Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 494365484582436864
but that's not the same as "starting from the ground up"
which, in my view, is rarely your best option, if the system you want is substantially similar to the one you have.
they key phrase being "if the system you want is substantially similar to the one you have"
which is, in this case, true
and what if you wanted to simplify supply lines?
they've attempted to merge the roles into one parent design of the airframe
you have failed
because you now have three aircraft which share what...10% of parts?
its like running retardedly. if u get 10 mph at running retardedly imagine the speed you'll get if u start back down and do the right form for running.
they share a lot of the instruments and software surely
but those were never that difficult to share between craft anyway
a VTOL F35 will be able to share exactly _none_ of the external surfaces
_none_ of the power components
None of the subassemblies are the same.
i was not aware the f35 design was publicly available
They have concepts
a vtol HAS to have ports in places there are none on the other two
it has to have ducts, vents, actuators
yes, and a keyless ignition care has a spot for the key ignition
are they going to make all three have the same bloody ducts the vtol has?
is that going to be a void?
what will replace it structurally?
on the outside why not? put in a plate that bolts in place like every other panel.
what goes where that lift fan is at?
second cockpit?
ammo
bombs
extra fuel (although that causes balance issues) or nothing if you are aiming for more underwing armament
the F135 has distinct variants for each F35 configuration
so how much of this supply is going to be shared?
sure, they might come from the same factories
but what do you get? you don't get interchangeability
you're not going to be building F135 variants into eachother
what exact value do you get out of this?
the fuselage is all different, the engines are procured separately, the cockpit is placed differently
"The variation between models allows military forces to achieve service-specific mission capability, while still taking advantage the economies of scale that result from the parts and processes that are common to all three variants"
sure, but that didn't require attempting to have them share an external dimension
anyway
I'm sure they'll figure out how to do something useful with them eventually