The F-20 was no real improvement over the F-16 except for being cheaper.
This is a bit of a misnomer perpetrated by the fact it is based on the F-5 of which the F-16 is an upgraded version.
In actuality, however, they're completely different animals. The F-16 is a multi-role that really favors anti-ground. The F-20, on the other hand, was pretty much a long range interceptor. It was fast (could do Mach 2.2) and very agile. It was also designed to carry sophisticated long-range AA weaponry. While, it was originally intended to have attack capabilities, it was soon realized it just wasn't practical, and the focus moved to anti-air. There was even a proposed refit late in its life span that would have increased its maximum payload, it's ceiling, and max speed (Closer to the 2.6-2.8 range) to essentially make it one bad-ass, yet cheap, interceptor.
The modified F-15s can supermanuever, but they are huge radar targets.
But as I pointed out, the whole "stealth" thing is blown out of proportion. For one thing, it doesn't do a damn thing for a guy with a SAM On his shoulder. And, as I said, the technology to detect it is there and it is quickly becoming more powerful, cheaper, and easier to obtain. It is also starting to be used in more places than people realize like, oh I don't know, China and Korea?
On the flip side, the F-15/MTDs were intended to have upgraded parts and electronics than a standard Strike Eagle, and it's performance and weaponry was better than an F-22s. In situations where stealth is irrelevant, wich would you rather have?
The only actual plane that was probably superior to the F-22 Raptor was the F-23 Black Widow. It was faster and stealthier.
As I stated at the beginning of my post.
But the Air Force reportedly did not like the lay out of its weapons bays which meant that if one weapon jammed on its launcher it would block all the other weapons in the bay from being dropped.
I don't really buy this. There were a whole bunch of other reasons given that really didn't hold any water--like the F-22 having the potential for Navy use even though it had pretty much been established neither one of them could be formatted for carrier use. I think the real reason was Lockheed just happens to be one of the biggest lobbies in Washington.
And given that no U.S. plane has been lost in air to air combat since Vietnam and no U.S. soldier on the ground has been killed by enemy aircraft since the Korean War, I wouldn't claim that air superiority was dead yet.
I didn't say "air superiority" I said "air superiority fighter." Air superiority is capturing and holding the air-space above a combat zone. This used to be done via dogfights. But in the age of aircraft that can fly at 1,600 MPH and have attack radii in excess of 350 miles, you do this with interceptors and attackers.
An air-superiority fighter is just a fancy name for a pure dogfigter: one that can fly into a furball and be that last man standing.
And by the way, the MIG-31 is simply a modified MIG-25. Upgrade of a 45 year old design.
No way it would do jack against an F-22.
Upgraded to be faster with a higher rate of climb, has a larger mission radius, more sophisticated weaponry, the most advanced radar system in the world, and is built like a brick shit house. This is of course the original that was basically built to answer the Bone, but obviously that quickly dismissed with that change to the B-1B. So they modified them to be more anti-air based.
Enter the M variant that was first proposed in the mid 80s and put into action in the 90s that is even faster, supports even more sophisticated radar, and a long rang multi-target weapons system similar to that of the F-14 and Typhoon.
The radar thing is a real dozy. It can be set up like a "network" of radar systems that encompass several of the fighters, AWACS, and GPS and other satellite systems. It can do active an inactive scans and supports low-pas (frequency) pinging. It sorta works like that thing Data set up in "Redemption". It's really quite amazing. It also can light those F-22 up like Christmas trees. Oh and China has a bunch of 'em.
