Oras, meu chapa, Portugal é NATO e NATO é EUA, portanto é inimigo da Rússia. A USAF faz plano de voo e têm o transpônder ligado quando passa perto da Rússia?cabeça de martelo escreveu:Os Norte-Americanos ao contrário dos Russos, fazem plano de voo e têm o transponder ligado, pelo menos quando passam cá em Portugal.
USAF News
Moderadores: Glauber Prestes, Conselho de Moderação
- Bolovo
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Re: USAF News
"Eu detestaria estar no lugar de quem me venceu."
Darcy Ribeiro (1922 - 1997)
Darcy Ribeiro (1922 - 1997)
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Re: USAF News
Os Russos pelos vistos nem o fazem ao pé da Rússia, afinal foi o que aconteceu recentemente com dois Sukhoi Su-27 (?) a escoltar o avião onde estava o Ministro da Defesa e que não tinham feito plano de voo e o transponder estava desligado. Estavam a sobrevoar o Báltico e como tal um F-16 Polaco foi identificar o que se passava. Ah, antes que esqueça-me, eles nems equer responderam às sucessivas tentativas de contacto rádio.Bolovo escreveu:Oras, meu chapa, Portugal é NATO e NATO é EUA, portanto é inimigo da Rússia. A USAF faz plano de voo e têm o transpônder ligado quando passa perto da Rússia?cabeça de martelo escreveu:Os Norte-Americanos ao contrário dos Russos, fazem plano de voo e têm o transponder ligado, pelo menos quando passam cá em Portugal.
- mmatuso
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Re: USAF News
Não fazem ou não deixam conhecer o plano de voou deles?
Imagina a loucura um país com quase 2k de caças e um monte de heli cada um fazendo o que quiser.
Imagina a loucura um país com quase 2k de caças e um monte de heli cada um fazendo o que quiser.
- cabeça de martelo
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Re: USAF News
O que tem acontecido nos últimos anos é que sobrevoam a Europa sem dar cavaco a ninguém.mmatuso escreveu:Não fazem ou não deixam conhecer o plano de voou deles?
Imagina a loucura um país com quase 2k de caças e um monte de heli cada um fazendo o que quiser.
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Mas quem disse que o avião do ministro russo estava sem plano de voo e transpônder desligado, a OTAN? Sinto muito, mas eu acredito muito pouco na OTAN. Exatamente como os russos, eles usam qualquer desculpa que as convêm para explicar suas ações. Mas eu estou perguntando de aviões militares de verdade, igual os Tu-95 e Tu-160. Quando colocam aqueles B-1 e RC-135 perto da Rússia, aqueles que são interceptados toda hora, será que mandam o plano de voo para Moscou antes? Eu duvido muito.cabeça de martelo escreveu:Os Russos pelos vistos nem o fazem ao pé da Rússia, afinal foi o que aconteceu recentemente com dois Sukhoi Su-27 (?) a escoltar o avião onde estava o Ministro da Defesa e que não tinham feito plano de voo e o transponder estava desligado. Estavam a sobrevoar o Báltico e como tal um F-16 Polaco foi identificar o que se passava. Ah, antes que esqueça-me, eles nems equer responderam às sucessivas tentativas de contacto rádio.Bolovo escreveu: Oras, meu chapa, Portugal é NATO e NATO é EUA, portanto é inimigo da Rússia. A USAF faz plano de voo e têm o transpônder ligado quando passa perto da Rússia?
"Eu detestaria estar no lugar de quem me venceu."
Darcy Ribeiro (1922 - 1997)
Darcy Ribeiro (1922 - 1997)
Re: USAF News
Comecem logo a Terceira Guerra que vocês tanto querem e parem de mimimi.cabeça de martelo escreveu:O que tem acontecido nos últimos anos é que sobrevoam a Europa sem dar cavaco a ninguém.mmatuso escreveu:Não fazem ou não deixam conhecer o plano de voou deles?
Imagina a loucura um país com quase 2k de caças e um monte de heli cada um fazendo o que quiser.
A Rússia não vai dar o primeiro tiro e ponto final. Comecem, então.
chris
- Carlos Lima
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Re: USAF News
O futuro upgrade aos B-52:
Boeing B-52 Re-engine: The Right Choice for the Air Force
Boeing B-52s will remain the backbone of the U.S. bomber force for decades to come. The final and crucial element to the aircraft’s modernization is to replace the engines. New engines will provide economic, operational and environmental benefits. New engines are the right choice to carry the B-52 into the future
- Glauber Prestes
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Re: USAF News
4 CFM56-5C4 ou o PW1100G fariam o serviço dos 8 TF33-P-3 em termos de empuxo (34.000/35.000lbs x 17.000lbs), porém demandariam algumas modificações mais severas na estrutura da asa.
Eu espero que seja o PW.
Eu espero que seja o PW.
http://www.tireoide.org.br/tireoidite-de-hashimoto/
Cuidado com os sintomas.
Você é responsável pelo ambiente e a qualidade do fórum que participa. Faça sua parte.
Cuidado com os sintomas.
Você é responsável pelo ambiente e a qualidade do fórum que participa. Faça sua parte.
- Bolovo
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Re: USAF News
B-2 lançando a GBU-57, mais conhecida por MOP!
"Eu detestaria estar no lugar de quem me venceu."
Darcy Ribeiro (1922 - 1997)
Darcy Ribeiro (1922 - 1997)
- knigh7
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Re: USAF News
A edição da revista Air Intrernational do mês de setembro trouxe uma matéria interessante sobre o futuro da USAF (Air Force 2030).
Digitalizei a matéria para o pessoal:
image hosting
Digitalizei a matéria para o pessoal:
image hosting
- cabeça de martelo
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Re: USAF News
Italian pilot school achievements may benefit American T-X trainer program
The M-346 has been sold to Singapore, Poland and Israel. (Leonardo)
ROME — A pilot school in Italy built around the M-346 jet trainer and advanced simulators — both on the ground and in the aircraft — will reach its full potential early next year, according to officials, who hope the achievement will boost the M-346’s chances in the U.S. T-X trainer contest.
With three more aircraft arriving in January, the Italian Air Force base at Lecce, southern Italy, will reach its full complement of 18 M-346s, allowing about 40 students to graduate annually from Phase IV courses before they shift to fighter squadrons.
“With the aircraft and simulators up and running, we will be at 100 percent,” base commander Col. Luigi Casali said.
Since the M-346 debuted at the school in 2014, 15 instructors have qualified to teach pilots to fly the aircraft and 13 are now training, said Casali. By mid-2018, the number of qualified instructors will rise to 18, including instructors from Italy, the Netherlands, Austria, France, Spain and the U.S.
Thirty-two student pilots have now qualified on the aircraft and 14 are now training, including three from Kuwait, added Casali.
The M-346, which is taking over Phase IV training duties from the older M-339, offers in-flight simulation of a series of capabilities, including an APG-68 radar, a targeting pod, beyond-visual-range and short-range missiles, laser- and GPS-guided bombs, a radar warning receiver, electronic warfare, and chaff and flare.
On the ground, the school has just received its second CAE full-mission simulator. And a second part task trainer, which provides an image spanning 220 degrees in azimuth and 90 degrees in vertical, is due early in the new year. The school also offers computer screen-based simulators.
What makes Lecce unique, officials claim, is the live, virtual and constructive training capability, which allows pilots at the simulators to, in a sense, see M-346 aircraft that are actually flying, thanks to data links, and which lets the pilots of those aircraft in the air see the simulated flights through their embedded simulation capability.
Officials claim up to 10 pilots can simultaneously participate in the same flight scenario mixing real and virtual aircraft.
To complete the capability, helmet-mounted displays will be introduced for pilots in the aircraft and in the simulators next year.
“Italy is a step ahead of the U.S. in the use of this technology,” said Lt. Col. Wyatt Morrise, a U.S. Air Force F-16 pilot-turned-instructor, who is six months into a three-year stint at Lecce as part of an exchange program.
“After a flight, you have to climb out of the aircraft and remind yourself that capabilities like radar are not really there,” said Morrise, who will qualify and work as an M-346 instructor.
Morrise said that with his experience at Lecce, he hopes to help development of the syllabus for the pending U.S. T-X fighter pilot training program.
“We have a front row seat here on a syllabus, which we may be able to improve on,” he said.
The M-346, built by Italian firm Leonardo, is a contender for the TX program, alongside a new build offering from Boeing and Saab, and Lockheed Martin’s T-50.
The M-346 has been sold to Singapore, Poland and Israel, a client that officials said relies more on the aircraft and less on simulators for its training than the Italians, who now split flying hours about 50-50 between simulated and real flying.
The accent on simulators has helped the Italians reduce flying hours in the aircraft, while the embedded simulators in the aircraft have cut 30 percent from the flying hours pilots need for final training when they graduate to Italian Air Force Eurofighters, said Casali.
The next task is readying Italian pilots to fly the F-35, of which the Italian Air Force is taking delivery, with five now based at Amendola Air Base.
Hitherto, experienced Italian pilots have trained to fly the F-35 at Luke Air Force Base in the U.S., but Casali said he hopes to send the first, fresh graduates straight from Lecce to Luke next year.
“Right now we are talking to Italian F-35 pilots and instructors coming back from Luke to see how we can shape the Lecce syllabus to better prepare pilots to fly the F-35,” Casali said.
Lecce also offers Phase II and III training, which together with Phase IV training takes two years to complete. Casali said he aimed to see a total of 100 pilots qualifying from the three stages a year as the school draws in more international students, exploiting the 12,000 flying hours the base can offer annually.
The school currently has 96 students enrolled at all stages — a mix of trainee pilots and instructors that includes 50 students from other air forces. To date, the school has trained pilots from Austria, France, Kuwait and Singapore, as well as Italy.
The M-339 is still used for Phase II and III training, but the Air Force expects to take delivery of Leonardo’s new M-345 jet trainer for the job from 2020 onward.
https://www.defensenews.com/training-si ... r-program/
The M-346 has been sold to Singapore, Poland and Israel. (Leonardo)
ROME — A pilot school in Italy built around the M-346 jet trainer and advanced simulators — both on the ground and in the aircraft — will reach its full potential early next year, according to officials, who hope the achievement will boost the M-346’s chances in the U.S. T-X trainer contest.
With three more aircraft arriving in January, the Italian Air Force base at Lecce, southern Italy, will reach its full complement of 18 M-346s, allowing about 40 students to graduate annually from Phase IV courses before they shift to fighter squadrons.
“With the aircraft and simulators up and running, we will be at 100 percent,” base commander Col. Luigi Casali said.
Since the M-346 debuted at the school in 2014, 15 instructors have qualified to teach pilots to fly the aircraft and 13 are now training, said Casali. By mid-2018, the number of qualified instructors will rise to 18, including instructors from Italy, the Netherlands, Austria, France, Spain and the U.S.
Thirty-two student pilots have now qualified on the aircraft and 14 are now training, including three from Kuwait, added Casali.
The M-346, which is taking over Phase IV training duties from the older M-339, offers in-flight simulation of a series of capabilities, including an APG-68 radar, a targeting pod, beyond-visual-range and short-range missiles, laser- and GPS-guided bombs, a radar warning receiver, electronic warfare, and chaff and flare.
On the ground, the school has just received its second CAE full-mission simulator. And a second part task trainer, which provides an image spanning 220 degrees in azimuth and 90 degrees in vertical, is due early in the new year. The school also offers computer screen-based simulators.
What makes Lecce unique, officials claim, is the live, virtual and constructive training capability, which allows pilots at the simulators to, in a sense, see M-346 aircraft that are actually flying, thanks to data links, and which lets the pilots of those aircraft in the air see the simulated flights through their embedded simulation capability.
Officials claim up to 10 pilots can simultaneously participate in the same flight scenario mixing real and virtual aircraft.
To complete the capability, helmet-mounted displays will be introduced for pilots in the aircraft and in the simulators next year.
“Italy is a step ahead of the U.S. in the use of this technology,” said Lt. Col. Wyatt Morrise, a U.S. Air Force F-16 pilot-turned-instructor, who is six months into a three-year stint at Lecce as part of an exchange program.
“After a flight, you have to climb out of the aircraft and remind yourself that capabilities like radar are not really there,” said Morrise, who will qualify and work as an M-346 instructor.
Morrise said that with his experience at Lecce, he hopes to help development of the syllabus for the pending U.S. T-X fighter pilot training program.
“We have a front row seat here on a syllabus, which we may be able to improve on,” he said.
The M-346, built by Italian firm Leonardo, is a contender for the TX program, alongside a new build offering from Boeing and Saab, and Lockheed Martin’s T-50.
The M-346 has been sold to Singapore, Poland and Israel, a client that officials said relies more on the aircraft and less on simulators for its training than the Italians, who now split flying hours about 50-50 between simulated and real flying.
The accent on simulators has helped the Italians reduce flying hours in the aircraft, while the embedded simulators in the aircraft have cut 30 percent from the flying hours pilots need for final training when they graduate to Italian Air Force Eurofighters, said Casali.
The next task is readying Italian pilots to fly the F-35, of which the Italian Air Force is taking delivery, with five now based at Amendola Air Base.
Hitherto, experienced Italian pilots have trained to fly the F-35 at Luke Air Force Base in the U.S., but Casali said he hopes to send the first, fresh graduates straight from Lecce to Luke next year.
“Right now we are talking to Italian F-35 pilots and instructors coming back from Luke to see how we can shape the Lecce syllabus to better prepare pilots to fly the F-35,” Casali said.
Lecce also offers Phase II and III training, which together with Phase IV training takes two years to complete. Casali said he aimed to see a total of 100 pilots qualifying from the three stages a year as the school draws in more international students, exploiting the 12,000 flying hours the base can offer annually.
The school currently has 96 students enrolled at all stages — a mix of trainee pilots and instructors that includes 50 students from other air forces. To date, the school has trained pilots from Austria, France, Kuwait and Singapore, as well as Italy.
The M-339 is still used for Phase II and III training, but the Air Force expects to take delivery of Leonardo’s new M-345 jet trainer for the job from 2020 onward.
https://www.defensenews.com/training-si ... r-program/
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Re: USAF News
USAF Is Jamming GPS In The Western U.S. For Largest Ever Red Flag Air War Exercise
The use of the mysterious jamming technology will impact the navigation of aircraft operating as far away from Nevada as Colorado.
http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/17 ... r-exercise
The use of the mysterious jamming technology will impact the navigation of aircraft operating as far away from Nevada as Colorado.
http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/17 ... r-exercise