EngTechno said:
What is dogfight? Is it still important for air-to-air combat ?
A dogfight is an air to air battle between fighter aircraft, generally involving intense manuverability tactics designed to give your fighter a "good shot" at your opponent.
While historically, dogfighting has been an important part of Air Force training and technology, there is real dispute about the continuing importance of old fashioned form of dogfight based on manuverability and more or less direct fire weapontry (cannons and relatively "dumb" missiles).
The new F/A-22 Raptor reflects this indecision. On one hand, it is designed to be the most manuverable jet in the world with the greatest ability to engage in sustained supersonic flight. On the other hand, the first look, first kill doctrine that goes with its design, and its stealth design, really isn't any different from the tactics for using the clunky and subsonic F-117 in combat. In theory, if you can see the other side first and kill him before he can react, the capabilities of your jet to conduct fancy flying is pretty much irrelevant. A stealth plane with the flight abilities of a Cessna that had the same sensors and air-to-air missiles as an F-22 ought to be almost as effective as an F/A-22 if first look, first kill technologies really work.
As a result, Third World countries with limited budgets, which can't afford $200M+ a piece plus jet fighters, or even the latest models from Russia for 10-20% of that cost, are investing a lot of money in upgrading avionics and armaments in their existing 1950s to 1970s vintage fighters, instead of upgrading to newer model planes. But, since there have been so few air to air battles in recent history, there is no real way to tell how the theory of air to air combat is going to match up with modern realities. There have been about 70 air to air combat incidents involving the F-16, and maybe double that many for all forces since Vietnam. Many have involved clearly inferior and non-upgraded planes against a more modern F-16. Many newer model fighters and upgrades to older ones have never been tested in combat.