QUOTE(waja2000 @ Apr 1 2015, 12:06 AM)
more of the idea of a civilian equipments for military use.. The hesitation
Military Thread V16
Military Thread V16
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Apr 1 2015, 12:08 AM
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1,210 posts Joined: Aug 2011 |
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Apr 1 2015, 12:17 AM
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QUOTE(waja2000 @ Apr 1 2015, 12:06 AM) latest update on Scorpion aircraftTextron Eyes Scorpion CAS, T-X Missions http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense/a...tomer/70678136/ |
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Apr 1 2015, 12:44 AM
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406 posts Joined: Jun 2007 From: 3°50'**.**"N - 103°16'**.**"E |
QUOTE(KYPMbangi @ Mar 31 2015, 11:55 PM) Seems there's a rumor of najib got to fly in the back seat of a super hornet in recent lima, betul ka? ntah, tak perasan pulakbut the Beoing are really agressive on promoting the ASH QUOTE(waja2000 @ Mar 31 2015, 11:55 PM) actually BAE already close Hawk production line at 2010,results 900 worker losing job. One quality of the BAE is their after sales support and partsbut due to receive new hawk order from Saudi 22 unit, oman 8 unit, so BAE Just restart production line on 2014 for total 30 unit new hawk, it will be complete 30 unit production until 2017. that's why all of their aircraft are performing very well that is the one of the point the BAE uses in the Typhoon |
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Apr 1 2015, 12:47 AM
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QUOTE(atreyuangel @ Apr 1 2015, 12:44 AM) ntah, tak perasan pulak but recently 1-2 year have a lot news on maintenance/support/parts issue in Germany/Spain/UK Typhoon.but the Beoing are really agressive on promoting the ASH One quality of the BAE is their after sales support and parts that's why all of their aircraft are performing very well that is the one of the point the BAE uses in the Typhoon |
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Apr 1 2015, 01:18 AM
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406 posts Joined: Jun 2007 From: 3°50'**.**"N - 103°16'**.**"E |
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Apr 1 2015, 01:27 AM
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Apr 1 2015, 01:38 AM
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QUOTE(waja2000 @ Apr 1 2015, 01:27 AM) seem news said BAE also plan next generation Hawk, current hawk quite old already. and hard to complete with M-346 T-50, Yak130 Between m346 and yak130, if the airforce were to choose between both. M346 would be most likely the choice for sole reason it made from western part though the latter might be cheaper in initial purchase This post has been edited by thpace: Apr 1 2015, 01:39 AM |
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Apr 1 2015, 06:29 AM
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QUOTE Sukhoi Company filed an application to participate in a tender issued by Indonesia Russian Aviaton » Tuesday March 31, 2015 15:04 MSK Sukhoi Company filed an application to participate in a tender for delivery of fighters to Indonesian air forces, Lenta.ru reports with reference to the company’s press-service. The model of the fighter offered by Russian company was not unveiled by the press-service. It was reported earlier that Indonesia is going to put 16 F-5E/F Tiger II aircraft delivered from USA in 1980 out of operation. And the country is looking for a replacement for these jets. According to some sources, only two out of sixteen jets of the type are operational now. In autumn 2014 after analysis of RFI (request for information) responses, Indonesian Ministry of Defense selected three finalists: Su-35 (Russia), F-16C/D block 52+ (USA) and JAS.39 Gripen (Sweden). The latter one is the favorite, according to sources close to Indonesian Ministry of Defense. At first Indonesia was also considering US F-15 Silent Eagle and F/A-18 Super Hornet, as well as French Dassault Rafale. Today Indonesian air forces operate four types of Sukhoi fighters. In 2003 the country purchased two Su-27SK jets, in 2010 — three upgraded Su-27SKMs. In 2003 Indonesia placed an order for two Su-30MK jets and nine more Su-30MK2s were purchased in 2008 and 2011. http://www.ruaviation.com/news/2015/3/31/3013/ |
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Apr 1 2015, 07:34 AM
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US Accuses China of 'Creating a Great Wall of Sand' ![]() At a naval conference in Canberra, Admiral Harry Harris Jr. of the US Pacific Fleet spent a few moments speaking on the beauty of the South China Sea, a body of water teeming with natural islands and coral reefs. "But what’s really drawing a lot of concern in the here and now is the unprecedented land reclamation currently being conducted by China," Harris said. "China is creating a great wall of sand with dredges and bulldozers over the course of months." This wall, as the admiral calls it, refers to a series of submerged reefs in the Spratlys archipelago, which China has built into utilitarian landmasses, complete with buildings and aircraft runways. "China is building artificial land by pumping sand on to live coral reefs – some of them submerged – and paving over them with concrete," he said. In total, Harris said that China had converted over 4 square kilometers of sea into land. The purpose of these islands is what worries both the US military and other regional players. The South China Sea is a highly contested area, with territorial disputes between a number of nations. While China claims a vast majority of the sea, the Philippines, Vietnam, Taiwan, Brunei, and Malaysia all have overlapping stakes. Earlier this month, both the Philippines and Vietnam filed diplomatic protests to Beijing over Chinese naval presence near their shores. The main fear is that these islands are being built as military installations with the intention of broadening Beijing's influence in the region. "When one looks at China’s pattern of provocative actions towards smaller claimant states…it’s no surprise that the scope and pace of building man-made islands raises serious questions about Chinese intentions," Harris said. "How China proceeds will be a key indicator of whether the region is heading towards confrontation or cooperation," he added. But to address these concerns, the United States is bolstering its own military presence. Last month, the US Navy admitted that it is launching its most advanced spy plane – the Poseidon P-8A – out of bases in the Philippines. Earlier this month, a bipartisan group of Senators wrote to Defense Secretary Ash Carter, demanding a formal strategy for countering Chinese influence in the South China Sea. An aerial photo shows Thitu Island, part of the disputed Spratly group of islands, in the South China Sea located off the coast of western Philippines. Some kind of strategy appears to be taking shape. Admiral Harris also said that the US Navy was currently in preparation to shift 60% of its fleet to the Pacific by 2020, and the Pentagon is also seeking broader cooperation with India to conduct maritime exercises. The conference, itself, was meant to signal a stronger partnership between the US and Australia. Earlier in the day, Rear Admiral Christopher J. Paul, deputy commander of the US Pacific surface fleet, urged the Australian Navy to join US-led "hunter-killer" patrol groups. Paul also said that the US was moving in its latest Zumwalt stealth destroyers, and that combined with Australian missile destroyers, amphibious ships, and frigates, the allied nations could pursue the "distributed lethality" doctrine recently decided on by the US Navy. "A shift to the offensive is necessary to create more favorable conditions to project power where required," Paul said. Building artificial islands may be one form of abstract aggression, but the expansion of US naval presence over 10,000 miles from home could be perceived as another, more direct type of aggression. http://sputniknews.com/asia/20150331/1020264686.html |
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Apr 1 2015, 07:41 AM
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THE HIGH-TECH BATTLE AGAINST PIRATES ![]() QUOTE Counter Piracy Guido Vitti Ghost flies through the ocean on buoyant foils, long propeller-tipped pontoons that sit six feet underwater. Ghose looks more like a spacecraft than a seaborne combat vessel. It's waiting for us in the Piscataqua River, a few minutes out from its home at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine. As we approach in a small chase boat, I get a full view of the cabin--sharp and angular like a stealth fighter--looming over the dark water. The roof holds a mount for a machine gun and rocket launcher. Greg Sancoff, the founder of the start-up Juliet Marine Systems, points out two 12-foot struts, each of which connects to sleek underwater pontoons. At full bore, he tells me, the pontoons ride just beneath the surface, while the cabin rises 20 feet above the waves. It is a case study in ominous, efficient engineering--a machine designed to fly through the ocean and invoke fear. Sancoff tells me Ghost could serve many functions, including as a luxury speedboat or an attack ship for Navy SEALs. But the mission it appears best suited to is fighting pirates. With tremendous speed, and triple the range of any comparably sized vessel, Ghost is a natural interceptor. And because it rides above the water on robotically stabilized pontoons, it remains steady in all but the roughest of seas. While attackers would struggle to aim weapons from a bucking, heaving boat, armed crew members on Ghost can engage with relative ease as it bears down at full throttle. http://www.popsci.com/high-tech-battle-fighting-pirates |
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Apr 1 2015, 07:57 AM
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Islamic State retreats from Tikrit, Iraq ![]() Iraq’s security forces have recaptured Tikrit, according to Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, which if confirmed would be the largest victory yet against Islamic State. Iranian military intelligence operatives and advisers have taken a public role in assisting Shiite militias in pushing back Islamic State from the far outskirts of Baghdad. Significantly, Shiite militia leaders have conducted this operation with no coordination from allied forces. http://graphics.wsj.com/battle-against-islamic-state/ |
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Apr 1 2015, 08:50 AM
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Apr 1 2015, 10:30 AM
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![]() QUOTE Raytheon awarded $35 million Stinger contract for Republic of Korea delivery Systems to go aboard Apache helicopters TUCSON, Ariz., March 31, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Raytheon Company (NYSE: RTN) signed a $35 million contract to deliver Stinger® missiles and air-to-air launchers to the Republic of Korea Army in support of their recent procurement of AH-64 Apache helicopters. Under the previously announced foreign military sale, Raytheon will begin deliveries of the Stinger weapon systems in 2017. "Stinger provides vital self-protection capabilities as well as defensive counter-air protection of aviation and ground forces," said Michelle Lohmeier, vice president of Raytheon's Land Warfare Systems product line. "Most importantly, Stinger operates day and night, in all environmental conditions and allows for the engagement of multiple targets within seconds." This agreement highlights a renewed global interest in air-to-air Stinger as a key component of attack and light attack helicopter mission configurations. Stinger greatly enhances the capabilities of the aircraft to successfully perform today's missions while countering existing threats. "With the emergence of unmanned aerial vehicles in the battlespace and the key role of helicopters, the evolved technology of air-to-air Stinger is easily adapted to defeat evolving threats," said Jack Elliot, Raytheon's Stinger program director. "Stinger is an immediate- response weapon of choice against a wide range of air threats for protection of both fixed sites and maneuver forces." About Stinger Stinger-RMP (reprogrammable microprocessor) Blk 1, the current production version of Stinger, has maintained a greater than 90 percent success rate in reliability and training tests against advanced threat targets. The combination of supersonic speed, agility, highly accurate guidance and control system, and lethal warhead gives Stinger the operational edge against all classes of helicopters, UAVs, cruise missiles, and fixed-wing aircraft. In service in 19 countries, Stinger not only has a surface-to-air capability from land and sea, but also an air-to-air capability that can be integrated into most fixed- or rotary-wing platforms. http://raytheon.mediaroom.com/2015-03-31-R...-Korea-delivery |
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Apr 1 2015, 10:35 AM
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Apr 1 2015, 10:59 AM
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Apr 1 2015, 10:59 AM
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Luconia_Shoals still our (Malaysia) control and Admin ?
china many forum have many hype said maybe Luconia Shoals already re-control by china and malaysia keep silent. just 100km to Sarawak. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luconia_Shoals http://www.fri.gov.my/friswak/publication/luconiafri.pdf This post has been edited by waja2000: Apr 1 2015, 11:02 AM |
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Apr 1 2015, 11:26 AM
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QUOTE(waja2000 @ Apr 1 2015, 10:59 AM) Luconia_Shoals still our (Malaysia) control and Admin ? How do they control something that is underwater? park a ship on top of it? maybe oil rig? china many forum have many hype said maybe Luconia Shoals already re-control by china and malaysia keep silent. just 100km to Sarawak. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luconia_Shoals http://www.fri.gov.my/friswak/publication/luconiafri.pdf |
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Apr 1 2015, 02:43 PM
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QUOTE(KYPMbangi @ Apr 1 2015, 11:26 AM) they can insert a small Pillar with there national flag, than already claim there one...... just like Scarborough Shoal standoff with Philippine This post has been edited by waja2000: Apr 1 2015, 02:51 PM |
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Apr 1 2015, 03:46 PM
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Apr 1 2015, 03:50 PM
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