WolfAngel Posted September 24, 2015 Posted September 24, 2015 Abiding by common sense and security as well as the forum rules, I am a civilian currently, looking for information on the usefulness of the A-10 in modern combat, particularly where networked Russian systems like the Pantsir and BUK are involved. General thoughts, with nothing classified or specific incidents not publicly well reported please. Love to hear from some pilots of the Warthog, or analysts familiar with the modern Russian systems. I'm aware of the general toughness, and survivability, and the fact the A-10 is the current CAS champ. I also understand the A-10 is one aspect of the aerial ballet, and that other aircraft and systems come in to fill in the gaps in A-10 abilities like removal of RADAR sources. Again, without violating forum rules, could the A-10 function in a modernized battle with leading edge tech anti-aircraft systems like Pantsir or BUK (or others)?A second, somewhat related question, what would the minimal training time be for training a hypothetical foreign friendly national to pilot and use in a CAS role the A-10... What I have found online is 55 weeks, 260 hours of flight time. (And that there are no public records of any active A-10 pilots outside the USAF, so strictly hypothetical) If the questions can't be answered without violating the forum rules, please don't answer saying that, as that inability, if present, represents an abstraction of the information itself.
WolfAngel Posted September 29, 2015 Posted September 29, 2015 Wolf Angel, is this you? sometimes. Usually to convince people Wolf Angel is not Angela (unless you speak Russian of course)
Jumpseat18 Posted November 18, 2015 Posted November 18, 2015 Nice.It appears the A-10 is (kind of) safe for another year. The President is expected to pass the current version of the 2016 NDAA. The ambiguity comes in the form of what is considered "significant reductions" in part C:SEC. 141. BACKUP INVENTORY STATUS OF A–10 AIRCRAFT.(a) Maximum Number.—In carrying out section 133(b)(2)(A) of the Carl Levin and Howard P. “Buck” McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113–291; 128 Stat. 3316), the Secretary of the Air Force may not move more than 18 A–10 aircraft in the active component to backup flying status pursuant to an authorization made by the Secretary of Defense under such section.(b) Conforming Amendment.—Such section 133(b)(2)(A) is amended by striking “36” and inserting “18”. SEC. 142. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR RETIREMENT OF A–10 AIRCRAFT.(a) Prohibition On Availability Of Funds For Retirement.—Except as provided by section 141, none of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2016 for the Air Force may be obligated or expended to retire, prepare to retire, or place in storage or on backup aircraft inventory status any A–10 aircraft.(b) Additional Limitations On Retirement.—(1) IN GENERAL.—Except as provided by section 141, and in addition to the limitation in subsection (a), during the period before December 31, 2016, the Secretary of the Air Force may not retire, prepare to retire, or place in storage or on backup flying status any A–10 aircraft.(2) MINIMUM INVENTORY REQUIREMENT.—The Secretary of the Air Force shall ensure the Air Force maintains a minimum of 171 A–10 aircraft designated as primary mission aircraft inventory.(c) Prohibition On Availability Of Funds For Significant Reductions In Manning Levels.—None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2016 for the Air Force may be obligated or expended to make significant reductions to manning levels with respect to any A–10 aircraft squadrons or divisions.(d) Additional Limitation On Significant Reductions In Manning Levels.—In addition to the limitation in subsection (c), during the period before December 31, 2016, the Secretary of the Air Force may not make significant reductions to manning levels with respect to any A–10 aircraft squadrons or divisions.
FishBowl Posted November 19, 2015 Posted November 19, 2015 Slightly off-topic (sorry), but I couldn't find a straight answer. If one were to drop A-10s out of UPT and three years later they were divested, what would be the options for that pilot with ~7 remaining on their ADSC?
sputnik Posted November 19, 2015 Posted November 19, 2015 Or you could fly another airplane. Stranger things have happened
Majestik Møøse Posted November 19, 2015 Posted November 19, 2015 This speaks volumes. The rationale for retiring the A-10 is so it can be replaced by the F-35, yet the AF won't have enough F-35s anytime soon for all the potentially jobless Hog drivers. Seems like we need about 300 of them first.
Jumpseat18 Posted November 19, 2015 Posted November 19, 2015 (edited) Fish bowl, there's a massive fighter pilot shortage. If the A-10 goes away, those pilots will fill 11F billets. ....i.e. they'll fly fighters, trainers, or go to school/staff or ALO. I know several guys that got Tx'd to other fighters a couple years ago based entirely on the *threat* of the A-10 going away. I know at least another dozen that have transitioned to the F-35. Several others to the A-29. M Mouse. Ask around, F-35s are starting to come off the line faster than they can find pilots. The A-10 isn't going anywhere for now, so contrary to what you implied about F-35 supply/demand, the limfac will very quickly become pilots, not iron. Ironically, cutting the A-10 is one of the only ways to solve that problem because it would free up a majority of the community to crosstrain. If they made a sweeping cut to the A-10 fleet, what do you think would become of the Hog guard/reserve 11Fs (assuming they don't want to fly whatever the follow-on aircraft is at their unit; like how the -130J was proposed for MD's 104th)? Seems like the -35s may be farther away from that community, at least in large numbers. Edited November 19, 2015 by Jumpseat18 add
Prosuper Posted November 20, 2015 Posted November 20, 2015 ....I don't think the cut would be "sweeping," per se. It would be gradual, unit by unit over the course of a couple/few years. As far as the guard/res guys, if they don't want to transition I think their options are pretty simple: separate/retire or move to another unit. Hogs have lost Barnes, Bradley, New Orleans, Willow Grove, and Fort Smith in the last decade. Battle Creek moved to Selfridge and Barksdale moved to DM. We gained Fort Wayne. ....Every unit has a hip pocket plan to transition (back) to vipers if the A-10 goes away. (Boise will go to Strike Eagles at MH) In all those moves, I know guys that stayed and transitioned to the new jet, guys that separated/retired, and guys that relocated to stay in the hog.Or you can apply here.https://www.news9.com/story/28039187/a-10-warthog-to-take-on-oklahomas-thunderstorms 1
Breckey Posted November 20, 2015 Posted November 20, 2015 The videos on SIPR were amazing. I'm glad they sanitized released them.
GoGuard Posted November 20, 2015 Posted November 20, 2015 Are some of those attacks using CBU? Or is that just what the strafe looks like?
TreeA10 Posted November 20, 2015 Posted November 20, 2015 That would be strafe. Some of that might be from the gunships, too.
Breckey Posted November 21, 2015 Posted November 21, 2015 I wonder if the guys that didn't have any secondaries were ridiculed.
ClearedHot Posted November 21, 2015 Posted November 21, 2015 Those are all A-10 strafe (except for the first couple, which are obviously bombs)As seen through a gunship HUD, tag team from hell.
di1630 Posted November 22, 2015 Posted November 22, 2015 As seen through a gunship HUD, tag team from hell. That's the A-10 display you are watching. 1
FlyinGrunt Posted November 23, 2015 Posted November 23, 2015 I think you missed his point, di1630 . . . 1
JS Posted November 25, 2015 Posted November 25, 2015 That's the A-10 display you are watching.Wow, I would have bet a pabst blue ribbon can of beer that the view was from a predator while A-10s strafed from other directions. I guess I would have lost.
HuggyU2 Posted April 14, 2017 Posted April 14, 2017 Post retired a few months ago. Good riddance. Any idea where he went? I'm guessing it wasn't the airlines.
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