Go Back  PPRuNe Forums > Aircrew Forums > Military Aviation
Reload this Page >

Live Long and Prosper - and the Death of the Fighter

Wikiposts
Search
Military Aviation A forum for the professionals who fly military hardware. Also for the backroom boys and girls who support the flying and maintain the equipment, and without whom nothing would ever leave the ground. All armies, navies and air forces of the world equally welcome here.

Live Long and Prosper - and the Death of the Fighter

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 29th Feb 2020, 19:31
  #1 (permalink)  
Ecce Homo! Loquitur...
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Peripatetic
Posts: 17,381
Received 1,581 Likes on 719 Posts
Live Long and Prosper - and the Death of the Fighter

Musk being provocative.....

https://www.defensenews.com/digital-...ets-is-ending/

SpaceX’s founder tells US Air Force the era of fighter jets is ending
ORAC is online now  
Old 29th Feb 2020, 20:19
  #2 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Northumberland
Posts: 8,537
Received 85 Likes on 57 Posts
What, again?
SWBKCB is online now  
Old 29th Feb 2020, 20:24
  #3 (permalink)  
Ecce Homo! Loquitur...
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Peripatetic
Posts: 17,381
Received 1,581 Likes on 719 Posts
They only have to be right once......
ORAC is online now  
Old 29th Feb 2020, 21:53
  #4 (permalink)  

"Mildly" Eccentric Stardriver
 
Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: England
Age: 77
Posts: 4,141
Received 223 Likes on 65 Posts
Duncan Sandys, Defence Minister UK 1957.
Herod is offline  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 00:26
  #5 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Sheffield
Posts: 155
Likes: 0
Received 3 Likes on 3 Posts
Sunken glandys

See Private Eye. Brainless and headless!
911slf is offline  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 01:14
  #6 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: NEW YORK
Posts: 1,352
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
If the 'loyal wingman' concept has any merit, Musk is probably right.
The drone needs to be able to at least keep up with the manned fighter, so the pilot is baggage apart from the tactical decision making. The latter is driven by the sensor inputs, which can certainly be handled by an AI.
There is a separate thread highlighting the impact of drones on operations is Syria here: Here it comes: Syria
It is quite illuminating and the impact of the mainstream military technology now available to Turkey,. Presumably a premier military technology power can do considerably better.
etudiant is offline  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 07:34
  #7 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Wherever it is this month
Posts: 1,788
Received 75 Likes on 34 Posts
Originally Posted by etudiant
the pilot is baggage apart from the tactical decision making. The latter is driven by the sensor inputs, which can certainly be handled by an AI.
This is the key insight. We are well-used to hearing the argument for ‘sensor fusion’, which is that there is too much information coming into a F-35 for the single pilot to interpret it all, so a computer will do the processing needed to present a simple, clear air picture: red track bad, blue track good, yellow track unknown. While this is not quite the case yet, it is getting there. And it is one of the factors behind the huge expense of the aircraft.

The original rationale for sensor fusion was being able to dispense with a second crew member, and of course this was wholly acceptable to the pilot-dominated Air Force hierarchies. However, as AI and automated flight improve, there will eventually come a point when the only argument for retaining a pilot is the societally-driven need to keep a human in the loop on ethical decisions like employing weapons (on the reasonable assumption that electronic warfare will make beyond-line-of-sight remote control too unreliable). But, when fully implemented, sensor fusion will reduce the fighter pilot’s ethical input to ‘shooting red tracks OK, shooting other tracks bad’: and of course it will be a computer taking the in-cockpit decisions over which tracks to colour red. The remaining step (to actually shoot at them) is not such a big ethical leap as opponents of AI would like people to think.

I should add that this isn’t an endorsement of AI in all corners of the military need. Robust line-of-sight datalinks and/or an alternative cheap manned platform would offer an alternative for peacetime home air defence operations, allowing AI elements to be focussed on the war fighting requirement, where the need to avoid human losses is most pressing and the ‘societal ethics’ barrier is likely to be marginally lower. And the relatively uncluttered air battle space makes it easier to foresee autonomous combat aircraft than (for instance) autonomous robot soldiers conducting house-to-house urban clearance operations with civilians present.

So I’m worried that we are doing Tempest 5-10 years too early, and thus including a cockpit, when the defining characteristic of 6th gen may well be the lack of a pilot. And this is exactly the kind of argument I think Dominic Cummings will raise during the UK’s forthcoming Integrated Review. The “start it now to keep BAES Warton busy after Typhoon” argument will cut little ice with him, one suspects.

Now, if the pilots had not pushed so hard for expensive/complex sensor fusion and had instead retained a single WSO as the crew of an automatically-piloted combat aircraft, there would not now be such an obvious path to a completely unmanned platform. Just saying... and I am a pilot. (Have I just hit on the answer to the MFTS debacle: stop training pilots to fly?!)

Last edited by Easy Street; 1st Mar 2020 at 12:14.
Easy Street is offline  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 08:49
  #8 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: East Midlands
Posts: 88
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Surely the pilot, or platform operator, doesn't have to be in the cockpit? Remote operating of airborne weapon systems is now routine. The human can still be in the loop, just not on board.
Visual ID? Camera turret slaved to VR headset and you've got it, at ranges beyond human capabilities. Likewise the operating envelope could be increased beyond the frailties of the human. We could have people operating these things who've got the mental capacity to fly and fight but wouldn't have the physical capability to fly a fighter. Don't suppose happy hour would be the same though..................................
Captain Radar.... is offline  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 09:49
  #9 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: these mist covered mountains are a home now for me.
Posts: 1,784
Received 29 Likes on 12 Posts
The mass of data that is sent to and from simple recce drones, is simply incredible. To transfer the hundreds or thousands of more data volume to replace the 'man in the cockpit' to a pilot in a bunker/office/bar, without losing line of sight during manouvering, in a timely manner without undue lag - I just don't know if its yet possible. Then in times of jamming, or lost signal, the aircraft is likely to return home, leading to a loss of mission - may cost more lives.

In many scenarios the Stick Monkey being on the scene in a much simpler aircraft can achieve a lot more at a much cheaper cost.
Runaway Gun is offline  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 09:58
  #10 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Wherever it is this month
Posts: 1,788
Received 75 Likes on 34 Posts
Originally Posted by Captain Radar....
Surely the pilot, or platform operator, doesn't have to be in the cockpit? Remote operating of airborne weapon systems is now routine. The human can still be in the loop, just not on board.
Remote operation is indeed routine, but only in the type of operating environments we’ve enjoyed over the past 20 years. It is already bandwidth-limited (a problem if you want remote video and/or large numbers of aircraft operating simultaneously) but the bigger problem in a full-scale war fighting scenario will be electronic warfare. A key advantage of air platforms over surface-based air defences is that they can move over hostile territory, and that means that they will be closer to the enemy’s jammers than to the friendly datalink transmitters. That’s a losing equation in terms of transmission power requirements unless you build a complex (and fragile/vulnerable/bandwidth-limited) network of air, surface and space relays: the so-called ‘combat cloud’. Short-range line-of-sight directional datalinks can probably avoid the worst of the effects, but combined with the increasing vulnerability of SATCOM to space-based interference, remote control is (IMHO) going to remain limited in its applicability.

Last edited by Easy Street; 1st Mar 2020 at 10:46.
Easy Street is offline  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 11:26
  #11 (permalink)  
Ecce Homo! Loquitur...
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Peripatetic
Posts: 17,381
Received 1,581 Likes on 719 Posts
Air combat was picked because it is the more clear cut arena for AI - no messy civilians about - think of it as an attack dog let off the leash with the order kill!

Able to pull high-G, if purposely built far smaller, or with greater range, as all the human support rims, cockpit, canopy etc are rendered obsolete - and with an AI pilot which is recomputing every millisecond and where a combat may only takes seconds which to a pilot is just a blur.....

https://magazine.uc.edu/editors_pick...res/alpha.html
ORAC is online now  
Old 1st Mar 2020, 17:32
  #12 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: BOQ
Age: 79
Posts: 545
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
And no relief tube required.
OK465 is offline  
Old 2nd Mar 2020, 06:35
  #13 (permalink)  
Ecce Homo! Loquitur...
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Peripatetic
Posts: 17,381
Received 1,581 Likes on 719 Posts
https://www.darpa.mil/news-events/2019-10-21


ORAC is online now  
Old 2nd Mar 2020, 16:21
  #14 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Threshold 06
Posts: 576
Received 25 Likes on 16 Posts
https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/nor...drone-17847201

just sayin.
oldmansquipper is offline  
Old 2nd Mar 2020, 17:14
  #15 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Jan 2020
Location: Scotland
Posts: 38
Received 14 Likes on 7 Posts
Being a pilot maybe I am biased but I am always suspicious when somebody says the days of the manned fighter are over, or driverless cars will be taking over, or my house is going to be completely networked and do everything for me. Technology is one of our strengths in the west but at the same time is our biggest weakness, if we rely on it completely we will be pretty screwed when it is denied to us (as it will be because any enemy worth their salt will know what our critical nodes are). How well will F35 work when ALIS is denied? I am sure automation, AI etc. will play a huge part in our future both military and civilian but it is worth considering why we like it; it makes our life easier and is good for business (isn't it Mr Musk) but it is not always the best solution, indeed some think we may have reached peak technology. I think there will always be a requirement for a squaddie with a bayonet or a fighter with a pilot in capable of operating outside the network when the crap really hits the fan.

Anyway, we cant even provide hot water in the mess at the moment so providing secure networked pilotless air systems may be a way off.
SOX80 is offline  
Old 3rd Mar 2020, 00:19
  #16 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Dunnunda
Age: 63
Posts: 150
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Originally Posted by SOX80
Technology is one of our strengths in the west but at the same time is our biggest weakness
Yep - just try buying something at the mall when the internet is down and the banking systems aren't talking.
Art Smass is offline  
Old 3rd Mar 2020, 08:49
  #17 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Way north
Age: 47
Posts: 497
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Sure it's not possible to jam the signal to and from drones?

The sun can corrupt a signal between a sattelite and a disc on the ground, if they're in a straight line (something experiences for a short while at noon every year up north where the sattelites are "low on the horizon")

So with the right equipment to detect the drones, disrupting the signal should be possible as well.... question is, who gets there first? And then you'd need someone on board again...

And I honestly don't believe jamming and corrupting encrypted radio signals cannot be done... Finding the frequencies may be a bit harder, but that kind of equipment have existed for years as well, mostly for intercepting radio communication though.

Radio frequence interference is already making using GNSS in some parts of the world "harder"...
jmmoric is offline  
Old 5th Mar 2020, 00:46
  #18 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Everett, WA
Age: 68
Posts: 4,407
Received 180 Likes on 88 Posts
A good analysis of Musk's claim.

https://www.popularmechanics.com/mil...hter-jet-dead/
tdracer is offline  
Old 5th Mar 2020, 01:48
  #19 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 370
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts

I think Maverick has the best response to Mr Musk.
flyinkiwi is offline  
Old 5th Mar 2020, 07:24
  #20 (permalink)  
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: A better place.
Posts: 2,319
Received 24 Likes on 16 Posts
Seconded Mav...
tartare is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.