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azriel
post Sep 20 2018, 07:38 AM

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Local media reported that the Indonesian Navy to have 8 new warships.

QUOTE
Kemhan Akan Datangkan 8 KRI Baru

Robertus Wardi / YS Selasa, 18 September 2018 | 17:11 WIB

Jakarta - Kementerian Pertahanan (Kemhan) berencana akan mendatangkan delapan KRI baru. Kapal-kapal itu sebagai proses peremajaan atau pergantian KRI yang ada sekarang yang sudah tua.

"Sigma ada empat, PKR nanti ada pengadaan dua. Nanti proses dua lagi. Jadi rencana ada delapan kapal," kata Kepala Badan Sarana Pertahanan (Kabaranahan) Kemhan Laksda TNI Agus Setiadji seusai mendampingi Menteri Pertahanan Ryamizard Ryacudu mengikuti Rapat Kerja bersama Komisi I di gedung DPR, Jakarta, Selasa (18/9).

Ia menjelaskan dari delapan kapal tersebut, ada kapal yang dibeli dari Belanda. Sebagian lain diproduksi PT PAL.
Saat ditanya bentuknya, dia menegaskan berukuran medium‎.

"Modelnya begitu (medium, Red). Satu dua di sana, tiga empat di sini. Sudah selesai dua. Sekarang lagi dibangun lagi," tutup Agus.‎


http://www.beritasatu.com/nasional/511224-...8-kri-baru.html
 

This post has been edited by azriel: Sep 20 2018, 11:04 AM
Frozen_Sun
post Sep 20 2018, 09:44 AM

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QUOTE(azriel @ Sep 20 2018, 07:38 AM)
The Indonesian Navy to have 8 new warships.
http://www.beritasatu.com/nasional/511224-...8-kri-baru.html
 
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So that already includes current four SIGMA corvettes and two PKR?

If yes, then this news is misleading.
azriel
post Sep 20 2018, 10:13 AM

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QUOTE(Frozen_Sun @ Sep 20 2018, 09:44 AM)
So that already includes current four SIGMA corvettes and two PKR?

If yes, then this news is misleading.
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Yes its still unclear. We'll have to wait for more infos. Prior to TNI Anniversary in October there are usually some interesting news about new assets and deliveries.

This post has been edited by azriel: Sep 20 2018, 11:45 AM
azriel
post Sep 20 2018, 08:27 PM

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QUOTE
Thailand orders four more H225M helos

Gareth Jennings, London - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
20 September 2018

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Thailand’s order of four more H225Ms brings its total buy up to 12 helicopters. All should be in service by 2021. Source: Airbus Helicopters

Thailand has ordered four more H225M (previously designated EC725) multirole helicopters to augment the eight already procured, Airbus Helicopters announced on 20 September.

The order comes on the back of the initial order for four helicopters in 2012 (received in 2015), two more in 2014 (received in 2016), and two in 2016 (to be received by the end of this year). These additional four helicopters are set to be handed over by 2021.

The EC725 is an 11-tonne twin-engine helicopter that can carry up to 28 people. The Royal Thai Air Force (Kongtap Agard Thai - RTAF) H225Ms are configured for the combat search-and-rescue, search-and-rescue, and troop transportation roles primarily. The introduction of the platform will enable the RTAF to retire its ageing Bell UH-1H ‘Huey’ helicopters that have been in service since 1968.


https://www.janes.com/article/83188/thailan...ore-h225m-helos
Fat & Fluffy
post Sep 20 2018, 09:16 PM

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AAD 2018: Olifant Mk2 vehicle mobility demonstration



Olifant Main Battle Tank Mk2 in service with the South African Army as shown at AAD 2018 mobility demonstration.

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
azriel
post Sep 22 2018, 10:06 AM

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Launching of 2 new training vessel V-06 & V-07 for the Indonesian Navy at PT Karimun Anugrah Sejati Shipyard - Batam. Credit to the photograher.

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azriel
post Sep 22 2018, 10:42 AM

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"A Pack Of Leopards" - Indonesian Army Kostrad 1st Cavalry Battalion Leopard 2RI & 2A4 MBTs during recent exercise at the TNI-AD's Combat Training Center in Baturaja South Sumatera. Credit to Yonkav 1.

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This post has been edited by azriel: Sep 24 2018, 05:13 PM
LTZ
post Sep 22 2018, 10:54 AM

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Guys....should give a try to watch Paskal the movie. For me.... its the best local action movie. Its just a RM10 mil budget movie..... but the utilization of TLDM assets in this movie give it umphhhh!!!

just dont imagine with hollywood, and u may be feeling frustrated.
zimhibikie
post Sep 22 2018, 12:31 PM

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QUOTE(LTZ @ Sep 22 2018, 10:54 AM)
Guys....should give a try to watch Paskal the movie. For me.... its the best local action movie. Its just a RM10 mil budget movie..... but the utilization of TLDM assets in this movie give it umphhhh!!!

just dont imagine with hollywood, and u may be feeling frustrated.
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I told u already, I will watch it next weekend.. tongue.gif tongue.gif tongue.gif
KYPMbangi
post Sep 22 2018, 03:17 PM

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Visiting the Yasukuni shrine

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SUSrazhar
post Sep 23 2018, 01:41 AM

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Sep 23 2018, 03:50 PM
This post has been deleted by MKLMS because: Trolling.

azriel
post Sep 23 2018, 11:46 AM

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Construction completion of the Indonesian Navy new Tarakan Class replenishment tanker KRI Bontang-907 and is set for launching at PT Batamec Shipyard. Credit to Military_buzz.

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Fat & Fluffy
post Sep 24 2018, 02:22 PM

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azriel
post Sep 24 2018, 02:51 PM

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Indonesian Army Aviation (Penerbad) 12th Assault Squadron new AS550 C3 Fennec light attack helicopters. Credit to Skadron 12/Serbu.

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https://www.instagram.com/p/BmXOrG2H0yk/

This post has been edited by azriel: Sep 24 2018, 02:51 PM
azriel
post Sep 24 2018, 02:55 PM

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South African Olifant Mk.2 MBT night live firing.

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https://www.snafu-solomon.com/2018/09/olifa...t-fire.html?m=1
G3-X
post Sep 24 2018, 04:55 PM

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QUOTE(atreyuangel @ Sep 18 2018, 03:14 PM)
Gila ah, punya la nak tolong bagi jugak geran
pasal apa aku igt ada yang bawak gi test dlm training, nak tenang ok, tp berat sangat nak bawak
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Dulu ada gambar Vita Berapi di Test dalam Hutan
Frozen_Sun
post Sep 24 2018, 07:50 PM

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

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Love zombie movies...I guess JB will be the next infected carried by mass exodus of millions of SG refugees

periuk_api1209
post Sep 24 2018, 10:26 PM

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Macam kenal je..min 3:21



This post has been edited by periuk_api1209: Sep 24 2018, 10:27 PM
azriel
post Sep 25 2018, 09:34 AM

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QUOTE
Russian fighter jets intercept U.S. F-22 Raptor flying over Syria

Sep 24, 2018

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A Su-35S air-superiority fighter jet of Russia’s Aerospace Force has intercepted and visually identified the U.S. F-22 Raptor Raptor combat aircraft flying over Syria.

A photographs posted by unofficial Russia’s military pilot Instagram account on 24 September has confirmed an intercept of the U.S. F-22 Raptor Raptor combat aircraft by the Russian Su-35S fighter jet.

Photographs, made by the infrared search and track fire control system of the Russian Su-35S, shows in infrared spectrum an F-22 Raptor fighter jet flying over Syria.

The Su-35S infrared search and track system called the OLS-35 and includes an infrared sensor, laser rangefinder, target designator and television camera. This system to determine the general position of aircraft within a fifty-kilometer radius—potentially quite useful for detecting stealth aircraft, such as F-22, at shorter ranges.

The systems scans the airspace ahead of the jet for heat signatures caused by aircraft engines and/or plane’s surface friction caused by the aircraft flying through the air.

According to the Deagel.com, OLS-35 comprises a heat-seeker, a laser rangefinder/designator with new algorithms and advanced software to outperform its predecessor installed on the Su-27/Su-30 aircraft family. The Su-35 IRST is superior to the OEPS-27 in terms of range, precision and reliability.

But, the Su-35’s infrared search and track system (IRST) does not represent a panacea solution against stealth aircraft.


Read more: https://defence-blog.com/news/russian-fight...over-syria.html

This post has been edited by azriel: Sep 25 2018, 09:37 AM

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