Jammer
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Agreed that F-22 is a very potent aircraft, still, there is a bit of empty chest thumping going on here.
1. If the AWACS tells you there is an F-22 in front of you, the correct thing is to shove a BVR down its throat and then evade. As already discussed on the thread, there is no such thing as a completely stealthy aircraft, the nearer the aircraft gets to the radar, the easier it is to detect. With the BVR's terminal active radar, and ability to even follow jamming signals, it is the right weapon to use, even though it is not guaranteed to be 100% effective. Yes, a pilot facing it the first time without prior briefing will be unnerved, but a pilot armed with this knowledge should do quite well.
2. Granted 1 above with a BVR of 100+ km is not going to be very effective. But then the Chinese VLRAAM comes into play. This actually has the USAF concerned. And its not only because of its ability to fly 400+ km in a straight line, but because it has longer legs to hunt for a longer time and get close enough to F-22 for its terminal active radar to be effective.
I can see how you guys spread the psychological advantage in your favor
http://www.businessinsider.com/f-35...tm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer-ti
An F-35 pilot explains why Russia and China's counterstealth can't stop him
Ever since the US used F-117s in 1991 to rock Baghdad, at the time one of the world's most defended cities, Soviets and other potential US adversaries have been studying up on how to counter stealth jets.
Later, over Serbia, an F-117 was shot down, forever souring the image of so-called invisible aircraft that have for decades been on top of the US Air Force's agenda.
Today, Russia and China have built impressive arrays of very high frequency, or VHF, and other integrated radars that can spot even the US's most advanced and stealthy jets like the F-22 and the F-35 under the right circumstances.
- While many have rushed to declare stealth a fruitless and expensive path for the US Air Force to walk, retired Marine Maj. Dan Flatley told Business Insider why pilots of America's most expensive weapons system weren't afraid of Russian or Chinese counterstealth.
"Adversaries have to build a kill chain," said Flatley, a former F-35 pilot. Just because a radar can find an object — and Russian VHF radars can spot F-35s — doesn't mean it can fix, track, target, and consummate that kill chain with a missile hit, he said.
"We're not trying to prevent every aspect of that chain, just snap one of those links," Flatley said.
So while an infrared radar could spot an F-35 and give enemy pilots an idea of where it is, it couldn't track it or target it with a missile. This means that the systems Russia and China have spent millions developing provide only a tiny glimpse of the F-35 — systems that may be sunk costs in the grand scheme of things.
"I don't need to stop everything all the time," Flatley said of the kill chain. "I just need to make you unable to finish what you've already invested tons of time and money and effort in trying to shoot me down."
"That's the thing people don't understand," Flatley said. "They think we're saying we're invisible to everyone all the time, at all bandwidths and energy levels. ... That's not what we're saying."
Flatley says F-35 pilots joke that only Wonder Woman has an invisible jet. The reality is that the F-35 is a huge piece of flying metal and alloy — a radar pointed at the right place at the right time will definitely spot it, but good luck shooting it down.
Meanwhile, as the enemy shoots radiation to scour the skies for any trace of the F-35, the F-35 sees all of those emissions and can pinpoint the air defenses and enemy planes.
Where legacy planes had to choose between lethality and survivability on a mission, the F-35 can do four, 16, or even 32 things at a time, meaning that while air and ground threats look for the stealth jet, the F-35 can drop bombs to smash them, according to Flatley.
"We're extraordinarily confident in what we believe the performance of this jet is, and we have a lot of data and material to back that stuff up," Flatley said.
So while the Russians' propaganda may boast that they can see F-35s, it may be a response to a platform that has rendered parts of their battle plan irrelevant.
The F-35 was built to penetrate the most guarded airspaces in the world and get the job done. While the enemy hasn't been standing still, making great progress toward countering the F-35, Flatley says he's sure the US can carry out its mission on its terms.
"The expectation is that the F-35 will operate in a scenario against air and surface defense systems — and that's an expectation that the American taxpayer and public should have," Flatley said. He also acknowledged the effort the US has put behind the F-35 as a stealth penetrator and was resolute in that "we're not going to waste it."