i have to agree with Gambit's logic..If stealth was insignificant why all countries are after it.....
But too many contradicting logics flying around...one interesting article i found..
I dont know the auther and dont know how credible the article is but interesting.
"The Raptor is a horrible failure on almost every one of those criteria, Sprey said.
The stellar attribute of the F-22 its invisibility on enemy radar due to a computer-aided stealth design is a myth, Sprey said. That is because in order to locate the enemy beyond visual range, the Raptor (like every other fighter) must turn on its own radar, immediately betraying its location.
Nor is the aircraft design effective simply because its advocates insist so, Sprey said. The 1980s-era F-117 stealth fighter was supposed to be invisible too, but post-Gulf War studies showed that the aircraft had been spotted by Iraqs ground-based radars, he said."
The F-22 Raptor is said to be invisible...until it isn't
With all due respect to Pierre Sprey, one of the fathers of my beloved F-16, every era has a beginning and an end. The F-16 as originally envisioned by Sprey was supposed to be a dedicated 'knife fighter'. It was supposed to have a radar just large enough to give the pilot a firing solution. Nothing more. The F-16 was supposed to be sent in waves against an enemy and directed in by a 'mother' aircraft, like an AWACS. All missiles and the gun. No bombs capability.
The F-22 Raptor is said to be invisible...until it isn't
The stellar attribute of the F-22 its invisibility on enemy radar due to a computer-aided stealth design is a myth, Sprey said. That is because in order to locate the enemy beyond visual range, the Raptor (like every other fighter) must turn on its own radar, immediately betraying its location.
First...No one claimed the F-22 was supposed to be 'invisible'.
Second...This criticism by Sprey is a tacit admission by him that low observable body shaping works to the point that the only way to find the F-22 is to wait for it to reveal itself.
Third...Radar technology has progressed past what Sprey was used to. The F-22's AESA radar has Low Probability of Interception (LPI) mode where modern RHAWS are still struggling to cope with that capability. Further, if the F-16 was supposed to be vectored into a fight by a 'parent' aircraft, then why not the same for the F-22 with the advantage of being very low observable?
Sprey said his briefing focused on the time-tested factors that define an effective fighter plane: (1) See the enemy first; (2) outnumber the enemy; (3) outmaneuver the enemy to fire, and (4) kill the enemy quickly.
The Raptor is a horrible failure on almost every one of those criteria, Sprey said.
The F-22 is the fighter aircraft equivalent of the ground sniper who sees the enemy
WITHOUT being seen. There is a difference between 'before' and 'without' with the latter the preferred. If I see my opponent before he sees me, the time span between the two events may not give me enough time position myself in an advantageous position. I would rather see him
WITHOUT being seen in return. In doing so, there is less of a need for numerical superiority even though I would love for the USAF to have a 10-1 ratio of Raptors versus <whatever> anytime.
And in the 77-day aerial campaign against Serbia in 1999, the adversarys 1950s-era radar managed to locate and shoot down two F-117s, Stevenson pointed out in his presentation. The situation is actually worse today, he said, because many nations have acquired advanced missiles that can home in on radar emissions.
Who do you want in a dark alley? Stevenson asked. The cop with the flashlight, or the crook with a gun that fires light-homing bullets?
Out of about 38,000 sorties, NATO lost only two aircrafts: one F-16 and one F-117. And the F-117 did not used radar. It does not have a radar. This is a pathetic air defense combat record. No wonder the Serbs made so much noise over the single F-117 shoot down. The North Vietnamese air defense fared much better.
Nor is the aircraft design effective simply because its advocates insist so, Sprey said. The 1980s-era F-117 stealth fighter was supposed to be invisible too, but post-Gulf War studies showed that the aircraft had been spotted by Iraqs ground-based radars, he said.
So what? Did the Iraqis had any idea on what they were seeing? Was the F-117s ingress or egress? No one claimed the F-117 was supposed to be 'invisible'. That hyperbole was by the media. Being seen on radar is one thing, identification is another. For example: I see a ship versus I identified the Queen Mary.
Hitler had 70 Me-262s in combat, Sprey said. They were crushed by the force of 2,000 inferior P-51s that the United States had in the air.
The Me-262's main advantage was speed...
Messerschmitt Me 262 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Luftwaffe pilots did however eventually learn how to handle the Me 262's higher speed, and the Me 262 soon proved a formidable air superiority fighter, with pilots such as Franz Schall managing to shoot down 12 enemy fighters in the Me 262, 10 of them American P-51 Mustangs. Other notable Me 262 aces included Georg-Peter Eder, also with 12 enemy fighters to his credit (including 9 P-51s), Walther Dahl with 11 (including three La-7s and six P-51s) and Heinz-Helmut Baudach with 6 (including 1 Spitfire and 2 P-51s) amongst many others.
If Sprey was trying to equate the F-22 with the Me-262 regarding comparing them against their respective opponents, then this is a terrible argument. Without the low radar observability feature, the F-22 is at least the equivalent of its opponent in every other aspects of what is a 'fighter aircraft', if not the superior. We cannot say the same for the Me-262 for its opponents.
The Me-262 was introduced far too late into a conflict to make any tactical difference, let alone strategic ones, while the F-22 is introduced in peace time when the US enjoys a clear superiority in technology over every enemy and potential enemy. New weapons always bring new tactics. It is only a matter of time and diligence that those new tactics are discovered, practiced, and refined. The Me-262 pilots had to learn the hard way about the Me-262 during war time but the US in peace time have plenty of opportunity to practice and refine the F-22 and the new tactics it brings because. Unlike the Me-262 whose main advantage was speed, the F-22 has advantages over its opponents in just about every other major components of what is a 'fighter aircraft' and it will enjoys those advantages for many years to come.
Sprey should be respected for what he has done for the US and for military aviation, but he is wrong on this one.