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> Military Thread V26

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SUSKLboy92
post Sep 1 2018, 08:03 PM

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From: Cherasboy
QUOTE(LTZ @ Sep 1 2018, 06:36 PM)
Initially, our sub project planned to have 4 set of crews, thats the reason we sent almost 200 to france for training. Reason is....to have more submariners in prep IF gov decide to buy more subs in short time....which is now, not possible.

And now?

Well soon will also have Gowind crew requirement

QUOTE
Aussie also having prob with crews now
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Big force increase

Rare in modern day and age


SUSKLboy92
post Sep 3 2018, 07:54 PM

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QUOTE(DDG_Ross @ Sep 1 2018, 08:15 PM)
he meant not many keen to volunteer for submariners life
oni few select pipul can withstand the underwater confinement

normal surface ships dun have that problem
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QUOTE(atreyuangel @ Sep 1 2018, 08:28 PM)
to be a submariner you need to go to extra training
of course when you are commisioned as CO or NCO you'll have navy training
but not all going to get the dolphin badge on their chest by just being in the navy
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I mean, bad enough with these recruitment issues, TLDM will have further crew requirements once Gowinds are built

True that subs are way more strenuous than surface ships, but even so, usually skilled personnel supply chain is a big problem for all militaries
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 3 2018, 11:52 PM

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QUOTE(atreyuangel @ Sep 3 2018, 10:55 PM)


I remember on how we decline the OHP because we lack the capacity and facilities for the ship
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good choice

old OHPs are reportedly maintenance nightmares even for the USN
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 10 2018, 11:03 PM

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QUOTE(pcboss00 @ Sep 10 2018, 12:27 PM)
MPA still on?


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Look East Policy 2.0 whistling.gif

Oh well. I'd rather operate Japanese equipment than Chinese.
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 11 2018, 01:58 PM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Sep 11 2018, 08:54 AM)
PT Perusahaan Perdagangan Indonesia (PPI) – a state-owned enterprise is the one planning to buy the A400Ms in which the aircraft will be operated by the Indonesian Air Force.
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Keyword state-owned

Just a excuse to sign defence contract with those consultant and commission fees hushed up as ULTRA TOP SECRET MILITARY INFO using taxpayer funds

While getting A400M cuz Msia also got, so can continue the dick comparing exercise in SEA

With the ostensible purpose of delivering trade cargo despite it probably being in negligibly small amounts and via air bridge, the most expensive method possible

Just when you think the Indons might be getting serious for once rolleyes.gif
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 11 2018, 03:19 PM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Sep 11 2018, 02:05 PM)

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has this been pshopped? looks like computer game liao doh.gif
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 11 2018, 05:12 PM

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QUOTE(xtemujin @ Sep 11 2018, 05:00 PM)
M’sians Shamefully Turn Butterworth Air Base into Rubbish Dump After TUDM Open Day

Read more at WOB: https://www.worldofbuzz.com/msians-shameful...-tudm-open-day/
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/ktard kata no sign ordering Msians to pick up rubbish, biarlah ada orang buat, if pickup then bangla no job whistling.gif
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 12 2018, 08:53 AM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Sep 12 2018, 08:40 AM)
that is fast

Russians selling RuAF stock?
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 12 2018, 10:29 AM

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QUOTE(DDG_Ross @ Sep 12 2018, 09:38 AM)
nah its just the old javelin sam
can see the number matches with the sipri export/import count
dunno why such portal can do this noob mistake though

(60) Javelin Portable SAM 1988-1991
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Media often make this kind of mistake

Complicated by the fact there is UK Javelin SAM and US Javelin ATGM doh.gif

This post has been edited by KLboy92: Sep 12 2018, 10:29 AM
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 12 2018, 08:03 PM

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QUOTE(DDG_Ross @ Sep 12 2018, 07:55 PM)
maybe i can count it as a pass if its your daily portal like nst/bharian/the star
but this is a niche defence portal with paywalled article
so their paid user got scammed with lazy research  laugh.gif
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British media company some more lulz doh.gif

How big do you think their ASEAN desk is - maybe just 1 or 2 overworked bodohs to cover Msia, Singkie, Indon, Thai and Phils laugh.gif

Anyway not like British media defence coverage is normally fantastic. Ridiculous the kind of bullshit they can spew out. "Fact-checking? what's that? here have another pint"
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 13 2018, 10:35 AM

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QUOTE(MilitaryMadness @ Sep 13 2018, 10:25 AM)
It does seem a tad overpowered as a scout vehicle. The capability to defend oneself is useful for a scout vehicle, but this EBRC looks like it has too much firepower. laugh.gif
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It's what the US Army would call a cavalry scout, designed to engage the enemy as well as look for them.

QUOTE(isetancrazy @ Sep 13 2018, 09:32 AM)
profile so high, makes it a sitting duck. How is it a recon vehicle ?
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The French Army likes to use fast, hard-hitting light wheeled vehicles. With a 40mm cannon and 4 ATGMs, its job is to look for the enemy AND engage while other troops come up.
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 22 2018, 01:14 AM

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Good article

QUOTE
The Mangled Myths Dogging the F-35
By Brendan Nicholson

With the RAAF’s first two operational joint strike fighters arriving in early December, long-time critics have launched a fresh wave of claims that the aircraft is a disaster.

Early in September, a writer in a major Australian newspaper declared that US pilots had ‘finally forced into the open one of the greatest cover ups in the modern world: the disaster that is the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) or F-35’. This claim is maybe one of the most ironic of all myths about the JSF, given it’s one of the most openly reported and heavily scrutinised development projects in world history.

The report went on to say, ‘America’s pilots could see that the JSF was no match for equivalent Russian and Chinese aircraft. Add to that bad management in the US air force and the US pilots have been leaving the USAF force [sic] in droves. Who wants to fly a death machine into battle?’

The big problem with the resurrection of myths about JSF capability trouble is that they are wrong. Another problem with the regurgitation of earlier claims is that many issues aired earlier have been resolved over the course of the JSF’s development. So we are hearing old news dressed up as new insights.

It’s worth saying something simple up front: the jets are operational with US and Israeli forces. The Israelis have used them operationally this year.

And the jets have proved very effective in the US Red Flag exercise—the most rigorous air combat contest held in peacetime—which pits forces from the US and allies such as Australia against teams trained to perform as the ‘enemy’ and equipped as much as possible to fight using the tactics of a potential adversary. F-35s achieved kill ratios of over 20 to 1. That’s an impressive empirical proof of capability and performance.

The US company that builds the JSF, Lockheed Martin Corporation, flew Australian journalists, myself included, to its plants in Fort Worth, Texas, and Orlando, Florida, to examine the project. The information I gathered through that trip, including from US Air Force personnel, is helpful in understanding the actual status of the jets and the production program.

So, on to some of the claims.

Are JSF pilots voting with their feet?

No. US Air Force pilots across all aircraft types are being recruited by airlines that can pay more than the US government, but JSF pilots aren’t unique in this situation. The pattern of competitive recruitment from airlines recurs as economic conditions change.

JSF pilots I have spoken to say the stealthy, multi-purpose fifth-generation jet is easy to fly, revolutionary in its capabilities, and very popular with those operating it.

On the claim that Russian and Chinese aircraft are superior, Lockheed Martin employees said that on the scant information available about aircraft such as the PLA’s Chengdu J-20 fighter and Russia’s Su-57, it appeared that both lagged the F-35 by 10 to 15 years in terms of stealth and other key capabilities. The Russians seem to have switched effort across to the Su-35, maybe showing the developmental and funding difficulty they were having with the Su-57.

The head of ASPI’s defence and strategy program, Michael Shoebridge, says various analysts tend to toss up comparisons between the JSF and the Russian and Chinese aircraft and usually combine this with a list of JSF developmental problems over time.

Shoebridge says that what these critics miss in their analysis is the exhaustive scrutiny of such US projects through the transparency built into them. The US government, through Congress, the US Department of Defense and the US Government Accountability Office, has provided reams of warts-and-all disclosure on the development of the JSF. In contrast, there’s almost no disclosure of the developmental difficulties in the Russian and Chinese programs.

This leads to analysis focusing on the JSF’s problems, while these other nations’ capability programs are almost assumed to have no issues. That is likely to lead to two consequences:

- underestimation of JSF capability (particularly when it operates as part of an integrated force of systems, sensors and shooters—as it is designed to do)

- overestimation of the Chinese and Russian capabilities—a bad case of Donald Rumsfeld’s famous ‘unknown unknowns’—with nothing but upside attributed to others’ efforts, despite the inherent difficulty of their programs.

Shoebridge agrees that the JSF program has indeed experienced problems and delays. Even a critical eye, though, has to recognise there is a track record of resolving complex issues through that development.

A June 2018 Government Accountability Office report notes the extensive work required across the life of the JSF to adapt the capability through continuous development. Shoebridge says that’s a sensible assessment for a system that will remain in service for decades.

‘To me’, he says, ‘the bigger message is the fact that the GAO report focuses mainly on controlling the acquisition cost and cost of ownership and improving overall system reliability. That’s a symptom of technical success.’

One oft-repeated claim is that the JSF is massively more expensive than its fourth-generation predecessors. In fact, as the jet shifts from development into production the cost is sliding down.

While the first models off the production line cost well over US$100 million each, the current tranche of F-35A models—the version Australia will buy at least 72 of—cost US$94.3 million each.

Lockheed Martin executives insist that by the time the RAAF pays for the bulk of its jets, the ‘fly-away’ cost will be below US$80million per plane. By comparison, the latest Super Hornet advanced fourth-generation jets cost US$78 million each.

The company says it’s working to drive F-35 maintenance costs down to around the equivalent of maintaining fourth-generation fighters.

A gap in the F-35’s capability is the need for a more effective maritime strike capability. Australia is working with Norway to build such a weapon to be added to the JSF arsenal.

An old claim re-emerged this week that the JSF could be taken down by a lightning strike. Lockheed Martin said that issue had been resolved and the aircraft could survive a direct strike by lightning. And while it’s never entirely safe to fly any aircraft into lightning conditions, there are no specific or unique restrictions on the JSF flying in such conditions.

Let me give one example of the inordinate level of scrutiny the JSF is exposed to and take the time to rebut it in equally inordinate detail.

A safety issue which emerged over a year ago was concern that the weight of the helmet could result in the shock from a parachute opening breaking the neck of a very light pilot ejecting from the aircraft.

The helmet is heavy because it’s a key part of the aircraft’s capability. It’s linked to six cameras placed around the fuselage to give the pilot an extraordinary level of all-round vision. The pilot can look ‘through’ the fuselage or down through the floor and see the landscape below.

For a time, pilots weighing less than about 62 kilograms were barred from flying the aircraft.

The risk to the pilot was reduced by installing a switch in the ejector seat, which slightly slows the parachute’s deployment at high speeds and reduces the opening shock.

In addition, a support panel has been added to the parachute’s rear risers to stop the pilot’s head being flung backwards during ejection. The helmet’s weight has also been reduced.

The pilot weight restriction has now been lifted.

It’s also been claimed often that the F-35 has proved inferior to older aircraft in dogfights. US and Australian pilots have pointed out that the F-35 is designed to identify its enemies and destroy them long before the opposing pilots even know it’s there. That is an operational advantage of far more importance to survivability and combat success than dogfight performance.

Back to the Red Flag results, if facts can help slay myths …
This post has been edited by KLboy92: Sep 22 2018, 01:15 AM
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 27 2018, 02:01 AM

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QUOTE(Fat & Fluffy @ Sep 24 2018, 02:22 PM)

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laugh.gif

looks promisingly stupid
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 28 2018, 11:29 AM

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QUOTE(miuk @ Sep 27 2018, 02:38 AM)
Looks damn cool especially with the soft launch at the start to get the missile out the tube  drool.gif
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I was talking about the zombie movie sweat.gif
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 29 2018, 09:16 PM

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QUOTE(xtemujin @ Sep 29 2018, 12:21 PM)
Malaysian army museum at Port Dickson on fire.

http://www.sinarharian.com.my/mobile/edisi...rbakar-1.885384
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OMG NO! I love that place!
SUSKLboy92
post Sep 29 2018, 09:19 PM

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Proud day for the Royal Navy rclxms.gif

user posted image

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SUSKLboy92
post Oct 7 2018, 01:11 AM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Oct 6 2018, 09:29 PM)
The MX-GCS installed as a gunsight on the SAIC Mobile Protected Firepower (MPF) vehicle. (Photo: L3 WESCAM)

user posted image

https://www.monch.com/mpg/news/ew-c4i-chann...cam-mx-gcs.html
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After the big hoo hah with the ACV program, SAIC still got chance for this?
SUSKLboy92
post Oct 7 2018, 02:30 AM

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QUOTE(atreyuangel @ Oct 7 2018, 02:16 AM)
Boleh, above the door ada, on the left of the door pun ada while RMAF punya body clean aja
I think this RAF bird also serve as a SIGINT plane
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Could it be DASS countermeasures?
SUSKLboy92
post Oct 8 2018, 01:00 PM

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Yo atreyuangel, ask you something

Our four A400Ms habis bayar instalmen dah? or still ongoing?
SUSKLboy92
post Oct 8 2018, 03:30 PM

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QUOTE(atreyuangel @ Oct 8 2018, 02:14 PM)
9 tahun loan ngan public bank  laugh.gif

All I know is A400M is cash with economic offset
Large long term projects like these would not be settled COD, always will have financing package... especially for poor country like ours

Oh well

QUOTE

further delayed in delivery more economic offset were offered by airbus

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oh we got discount for late delivery?

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