Jeg har beskrevet denne problemstillingen tidligere, men ikke så utførlig som nå. Dette kan også få bæring på våre egne flygerkandidater en gang i fremtiden. (Red.)
With T-7 on the way, why is ACC eyeing a new
trainer?
Dec 1, 03:00
While the Air Force has a new trainer designed to teach new pilots how
to fly in 5th generation fighter aircraft, the T-7A Red Hawk, Air Combat Command
has started exploring the possibility of another Advanced Tactical Trainer.
(Boeing)
WASHINGTON — The Air Force is considering a new
trainer aircraft — one intended to emulate 4th and 5th generation fighter jets
and be able to better train the service’s newest fighter pilots how to fly in
combat.
Nope, not the T-7A Red Hawk. Another one. Maybe.
The Air Force released a request for information
for a new trainer aircraft, dubbed the Advanced Tactical Trainer, on Oct. 12.
But given the service has the first T-7s on the way, scheduled to arrive at
Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph in Texas in 2023, the service’s apparent
interest in another — similar — trainer left some observers scratching their
heads.
Dan Grazier of the watchdog group Project on
Government Oversight said the Air Force’s consideration of another trainer
aircraft raises questions about its strategy and priorities — and perhaps about
the T-7.
“This does seem like a really curious move,”
Grazier said in a Nov. 29 interview. “There’s a couple of things that this move
communicates that I think the Air Force didn’t really mean to communicate.”
In 2018, the Air Force awarded a $9.2 billion
contract to Boeing to build 351 of the Air Force’s next trainer, unveiled as
the T-7A Red Hawk the following year.
Its use of digital engineering, open architecture, and other innovative design
techniques excited many service leaders, and was seen as a new model for rapid,
efficient aircraft development.
In a statement, Boeing said it’s interested in
exploring what ACC wants to see in an advanced trainer and stressed the
capability of the T-7 to evolve and meet the command’s needs.
“From its digital beginnings, the T-7 was designed
for growth,” Boeing said. “This exciting opportunity is being explored to see
how the T-7′s growth path for future missions align with Air Combat Command’s
ATT initiative.”
The T-7 is intended to replace the T-38 jet
trainer, which dates back to the 1960s and has been at the center of several
fatal crashes in recent years — the most recent on Nov. 19. The Air
Force’s newest 5th generation fighters, the F-22 and F-35, are also far beyond
the T-38′s capabilities.
“Every day, that [T-38] airplane becomes just
another step more disconnected from the advanced avionics, advanced sensing,
the advanced processing that our modern fighters have, and so we can’t fill that
void fast enough,” Air Combat Command head Gen. Mark Kelly said in an Oct. 25
event with the Mitchell Institute.
Kelly said the T-7 is already slated to go to Air
Education and Training Command to teach the service’s youngest aviators how to
fly.
“But I need to get our [ACC] aviators, as soon as
I can, something that is not such a leap from a 1964 T-38 to a 2021 F-35,”
Kelly said.
Kelly acknowledged the T-7 may be able to do
everything ACC needs it to do, and the answer could be buying more of them. But
he also said industry may be able to offer some new ideas that could either be
added to the T-7, or lead to a completely new air frame.He added that ACC needs
additional features in the aircraft it uses to conduct fighter pilot training —
features the T-7 was never required to have.
Kelly said those features could include increased
use of sensors, and increased fuel requirements for mission duration and
afterburner use. And he expects it could have some rudimentary weapons
computing capability and some simulation playback capabilities to teach pilots
how to respond to threats.
“All of those drive requirements that weren’t in
the original T-7 statement of requirements,” Kelly said. “And so it’s not a
criticism of the T-7 — they built what they were designed to build. But it may
or may not fit the demand of going from flying to fighting, because they’re a
different avenue. They just happen to take place in the same space.”
Air Combat Command declined an interview request
from Defense News, but said in written responses to questions that this
proposed trainer’s requirements would differ from the T-7 and help ACC “most
effectively and efficiently train fighter pilots".
“The goal of the ATT is to provide pilots with
training that emulates the aircraft (systems, displays, etc) they will
eventually be flying at their operational unit, thus reducing the amount of
training hours spent on operational fighter aircraft,” ACC said in a Nov. 23
email.
Flying the ATT would allow pilots to acquire
“transferable learned skills” that would save combat fighters time they need
for mission training and preparation, ACC said.
Want vs. need
The Air Force first posted a request for
information Oct. 12 for an Advanced Tactical Trainer that would primarily be
used for Air Combat Command’s Initial Tactical Training program. The RFI said
it would also be used to provide adversary air support, or playing the enemy
during combat training exercises, and lastly as a tactical surrogate for
existing or future fighters.
A Q&A document posted online Nov. 9, drawn
from one-on-one exchanges with industry representatives, further detailed some
of ACC’s hopes for this trainer. It would have to carry munitions for training
purposes only, but not to release them. And it would have to emulate 4th and
5th generation fighters and their performance capabilities, possibly with
transonic acceleration.
ACC said in the Q&A it hopes that using the
proposed trainer instead of actual fighter aircraft would shave 12 to 18 months
off the timeline required to fully train a pilot.
But in a time when future budgets are expected to
be tight and Air Force officials regularly speak about the need to make tough
budgeting choices and possibly divest aircraft, Grazier said the service’s
apparent interest in another trainer doesn’t fit.
“This almost sounds like a ‘want-to-have,’
[rather] than a ‘need-to-have,’” Grazier said.
Todd Harrison, director of the Aerospace Security
Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the RFI
“does make you scratch your head and wonder, how can the Air Force afford
another new-start aircraft program when their acquisition pipeline is already
quite full?”
Weighing T-7 upgrades
Harrison cautioned that the Air Force’s request
for information on another trainer doesn’t necessarily mean it’s going to
launch a whole additional program.
Instead, he said, the suggestions the Air Force
collects could give it some ideas for improving the Boeing-built T-7A, allowing
ACC to fly the F-35 less.
“This is definitely going to ramp up the pressure
on Boeing to adapt the T-7 so that it can meet these types of requirements,”
Harrison said. “The last thing Boeing wants to see is another training aircraft
program being started that would compete for budget [dollars] with what they’ve
already won.”
The T-7, which was designed to be easily adapted
and upgradeable, should be able to do that, Harrison said. And if it means the
Air Force could buy even more of their planes, he said, Boeing has a clear
incentive to modify them to meet the ATT requirements.
But if the T-7 can’t do what ACC needs, Grazier
said, it raises questions as to whether the Air Force should hit the brakes on
the program before it goes any further.
“Does this mean that the requirements, and the
design for the T-7A aren’t what we need?” Grazier said. “And if that’s the
case, then should we still be pressing forward with a T-7A?”
John Venable, a former fighter pilot who now is a
defense policy expert at the Heritage Foundation, said the apparent
consideration of another trainer aircraft “makes little sense” — and could be a
sign the Air Force left some gaps in the capabilities it requested when it
asked industry to build a trainer jet that became the T-7.
“If Boeing is actually meeting the specifications
that were called for in the RFI [for the T-7], they should be able to take that
air frame and modify it,” Venable said.
It makes sense the Air Force would want to have an
aircraft for fighter pilots to train in that doesn’t require time in an actual
fighter jet — particularly the F-35, which has turned out to be more expensive
to fly than expected, Harrison said.
“I could see where they’re coming from in terms of
trying to … save wear and tear on the [fighter] platform,” Harrison said.
ACC would also benefit from having a dual-seat
trainer like the ATT, so newer pilots could have an experienced pilot in the
unit right behind them offering guidance, Harrison said. The 5th-generation
F-22 and F-35 fighters are single-seat aircraft.
And, Kelly said, ACC needs a trainer that can fly
at a much lower cost than aircraft like the F-35, which costs between $34,000
and $36,000 to fly for one hour.
“I need something … that’s not $20,000-plus cost
per flying hour, closer to $2,000 to $3,000 cost per flying hour, that comes a
little closer to our modern avionics,” Kelly said.
But this issue underscores broader issues with the
sustainability of the Air Force’s current fighter fleet, Grazier said.
“Pursuing another training aircraft is a real
indictment on the current fleet of fighter aircraft,” Grazier said. “Between
the F-22 and F-35, this is further evidence that those programs really are
unaffordable if we have to have an entirely new trainer aircraft to pick up the
fleet.”
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