GScholz, I think we disagree on the design brief that drove the F-35 (and my disagreement is qualified as below), but, as I state, I get your rationale and have some additional questions for you. The only thing I was apologizing for was any impression that I was flamebaiting you. I am trying to provoke your thoughts and reasoned responses, not flames.
Regarding my additional questions...
1. what do you make of the low-freq networked radar issue? What of "quantum" radar (looks pretty far away from reality to me right now)?
2. If external ords/fuel drive signature up, surely, revised material usage and geometry (stealth ords, thus) could surely mitigate, such that the package size of the final design could be reduced... clearly, there would be a cost tradeoff in the external stores designs, but, in peacetime, most of that stuff gets a lot of re-use anyway.
3. As for the AI required to truly remove the man from the loop: I'd think remote piloting could bridge that gap, but can also envision problems associated with same - for example, the detached remote pilot has little sensory input, never mind the widely varying quality of any individual pilot's evaluation of that sensory input. The man in the loop is thus likely suboptimal, given that he's not fully integrated. (also, the latency is noted below... - same reason you can't play AH by satellite).
My other point: a robust approach, imj, is multi-tiered/portfolio. Indeed, I think USAF planning has misapprehended the current situation as stealth-rules-all as opposed to what I would characterize as; rapidly evolving technologically. I'd argue our current mix of high-signature turn-and-burn with a small contingent of ultra-costly but stealthy bleeding-edge designs is actually a pretty sound mix in that it mitigates the risk of stealth obsoletion- but what will replace the former?
as for F-22, the Typhoon pilots claimed advantage post-merge, I'd suspect based on the old stick and rudder virtue of advantageous wingloading and control authority.
Just enjoying some mental excursion...