even begun to scratch the surface Even "advanced designs" are still using 1930s technology thanks to our friends at the FAA.

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    4. Re:Peak Aeroplane by SpinyManiac · · Score: 1

      The three V bombers were designed for high altitude operations. They were switched to low altitudes due to the threat of SAMs. The air down there is denser and wears aircraft out faster.

      The Vickers Valiant wore out first, with it's long flexible wings.

      The Avro Vulcan has delta wings which are less flexible and allowed it to operate at low level for far longer.

      The Handley Page Victor lasted longest because it was converted to reconnaisance and tanking and stayed in thinner air. It's enormous bomb bay made it suitable for this job.

      The B52 was never switched to low level operations so comparing the fatigue life of its airframe to the V bombers isn't really fair.

      --
      It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
    5. Re: Peak Aeroplane by maroberts · · Score: 1

      But a modern 747 shares very little with the original, apart from a rough similarity in shape.

      --

      Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
      Karma: Chameleon

    6. Re:Peak Aeroplane by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      | That's pretty much why airframers aren't putting to use hybrid wing body aircraft or other new concepts that have been modeled or developed in recent history.

      For passenger planes, I learned there's a significant problem with pressurization. An oval tube is the easiest and lightest to keep pressurized, and to be manufactured that way. Blended wing designs are more difficult and require more structure contributing to more mass and lower performance.

    7. Re:Peak Aeroplane by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      I've always wondered why, for the bomb-truck application, it wasn't easier to modify civilian jets that are already supremely optimized for fuel consumption, flyability, modern systems, etc.

      It's not like the B52 is a wonder of modern engineering, it's literally just a high-flying pickup truck.

      --
      -Styopa
  13. A Pilots Joke by ausekilis · · Score: 5, Funny

    I was reading about the B-52 some time ago and came across this gem:

    "The B-52 has the power of 8 locomotives, 10 miles of wire, and enough metal to make 10,000 trash cans. That's exactly how it flies, like 8 locomotives pulling 10,000 trash cans with 10 miles of wire."

    1. Re:A Pilots Joke by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      For some reason I find this too funny. I think I need that on a shirt.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    2. Re:A Pilots Joke by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Very funny, but I think eight locomotives would have no problem pulling 10,000 trash cans.

  14. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The summary is highly misleading. In fact, while the B-1 or B-2 may have been thought of as a possible replacement at one time, it was decided to only make a few of each and use their unique capabilities.

    The B-2 has come in very handy and can do things the B-52 cannot. It can't replace the B-52, but having a plane that is all but invisible in clear non-rainy skies is still a big advantage.

    Same wth the B-1. It's high-speed down-low flying makes it a good nuclear deterrent va the slow, lumbering B-52.

  15. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Aside from the "because military contractors" excuse, I suspect that the very dumb, durable, reliability of the B-52 may actually contribute to a dysfunctional replacement-selection process:

    Since the B-52, while old enough that it could almost certainly be done better with newer engines, more lightweight composites, and whatnot, does what it does fairly well; which means that any bid of the form "Well, build basically the same aircraft; but with contemporary technology where applicable" will immediately be compared with proposals to just do more maintenance and some incremental system upgrades to the planes we already have.

    Any bids of the "zOMG, radical new bomber with sexy low-radar-signature geometry and stuff!" flavor, by contrast, aren't as vulnerable to "Or we could just upgrade the engines at markedly lower cost and within a much shorter and more reliable timeframe..." objections.

    In fairness to the "zOMG radical new bomber!" proposals, one of the reasons that the B-52 has remained in service so long is that it can be used to air-launch cruise missiles against targets that might actually have AA capabilities; and many of our wars largely involve pounding on hapless opponents who simply lack the means to shoot down anything other than low-flying helicopters, so its probably-dismal survivability against remotely competent air defenses hasn't been a serious issue. This probably also complicates the bidding for a replacement: If you decided to admit that "Yeah, this thing isn't supposed to go near actual air defenses, it's either a missile boat or for beating down soft targets", you could probably have the B-52++ sketched out relatively quickly. If you want similar payload; but in an aircraft that can actually survive hostile environments, it's much less clear exactly how you can do that. B-1s and B-2s are totally sci-fi; but I'd hate to imagine what building an aircraft like that on a scale large enough to match a B-52 would cost.

  16. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

    Nuclear deterrent? With nuclear subs and ICBMS?? Please stop. The Gulf War clearly showed that stealth technology was clearly not needed.

  17. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

    Really? "Design flaws and engine fires sidelined the plane during the Persian Gulf war and have limited its capabilities since." http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12...

    The A-10 Warthog is more valuable.

  18. Re:It's called Air Superiority by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

    LMOL - do some research Potsy. It's flown in Wars and has been very successful.

  19. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    When you're fighting enemies that uses equipment at least 3 generations older than yours, stealth is not your concern.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  20. Where old tech trumps new by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is one huge advantage of old technology over new one: Repairs. As any military mechanic will tell you, you're SOL with new technology and no spare parts. You NEED the correct spare for the job, you may be able to salvage one from another plane of exactly the same spec, but even that's not a given. You cannot simply "patch" it. The old joke about beer cans being used to fix leaking fuel lines was originally no joke. You could actually do that. Couldn't for the longest time now, but there were still a few things you could do without necessarily having exactly the right spare parts.

    Not with any modern jet, tank or other vehicle. And I'm not even talking about anything complex like avionics or electronics. Something as simple as a hole in the wrong section of the fuselage without you having the correct part to replace it grounds the plane.

    This is of course not a problem for an army with a logistic that overshadows its actual fighting staff. And bluntly, with the US military I often get the idea that the whole intent is to make it as un-repairable as possible to maximize profits for replacements. Well, you have to somehow, it's not like many of those planes are lost in a battle against an enemy that is essentially unable to put a dent into those birds. But that can be very relevant for an army that actually has to fight without more logistic staff than fighting staff. Being able to repair your weapons with minimal equipment is key to many armies on this planet.

    There's a reason Russian weapons technology is prized. Yes, it's ugly, yes, it's rather low tech, yes it's sometimes unreliable and less accurate under most circumstances. But it works in ANY terrain, ANY climate condition and most of all, can be kept operational with an absolute minimum of repair equipment and skill.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Where old tech trumps new by chthon · · Score: 1

      And you know what: that is exactly what one of my teachers (electronics) said already 25 years ago!

    2. Re:Where old tech trumps new by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Especially true for Russian equipment. The T-34 was a horrible tank on pretty much all accounts save one: It was incredibly easy to produce. Same goes for Russian guns. Incredible simple designs, mostly consisting of (ply)wood and sheet metal any factory (or even manual production) can produce in reasonable quality and quantity. Nearly indestructible too (The recommended procedure of de-icing a PPSh41 was pretty much"wrap in blanket, jump on it").

      Germany overdesigned its weapons. And the US are copying exactly that flaw now. This does work as long as you have limitless supply. That's why it does work out. Just hope you never have to fight an actual war with a matching opponent.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Where old tech trumps new by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind, also, that while the T-34 wasn't a great tank, they had lots of them and lots of people to drive them.

      I remember reading about US vs. Soviet tanks back in the 1980s. Something that was mentioned was that the front-line US Battle Tank--I think it was the M-1--could be relied upon to take out 3 Soviet tanks. The problem was that the Soviets had 5 times the number of tanks.

    4. Re:Where old tech trumps new by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Especially true for Russian equipment. The T-34 was a horrible tank on pretty much all accounts save one: It was incredibly easy to produce.

      That's just plain wrong. T-34 was actually superior to pretty much all German tanks it encountered at the beginning of the war, largely courtesy to its sloped armor. Germans had to scramble to produce designs that could beat it, and the most successful one - the Panther - has borrowed the sloped armor concept to do so.

      Same goes for Russian guns. Incredible simple designs, mostly consisting of (ply)wood and sheet metal any factory (or even manual production) can produce in reasonable quality and quantity. Nearly indestructible too (The recommended procedure of de-icing a PPSh41 was pretty much"wrap in blanket, jump on it").

      PPSh was a submachine gun of WW2 era; their whole point was to be simple and cheap to produce and feed. In fact, as far as simplicity goes, PPSh was more complicated, expensive and fragile than e.g. Sten or M3 (though Soviets later added PPS to their lineup, which was comparable).

    5. Re:Where old tech trumps new by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Soviet top-of-the-line main battle tanks are comparable to US ones, if not outright superior, in terms of survivability and combat power. The problem is that they're driven by troops that aren't trained anywhere near as well.

    6. Re:Where old tech trumps new by guestapoo · · Score: 1

      That's right! T-34 is faster and more manoeuvrable than German tanks, only "inferior" in size, but small size is also the advantage of T-34.
      About fire power, an interesting blog discussed about this:
      http://tankarchives.blogspot.c...

    7. Re:Where old tech trumps new by david_thornley · · Score: 2

      The sloped armor was a mixed blessing. It made the armor more effective, but having it slope all around seriously reduced the interior space and fighting efficiency. From the Pz III on, German tanks were designed to make the crew as effective as possible. Later German tanks had better guns, and were generally better than Soviet tanks - and far less numerous. The T-34 was relatively easy to produce in numbers without a lot of highly skilled workers and fancy tools, and the T-34 with the 85mm gun had much better ergonomics than the original.

      An ME friend of mine looked over a tank museum once, making estimates of the tools and manpower it took to make things. The mantlet (turret plate they bolt the gun into) on Soviet tanks were cut with a cutting torch, very irregular, but doable with sketchy tools. US mantlets were cut with a bandsaw, which was the right way to do it if you weren't short on bandsaws. German mantlets were cut with a bandsaw, and then machined to a nice finish that added absolutely no fighting value but cost valuable machines and man-hours. If you look at the fenders (specifically, what goes over the wheels to cut down on splashing), Soviet were sheets of bent metal, easy to do, US were sheets of metal with a constant curve , also easy to do if you've got the tools, and the German had complicated double curves.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  21. Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by dlenmn · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The B-52 is great at bombing people back into the stone age, so long as the people were not that advanced to begin with (i.e. as long as the people can't really shoot back). This was evident even back in the Vietnam war.

    Want to bomb some insurgents in south Vietnam who don't have surface to air misses or fighter aircraft? No problem.

    Want to bomb north Vietnam, which has some fighters and reasonably good surface to air missiles? Danger!

    For example, look at operation Linebacker II, the American bombing campaign that "ended" the Vietnam War. The US used 207 B-52s, which flew 741 sorties during the operation. The North Vietnamize had 14 S-75 missile batteries distributed over their whole country. The S-75 design was about 15 years, so not super high tech even at the time. (The USSR had newer missilea, but they didn't give them to North Vietnam.) These 14 missile batteries shot down 15 B-52s. Granted, that's only a 2% loss rate per sortie, but imagine if North Vietnam had more than 14 missile batteries! Imagine that the missile batteries used modern technology rather than 1950s technology. The B52-s would be mincemeat even with more modern countermeasures. If the B-52 had a 2% loss rate in Iraq or Afghanistan, you would not be seeing the above headline.

    That's the fundamental issue with the B-52. It's not a threat to a modern and competent foe like China or even Russia. Iran just bought a bunch of modern surface to air missiles (with a ~250 mile range) from Russia, so who knows how B-52s would fare in Iran.

    Short version: The B-52 is great against people who wield AK-47s and drive around in Toyota pickup trucks. It's not clear how useful the B-52 is against a reasonably modern and competent military. I should add, rightly or wrongly, that is the logic for why the air force wants to ditch its A-10s, which fly at lower altitudes than the B-52 and are thus more vulnerable to man-portable surface to air missiles.

    1. Re:Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by dlenmn · · Score: 1

      I should change "distributed over their whole country" to "in the whole country." The missiles were not very well distributed.

    2. Re:Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by ageoffri · · Score: 1

      The B-52 will not be the lead bomber in the case of a conflict with a modern military. There will be a package of Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses, right now lead by EF-18G Growlers, F16 configured as Wild Weasels, B2 and B-1B bombers. Once either the temporary or permanent suppression is done, then the B-52's will come in with large bomb/missile loads. The US is very much about integrating forces so that the sum of the attack is greater than the parts.

      --
      -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
    3. Re:Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by PPH · · Score: 1

      Nothing can outrun modern air defense. That's what they figured out when they tried to design the first replacement for the B-52. The SR-71 had a good survival rate because its tactic for handling SAMs was to turn and run. But that's no good for a bombing mission.

      The solution is to use some sort of stand off weapon or missile. The launch platform doesn't have to be particularly fast or stealthy. It just gets close enough, dumps a load of cruise missiles and heads home. The weapons and mission profiles have changed so that the B-52 can accomplish such a task effectively. So the question isn't why the B-52 has been replaced by the latest high tech supersonic bomber. Why hasn't someone fit bomb and cruise missile racks to a long range military cargo plane (or even a 747) to solve the airframe age and maintainability problems?

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    4. Re:Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      That's why doctrine doesn't send the B-52s in first. Instead, the first missions are to blow up those air defenses using aircraft that can survive in that environment.

      Once the air defenses have been knocked down, then you send in things like B-52s to just drop a lot of bombs.

    5. Re:Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by neo-mkrey · · Score: 1

      I own an AK-47 and I drive a Toyota Tacoma -- should I be worried?

    6. Re:Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

      You are right, the A-10 was conceived primarily as a ground-attack platform, so flies lower and slower.
      However, the guys thunk about that and made it so that the engine exhaust is shielded by the airframe, and even when you do get hit, you can still fly home.

    7. Re:Doesn't die unless faced with air defense by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      The US used 207 B-52s, which flew 741 sorties during the operation. The North Vietnamize had 14 S-75 missile batteries distributed over their whole country. The S-75 design was about 15 years, so not super high tech even at the time. (The USSR had newer missilea, but they didn't give them to North Vietnam.) These 14 missile batteries shot down 15 B-52s. Granted, that's only a 2% loss rate per sortie, but imagine if North Vietnam had more than 14 missile batteries! Imagine that the missile batteries used modern technology rather than 1950s technology.

      Note that each battery had 6 launchers, so they had 84 missiles on the rails at a time, each rail had 6 ready reloads, and the reload time was only 10 minutes, so in a hours time could have put 500 missiles in the air if needed. And about this "distributed over the entire country" thing. The batteries were mobile and they moved them to protect the Hanoi-Haiphong area during the U.S. blitz. About 750 missiles were fired to being down those 15 aircraft. This was the densest air defense system every assembled anywhere on Earth at the time.

      Short version: The B-52 is great against people who wield AK-47s and drive around in Toyota pickup trucks. It's not clear how useful the B-52 is against a reasonably modern and competent military.

      The dumb bombs that the B52s dropped back then have been almost completely retired, guided weapons are used exclusively today, and stand-off weapons with ranges of hundreds (or even more than a thousand kilometers) are available to use when needed. Your "short version" is 20 years out of date.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
  22. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by operagost · · Score: 1

    I'm still trying to figure out what the "replacement's replacement's replacement" mentioned in the article is. Did they maybe count the F-111 in there? That's a strategic bomber... it wasn't even close to an intended replacement.

    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  23. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by Drethon · · Score: 1

    From the article I referenced. I can't really judge which article is more accurate.

    "Aside from its less controversial presence, the B-1 has a number of other advantages over its B-2 and B-52 counterparts. Its internal payload capacity is the highest at 75,000 pounds, which is 5,000 more than the B-52 and 25,000 more than the B-2. Reaching Mach 1.2, it is the only supersonic heavy bomber the U.S. possesses. It is also the cheapest to fly at $63,000 per hour of flight, compared with $72,000 for the B-52 and $135,000 for the B-2. Furthermore, as a testament to its preference among U.S. commanders, from October 2001 to September 2012 the B-1 flew 10,940 combat sorties over Iraq and Afghanistan versus the B-52's 2,891 and the B-2's 69. In fact, the B-1 dropped 40 percent of the bomb tonnage in the first six months of the war in Afghanistan, and, by 2012, had released 60 percent of the weapons overall. Now, it is carrying out a similar mission in Iraq."

    My understanding is when the B-1 was first produced its reliability was abysmal. This was improved in more recent models, making it a very valuable asset. Though I don't have any articles to support this beyond the somewhat support from the quote above.

    I wasn't comparing the B-1 to the A-10, but to the B-52. The A-10 is far and above the better aircraft for vehicle killing and small building destruction in my opinion. Where I can see the B-1 shining is taking out larger buildings and vehicle formations (though even formations I think the A-10 has nearly as good a capability). Also the B-1 can be on site faster, if likely less precise.

  24. Join the Air Force... by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

    ...and fly the plane your father flew, they used to say.

    Now, it's "fly the plane your grandfather flew".

    Pretty soon, it'll be great-grandfather.

  25. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by njnnja · · Score: 1

    I'd hate to imagine what building an aircraft like that on a scale large enough to match a B-52 would cost.

    Your entire post is spot on, but I would add that if we ever did have to fight a war against "remotely competent air defenses," we are probably talking about a major war. In that case, it is not unreasonable to expect a major mobilization of huge parts of the economy, including, say, reallocating nearly all civilian engineers to work on military projects, as was done during WWII. In that case, it is acceptable that we didn't invest in more modern technology before such a war, because the B-52 replacement will be designed to deal with a specific threat in mind, instead of trying to worry about the Chinese, and the Russians, and the Indians, and the Germans, and the British, and the French, and whoever else could field serious air defenses in the near future. Sometimes, it is better *for the military* to leave resources under civilian control unless and until it is absolutely necessary.

  26. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by stealth_finger · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The Gulf War clearly showed that stealth technology was clearly not needed.

    Not needed after they went in the first night and blew up all the radar stations and C&C you mean.

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  27. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by KGIII · · Score: 1

    Hmm... Not sure if serious? I encourage you to look at what happened in the Gulf War, specifically with stealth-capable aircraft. It came in quite handy and may well have saved a bunch of lives and expensive equipment. More than once they were firing up at an unseen enemy because things mysteriously we blowing up around them.

    Having one tool is generally a bad idea unless you need to accomplish a very uncomplicated thing. We probably could have used a B-52, lost a few, and obliterated whole cities if we wanted to. Since the days of Total War, ala WWII or, perhaps, Korea, that's generally frowned upon as certain people get their knickers in a wad when you're killing scads of innocent civilians.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  28. The Spoon! by DeFKnoL · · Score: 1

    The Spoon: The utensil that refuses to die

  29. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by mikael · · Score: 1

    It could fly in the rain. It's just the wet wing surface no longer made it stealthy. Having a radar jamming system that jammed it's own radar system is probably due to the sensitivity of the radar system.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  30. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In other words, design attribute prioritization is wrong on those following planes. The aerospace engineers should look for help in the software engineering field for this problem (hides, ducks, jumps into a pool of flame retardant). Politics fucks up every engineering project in every field.

  31. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by clovis · · Score: 1

    Just who in the hell do you think ran ahead of the bomb trucks and took out all the SAM emplacements?

    F117s. Yes an apache flight took some I that famous vid, clearing a path for the tank rush and its CAS, but the majority, especially around Bagdad, were taken out by the F117.

    Then we got a repeat of that during the 2nd Gulf War when, once again when taking Bagdad, stealths flew in ahead and once again took out the SAMs and other defenses ahead of the main push, this time being done by the B2.

    While we're on the topic of old-timers that refuse to die, don't forget to mention the Phantom F4-G SEAD missions in the first Gulf war.
    It took out about 3/4 of the radar sites destroyed.
    http://www.defensemedianetwork...

  32. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

    This touches on most of the reasoning but leaves out the most obvious thing: the B-52 is as close to the "ideal" for a subsonic bomb truck that we've been able to come up with.

    Look, we need different types and numbers of aircraft for any given military engagement. They should be:

    1. A small, elite force of the best stealth and precision-targeting weapons we can muster as a nation, flown by the most rigidly-trained men and women our nation has to offer. These forces lead the initial attack, destroying command and control facilities, air defenses, air bases, and logistics. Given our huge lead in these areas of technology over our hypothetical foes, these missions should have a very high success rate and low attrition rate.

    2. Once the enemy air force and air defenses have been beaten down, the value of stealth is greatly diminished. At this point we're far better served by cheaper, less maintenance-intensive forces like a B-52 or A-10. Their ruggedness and numbers make them ideal for this lower-threat environment where stealthy options would be too expensive to maintain and too valuable to lose in a protracted fight.

    3. When all major targets are bombed into oblivion by the forces in item #2, you need to keep a constant presence around to deter regrowth. But things like B-52's are expensive to keep flying around waiting on something to bomb. Far better to spend money on armed drones which can orbit for a full day, out of sight, waiting to deliver a "bolt from the blue" when a bad guy steps outside for a piss. All the destructive power of a precision-guided munition married to the omnipresent terror of a sniper in an unknown and unreachable location.

    --
    In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  33. Re: Aluminum Overcast by emaname · · Score: 1

    The B-17 was the first to earn that moniker. I've seen that monster fly over our neighborhood a couple of times. Once you see it fly over you'll know why they called it Aluminum Overcast. You never forget how those big engines sound.

    --
    An effective "democracy" creates the illusion the people have a say in their government.
  34. Wild Weasels were in Vietnam too... by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    They had Wild Weasels (and other methods to suppress air defense) in Vietnam too, but that clearly didn't stop B-52s from being shot down. Heck, the North vietnamese only had *14* surface to air missile batteries, and the US was clearly unable to knock them all out.

    As with all things, we have an arms race. Air defense suppression techniques have got better, but so have air defenses. Unless advances in supression techniques have far outsripped advances in air defense (unlikely), we're in the same boat and B-52s will be shot down when facing a modern military.

  35. Sincere longstanding question (meta, going OT) by mark-t · · Score: 1

    Why is it that some AC's feel like they should always add to the text of their comment whatever they had to type for the captcha that was required to submit the post? The above is an extreme example of this where the AC actually made a separate post just to announce what their captcha was. I'm asking sincerely... is there actually a real demographic of people out there that actually give anything more than two-tenths of a shit what captcha word somebody else had to type?

    1. Re:Sincere longstanding question (meta, going OT) by Bugamn · · Score: 1

      I think they find funny that they can draw a relation between the captcha word and the topic.

    2. Re:Sincere longstanding question (meta, going OT) by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Why is it that some AC's feel like they should always add to the text of their comment whatever they had to type for the captcha that was required to submit the post? The above is an extreme example of this where the AC actually made a separate post just to announce what their captcha was. I'm asking sincerely... is there actually a real demographic of people out there that actually give anything more than two-tenths of a shit what captcha word somebody else had to type?

      They've caught the Alanis Morrisette diesease where every single thing in the world is seen as ironic. Especially when it's not.

      Black fly in my chardonnay , my fucking arse is it ironic.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    3. Re:Sincere longstanding question (meta, going OT) by mark-t · · Score: 1

      I hadn't noticed before.... I mean, while the above post stated it explicitly, most of the time they do not, but looking at where it has been done in other posts, that does seem to be the common theme. I might not agree with it, but I feel like at least I understand it now.

    4. Re:Sincere longstanding question (meta, going OT) by DiscoDave_25 · · Score: 1

      My favourite line in that song is "traffic jam, when you're already late" which IS ironic but only if you are a town planner on your way to a meeting to discuss traffic congestion.

  36. Tried that in Vietnam too... by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    The US tried the same method in Vietnam, and look what happened. Just to reiterate, the North vietnamese only had *14* surface to air missile batteries capable of hitting B-52s, and the US was clearly unable to knock them all out. B-52s will be shot down when facing a modern military. Period.

    1. Re:Tried that in Vietnam too... by mbkennel · · Score: 1


      The targeting of precision guidance against ground targets, especially fixed ones, is much better now than in Vietnam.

      Now against a modern air defense system, the cruise missiles and incoming JDAM's are susceptible to counter-fire as well, of course. Then the question becomes which side has enough.

      The longest range SAM's are quite expensive.

    2. Re:Tried that in Vietnam too... by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      And in Vietnam, we didn't have weapons that could take out those *14* missile batteries. We had dumb bombs, slung under the wings of F4s that were desperately trying to avoid getting shot down themselves. And that doesn't exactly lead to accurate bomb strikes.

      OTOH, we have bombed other countries since Vietnam that did have modern air defenses. There were some "tricks" used to try and protect the air defense sites (Balkans: rip the doors off of microwaves, power them up and shut off your "real" radar when the anti-radiation missiles are inbound). But we still destroyed those air defenses.

    3. Re:Tried that in Vietnam too... by guestapoo · · Score: 1

      And in Vietnam, we didn't have weapons that could take out those *14* missile batteries. We had dumb bombs, slung under the wings of F4s that were desperately trying to avoid getting shot down themselves.

      No! At this time, USA already used passive homing missiles, aimed to destroy any North Vietnamese radar systems, which were guiding missiles. At first, it worked, but North Vietnamese found counter method, they used radar at the first phrase and then turned it off, they guided the missile by hand, by calculating the route of B-52s.

  37. Not clear it could even do that by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    It's not clear that the B-52 was much used for its original design purpose either. The B-52 was introduced in 1955 and the S-75 was introduced in 1957. The USSR also had a lot more fighter aircraft that North Vietnam. The bombers will not always get through, and it's not clear that enough B-52s would reach their targets to be effective. There's a reason the US moved its nuclear focus to ballistic missiles.

  38. Re: Aluminum Overcast by whoever57 · · Score: 1

    Example video here. Wait, no ... even models of B52s sound amazing!

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
  39. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by tnk1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I disagree with that sentiment. You don't just pop out new equipment on a short time frame to meet a current threat. You start a war with what you have and hope that you can hold your own until the projects that you started before the war can be finished.

    That idea may have worked out in the relatively lazy days of WWII, but even that is an aversion. Most of the best projects that were designed for WWII like your Tigers and your P-51 Mustangs were the result of programs that had started before the war, and in fullest anticipation of an upcoming major war with a known enemy. And they still took a couple of years to be produced, even with their programs working in overdrive on a Total War footing.

    That's not going to happen today. Even a major war in the present time is going to take a lot less time than you think. While it could bog down into insurgencies after the main battle, the clash of modern armies will be very brief. Iraq was run over twice, very quickly, and Iraq had a large, battle tested army in the first Gulf War to boot. While it was no Soviet Union, it did have some first line equipment for the time.

    Also, modern equipment takes longer to research and produce. What is really going to happen is that we manage to improve what we have already.

    However, if we only have B-52s to improve, then we're screwed because a B-52 isn't ever going to be able to do much more than it is doing now which is release lots of cruise missiles under cover of complete air superiority. There's no point in improving a B-52, it's doing about as well as it is going to do. The real advantage will come from wartime experience which improves platforms like the F-35 which are underwhelming, but have considerable room for improvement.

  40. Probably an improvement but by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    Standoff weapons would probably help, but given air defense systems with a 250 mi range (like the S-300s Iran bought), the B-52s would have to stay pretty far away, and fighter aircraft could still be a problem.

    I think that launching standoff weapons from a stealthy ship makes more sense (unless the target is too far from shore). There's a reason the USN is ripping out the ICBM tubes from some submarines and replacing them with the capacity to launch up to 154 cruise missiles.

    1. Re:Probably an improvement but by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      Standoff weapons would probably help, but given air defense systems with a 250 mi range (like the S-300s Iran bought), the B-52s would have to stay pretty far away....

      The U.S. is currently buying 5000 cruise missiles that defeat the range of a 250 mile SAM system. Seems like the U.S. has thought of this. Imagine that!

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
  41. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by njnnja · · Score: 1

    Most of the best projects that were designed for WWII like your Tigers and your P-51 Mustangs were the result of programs that had started before the war

    Germany was already on the kind of "full mobilization for war" footing that I am talking about in the mid 30's, in violation of the treaty of Versailles. They were sending plenty of materiel to fight in the Spanish Civil War, and were taking over territory by 1938. So while America entered the war in 1941, Germany had already been going through a military buildup for about 5 years, and advances like the Tiger tank were designed and produced while the German economy was fully mobilized for war.

    Interestingly, even though the P51 is seen as a piece of quintessentially American tech of WWII, its initial development was done at the impetus of the British with British funding. So even though it was developed while America was still at peace (and technically neutral), the resources that produced it came from Britain, which because of its proximity to Germany, had established a war footing much earlier than the US did.

  42. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by russbutton · · Score: 1

    And while you're at it, another aircraft they keep trying to kill off and just won't go is the A-10. Ya gotta love a flying tank whose sole mission is ground support. And then there's the AC-130!

  43. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by rbrander · · Score: 1

    "Ya gotta" ABSOLUTELY HATE ANY AIRCRAFT "whose sole mission is ground support " if you are an Air Marshal who has no job unless they're doing strategic bombing. Fixed that for you.

      Close-air support hands over an AF asset to some Army(!!) lieutenant to boss around with a walkie-talkie. That's why the AF has been trying to kill it for decades.

  44. one weekend, the right set of folks by vpness · · Score: 1

    what was most amazing about this story, is that it took a few folks - the right folks - to make this happen. It was just the right guys, right time type of thing. Had they just hung out (by the pool ? in Cleveland ? ) that weekend, it's likely this story wouldn't have been.

  45. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by russbutton · · Score: 1

    Don't ya just love self-serving politics?

  46. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by TheBilgeRat · · Score: 1

    Um, that's the whole point of non-SAC mission aircraft honestly, either Navy or Airforce. Once you've eliminated the few hard targets or someone's laughable air force, you are supporting the boots on the ground. If you are an air marshal and bitching about some Army or Marine butterbar "bossing" you around on the radio, you shouldn't be an air marshal.

  47. No, we had anti-radiation missiles in Vietnam too by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    we didn't have weapons that could take out those *14* missile batteries. We had dumb bombs

    No, the US had the AGM-78, which was a second-generation anti-radiation missile (i.e. a missile that homes in on radar emitters). By the time of Operation Linebacker I & II, the US had guided ordnance that was recognizably modern (e.g. laser guided bombs) and were used to great effect (example).

    OTOH, we have bombed other countries since Vietnam that did have modern air defenses... Balkans

    As far as I can tell, the Serbian milatary was using S-125 surface to air missiles. The S-125 dates to 1961, so it's barely more modern than the S-75 used in Vietnam. It looks like Iraq was using S-125s too along with the slightly newer 2K12, which dates to 1970.

    So no, we haven't bombed a single country with modern air defenses since at least the Korean war. The closest we got was in Vietnam. In Serbia it was a 38-year-old-system. In the Gulf war it was a 21-year-old system.

  48. Not invincible by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    The A-10 is a well-designed, rugged plane. However, putting the engines back there doesn't make the plane invincible. A-10s have been shot down by surface-to-air missiles in the past, and missile designs are only improving while the A-10 is staying the same.

    I'm not agreeing with the air force that we should get rid of the A-10s, but there's a fair amount of myth that surrounds the aircraft, and not all the myths are true. If the insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan had man-portable surface-to-air missiles and knew how to use them, then there would be A-10 losses. Probably not a lot, but it might dispel the notion that the A-10s are magically invincible.

  49. Correction by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    It looks like the Serbs also had 2K12s, in which case their air defense system had components that were only 29 years old.

  50. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by kilodelta · · Score: 1

    It's the whole military industrial complex coupled with DARPA and you get what we paid for.

  51. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by rbrander · · Score: 1

    Or as Dr. Gwynne Dyer put it over 40 years ago, "The next war is a come-as-you-are war". It isn't just that nobody would be able to invent a new type of weapon during the course of it; they couldn't manufacture a single copy of any weapon. In WW2, it was a battle of factories: could we build tanks and planes faster than they could? Faster than they could shoot ours down?
    Dr. Dyer pointed out that the next war is very unlikely to exceed 30 days duration, much less the 30 months needed to put out a single tank or plane these days.

  52. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by pkinetics · · Score: 1

    Military brass get sensitive about anything alters their mission and fiefdoms. Its all about budgets and who owns how much of the pie.

  53. Re:B-36 by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Wasn't that magnesium?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  54. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by eth1 · · Score: 2

    That idea may have worked out in the relatively lazy days of WWII, but even that is an aversion. Most of the best projects that were designed for WWII like your Tigers and your P-51 Mustangs were the result of programs that had started before the war, and in fullest anticipation of an upcoming major war with a known enemy. And they still took a couple of years to be produced, even with their programs working in overdrive on a Total War footing.

    Lazy?? They were popping out one B-24 EVERY HOUR AND A HALF at one point during WW II...

    And they were constantly popping out new variants of aircraft throughout the war, too, just as fast as they could figure out the improvements.

  55. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by ksheff · · Score: 1

    If there ever was a major war, the remaining civilian engineers would be busy trying to rebuild cities from nuclear blasts. Given the time frame for development of new weapons systems, the war would be over before the designs were finished.

    --
    the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
  56. Right... by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    Yay! The US is buying 5000 silver bullets! Nothing could possibly go wrong!

  57. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by njnnja · · Score: 1

    True, but I am assuming that somehow we are restricted to a conventional war. Otherwise, this whole debate about the quality of your bomber force versus air defenses is made moot by ICBM's.

  58. Interesting by dlenmn · · Score: 1

    I corrected my comment about "distributed over the entire country" two minutes after I first posted.

    The fact that 750 missiles were used to bring down 15 aircraft is interesting, but it doesn't change my conclusions. 15 planes is still 15 planes, and the missile system was a couple generations old at the time. See guestapoo's post (above) about how the missile systems were operated to avoid detection. If true, it's a knock on the B-52 that the north vietnamese hit a single B-52. A newer missile system could have made a world of difference.

    B-52s did a fair amount of carpet bombing in Afghanistan not too long ago. The airforce definitely still practes carpet bombing, so it's not a bygone tactic that has been totally replaced by standoff weapons. (Yes, JDAMs aren't quite dumb bombs, but they sure aren't standoff weapons either.)

    I agree that standoff weapons with a long enough range would help the B-52 stay out of harms way, but the US already has plenty of systems that can shoot standoff weapons: specially modified subs, regular subs, surface ships, other aircraft, and ground vehicles. Of those options, the B-52 is one of the least stealthy; China, Russia, etc. would sure see them coming.

    I still don't see a good use for a B-52 against a modern military.

  59. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

    If the improvements in fuel economy of civilian airliners are anything to go by, we could probably build a somewhat better B-52 today(either longer range, larger payload, or some combination of the two); but it would be a sufficiently modest and incremental improvement that the cost and uncertainty of a new development project would be a really hard sell compared to incrementally worse performance; but markedly lower project management risk, through repairs and incremental upgrades of the aircraft we already have.

    It doesn't have to be, and probably isn't, the best possible implementation; but it is a good enough implementation that the airframes are really going to have to be falling apart before "Yeah, basically a B-52 but with more carbon fiber" is something you'd be willing to risk development hell on. Even with the substantially larger production numbers of airliners, the current generation improved fuel efficiency models had some serious teething issues; and similar problems would really blow up the unit cost of a smaller production run.

  60. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

    "Ya gotta" ABSOLUTELY HATE ANY AIRCRAFT "whose sole mission is ground support " if you are an Air Marshal who has no job unless they're doing strategic bombing. Fixed that for you.

        Close-air support hands over an AF asset to some Army(!!) lieutenant to boss around with a walkie-talkie. That's why the AF has been trying to kill it for decades.

    Which is why I think the A-10 program should just be transferred from the Air Force to the Army by an act of Congress, and the Air Force told to shut the hell up. The Army will always need close air support. The A-10 is really really good at it. The Army should just fly it themselves.

  61. Russia and China by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    It would be nice to stop bragging about war capacity against Russia and China.

    USA, Russia and China are all nuclear powers, which means a war involving them cannot only have losers. Please think about diplomacy instead.

  62. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    When they use technology for technology's sake.

    Soon we'll be seeing 3D printed warplanes.

    And everyone on slashdot will say it's a great idea until they take them out to Syria and they melt in the heat.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  63. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

    It's not that the designs are shitty. They are just meeting the requirements they are given. And as planes have gotten more advanced they have required more maintenance between flights. Also much of the maintenance that is being done is preventative. During a war much of it could be put off.

  64. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    I can find you lots of experts who said the next war couldn't last more than a few months, certainly not a year, in 1913 and 1914. After that, they anticipated that the economies of the belligerents would fall apart.

    If the next war doesn't involve nukes (much as WWII was fought with darn few chemical weapons), it could last a lot longer than people think.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  65. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by toddestan · · Score: 1

    I assumed they were also counting the XB-70 Valkyrie which was the next generation bomber that was intended to replace the B-52, but never made it past the prototype stage.

  66. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

    If memory serves, we got really lucky on chemical weapons in WWII. Pesticide research had just started to stumble onto the potential of organophosphate nerve agents when things heated up. Luckily the allies were not yet fully aware of the potential of their research; and the axis, based on published patents and research papers, thought that the allies were further along than they in fact were, and feared retaliation. V-2s full of Sarin would not have improved the situation.

  67. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    As far as I can tell, chemical weapons were only used in WWII when there was no possibility of retaliation.

    While the Allies didn't have Sarin, they had large quantities of other chemical agents, primarily mustard gas. They had the means to put it where they wanted. Finally, the Western Allies did not depend on horses, and the Germans did. You can put protective clothing on a horse, but you won't get any work out of it. p. So, Allied retaliation would have killed horses, destroying the mobility of everything but the Panzer and Panzergrenadier divisions. It would have effectively destroyed German industry (machine tools can take a lot of bombing, but decontaminating them is difficult). V-2s with Sarin would have caused Germany a great deal more harm than it would have caused the Brits.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  68. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by tnk1 · · Score: 1

    Perhaps a bad way of putting it. They worked very hard at production, but the pace of the war itself was pokey. War was intense, but a lot slower paced than a modern war. A four year war in the 40's against an enemy at parity would probably be over in a few months today.

    Popping out an already designed B-24 isn't want I'm talking about. Certainly your total war production is going to let you produce materiel faster using already researched designs on proven assembly lines. Although I do wonder if the war would even last long enough to bring the factories up to speed in this day and age.

    And variants are variants. They aren't new designs. They were using Shermans all the way up to the end, and were able to up-rate their guns and everything, but they were still merely uprated Shermans with all of the other deficiencies of an older Sherman with the exception of the things that got upgraded.

    Today, a variant on a bomber would have to be a tweaked B-52 or B-1. You're not going to be able to wait until the war starts to design and then put into full production the XB-3 or whatever unless that plane is already in testing before the war starts.

  69. Tha AK-47 of aircraft? by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    Old design, rugged, does the job, still in use.

    B-52 or AK-47? Both.

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
  70. Re:Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Works by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

    3D printing is not limited to plastic, it can be done with metal as well.
    Still, it would be a horrible idea.

  71. Re: Because It's the Only Thing That Actually Work by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

    The airforce has not been trying to kill off the Warthog, the Pentagon has been. The airforce refuses to let go of it, and have been basically telling the Pentagon to fuck off over this plane for decades.