In certain regimes, alt, time of day, flight station/observer team has beaten the radar operator in locating the feather wake trail of periscopes. I have won my fair share of beer that way. You get real good at picking out buoys, marking on top, and finding swirl patterns. All part of the hunt, and using ALL sensors.Have you really made alot of visual detections of submarines? If there is something I don't know here (which I'm sure there is) ok...but as a bubblehead, I'm skeptical.
OK, the 737 brings higher onstation loiter speeds, being sold as "it will give you a greater search radius and revisit".... but that all breaks down when you start tracking... The 737 has a whole list of strengths and weaknesses when compared with the P3... but for me, the speed to onstation and offstation, coupled with the higher mission completion rates, are going to make it a highly desired asset. There is more to the problem than one plane onstation, you also have to factor in for certain mission sets, 24 hour coverage and relieving onstation assets. MMA is going to do that just fine, and make the log/ops planning aspect that much easier, so we as a community can focus more on the jack of all trades (ASW/SSC/ISR...) products that our customers want.I don't know what the endurance of the P-8 configuration is going to be, but I doubt it is less than 7-8 hours, and with the significant increase in ground speed getting on station, it should give you ample loiter time flying endurance, especially at altitude.
Hmph...no #$%^... Learn something new everyday. Surpirses me a little I guess because of what I know of our tactics...but then again...everyone isn't us.
The number one detection method of submarines is the MK 1 eyeball (fact). Anecdotal evidence says that the number one detection platform is the -46 doing a log run or Vertrep and whose pilot happens to look outside.
I have read all around the internet that the navy is only going to buy 108 of the P-8's. I am wondering if this will be enough? Considering the current force level of over 200 P-3's how can they expect to accomplish the mission with half the amount of airframes.
I weep...
Brett
I have read all around the internet that the navy is only going to buy 108 of the P-8's. I am wondering if this will be enough? Considering the current force level of over 200 P-3's how can they expect to accomplish the mission with half the amount of airframes. I doubt that the small number of BAMS will be able to cover the gap. I heard RADM Lemmons speak at the decomming of VP-92 in October and he said that the P-3 force is already stretched to thin. He said the airframes are giving out rapidly and that they only closed down VP-92 because they needed the planes. So it would only make sense that they would want to get enough airframes to cover this important role. I'm wondering also if there is a chance they could purchase more of the P-8s up front or maybe buy surplus ones from the civilian fleet, such as old southwest ones, and convert them later
I'd hate to have to coordinate with the airforce for tanker support before every mission.
Put it this way: you really think anywhere close to all of those 200 P-3's are up at any given time? By the same token, what percentage of Southwest's 737's are flyable in a given day? My money is that the P-8 will be able to cover the same tasking requirements being thrown at the P-3 with fewer planes.