Indian kicked USAF a$$

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Aharami

Lifer
Aug 31, 2001
21,205
165
106
Originally posted by: kalster
Originally posted by: beer
Regarding dogfighting in the gulf war:

http://www.strategypage.com/dls/articles2001/20010611.asp

Of which I quote:
During the 1991 Gulf War the change was clearly underway. There were 39 U.S. air-to-air kills. The Sidewinder got 25 of them, the Sparrow 11. The traditional air-to-air weapon, the machine gun, got none. The A-10 ground attack aircraft nailed two helicopters with its 30mm anti-tank cannon, and one Iraqi aircraft was maneuvered into the ground (a not unusual method over the history of air warfare.) While only 12.6 percent of the Sidewinders fired scored a hit, 28 percent of the Sparrows did.

EDIT: And apperantly we did lose two F15Es to ground fire. That is news to me to be honest.

And another specifically on the F15 in the Gulf War

http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/f15_12.html

damn you are in idiot


my dad is better than your
lets see you post some link and 10 posts about it




no one is claiming IAF > USAF

stop being a moron


HAHAHAHAH
 

TheVrolok

Lifer
Dec 11, 2000
24,254
4,092
136
Originally posted by: etech
Originally posted by: Lynx516
beer: an F15 is hard locked to 9G. A Mig 21 can only pull 7G without loosing too much speed and its control surfaces loosing control . The F15 is much more manuverable than the Mig 21 and should have had their ass. Those planes are ancient. The only decent plane the INdians have is the SU 30. The F-15 is designed for air supremicy. If it cannot dog fight it has been designed crap


Judging on this even if it was close range it indicates that if your air force faced a decent plane such as an SU-35 it woudl get had badly. An SU-35 oputranges and out guns anything the USAF has, the russian missles have a range of 130km and there is even a 400km missle. THis is compared to about 60km for the AIM-120. Just to put this into perspective, the F-22's radr range is 120km. In short the Su-35 can fire at an F-22 without ever being spotted just by staying out of radar range. The SU-35 has a similar radar range than an AWACS and can act as one to support neibouring planes. In close combat it is super manuverable compared to anytihing the US has to offer, i.e. 1.5x ROT.

Based on the US's performance in this exercice against inferior planes I would surmise that in any real air war against a well equiped enemy they would get had.


I wouldn't put any bets on it. Surmising the perfomance of a full war based on one contrived air game scenario would not be wise.

This may be the most asinine thing posted in this thread.
 

tnitsuj

Diamond Member
May 22, 2003
5,446
0
76
Originally posted by: TheVrolok
Originally posted by: etech
Originally posted by: Lynx516
beer: an F15 is hard locked to 9G. A Mig 21 can only pull 7G without loosing too much speed and its control surfaces loosing control . The F15 is much more manuverable than the Mig 21 and should have had their ass. Those planes are ancient. The only decent plane the INdians have is the SU 30. The F-15 is designed for air supremicy. If it cannot dog fight it has been designed crap


Judging on this even if it was close range it indicates that if your air force faced a decent plane such as an SU-35 it woudl get had badly. An SU-35 oputranges and out guns anything the USAF has, the russian missles have a range of 130km and there is even a 400km missle. THis is compared to about 60km for the AIM-120. Just to put this into perspective, the F-22's radr range is 120km. In short the Su-35 can fire at an F-22 without ever being spotted just by staying out of radar range. The SU-35 has a similar radar range than an AWACS and can act as one to support neibouring planes. In close combat it is super manuverable compared to anytihing the US has to offer, i.e. 1.5x ROT.

Based on the US's performance in this exercice against inferior planes I would surmise that in any real air war against a well equiped enemy they would get had.


I wouldn't put any bets on it. Surmising the perfomance of a full war based on one contrived air game scenario would not be wise.

This may be the most asinine thing posted in this thread.


ummm why??
 

etech

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
10,597
0
0
Originally posted by: TheVrolok
Originally posted by: etech
Originally posted by: Lynx516
beer: an F15 is hard locked to 9G. A Mig 21 can only pull 7G without loosing too much speed and its control surfaces loosing control . The F15 is much more manuverable than the Mig 21 and should have had their ass. Those planes are ancient. The only decent plane the INdians have is the SU 30. The F-15 is designed for air supremicy. If it cannot dog fight it has been designed crap


Judging on this even if it was close range it indicates that if your air force faced a decent plane such as an SU-35 it woudl get had badly. An SU-35 oputranges and out guns anything the USAF has, the russian missles have a range of 130km and there is even a 400km missle. THis is compared to about 60km for the AIM-120. Just to put this into perspective, the F-22's radr range is 120km. In short the Su-35 can fire at an F-22 without ever being spotted just by staying out of radar range. The SU-35 has a similar radar range than an AWACS and can act as one to support neibouring planes. In close combat it is super manuverable compared to anytihing the US has to offer, i.e. 1.5x ROT.

Based on the US's performance in this exercice against inferior planes I would surmise that in any real air war against a well equiped enemy they would get had.


I wouldn't put any bets on it. Surmising the perfomance of a full war based on one contrived air game scenario would not be wise.

This may be the most asinine thing posted in this thread.


You're kidding right? Basing an outcome of a large scale war on one limited war game scenario and you are ready to predict the outcome of a war?

That's stupid and I'm not even going to take the time to point out why.
 

kalster

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2002
7,355
6
81
Originally posted by: TheVrolok
Originally posted by: etech
Originally posted by: Lynx516 beer: an F15 is hard locked to 9G. A Mig 21 can only pull 7G without loosing too much speed and its control surfaces loosing control . The F15 is much more manuverable than the Mig 21 and should have had their ass. Those planes are ancient. The only decent plane the INdians have is the SU 30. The F-15 is designed for air supremicy. If it cannot dog fight it has been designed crap Judging on this even if it was close range it indicates that if your air force faced a decent plane such as an SU-35 it woudl get had badly. An SU-35 oputranges and out guns anything the USAF has, the russian missles have a range of 130km and there is even a 400km missle. THis is compared to about 60km for the AIM-120. Just to put this into perspective, the F-22's radr range is 120km. In short the Su-35 can fire at an F-22 without ever being spotted just by staying out of radar range. The SU-35 has a similar radar range than an AWACS and can act as one to support neibouring planes. In close combat it is super manuverable compared to anytihing the US has to offer, i.e. 1.5x ROT. Based on the US's performance in this exercice against inferior planes I would surmise that in any real air war against a well equiped enemy they would get had.
I wouldn't put any bets on it. Surmising the perfomance of a full war based on one contrived air game scenario would not be wise.
This may be the most asinine thing posted in this thread.

well what everyone seems to be missing is that the OP talked about 1 instance, that is all,


he didn't imply that IAF as a whole is better than USAF (atleast that is how i interpreted it)


if the detroit tigers kicked yankees @ss in 1 game and a fan who loves the tigers posted that the tigers kicked yankee @ss. would that be a wrong statement? , NO

would interpreting it as Tigers ALWAYS being better than Yankees be wrong, HELL YEH

would being an arrogant yankee fan and being in denial about that ONE loss be wrong (hint hint beer) HELL YEH


 

dawheat

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2000
3,132
93
91
Originally posted by: Lynx516
beer: an F15 is hard locked to 9G. A Mig 21 can only pull 7G without loosing too much speed and its control surfaces loosing control . The F15 is much more manuverable than the Mig 21 and should have had their ass. Those planes are ancient. The only decent plane the INdians have is the SU 30. The F-15 is designed for air supremicy. If it cannot dog fight it has been designed crap


Judging on this even if it was close range it indicates that if your air force faced a decent plane such as an SU-35 it woudl get had badly. An SU-35 oputranges and out guns anything the USAF has, the russian missles have a range of 130km and there is even a 400km missle. THis is compared to about 60km for the AIM-120. Just to put this into perspective, the F-22's radr range is 120km. In short the Su-35 can fire at an F-22 without ever being spotted just by staying out of radar range. The SU-35 has a similar radar range than an AWACS and can act as one to support neibouring planes. In close combat it is super manuverable compared to anytihing the US has to offer, i.e. 1.5x ROT.

Based on the US's performance in this exercice against inferior planes I would surmise that in any real air war against a well equiped enemy they would get had.

I'd love to see the radar that has the range of an AWACS, but somehow remains undetected when illuminating a target. Though against the very low RCS of the F-22, it would be interesting to see what its detection range would be. Also, I'm not familiar with a current production 400km range missle, but I'd assume it would have the same failings as the AIM-54, specifically that to have such great range, its manuverability at such great distance would be reduced. Such missiles would only be effective against long-range heavy bombers, not fighters.

You also forgot to mention how the Indian navy OWNZ the US Navy. Those fearsome 16 Harriers will avoid AWACS detection, blast 48 F-18s from the air, penetrate our Aegis screen, and send our carriers to the bottom of the ocean. A wise man would just surrender now to them to avoid defeat.

Though more seriously- this was a specific exercise with a specific purpose. In truth I am impressed that even with those numbers, the IAF won this exercise- so kudos to them. I was looking through the IAF orbat and didn't see any AWACS aircraft listed. I'd hazard a guess that a lack of such aircraft would be a massive disadvantage in a real engagement, especially when combined with the expected heavy support jamming.

In a real fight, the USAF would do everything possible to make the fight as unfair as possible- multiple AWACS aircraft, heavy jamming, cruise missles to take out ground radar, F-22s picking off fighters, etc.
 

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
20,577
432
126
Originally posted by: dawheat
Originally posted by: Lynx516
beer: an F15 is hard locked to 9G. A Mig 21 can only pull 7G without loosing too much speed and its control surfaces loosing control . The F15 is much more manuverable than the Mig 21 and should have had their ass. Those planes are ancient. The only decent plane the INdians have is the SU 30. The F-15 is designed for air supremicy. If it cannot dog fight it has been designed crap

Judging on this even if it was close range it indicates that if your air force faced a decent plane such as an SU-35 it woudl get had badly. An SU-35 oputranges and out guns anything the USAF has, the russian missles have a range of 130km and there is even a 400km missle. THis is compared to about 60km for the AIM-120. Just to put this into perspective, the F-22's radr range is 120km. In short the Su-35 can fire at an F-22 without ever being spotted just by staying out of radar range. The SU-35 has a similar radar range than an AWACS and can act as one to support neibouring planes. In close combat it is super manuverable compared to anytihing the US has to offer, i.e. 1.5x ROT.

Based on the US's performance in this exercice against inferior planes I would surmise that in any real air war against a well equiped enemy they would get had.

I'd love to see the radar that has the range of an AWACS, but somehow remains undetected when illuminating a target. Though against the very low RCS of the F-22, it would be interesting to see what its detection range would be. Also, I'm not familiar with a current production 400km range missle, but I'd assume it would have the same failings as the AIM-54, specifically that to have such great range, its manuverability at such great distance would be reduced. Such missiles would only be effective against long-range heavy bombers, not high manuverable fighters at long range.

Next we'll hear how the Indian navy will blow the US Navy out of the water. Those fearsome 16 Harriers will avoid AWACS detection, blast 48 F-18s from the air, penetrate our Aegis screen, and send our carriers to the bottom of the ocean. A wise man would just surrender now to them to avoid defeat.

Though more seriously- this was a staged, specific exercise where 4 F-15s took on 12 enemy aircraft. In truth I am impressed that even with those numbers, the IAF won this exercise- so kudos to them.

I was looking through the IAF orbat and didn't see any AWACS aircraft. I'd hazard a guess that a lack of such aircraft would be a massive disadvantage in a real engagement, especially when combined with the expected heavy support jamming.
Actually I was extremely skeptical at the idea that the Su-35 had comparable radar range to an E-3 Sentry, but published figures seem to indicate a max range of 400 km. The E-3 is supposed to have a 320 km radar window. Okay, the rough numbers match. However...the Su-35 could never act in the same role as the E-3. You're telling me a lone Su-35 pilot can take the role of four E-3 crewmen to coordinate an attack? Or that its radar is nearly as adept at tracking large numbers of aircraft in motion?
 

Lynx516

Senior member
Apr 20, 2003
272
0
0
The SU-35 has the electronics on board to allow other aircraft to use its radar instead of their own. It can track a large number of multiple targets at once. When you have a strick group that can see the situattion on their radar screens co ordinating an attack is fairly easy as you the lead aircraft makes all the decisions and can guide the other aircraft in. It also has the advantage of being able to shoot back that teh E3 doesnt have.
 

K1052

Elite Member
Aug 21, 2003
53,644
48,219
136
AFAIK, no SU-35 has ever been fielded in combat. The Russians don't have the cash to produce very many and no foreign country has put up the dough to purchase.
 

dawheat

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2000
3,132
93
91
Also, there is a difference on listed range and effective range. Like someone stated, a radar with the power of an AWACS requires multiple, dedicated crew members to effectively monitor and direct.

The SU-35 long-range concept makes sense for strategic defense, i.e. northern russia defense against US strategic bombers crossing the artic, where you're dealing in ranges of hundreds of miles over empty land, but over highly populated regions, it must be terribly difficult.

A radar scanning 400kms means a plane over New Delhi would be scanning across northern india, across nepal, and even into China, picking up literally hundreds if not thousands of targets.
 

Vonkhan

Diamond Member
Feb 27, 2003
8,198
0
71
Alrite, this has gone far enough - too many people talking outta their a55es ... some details about the excercize:

The excecize's name was COPE INDIA 2004

USAF:
6 x F-15C Eagles (Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska)
Originally, the number was 4 + 2 (F-15s) in two stages, but then air-air tanker taking part in the second excerize had to be pulled out due to a small onboard fire and the entire thing was re-organized into one big excercize with all 6 F-15s at the same time.


IAF:
2 x Su-30K (No. 24 Sqd. "Hunting Hawks")
2 x Mirage 2000 (No. 7 Sqd "Battleaxes")
2 x MiG-21Bison (Possibly from No. 3 Sqd. "Cobras")
6 x MiG-27M (Sqd. ?)


At BVR, USAF dominated.

At dogfighting - the ratio was 4:1 in the IAF's favor.

The reasons:
(1) the IAF were on home turf
(2) the Sukhois have thrust vectoring - making them exceptionally agile
(3) the Mirage 2000 is also a better dogfighter than the F-15Cs
(4) the IAF trains exceptionally hard for dogfighting scenarios given the lack of depth + the length of the Indo-Pakistan border
(5) the F-15Cs are exactly state-of-the-art anymore
(6) the IAF pilots were handpicked for the excercize - Squadron Leader & higher ranks


Having said that, 4:1 is a pretty good score against the USAF pilots who put in a lot more hours in training than their IAF counterparts.

US forces have been training in India quite a bit in recent years:
(1) Spec. Ops in Counter Insurgency & Jungle Warfare School (CIJWS) at Vairengte, Mizoram (Eastern India)
(2) Spec. Ops in High-Altitude Warfare School (HAWS) at Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh (Northern India)
(3) joint naval excercizes in the Arbian Sea
(4) Special Forces assigned to SOCPAC in PTS (Paratroopers Training School) at Agra, Uttar Pradesh

There're more, but ... bleh ... if there's more interest in the topic, lemme know
 

TheVrolok

Lifer
Dec 11, 2000
24,254
4,092
136
Originally posted by: Vonkhan
Alrite, this has gone far enough - too many people talking outta their a55es ... some details about the excercize:

The excecize's name was COPE INDIA 2004

USAF:
6 x F-15C Eagles (Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska)
Originally, the number was 4 + 2 (F-15s) in two stages, but then air-air tanker taking part in the second excerize had to be pulled out due to a small onboard fire and the entire thing was re-organized into one big excercize with all 6 F-15s at the same time.


IAF:
2 x Su-30K (No. 24 Sqd. "Hunting Hawks")
2 x Mirage 2000 (No. 7 Sqd "Battleaxes")
2 x MiG-21Bison (Possibly from No. 3 Sqd. "Cobras")
6 x MiG-27M (Sqd. ?)


At BVR, USAF dominated.

At dogfighting - the ratio was 4:1 in the IAF's favor.

The reasons:
(1) the IAF were on home turf
(2) the Sukhois have thrust vectoring - making them exceptionally agile
(3) the Mirage 2000 is also a better dogfighter than the F-15Cs
(4) the IAF trains exceptionally hard for dogfighting scenarios given the lack of depth + the length of the Indo-Pakistan border
(5) the F-15Cs are exactly state-of-the-art anymore
(6) the IAF pilots were handpicked for the excercize - Squadron Leader & higher ranks


Having said that, 4:1 is a pretty good score against the USAF pilots who put in a lot more hours in training than their IAF counterparts.

US forces have been training in India quite a bit in recent years:
(1) Spec. Ops in Counter Insurgency & Jungle Warfare School (CIJWS) at Vairengte, Mizoram (Eastern India)
(2) Spec. Ops in High-Altitude Warfare School (HAWS) at Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh (Northern India)
(3) joint naval excercizes in the Arbian Sea
(4) Special Forces assigned to SOCPAC in PTS (Paratroopers Training School) at Agra, Uttar Pradesh

There're more, but ... bleh ... if there's more interest in the topic, lemme know

Good info. Thanks.
 

K1052

Elite Member
Aug 21, 2003
53,644
48,219
136
Originally posted by: Vonkhan
Alrite, this has gone far enough - too many people talking outta their a55es ... some details about the excercize:

The excecize's name was COPE INDIA 2004

USAF:
6 x F-15C Eagles (Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska)
Originally, the number was 4 + 2 (F-15s) in two stages, but then air-air tanker taking part in the second excerize had to be pulled out due to a small onboard fire and the entire thing was re-organized into one big excercize with all 6 F-15s at the same time.


IAF:
2 x Su-30K (No. 24 Sqd. "Hunting Hawks")
2 x Mirage 2000 (No. 7 Sqd "Battleaxes")
2 x MiG-21Bison (Possibly from No. 3 Sqd. "Cobras")
6 x MiG-27M (Sqd. ?)


At BVR, USAF dominated.

At dogfighting - the ratio was 4:1 in the IAF's favor.

The reasons:
(1) the IAF were on home turf
(2) the Sukhois have thrust vectoring - making them exceptionally agile
(3) the Mirage 2000 is also a better dogfighter than the F-15Cs
(4) the IAF trains exceptionally hard for dogfighting scenarios given the lack of depth + the length of the Indo-Pakistan border
(5) the F-15Cs are exactly state-of-the-art anymore
(6) the IAF pilots were handpicked for the excercize - Squadron Leader & higher ranks


Having said that, 4:1 is a pretty good score against the USAF pilots who put in a lot more hours in training than their IAF counterparts.

US forces have been training in India quite a bit in recent years:
(1) Spec. Ops in Counter Insurgency & Jungle Warfare School (CIJWS) at Vairengte, Mizoram (Eastern India)
(2) Spec. Ops in High-Altitude Warfare School (HAWS) at Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh (Northern India)
(3) joint naval excercizes in the Arbian Sea
(4) Special Forces assigned to SOCPAC in PTS (Paratroopers Training School) at Agra, Uttar Pradesh

There're more, but ... bleh ... if there's more interest in the topic, lemme know

Thats some of the info I was wondering about. Thanks.
 

AndrewR

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
11,157
0
0
Originally posted by: Gyrene
Originally posted by: AndrewR

Originally posted by: Gyrene
Meh. Air Force people are pansies. Should have sent a MAW Aggressor Squadron against the Indians.

Whatever -- tell that to the Marines who get pasted regularly by the local F-15C squadrons here.
rolleye.gif

:D So, a particular squadron isn't doing so hot. Air Force is for people who want to learn a technical skill or stay away from the real fighting. They're pansies. Marines are the people who go in head first. Just remember, the rivalry is all in good fun, I still respect my coward brethren. And remember, at least your not Navy. ;)

You can walk around this island without bumping into Marines, and I've always respected them and the service (unless the morons start beating on or stealing from the locals, which happens all too much unfortunately). However, Marine air is focused on ground support, for good reason, and don't have the best aircraft for air-to-air engagements. That's a fact, not an opinion. Sometimes, he who has the best toy wins. :)

Cowardice? Staying away from flying bullets, earning a useful skill, living in quality facilities, earning the same pay -- I call that intelligence. And everyone knows the reputation of Marines and intelligence... ;)
 

SherEPunjab

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2002
3,841
0
0
i agree with kalsters statement: by the OP saying Indian kicked USAF a$$, it isn't saying they are BETTER. just like he said, they won, this one.

in any case, some posters then felt the need to retort "if this was in real life..." why even go there? no relevance to what the OP wrote. but, can't these posters give credit to the fact that in the simulated war, the IAF won?

Lynx made a interesting observation though, the IAF was fighting with fckin Migs. Those things are antique, and they were still doing that well.

to me, that means one of four things: a) the USAF had some really bad luck/bad days b) the Indian pilots were DAMN good c) the USAF LET the Indians beat them for some reason d) the USAF just sucks.

anyways, i'm sure they got respect now (IAF).

now, back to WHY THE HELL ARE THERE SO MANY JOINT MILITARY EXCERCISES GOING ON BETWEEN THE TWO? i'm suspicious again. 4 times in India, once or twice in the U.S. in the past couple years.
 

kalster

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2002
7,355
6
81
now, back to WHY THE HELL ARE THERE SO MANY JOINT MILITARY EXCERCISES GOING ON BETWEEN THE TWO? i'm suspicious again. 4 times in India, once or twice in the U.S. in the past couple years.


I dont think there is anything into it. Although it is good that they are getting closer.
And if something was indeed planned i dont think it would be so obvious for you and me to know.about it


Maybe they just feel the need to learn from Indian Pilots ;) :D (dont jump on me beer lol )
 

etech

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
10,597
0
0
What I notice the most is how desperatly happy the Indians are that they managed to win in this contrived scenario and are having to much such a big deal out of it including using the term "kicked USAF a$$".

Why?
 

mAdD INDIAN

Diamond Member
Oct 11, 1999
7,804
1
0
Originally posted by: etech
What I notice the most is how desperatly happy the Indians are that they managed to win in this contrived scenario and are having to much such a big deal out of it including using the term "kicked USAF a$$".

Why?

because its a big thing to beat the world's most powerful airforce, especially from a third world country with an ageing fleet. It's a compliment to you guys in a sense. Like a hopped up Civic beating an Enzo.

And its a national pride thing.
 

Lynx516

Senior member
Apr 20, 2003
272
0
0
Originally posted by: Fiveohhh
Shoulda brought the f16s out:D

The F-16 is a fighter bomber not an air superiority fighter. The F-15 is designed as an air superiority fighter thus the F-15 is what should be used. If they used F-16s they would be mashed.
 

freegeeks

Diamond Member
May 7, 2001
5,460
1
81
Originally posted by: etech
What I notice the most is how desperatly happy the Indians are that they managed to win in this contrived scenario and are having to much such a big deal out of it including using the term "kicked USAF a$$".

Why?

you can reverse the question and wonder why there is so much "USA is N°1" flagwaving in these forums

;)

 

DorkBoy

Diamond Member
Sep 25, 2000
3,591
0
0
This is a U.S. Navy story not an USAF one but probably same type of scenario.

We would let other countries take the lead during Joint Ops, let them respond first, fire first and claim victory over other U.S. Navy ships playing the "other team" when we played simulated war games.
This list includes countries that could not defend themselves like Cananda, Poland and France.

Although India is a powerful country and only getting better as the years pass, and I would like to see them become the Asian SuperPower. I am sure the same type of thing happens, the Americans have to let things pass and other to take the lead. What country wants to do joint exercised with us if we just kick their @sses everytime?
 

Red Dawn

Elite Member
Jun 4, 2001
57,529
3
0
You have to wonder how highly the Americans think of their capabilities when they expect to win a 4 against 12 match up. I bet if it was 12 against 12 the IAF would have bitten the big one.