If I'm wrong and you're right, then why hasn't it deployed? The truth is, the aircraft is beleagured with problems: structural, battlefield compatibility, performance, and avionics.
...It hasn't and....well....it hasn't. I think the proof lies on my sid eof the debate. To this date, F-22s have not been allowed to attend the war.
The P-80 wasn't sent flying into the heart of Nazi air defenses upon its entering service to hunt Me262s, even though there were three or four in Europe before VE Day. The F-117 wasn't sent in during Operation El Dorado Canyon, either, even though using it would have caught ol' Qaddafi asleep in bed. That doesn't prove that either aircraft was
incapable of doing the job, it only shows that planners decided not to use them in those capacities at that time.
The F-22 is optimized as an air-to-air fighter, but sending it to Iraq wouldn't justify that role since there's no air defenses to penetrate or enemy fighters to kill. At this point even the air-to-mud F-16s and F-15s could be called a waste; if you could fit smart munitions onto a B-17, it could do the close air support job about as safely and well (albeit slower) than the front line fighter-bombers of today.
The F-22
has been used to intercept probing Russian bombers recently and has done so well by all accounts, but that's the extent of the non-testing-related missions it's been involved in so far. It's not the F-22's fault that the whole Iranian air force hasn't come after it just yet.
Oh; but it's not. I've gone into detail in ous posts and listed even more directly above.
No you haven't.
You pointed to one crash of an early prototype as proof of the production type being beyond hope, yet how many Have Blue stealth prototypes survived their testing? And how successful has the F-117 been?
Then you pointed to the IDL problem as being proof of the F-22's avionics being crap, yet you don't have citations establishing an ongoing problem with that - and as for other avionics issues, the F-22 was recently tested by L-3 as an effective datalink hotspot superior to other systems in place, and at Red Flag F-22s stayed over the battlefield (after obliterating the Red Force's fighters) to provide electronic surveillance to Blue Force. The datalink between F-22s is also supposed to be very effective. So they're more capable than you think, certainly not being off in a "low-tech 'lights-out' world." (
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/06/19/super_stealth_jet_acts_as_flying_wifi_hotspots/ )
Then you pointed to some incident at Hill AFB. The only reference (
http://www.f-22raptor.com/news_view.php?nid=192&yr=2006 ) I could find about F-22s and Hill AFB was about them undergoing some minor modifications being done to the Raptors in 2006, and in fact the site actually states, "Maj. Evan Dertien
flew the aircraft from Langley Air Force Base, Va., to Hill for the modifications." Not trucked. Not moved by rail.
Flew. In all three cases you don't give any kind of background on the incident or any context, you're just saying that the plane is unusable just because something happened once.
Red Flag: (
http://www.acc.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123041831 )
You might as well say the A320 should be disposed of because one crashed into the Hudson River - without mentioning that both engines died because of a rare double bird strike, or that the crash was actually a very expertly controlled ditching, or that the aircraft stayed afloat long enough for all the passengers to get off. Or saying that the 747 should be grounded because one blew up over Lockerbie, Scotland - without mentioning that a terrorist bomb caused it to blow up.
Context and background are key, but your argument centers on how you just don't like the F-22. You don't like it, and it's had a couple problems, and that's all that matters. Details don't seem to matter.
Was the P-38 unuseable after being around for 20 years? No. Name one other aircraft. I challenge you.
Well, yes, it was unusable in combat after 20 years. Who wants to take a P-38 up against an F-100, anyway?
Try this on for size though: A LOCKHEED EMPLOYEE COULD HAVE STARTED ON THE BRAND-NEW F-22 PROJECT RIGHT OUT OF SCHOOL AND RETIRED BEFORE IT ENTERED ACTIVE DUTY.
Ignoring how short of a career twenty years is, especially these days, that sounds very much like the V-22 program. But you seem to like that program, so that's apparently all the difference.
I have an open mind, so if you come back with respectable reports about ongoing problems with the aircraft or reasons why it wasn't deployed backing up your theory that it can't be, I'll reconsider. Lacking that, I'm not one to take such opinions at face value over what seems to be a battalion of industry experts who don't seem to agree with you.