RPM, I thought the F14 was one of the FEW planes procured that was focused primarily on A2A combat, or a "single" job as opposed to many like the F16/F18 etc. I'd always read that the F15A and C as well as the F14 were purpose built, the former a Fighter, the later a fleet interceptor? I know that they both had the capability to drop bombs, and in later life the F14 had very good precision guided bomb dropping ability, and the F15E of course grew out of the F15 A, but wasn't the Tomcat program initially all about focusing on killing Soviet bombers, cruise missiles, and the odd long range fighter escort out at sea?
I'm not trying to start an argument with you, I don't know enough about the subject to be an expert, but I'm interested in what reasons you have for specifically saying that the F14 program was a disaster? I read somewhere recently that the early engines were responsible for over a third of the airframe loses with the F14A's, and that can obviously be laid in large part at the door of the manufacturer of those power plants, which I realize is a huge part of the fighter, it's beating heart. Despite this I'd always had the impression that the Navy was happy with what they got out of the F14, and that the F18, even the Super Hornet, made a poor replacement.
Gsholz, I've always admired Norway's military, in particular it's air force. Canada has participated in a ton of exercises with you guys back when you secured the Northern flank vs the Soviets, and always kept excellent relations and considered Norway a strong ally and great training partner. It's ridiculous that Canada with 35 million people and our economy is planning on buying only 65 F35's, if the sale EVEN goes through now, when Norway is buying over 50. Our military is getting pressure from all corners to find "alternatives", but our RCAF needs a jack of all trades,and even if the F22 was available, it wouldn't suit us due to the limited attack capability. The Grippen, Typhoon, Super Hornet, Rafale...they are all gen 4 or 4.5 fighters not much better than our upgraded F18's in terms of capability. The only real option out there is the F35 for us, take it or leave it. Our fighters are TIMED OUT. Some are approaching 7 and 8 thousand hours on their airframes.
This is a quote from a Calgary board where I guy I know who works ground crew, radar tech for our CF18 fleet.
You have no idea how much maintenance it takes to keep one flying, its slowly becoming the sea king of the fighter world. Available parts are decreasing, things are starting to break that we've never seen before and there are no known fixes. The fleet doesn't have very much time left - 5 years tops.
One point he also made is that the F35 will have 55% greater fuel capacity internally than the F18, and in a country that is vast like Canada, this alone is a huge positive for the RCAF. Is it going to be perfect? No. Will there be even more teething problems. Yes, that's just how procurement works now a days I guess.