MAD-4A wrote:Wrong - it failed because, unlike the F-5, it was up against the F-16 & YF-17/18 and wasn't up to the standard they set.
You don´t seem to be aware what was considered, nor what incentives given.
F-5 and derivatives were never meant to compete with the -16/17/18, of course they will have trouble beating them.
That only shows you missed the whole point of the F-5 family.
MAD-4A wrote:There was plenty of market. the market was taken up by the F-16 - if there was no market then how come so many F-16s were sold?
Because they were subsidised like mad.
Literally. Poland got their F-16s at something that could be called at most quarter price.
Greece got a bundle well below half price.
Pakistan and Indonesia close to half price.
Israel´s F-16s were effectively paid for by USA.
Italy leased a bunch at a cheapskate rate.
Norway and Denmark got theirs at pricetags too low for the older SAAB-37 to compete seriously with even though the F-16 is more expensive to build and operate.
MAD-4A wrote:It is? What has it "Killed" perhaps in theory but I'm not aware of anything it's actually done (though I'm not up to date on any little conflicts that have errupted in Russia lately). where has it fought & what against, MIG-23?
What has the F-22 "killed" except in theory?
Or are you so lost in the "rah rah USA" hype that you´re unable to even look at what facts does exist?
Or are you so naive as to think that no other nations test their military gear?
In part, the MiG-31 is the same kind of plane as an F-15, air domination by being able to detect and hit targets far away.
However, during design that was intermixed with the role of being able to intercept both terrain following supersonic bombers as well as cruise missiles.
This resulted in a uniquely powerful phased array radar combined with computerisation and automatic datalink integration that is still not used in ANY other plane.
In a group of MiG-31s, what the radar of one plane see, ALL pilots see.
In a group up to 16 planes, if everyone launch all their missiles, then all missiles will retain guidance(and probably hit their targets) as long as 1 plane is still alive and has radar tracking in the right direction.
Being able to touch mach 3 as a leftover of the MiG-25 lineage(even though the -31 is effectively a completely new plane) doesn´t hurt.
USA will fervently deny it, but MiG-31s have detected and tracked US stealth planes repeatedly and reliably. Including getting a reliable missile lock.
At distances where only the F-14 could have shot any missiles back, because it´s far beyond the range of the AMRAAM.
Their only real downside is that they normally carry only 4 of their standard missiles. But fired from a MiG-31, those missiles have exceptionally high kill probability against pretty much anything.
Well, they´re not exactly high on maneuverability either, but it was never meant to get up close and personal.
In the 90s when there were some arguing around the Russian border with China, Russia moved a MiG-31 regiment to nearby, and suddenly China stopped arguing instantly and there was no longer any quarrels.
All military planes have their good and bad sides, but as a stand-off fighter/interceptor, it effectively has no equal today.