Math is funny in how you can make up a lot of things and justify the outcome because numbers add up. Looks like somebody's been reading too much "war is boring" blogs.
Fact is that every US congressional report that comes out since the first two planes posted a price tag of 220+ Million Dollars (sans engine) has been dropping significantly. That includes multiple reports within the same year, and going from batch to batch. Meanwhile inflation has been rising steadily while that price has been going down. That 80-85 Million range will be when it is in full production and not LRIP (Limited Range Initial Production) batches. That should kick in for the full production run in 2018. LRIP is always more expensive, but allows for rapid advancements in design changes on the production line which otherwise might take 10+ years, as with the F-16s.
Let's look at some other production (not LRIP) costs per-plane:
Eurofighter: 119 Mil
F-15K: 108 Mil
Rafale B: 98 Mil
Super Hornet -E (more recently marketted versions cost more, even): 78 Mil
Jas-39C: 69 Mil
Even sans engines, its price point is middle of the pack but its performance or "sales-points" if you prefer blows all the competition off the scorecard. In actual performance so far it has been a rockstar compared to currently serving combat-ready airframes. Keep in mind that's with a 7-G limitation on the software, which won't fully unlock until final production starts in 2018.
You'll notice the F-16 isn't on that list. That's because the 1974 era design is breaking down and horribly limited in what you can upgrade. It doesn't have any space, any cooling or even enough power generation to add on countless computer modules and technology upgrades. It's a dead end. The USAF has in recent years spent multiple Billions (with a B) on just stiffener plates and similar updates to keep the 1995-era F-16C/Ds semi-functioning in this modern day. Almost all of the airframes are at the very limit of their operational lifespan (allowed flight hours) and are developing microfractures in multiple bulkheads and wing mount points. Keep in mind this is just a band-aid on a sucking chest wound. The stiffener plates are also externally tacked on, so it's not like they had to rip the sucker apart and put them on the inside of the plane. That's why those UAE F-16 E/F models are so damn expensive: They have every possible modernization packed into them -- no possible upgrades after that point -- and they have been heavily modified from the cheap original models. If production began on brand-new F-16s and the F-35 magically didn't exist, we'd be paying even more than the UAE for updated F-16 airframes (which would still have all the current deal-breaking shortcomings that the F-16 has now).
A good reference point on just how bulky and ungainly and unwanted these stiffener plates are can be found on the usaf-sig website. Remember the USAF had to allocate BILLIONS of dollars for this program just to keep these in the air until the F-35 is ready. This and other MLU projects for the F-16 have been costing hundreds of millions of dollars of additional operating costs to many international users as well.
http://www.usaf-sig.org/images/stories/Kit_Corrections/Viper_Article/Nirel2.jpgAnd that's just to keep it from falling apart in mid-air, like some F-15s did not too long ago. Super Hornets are already past this point and are being retired to non-combat roles. They're taking legacy hornets (Cs and Ds) from low-hour units like the Marines or training squadrons and giving them the worn-our Super Hornets and using the still-viable legacy Hornets. To use a controversial example: The real reason the F-14 was retired was not the price per airframe, but the operating costs and maintenance costs. The common joke was to let Iran have more F-14s and they'd go bankrupt inside 5 years.
Every aviation branch in our military is horribly desperate for this F-35 airframe. That's a basic fact. We need new aircraft -- and I mean new designs, not "more of a 1970s design that doesn't work." So we're going to get them, regardless of what plane it is. Look at the options. The price point of the F-35 is comparable to any other contemporary that might even be a remote option, yet the F-35 in its LRIP state with software limitations is still besting all the competition in every example in any international competition it participates in.
No matter how you try to coin a phrase or create a perjorative name for it, this plane is coming, it will be the primary fighter of our air services (much as I have issues with the cross-service platform), and it is already performing better than anything we've got flying right now. That's not counting the fact it won't even be "finalized" for 2-3 more years.
What exactly do you want? Objectively looking at the price point, looking at the capabilities, looking at what progress they're making and how close they are to full production, what, exactly, are you crying out for or lamenting? The points you keep bringing up have little or no merit, IMO. There are many points you have made that are good (i.e. cheap marketting fluff to not include engine price in the cost), but these are not "deal breakers" so to speak and the ones you latch onto are unsubstantiated and even refuted by the facts.
As for me? I personally hate how they took one plane and forced it to be the basis of all three branches. That hasn't worked out most times in the past (with some exceptions) and kills/stifles the aviation world's minimal remaining competitive natures. They keep this up and we'll have a monopoly going which will just churn out crap and we have no alternative. Also, the variations are too much from branch to branch when they don't need to be. That ruins the entire point of using the same airframe. Have the AF unit use the same nose gear as the naval unit, for example. WHY create cost delays and problems and production divergence to implement hundreds of minor changes like that? The USAF used A-7s, F-4s, and other aircraft designed for the Navy with only moderate changes in the past. Tell them to suck it up or have fun in their grounded F-16 fleet. Seriously!
I have many issues I can bring up that are all very valid problems with this project and how it's been run so far. I am not happy in the least. Objectively, however, the constant wolf-cries of "the end is near!!!" get old.
I think that's all I'm going to say on this thread anymore. It's becoming repetitive. I welcome comments in general to further the conversation, discussion, or debate. There's not enough of that here to justify this thread. It's borderline politics, which I won't get sucked into.