I want to reiterate that this series of posts is for the purpose of developing an understanding of aircraft performance parameters and the factors that influence them. It is not at all about providing answers (we don’t have enough relevant information about the aircraft we’re surveying, much less how they were/are or will be employed) but it is about how to THINK about the questions in the first place.
Let’s begin this post with an updated version of the table I showed the last time:
Selected Legacy Aircraft Configurations |
GD fighter Weapon Symposium "Fighter Performance" Handbook, Circa 1986 |
Turn Rate =Velocity Squared /(G *tan Ø)*
(G *tan Ø)/Velocity; where Ø is still, as shown in the previous post, the “bank angle”.
*originally mis-typed formula for turn radius, but all rate values presented used correct formula (I checked the spreadsheets). Hazards of changing direction in middle of analyses, I guess.Note that I include 5.3gs as the upper boundary partly because we do not know how close the F-35 came to meeting that spec, but more because we know the ‘grade’ must be against some weight that includes some fixed aircraft dry weight, and we do not know how ‘light’ or ‘heavy’ the F-35 will be until after the final weight accounting that is sometime in the future. Right now, per the latest DOT&E report, we know as late as December the F-35A was nearly 1% below the projected weight needed to meet performance specs. If it comes in below spec weight, it will have sustained turn performance higher than what is currently ‘predicted’ based upon the spec weight.
F-35A_H Sustained Turn Rates Derived From Possible Range of 'Sustained G' Capability of 'Bowman Configuration' (Corrected**) |
We now have the high and low boundaries for the possible raw sustained turn rate for our hypothetical F-35 (To keep things concise, let’s call it the ‘F-35A_H’ from now on in this series) and can compare it to the derived Sustained Turn rates for our selected legacy aircraft configurations:
Sustained Turn: F-35A_H vs Legacy Aircraft |
Don’t Go There
I presume the above is the kind of raw comparison that sets simple minds down the ‘F-35 can’t turn’ path. Don’t go there – you don’t know enough about what matters…yet. The next thing we need to do is highlight the relative importance or unimportance of the differences shown.Since we are using the boundaries of our F-35A_H performance in covering the range of possible performance, I’m going to present the ‘low’ boundary evaluation first (Remember, among other things, we don’t really ‘know’ the altitude at which this spec change was applied, we are ‘assuming’ for 'learning' purposes only):
Sustained Turn: F-35A_H (Low) Estimation Vs. Legacy Aircraft |
Determining Turn Rate Parity, Superiority and Dominance
The rules used for assignment of comparative parity, superiority, and dominance ranges above and to follow are not mine. Consulting Raymer* (page 105) provided me with my first indication:An aircraft designed for air-to-air dogfighting must be capable of high turn rate. This parameter dѱ/dt or ѱ, will determine the outcome of the dogfight if the aircraft and pilots are evenly matched otherwise. When air-to-air missiles are in use, the first aircraft to turn towards the other aircraft enough to launch a missile will probably win. In a guns-only dogfight, the aircraft with the higher turn rate will be able to maneuver behind the other. A turn rate superiority of 2 deg/s is considered significant.*Aircraft Design: A Conceptual Approach 3rd Edition; D.P. Raymer;AIAA Education Series; 1999.
I had originally intended to use the ‘2 deg/s’ standard to evaluate which aircraft had ‘significant’ advantage over others when, in reviewing my ‘Fighter Performance’ handbook, I found an expansion on Raymer’s observations:
Sustained Turn Rate Equality, Superiority and Dominance |
Using the same methodology for our upper bound F-35A_H (High) configuration we find the F-35 fares quite a bit better in the comparison:
Sustained Turn: F-35A_H (High) Estimation Vs. Legacy Aircraft |
"What If"? (Parts 3 and 4)
These comparisons are rather static and one-dimensional and the relationships can change dramatically with changes to the armament and fuel carried. It is instructive to note the very large difference in F-18C sustained turn-rate performance based on the variation in weight (which is why I included the 'F-18C Light' data in the first place). Now consider the 'Bowman Configuration' assumption of 60% fuel on board for the F-35 also means that the F-35A_H's fuel load, as a fraction of the total weight, appears to be significantly larger than any of the other aircraft we are comparing. This hints that there may be equally 'realistic' if not more realistic F-35A configurations with far higher sustained turn capability than is attainable at the 'Bowman' weights.I think it will be worthwhile (and fun) to look at things from a ‘1 v 1’ perspective with the two extremes of possible comparisons in our selected group: F-35A_H vs. the F-4E, and F-35A_H vs. the F-16A, and exploring the 'what ifs' of having slightly different configurations in our comparisons. I anticipate (but won't know until I get there) that I will be illustrating the F-4E at very light weights is not to be trifled with, and that the F-35A, when using comparable fuel weights, based upon equivalent fuel needs will be seen to have solidly 'respectable' sustained turn performance in comparison to other modern aircraft.
Part 3 will look at the F-35A_H vs F-4E.
BONUS GRAPHIC
From the Fighter Weapons Symposium Handbook, we see that the F-16A is/was about the 'cream of the crop' when it comes to Sustained G turns:Sustained G: Thrust to Weight Matters Too |
Great post!
ReplyDeleteI'd also like to point out your post (and the one before it) both assume even skill by the pilots. Historically (post WWII) American pilots have fared _very well_ in combat. Take a look at Vietnam. A "missile conflict" where missiles more often than not failed to fire or failed to actually hit anything. And yet, there with F4s that were terribly matched by the standards you present here, our aviators consistently came out on top.
Never forget the human element.
You're getting ahead of me. ;-)
ReplyDeleteIs the fighter weapons symposium available as PDF?
ReplyDeleteNo PDF file, sorry. I'm scanning pages as required. From what I can tell there are several different volumes in this series that cover different topics. Later versions numbered the volumes. I've bought three 1986/87 books at my local bookstore, but there seems to be some later (1994!) volumes available online at Google books or Amazon, but I can't tell if any are the corollary to the one I'm using right now.
ReplyDeleteDo you know what altitude each study was made? Altitude significantly changes G available along with rate and radius of each aircraft. Some aircraft do better at higher altitude (F-15) and some do much better on the deck (F-18). Bottom line, is the FWS numbers and the F-35 numbers based on the same altitude?
ReplyDeleteHi LouG.
ReplyDeleteYes I'm acutely aware of the altitude factor :-).
I identified it as an unknown and an assumption for the F-35A_H case, as a "Bowman configuration" 15k feet altitude assumption in Part 1. Aircraft selected for comparison were selected specifically because I had plots for 15k feet performance as well. In Part 1, I specifically note that the only thing ANYONE can conclude with certainty was the change in Bank Angle in a turn at constant speed and altitude. Everything that comes after is parametric exploration for understanding of the relevance of same. I'll link this part back to the other parts after I'm done with the series for clarity.
Thanks
Excellent report. And good point on the fuel fraction: You can not really compare kinetic performances of a traditional fighter - which is designed to operate with external tanks - with the F-35 or Flanker (when's the last time you saw a photo of a Flanker With external tanks), which have the external tanks embedded in the fuselage.
ReplyDeleteYour average fighter has a fuel fraction around 0,3 in combat configuration wheras the F-35 and Flanker is about 0,4 - a huge difference.
So 50 percent "internal fuel" on a traditional fighter is much less - relatively speaking that - of,say, an F-35. A more fair comparison would be if the F-35 had perhaps 30-40 percent fuel in the same configuration. Did the math once, but don't have it at hand right now.
Best,
Bjørnar Bolsøy
Hi Bjørnar,
ReplyDeleteYou will enjoy the "results". ;-)
So Pierre Sprey is correct about F-35 being decisively inferior to F-16A in visual-range combat.
ReplyDeleteRE: "So Pierre Sprey is correct about F-35 being decisively inferior to F-16A in visual-range combat"
ReplyDeleteReally?
Picard,
You're knowingly stating a false conclusion for two reasons. One, because you chose to post the comment on Part 2 instead of Part 4 AND in Part 2 I forewarned:
"I presume the above is the kind of raw comparison that sets simple minds down the ‘F-35 can’t turn’ path. Don’t go there – you don’t know enough about what matters…yet." Assuming you can read, you saw the warning - so this means your comment is a trifling attempt to tweak the house. Pffft.
BTW: The link your 'handle' takes me to your(?) website. I see a rather comical take on 'evading Air to Air Missiles'. I'm pretty sure I've read the core of it before and it didn't demonstrate sufficient knowledge of the mechanics involved then either. If you've got serious points to argue or discuss, or even offer, you are welcome. But as the record runs so far, you come off more as a link-wh*ring ignoramus trolling for attention. You get one free pass. You took it. Play nice or stick to regurgitating Center for Defense Disinformation archives at your undiscovered hole in the web. And please, for everyone's sake, learn some math and physics, will you?
Your cited year 2012 DOT&E report refers to Block 2A.
ReplyDeleteFrom
http://s619.photobucket.com/user/SpudmanWP/media/F-3520Master20Plan.jpg.html
The so-call reduction performance in 2012 is line with the above "Block Plan: Capabilities / Transition Plan" table
At Block 2A, the G numbers are 5.5 / 4.5 /4.5. <------ Year 2012
At Block 2B / 3I, G numbers are 7 / 5.5 / 7.5. <------ Year 2015
At Block 3C(3F) stage, G numbers are 9 / 7 /7.5.
Like the F-16, F-35A obtains it's 9G.
From
http://www.defensenews.com/article/20130531/DEFREG02/305310021/Pentagon-First-F-35s-Operational-2015
Pentagon: First F-35s Operational in 2015
These are F-35A and F-35B Block 2B.
Hi Rval,
ReplyDeleteWhat you are reference are the Maximum G restrictions in early blocks and planned full Max G numbers. The 'reduced G' spec controversy was over the 'Sustained G' numbers.
Thanks for visiting and commenting. BTW> I'm going to finally get around to the transonic acceleration spec change pretty soon.
It is a lot more interesting, from an Aerodynamics viewpoint, to just go ahead and compute the sustained load factor. You do that by multiplying the T/W ratio by the L/D ratio (which varies with speed). This eq. explains some hard to digest facts, eg how and why a fighter with a significantly lower T/W ratio (a non-afterburning subsonic type, like the HUNTER) can match the sustained performance of a high-T/W opponent. With an L/D ratio of about 10, the F-5 could out-turn the PHANTOM which possessed an L/D of about 8, despite the weaker engines (relative to its weight of course).
ReplyDelete