Umm... no. Would you rather take ideas on naval aviation from Brazil, or from the U.S. Navy?That's much easier to obtain from Brazil which operates old French carrier. If something might be sold, it will be sold in Brazil
Umm... no. Would you rather take ideas on naval aviation from Brazil, or from the U.S. Navy?That's much easier to obtain from Brazil which operates old French carrier. If something might be sold, it will be sold in Brazil
RelaxYou can lie to yourself and you can lie to us but you still haven’t explained why you need to know these odd specifics about aircraft and ship engineering design, operating processes, human capital practices, organizational setups, etc. -- all the exact DOTMLPFP things a nation state would need in order to take its navy from poor to mediocre, or from mediocre to good, or from good to great.
I’ll tell you why. If scrounging open source info prevents a single jet from splashing behind the Kuznetsov/ Liaoning/ Vikrant (by avoiding a mishap that the U.S. Navy has learned the hard way how to avoid at the cost of U.S. blood and treasure), then that small intel effort has paid for itself a million times over.
No museum curator needs this info for an exhibit. No fiction author needs this info for a novel. No curious retired sailor needs this info out of sheer curiosity. Why do you?
Like was just said - relax. Max asks some fucked up off the wall questions but you’re having some fucked up off the wall paranoia.You can lie to yourself and you can lie to us but you still haven’t explained why you need to know these odd specifics about aircraft and ship engineering design, operating processes, human capital practices, organizational setups, etc. -- all the exact DOTMLPFP things a nation state would need in order to take its navy from poor to mediocre, or from mediocre to good, or from good to great.
I’ll tell you why. If scrounging open source info prevents a single jet from splashing behind the Kuznetsov/ Liaoning/ Vikrant (by avoiding a mishap that the U.S. Navy has learned the hard way how to avoid at the cost of U.S. blood and treasure), then that small intel effort has paid for itself a million times over.
No museum curator needs this info for an exhibit. No fiction author needs this info for a novel. No curious retired sailor needs this info out of sheer curiosity. Why do you?
Yeah...those radar blips are probably just that flight of B-17s coming in from the west coast.Like was just said - relax. Max asks some fucked up off the wall questions but you’re having some fucked up off the wall paranoia.
Yeah...those radar blips are probably just that flight of B-17s coming in from the west coast.![]()
Totally understood. Right, from American standpoint, to know something one can neither apply nor use on daily basis is like to collect some fucking trash. Eurasia is different - here the tailor or carpenter could be expert in opera singing, by the wayYou can lie to yourself and you can lie to us but you still haven’t explained why you need to know these odd specifics about aircraft and ship engineering design, operating processes, human capital practices, organizational setups, etc. -- all the exact DOTMLPFP things a nation state would need in order to take its navy from poor to mediocre, or from mediocre to good, or from good to great.
I’ll tell you why. If scrounging open source info prevents a single jet from splashing behind the Kuznetsov/ Liaoning/ Vikrant (by avoiding a mishap that the U.S. Navy has learned the hard way how to avoid at the cost of U.S. blood and treasure), then that small intel effort has paid for itself a million times over.
No museum curator needs this info for an exhibit. No fiction author needs this info for a novel. No curious retired sailor needs this info out of sheer curiosity. Why do you?
Horse shit. Ain’t no OpSec in the question.Viggies are magic...........no more about this, OpSec and all.
Jesus Hal...........it was a joke. Magic ins't an OpSec concern...........well not yet. Stop going fangs out, and keep the FAs in line.Horse shit. Ain’t no OpSec in the question.
The same engine can be set up to provide different power for different versions. Plus aerodynamics, weight, etc. all come into play.