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F-22 Raptor: The Best Fighter Jet On Earth

F-22 Raptor
F-22 Raptor. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

What You Need to Know – Top 3 Key Facts: The F-22 Raptor is considered a superior global air dominance platform due to its exceptional dogfighting capabilities, speed, vectoring, stealth, and thrust-to-weight ratio.

-Initially used in combat against ISIS in 2014, the F-22 has undergone significant upgrades, enhancing its stealth, weapons systems, radar, and communication capabilities.

-Its top speed of Mach 2.25 and highest-in-the-world 1.25 thrust-to-weight ratio, combined with advanced avionics and pilot training, make it unmatched among modern fighter jets.

What Makes the F-22 Raptor So Dominant?

The F-22 Raptor is well revered as a pre-eminent global air dominance platform. Its dogfighting capabilities, speed, vectoring, and stealth have been cited and referred to by observers, Pentagon leaders, weapons analysts, and leading experts for many years.

Why is the F-22 regarded as superior?

First used in combat against ISIS in 2014, the F-22 has shown its dogfighting prowess in many wargames throughout the years and received a large measure of performance-enhancing upgrades. The stealth coating has been preserved and reinforced, and a sweeping 3.2b software upgrade in recent years has massively improved the performance of its weapons.

F-22

Lt. Col. James Hecker (front) and Lt. Col. Evan Dertein line up their F/A-22 Raptor aircraft behind a KC-10 Extender to refuel while en route to Hill Air Force Base, Utah. Colonel Hecker commands the first operational Raptor squadron — the 27th Fighter Squadron at Langley Air Force Base, Va. The unit went to Hill for operation Combat Hammer, the squadron’s first deployment, Oct. 15. The deployment has a twofold goal: complete a deployment and to generate a combat-effective sortie rate away from home. [U.S. Air Force photo by TSgt Ben Bloker]

The range, security, and guidance systems of the AIM-9X and AIM-120D have been greatly improved across the fleet to better position the aircraft against 5th-generation adversaries. Enhancements include the “hardening” of weapons-targeting guidance systems, precision, flight path trajectory, and range.

Additional enhancements such as upgraded AESA radar, new sensor possibilities, and improvements to two-way communication between F-22, F-35, and 4th-generation aircraft.

In a simpler or more obvious sense, the F-22’s air supremacy can be observed through its pure speed, vectoring ability, stealth, and thrust-to-weight ratio. All fighter jets are listed with specs indicating a maximum speed, which is achieved at altitude and often at 50 percent fuel capacity. While its top speed of 2.25 Mach is quite similar to the Russian Su-27 and Su-35, listed at speeds of Mach 2.35 and 2.25 respectively, the F-22 appears to have distinct advantages over these 4th-gen Russian aircraft in terms of stealth and ever-critical thrust-to-weight ratio.

While its thrust-to-weight ratio is the F-22’s singular superior attribute, comparing the top speed and thrust-to-weight ratio of top Russian, U.S., and Chinese fighter jets, the F-22 is equivalent to or faster than any top fighter jet in the world. When combined with top speed, the F-22’s highest-in-the-world 1.25 thrust-to-weight ratio explains its vectoring and dog-fighting superiority. Interestingly, the 4th-generation F-15 is also listed with a comparable, best-in-the-world 1.26 thrust-to-weight ratio, nearly identical to the F-22.

Speed & Thrust-to-Weight Ratio

The F-22’s combination of stealth, speed, and thrust-to-weight ratio seems unmatched across the entire range of advanced fighter jets operated by great power nations. The Russian Su-27 and Su-35 are the closest to the F-22 when it comes to thrust-to-weight ratio, as they are listed at 1.07 and 1.13 respectively. The US F/A-18 and F-35 are listed as having a thrust-to-weight ratio of less than 1.

Defined simply as the amount of power or thrust the plane has versus its weight at the time of the dogfight, the thrust-to-weight ratio greatly impacts an aircraft’s ability to maneuver, vector, and seek advantage in an air-to-air engagement. While some of these slight distinctions in speed and thrust-to-weight ratio are likely of great consequence when it comes to high-speed air-to-air combat, the pilot is a significant factor with critical variables necessary to win a dogfight such as pilot training, skill, and experience.

“Once the fight begins, the outcome is determined by a pilot’s experience in the air, his tactics and the airplane itself. Training and confidence can do wonders even if the pilot is flying an airplane that is roughly equal or even inferior to the enemy’s fighter. Pilots who control the merge generally get off the first shots before the enemy has time to react,” an essay from Military History Now states.

The conceptual framework for dogfight air-to-air combat victory was famously articulated years ago by former Air Force fighter pilot Col. John Boyd, who pioneered the term OODA Loop, for Observation, Orientation, Decision, Action. The idea, as expressed by Boyd, was that whichever pilot and aircraft were able to complete the OODA Loop process, and determine the position for a rapid first attack, would “be inside of” an enemy’s decision cycle and prevail in air-to-air combat.

Given this, the ability of a fighter jet to vector and maneuver into position more quickly and dynamically is clearly fundamental to which aircraft can get into position to launch the first lethal strike. Yet another critical element to dogfighting, a variable also heavily impacted by thrust-to-weight ratio, is also an aircraft’s ability to “accelerate” and “thrust” out of the way of an incoming enemy missile. The F-22 would appear to have an advantage in this area as well.

By contrast, the U.S. F/A-18 and F-35 are listed at Mach 1.8 and Mach 1.6. While not comparable in terms of top speed, the F-35 is of course known as an advanced multi-role fighter with superior drone-like sensing, targeting range and fidelity, computing, and electronic warfare (EW), among other things. The Chinese 4th-generation J-11 is also quite fast, listed with a top speed of Mach 2.25, similar to the U.S. F-22 and Russian Sukhoi Su-27 and Su-35 aircraft.

Interestingly, while flying as a non-stealthy 4th-generation aircraft, the U.S. Air Force’s F-15 shows the fastest speed among the group at Mach 2.5 at altitude. The Navy’s F-14 Tomcat, now retired, is quite similar at Mach 2.34, indicating that several less stealthy U.S. aircraft can certainly compete with the Russian Su-27 and Su-35 in terms of pure speed. Russia’s 5th-gen Su-57 and China’s 5th-gen J-20 are both slated to reach top speeds of Mach 2, somewhat slower than the top speed of an F-22.

About the Author: Kris Osborn

Kris Osborn is President of Warrior Maven – Center for Military Modernization. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army—Acquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The History Channel. He also has a Masters Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University.

Kris Osborn
Written By

Kris Osborn is the President of Warrior Maven - Center for Military Modernization. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army—Acquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The History Channel. He also has a Masters Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University

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