United State's NGAD & F/A-XX Fighter Programs : Updates and Discussions

Only India today has the ability to develop and make QDIP IRST which provides 4 times the detection range of QWIP IRST.
further to my post.

as you can see, we have taken a lead compared to rest of the world in this tech.
 
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further to my post.

as you can see, we have taken a lead compared to rest of the world in this tech.
@marich01
Do you have more info about this QDIP IRST sensor that we're developing?
 
Let's see how much trust USAF has on LM after the F-35 fiasco! I was hoping(against hope) for Northrop Grumman to win NGAD contract. But then USAF would have like to diversify their suppliers as NG are already supplying B-21. So no NGAD contract to them.

Now all hopes on NgAD or F/A-XX for NG. However most likely result would be LM winning NGAD and Boeing winning NgAD.

So NG = B-21(B-2s replacement also from them).

LM= NGAD(F-22 replacement which is also from them).

Boeing= NgAD( F/A-18E/F replacement which is also from them).

Damn, more things change, more they remain the same:ROFLMAO:.
What F-35 fiasco? The fiasco where nations select the F-35 over Rafail? The fiasco where first world nations prefer the F-35 over Rafale? Stop being such an troll you're no Anonymous and you will never be like her. At least she was funny you just come across as a troll or a very dumb person that doesn't know what he's talking about.

NG is going to concentrate on the Navy's NGAD.
 
@marich01
Do you have more info about this QDIP IRST sensor that we're developing?
I do know that only IIT-B/M has been able to stabilise it and that too at room temperature. Which is outstanding as we can always apply cooling to the detector to increase its detectivity. You may not even know that IIT- Roorkee has done research on cabon nanotech and their model has over 90% absorption of radio waves frpm 0.8 GHZ to to over 18GHX frequency band. I follow research within India a lot. It is for this reason that My own MSA will have metalluc internal structure created thru 3D printing of duralumin and only a skin made of carbon nanoparticle made skin from IIT-Roorke
 
I do know that only IIT-B/M has been able to stabilise it and that too at room temperature. Which is outstanding as we can always apply cooling to the detector to increase its detectivity. You may not even know that IIT- Roorkee has done research on cabon nanotech and their model has over 90% absorption of radio waves frpm 0.8 GHZ to to over 18GHX frequency band. I follow research within India a lot. It is for this reason that My own MSA will have metalluc internal structure created thru 3D printing of duralumin and only a skin made of carbon nanoparticle made skin from IIT-Roorke
We've already developed ULB composite skin for AMCA and Aura programme. I posted about that here: Sukhoi Su-30MKI

This absorbs frequencies between 0.5GHz to 60GHz(supposedly) just like CNT based RAM/RAS of F-35.



 
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Signs Point To Less Range, Higher Performance For CCA Drones

Growing demands for the USAF’s collaborative drones, with greater payload and performance, could lead to cost growth and other issues.
BYJOSEPH TREVITHICK, TYLER ROGOWAY|PUBLISHED NOV 28, 2023 6:28 PM EST

The U.S. Air Force says it's considering drone designs capable of being aerial refueled for its Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) program with range capabilities similar to its existing fighter aircraft. It has also revealed new details about what kind of payload it wants these highly autonomous uncrewed aircraft to have from the start, as well as a price tag that is at the top of what was supposedly being considered before.
Taken together, there are growing signs that the kinematic performance and payload targets, as well as the overall complexity, of the CCAs are growing, and range is decreasing.

This is concerning considering that for unmanned aircraft of this variety, range is traditionally one of their biggest advantages over their manned counterparts. Giving up range for higher performance and larger payload could limit how and where the CCAs are employed and make them dependent, like their fighter stablemates, on an increasingly overtaxed tanker force.

Thomas Lawhead, head of the Air Force Futures office at the Pentagon, discussed the potential for aerial refueling capability and other aspects of the CCA program during a virtual event the Air & Space Forces Association's Mitchell Institute hosted on November 15. Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall also talked about the current state of the CCA effort at a separate event the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) think tank held on November 13, the basics of which The War Zone has already reported on.

"There is potential, depending on the offerer, for refueling capability in our first CCAs," Lawhead said last week. "Future tranches and increments of CCAs will probably be refueled [in mid-air]."

Currently, the Air Force is planning around a fleet of at least 1,000 CCAs, but with the expectation that the size of that force will likely grow substantially. The 1,000-drone figure could very well become an initial tranches/increments, which the service hopes to start production of within the next five years.

The possibility of incorporating air-to-air refueling capability into the CCAs is being driven heavily by range requirements.
"So we think that, particularly in the initial tranche of CCAs, their range will be relatively the same as our current fighter fleet. [It could even] potentially be a little bit longer, which helps with the flexibility of how we would actually employ them, and we're working through those concepts of employment right now."

Lawhead also stressed the importance of payload requirements to the CCA program, but did not provide details on what those might be or what they might be comparable to.

"We need something that has range and payload characteristics, consistent with our operational concept," Secretary Kendall said last week. "At the end of the day, ... you've got to either fly ahead of or accompany crewed fighters, and have range and payload capabilities that are operationally consistent with that."

The Air Force has long made clear now that, at least initially, it envisions CCAs working very closely with crewed combat jets, with a heavy focus on supporting air-to-air missions. The initial batch of drones, or further variants or derivatives thereof, as well as entirely different designs, could collaborate with other types of crewed aircraft in support of other mission sets, or conduct operations independently.

Secretary Kendall has also said in the past that the 1,000-drone fleet is based on a concept of operations that could see two CCAs paired with each of 200 new sixth-generation stealthy crewed combat jets being developed under the Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) program and 300 F-35A Joint Strike Fighters. He has added previously that a single pilot could potentially manage more CCAs if it is determined to be feasible technically and from an operator workload perspective.


Even with all this growing clarity about what the Air Force Force wants from its CCAs, there increasingly seems to be critical details left unspoken. If CCAs are to have a combat radius that is similar to existing crewed combat jets, and the drones otherwise have to keep up with those aircraft, then the desired platform seems all but certainly demand significant performance and/or payload capabilities. That, in turn, points to designs that are perhaps larger, as well as costlier, than might have been expected based on how the Air Force had presented the program in the past.

There has already been mounting evidence that this is the case. Last week, Secretary Kendall provided the most detailed estimates for how much a single CCA could be expected to cost. He pegged that figure at between one-third and one-quarter of the current price tag of an F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. Based on available F-35 cost data, this would mean the price of each CCA would be roughly between $20.5M and $27.5M.

To provide some further comparisons, the F-35A version of the Joint Strike Fighter, one of the crewed aircraft the Air Force has said it expects CCAs to work together with initially, has a publicly stated unrefueled combat radius of just over 650 nautical miles. This is, of course, dependent on a number of factors, and those fighters can also refuel in flight to extend their reach. The F-22 has a far lower combat radius, as do F-16s, for instance.

Drone maker Kratos has said in the past that its stealthy XQ-58A Valkyrie drone could have an unrefueled combat radius of up to 1,500 miles (3,000-mile total range), but with a maximum payload of just 500 pounds. The Air Force has been flying XQ-58As for years now and these drones have often been held out as an example of a design that could be pitched for the CCA program.

Boeing's MQ-28 Ghost Bat, which was originally developed as a loyal wingman-type drone for the Royal Australian Air Force and the U.S. Air Force is now using to support its own advanced uncrewed aircraft work, has a stated maximum range of 2,000 miles. Some have extrapolated this to a combat radius of around 900 miles. To date, Boeing does not appear to have released details about the Ghost Bat's expected unrefueled combat radius or payload capacity.

Neither the XQ-58 nor the MQ-28 can be refueled in mid-air, at least in their current configurations.

There is also the question of how these drones, which are meant to be paired with the Next Generation Air Dominance crewed tactical aircraft, will be able to match its reach if they are being designed to do so to match the shorter legs of current fighters in the inventory. One of the key features of the manned NGAD aircraft is known to be a much more generous range than its currently serving counterparts, which allows it to penetrate deep into the enemy's anti-access bubble. If that too has changed, it would be a major development.

The vulnerability of tanker aircraft against a foe with long-range defenses, and especially in a theater like the vast Pacific, is a major issue, one we have pointed out for years. Now the Air Force is realizing the same and is actively working to mitigate it via a number of initiatives, including building a stealthy tanker in the decade to come. This very real problem would be offset by NGAD with a longer combat radius than existing fighters, but if their CCAs cannot match this, it's a major issue.

Outside of range and payload, as well as the new cost details from Secretary Kendall, there have been other indications that the Air Force might be looking toward more capable, but also more complex and costlier designs for CCA than had previously been expected.

A CCA-related contracting notice the Air Force put out in September emphasized a desire for options that could offer "increased range, reduced runway take-off distance, increased Mach capability, increased power and thermal capacity, and increased payload." All of this is in line with what Lawhead and Kendall said this week.

The September contracting announcement also explicitly identified interest in the drones having "3000-8000 lbf thrust class [jet] engines."
While Kratos does not identify the specific turbofan engine it uses on the XQ-58A, the company does say that it is in the 2,000-pound thrust class. Boeing has only said in the past that the MQ-28 uses a "commercial turbofan engine."

General Atomics, which is on contract to provide a drone from its Gambit family to the Air Force for the separate and secretive Off-Board Sensing System (OBSS) program, told Breaking Defense on the sidelines of the Dubai Airshow that the Williams FJ44 and unspecified types from Pratt & Whitney could be possible powerplants for that design, according to a story published just today. It seems very likely that a Gambit design will be proposed for CCA, as well. The most powerful known version of the FJ44 is in the 4,000-pound thrust class. This is also roughly the same thrust output as the Pratt & Whitney PW545B that General Atomics uses in its Avenger drone, although that is a very different kind of uncrewed asset than what CCA envisions, especially in terms of performance.

The FJ44 is also the engine that Anduril's Fury, another drone that could be a CCA contender, was originally designed around. You can read more about Fury and the story of its development in detail in this past War Zone feature.

Regardless, the higher end of the thrust range that the Air Force says it is interested in for CCA is significantly greater than any of what is being actively discussed here, and could point to a desired design with at least a high subsonic/transonic top speed. But more than that, it is a sign of the desire for CCAs to have larger payloads than what has been hinted at in the past.

All of this could invite potential pitfalls. The Air Force, which continues to stress that it is still in the early phases of defining the core CCA requirements, has acknowledged a number of these itself.

Aerial refueling, for instance, "adds to their fueling complexity and the fuel needed in theater," Air Force Futures head Lawhead said last week. "We think those are problems that are solvable going forward."

Lawhead also indicated that the CCA range requirement may be more flexible than it otherwise seems and that the Air Force could consider novel ways to ensure that the drones can keep up with their crewed companions.

"Do we forward deploy and set the theater with CCAs already in theater?" Lawhead posed as a rhetorical question with regard to how these drones might be employed in the future. "What are the other things we want uncrewed aircraft [not necessarily just CCAs] to do, and whether that's coming out of palletized effects, whether it's being launched off of fighters, bombers, [or] whether it's ... special ops forces inserted into the battlespace."

"Palletized effects" here appears to be a reference to the Rapid Dragon system that the Air Force is developing. Rapid Dragon is a palletized launch system that is designed to allow various kinds of cargo aircraft to employ different kinds of munitions and other stores (which could include air-launched drones) via their main cargo bays.

Lawhead's mention of fighters and bombers air-launching drones is also interesting given that this is exactly what the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) aims to explore through its LongShot program. DARPA hired General Atomics in September to build and flight test its proposed LongShot design.

The Air Force has explored the possibility of other fighter-launched drones in the past and has also been looking at the possibility of using other aircraft as drone motherships. At the same time, the core idea of launching a drone from a crewed combat jet is very different from what would be entailed in doing so with a CCA, especially if various requirements for those drones are expanding. In its marketing material, GA-ASI has already been depicting LongShot as being launched by large F-15-series jets due to their expected size and weight. Still, LongShot and similar designs do not seem representative of the baseline CCA requirements.

With regard to any growth in CCA's requirements, the bigger issue could be cost.

"Obviously, once a CCA gets up towards the cost of an F-35, you might as well buy an F-35," Lawhead, the head of Air Force Futures, noted last week. "So we will keep that cost down by, again, using that trade space between what it needs to do, what we need it to do, and how elaborate it needs to be."

"You don't want the full complement of systems that are on a fighter [on a CCA], but you want some subset of that," Secretary Kendall said last week. "They're not expendables. They're intended to be systems that you can accept losses of a fraction of them and not have a big operational impact."

That latter point is in line with how the Air Force has typically defined the term "attritable" in the past. However, that concept has always been somewhat nebulous and the service has steadily backed away from using it in recent years, especially with regard to CCAs. Instead, the preferred phrase is now "affordable mass."

"It doesn't mean though that this [CCA] is an attritable type of platform," Maj. Gen. R. Scott Jobe, the Director of Plans, Programs, and Requirements at the Air Force's Air Combat Command (ACC), said during a panel talk at the 2023 Air and Space Forces Association's Warfare Symposium in March.

"We've got to make sure that everyone keeps an eye on that we're going to reuse these air vehicles and that the decision for risk, of risk that we will take with these type of capabilities, will be at the mission command or at the combined forces air component command level," Jobe added at that time. "It'll be at the point in time when you're making a risk decision in combat, not at the industrial side of design, not at the engineering level."

"Affordability is only as good as the capability that goes with it. No matter how cheap it is, if it doesn't achieve the effect we need... in the battlespace, then it's not going to do what we need it to do," Brig. Gen. Dale White, the Air Force's Program Executive Officer for Fighters and Advanced Aircraft, another member of the panel Jobe was on in March, also said. "So affordable mass has to be based on affordability and capability... We have to start thinking through the lens of lethality for development."

The War Zone noted then that there seemed to be signs emerging of a debate within the Air Force about exactly where the sweet spot might be between affordability and capability when it came to CCAs. The Air Force has repeatedly insisted that CCAs will be essential for providing adequate aerial combat capacity, especially in a future high-end conflict, such as one against China in the Pacific, and therefore need to be low-cost enough to be procured in large quantities and built quickly.

All of this gets at broader issues about just what any changes in the fundamental requirements will mean for the future of the CCA program. Demanding near-fighter-like range and performance, as well as appreciable payloads could easily result in a costlier platform without the benefit of increased range that gets away from what this entire effort was supposed to be about at the start. Things like an aerial refueling requirement could further negate key cost, production, and operational advantages that these uncrewed aircraft might otherwise offer if they were cheaper to acquire and field in large numbers, as well as easier to operate and maintain.

A family of systems, with drastically different performance capabilities will likely be needed to build-out a robust unmanned-manned teaming capability in the future. Lockheed Skunk Works made just this case for a 'distributed' concept some time ago, but as it sits now, the USAF looks focused on a more centralized solution in terms of the CCA program. This could change over time though.

It is clear that much about the CCA program and its requirements remain unsettled, and there is still the potential for things to change further as time goes on. At the same time, there is now something of a steady stream of new details about what the Air Force wants from these drones and the picture that seems to be coalescing now seems different in many key aspects from how things have been presented in the past. With its vision being centered on a higher-performance, higher-payload, short-ranged initial CCA platform.
 
Not really.
Where F22 was a success, F35 is a burden for every customers. Some have already seen reality (USAF, Marines, USN), for the others it's a bad surprise to come.
So it's not surprising to see the Pentagon seeing other supplier than LM.
crazy-laughter.gif
 

My prediction is exactly the same. LM taking the main contract, GE supplying the engines and Boeing supplying the drones. LM 'cause they are using a less-risky evolutionary approach. GE 'cause they are a bit more ahead in the program along with Boeing on drones, hence less risk.

Boeing could win the NgAD though.
 
Allvin: ‘No decision’ made on NGAD, but ‘difficult’ choices loom

“The deliberations are still underway, there’s been no decision made. We’re looking at a lot of very difficult options that we have to consider,” Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin said today when asked about the sixth-generation fighter.

WASHINGTON — Funding constraints combined with rapid development of new drone technology has the Air Force openly questioning the fate of its planned sixth-gen stealth fighter, according to the service’s top uniformed officer.

“The deliberations are still underway, there’s been no decision made. We’re looking at a lot of very difficult options that we have to consider,” Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin said today in a roundtable with reporters at the Pentagon, when asked about the service’s plans for its Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) fighter.

Delaying or outright canceling NGAD would represent a stark reversal for the Air Force, which officials like Secretary Frank Kendall have previously called a “vital element” of the “family of systems” the service is pursuing to dominate rival militaries, particularly China. Planned to replace the F-22, the NGAD platform is expected to be extremely expensive, likely several times the cost of an F-35. Lockheed Martin and Boeing are thought to be competing to build it.

Until this week, NGAD seemed to be largely on track as a program, with the Air Force previously announcing its “intent” to award a contract for the effort this year. But in the last 24 hours, the service’s top two officials have both floated the idea that the manned, sixth-gen fighter may be in danger.

Allvin first revealed on Thursday that the Air Force might be having second thoughts, when asked directly whether the service could still field it as planned. The general didn’t commit to the program, suggesting instead that it was one of several “choices” officials had to make for its fiscal 2026 budget request.

Shortly after, Aviation Week published a story with Kendall, who said officials have to be “open-minded” about the program due to funding constraints. The service has many competing priorities, including the B-21 Raider and Sentinel ICBM whose costs have ballooned.

During his comments today, Allvin noted another factor that has gone into the potential rethink of NGAD: a better understanding of how unmanned systems fit into future concepts of operation.

He explained that by “leaning into” the Air Force’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) drone wingman effort, the service is “discovering” a “different way of developing capabilities.” Specifically, the Air Force’s vision for CCA — where the drones would be capable of quickly evolving to meet new threats — can serve as a “pathfinder” for many of the service’s new initiatives, shifting focus away from long-term platforms envisioned to win fights decades into the future.

“We don’t tack on extra requirements like Christmas tree ornaments that make them so much more expensive. We don’t add a sustainment tail that you have to build a depot structure [for] and you’re going to have block upgrades and everything — no, because the assumption is that the technology is going to move fast enough that if you can fit that technology into the current form factor because it’s modular, great. If not put that aside,” Allvin said of CCA.

“It’s the systems that make the difference,” he continued. “So privileging design rather than very expensive hardware that is so expensive you can’t afford enough of them to be able to use, I think is one of the areas that we’re pursuing in several of the capabilities we’re developing.”

Allvin also noted that a “Century Series” concept championed by former Air Force acquisition czar Will Roper, where fighters would have iterative designs capable of changing every few years in response to threats, is “not dissimilar” from how the service is thinking about the future. Emphasizing that considerations like cost and requirements must stay in the mix, Allvin said, “we will see how fast industry can deliver.”

A move toward rapidly iterated designs and short sustainment tails would likely upend industry’s business model, which often depends on long, lucrative contracts to maintain systems. Allvin suggested that for newer platforms, their lifespan might not be as long as their predecessors.

“I often joke about ‘built to last.’ Maybe ‘built to last’ isn’t a good bumper sticker anymore, because built to last assumes that it’s relevant as long as it lasts,“ he said.

What will happen to the Air Force’s next-gen fighter jet?

Delays in Lockheed Martin’s F-35 program and Boeing’s lackluster performance on its own defense efforts could be driving recent—and unexpected—comments from Air Force leaders that it might not build a next-gen fighter jet.

Aviation observers were thrown for a loop last week when service chief Gen. David Allvin declined to commit to building the future Next Generation Air Dominance aircraft—a program that was once the service’s top air dominance priority. Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall also recently told Aviation Week that budget constraints are forcing the service to relook at its plans for NGAD.

“Just to be clear, the deliberations are still underway. There’s been no decision made. We’re looking at a lot of very difficult options that we have to consider,” Allvin told reporters Friday when asked about the program’s future. The service said it would pick a winner for NGAD this year, with Lockheed and Boeing in the running, but now that leaders are hedging on the program, it’s unclear if that goal still holds.

The Air Force may be waffling on NGAD because it’s dealing with a “truly miserable choice,” said Richard Aboulafia, managing director for AeroDynamic Advisory, an aerospace consulting firm.

“Boeing, which still hasn't replaced the worst senior management team in history, even though it intends to do so, and has a dismal track record, at best, with just about everything in recent years. Or Lockheed Martin, which has absolutely no incentive to execute on this in a cost effective way,” Aboulafia said.

If NGAD were canceled, the Pentagon would likely fly Lockheed’s F-35 jets longer—generating even more money for the defense titan.
“They have no incentive. At the end of the day, there's a lot of [research and development] going into F-35 Block 4 and other improvements, and a lot of R&D that would need to go into NGAD. They're conflicted, at best,” Aboulafia said.

This could also be deliberate messaging from the Air Force to Lockheed, Aboulafia said, which hasn’t been delivering F-35 jets for almost a year due to hardware and software delays with new technology for the jet.

Since the Air Force probably doesn’t trust Boeing enough to handle NGAD, and Lockheed is the only game in town for next-generation combat aircraft, the service could be telling the F-35 builder to “give us something to work with here on Block 4. When you've cleared up that absurd mess, you'll get this too. But we don't like it and we don't like your execution on things,” he said.

Service officials have said that budget constraints are motivating their hesitancy towards NGAD. Paying for this next-gen fighter, which is expected to cost about $300 million a pop, will be tough as the service expects to spend increasing amounts of money in the coming years on F-35s, the new B-21 Raider, and the next-gen Sentinel intercontinental ballistic missile. And in addition to budget constraints, new technology developments and drones have the service rethinking the future of air dominance.

NGAD may be the only place the Air Force can take a reduction, said Bryan Clark, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, given all the other programs the Air Force needs to pay for, and the desire to grow its new collaborative combat aircraft program.

The service also may be rethinking its overall concept of operations to rely on B-21, CCAs, and stand-off weapons rather than a traditional aircraft, Clark said. But given emerging technologies, it’s still unclear what air dominance is exactly going to look like in the future.

Some experts argue that there could’ve been a chance for Boeing to grab NGAD to avoid Lockheed having a monopoly on U.S. fighter production. If so, the cancellation of NGAD would be a massive blow to Boeing, which has been pouring money into building new facilities for future air dominance contracts, like NGAD. But those investments could still be funneled to other programs like CCA, the Navy’s next-gen fighter (F/A-XX), and even precision guided munitions.

On the industry side, Aboulafia said he’s more concerned about the supplier level, because companies have likely been preparing for next generation systems and “now, all of a sudden, highly uncertain future.”

While it’s too early to tell whether NGAD will actually be canceled or not, recent comments from Air Force leaders have signaled a “very sudden reversal,” said Doug Royce, an aviation analyst with Forecast International, a sister firm to Defense One.

“Whether it's driven by concerns over the budget, or concerns over technology, or uncertainty on the future of manned fighter designs—there's a bunch of open questions here,” Royce said.
 
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