If you knew that an invasion will never work then why'd you mention it? If you knew Ohio class subs have better sensors than Los angeles class then why'd you say the opposite? If you knew that it's virtually impossible to send a couple subs out and tell them to go find 4 subs in the middle of the Pacific Ocean then why did you say they could just go do it? Not trying to be a smart arse, I'm just not sure which of my main points you already knew. The Pacific aint gonna get any smaller, so regardless of how much China improves it's not like they can ever realistically support an army across 6,000 miles of ocean.
Because this is HYPOTHETICAL. And I never said Ohio class subs have better sensors that Los Angeles class. What the 688i has is better than the Ohio class, but the Ohio class does have some improvements over the original Los Angeles class. But that was not my point, I have NEVER said that ANY army could have ANY hope of invading us right now. This entire conversation has been based on that. Or at least I thought so.
You have just defined thermocline. Here's Wiki's defintion of thermocline. A convergence zone is another matter, basically when a sound is made underwater the sound travels in all directions. The sound that travels down starts to bend and eventually comes back up. This is caused by the effect of pressure on sound. Once it comes back up it becomes focused again and then goes back down. I guess from a horizontal view it looks something like a sine wave.
There are also "shadows." That basically means that if you are at such a distance that the sound is on the lower half of the cycle you cannot hear it. Crappy explanation I know, but to give you a better idea a sound can be heard from 90 miles but not from 80 miles. That's because when your 80 miles away from a sound it has not traveled back up to submarine depths but by if it's 90 miles away it has had enough time to travel up. So basically there's rings that you can detect in and rings that you cannot detect in.
I know what a thermocline is. A convergence zone as I described it is not a thermocline.
"Brooks A Rowlett provides an explanation of the convergence zone. "One of the big discoveries post WWII was a much better understanding of the acoustic and refractive properties of the ocean. The 'layer', where the temperature changed from the surface temperature curve to the deep-water temperature curve became well known in WWII, where after a certain angle, the acoustic energy transmitted would reflect from the layer so that a submarine, could in effect, hide 'under the layer"
http://jproc.ca/sari/asd_mod.html
_That's_ what a convergence zone is.
Some modern jets cruise at about 650 MPH, some cruise at about 750 MPH, I guess it would depend on the type of jet in question. Mig-29's cruise just 10 knots faster than Badgers, whereas a Mig-31 cruises 60 knots faster. If they stuck with the Mig-29 their tankers could keep up with the jets cruising speed without costing them too much extra fuel.
Considering 750 MPH is over the speed of sound at altitude, just under it at sea level, and the F-22 is currently the only jet that can cruise at faster than the speed of sound without eating tons of fuel, I somehow doubt your info. Almost all modern jets cruise at below the speed of sound. Not alot under it, but definitely under it. You waste too much fuel otherwise. So all the planes would have no trouble pacing the Badger.
As far as the fuel a tanker carries, I actually have a pretty good idea. To give you an idea of why I keep saying their tankers are nowhere near as capable as ours I just checked the plane specs on Wiki, our tankers carry about 200,000 lbs worth of fuel. The Badger has a maximum take-off weight of 174,000 lbs. Not their load, the entire plane. So like I keep saying, they can hold enough fuel to top off a couple tanks and that's it. To help clarify just how crappy Badgers are at it, the SU-30 actually holds just about as much fuel as a Badger.
I must be missing something here, why would they need less fuel by going over the pole? It's a much greater distance and the cold weather really screws them up...
Ok, that is pretty crappy. Only around 80,000 pounds of fuel all up. But still enough, considering a fighter will only hold about 19,000 pounds of fuel internally. But dismissing the badgers, why not just retrofit some civilian planes to be tankers? That's all the KC-135 and KC-10 are. I'll concede the point that Badgers might not be enough to cut it, but I will not concede the point that tankers flying with them would not be a way to do it.
Oh and the pole thing, it's actually a shorter distance than a straight line across the pacific, because the world is round. It's not exactly across the pole, what it is, is, they fly up from Manchuria, across alaska and across Canada to the US, which is a shorter distance than a straight shot across the pacific. The cold weather isn't really a factor as they fly high enough that's damn cold all the time anyway.
I've forgotten just how overboard our nuclear weaponry has gone, but if I remember right I think we could blow the world up 7 times over or something like that. So yeah, if we lose half of our nukes we'd be in a huge danger of only being able to blow the world up 3.5 times. rolleyes.gif
Not destroy the world, just remove the crust. And I'm not talking half here, more like 90%
Volkov, the reason I included Criterion 3 stares one in the face where I grew up.
The United States stepped in in both World Wars (after some prodding), which is why we speak Hungarian in Hungary, and not German or Russian. Which is why West Berlin is prosperous today. Which is why countless other things occurred for the better this century. True, she made some cockups in Latin America, but everyone makes some once in a while.
The same is true for the British Empire, and to a lesser extent, Rome (yes, they were very brutal in conquest, but ruled well in peace).
Now you have to look no further than Chechnya or Armenia, or Hungary or Yugoslavia, or indeed Moscow and Siberia -- or your own Poland -- to see that the USSR left a very different sort of legacy. I knew you would say subjective, yet it is as clear to mankind as the difference between the tendency for good and the tendency for evil.
Perhaps the USSR is still a superpower by your definition, but I am not defining a superpower the same way. Please reply, I am genuinely curious as to your feelings on this matter.
~B
My feelings are that the definition of superpower is objective, not subjective. Good and evil are relative terms. And the US has left it's own trail of failed tries. Cuba, Vietnam, the hash we're making of Iraq, and the hash we made of Korea, true we've had successes, and capitalism has proven to be the better system for creating wealth, but while the USSR was still a going concern, the living conditions weren't anywhere near as bad as they are right now in those countries. Imagine how the US would be if we collapsed like the Soviet Union did. Actually imagine the state of the world if the single largest economy in it collapsed. The last time it caused the Great Depression. But that's beside the point. Point is, while the USSR was around, it was a superpower because it controlled vast amounts of land, had a mighty army, and no one dared challenge it except the only other superpower, the US.
It is said that when Rincewind dies, the occult ability of the human race will go UP by a fraction. -Terry Pratchett