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#21 |
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#22 |
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#24 |
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I heard somewhere the Chinese cheated a bit - they changed the sat's course to move into the path of the incoming missile, to ensure the test is successful. That would indicate that indeed the technology they use currently sucks. However it would be foolish to believe that they can't do better sooner or later....
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#25 |
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#26 |
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They're catching up, though (not that I think that's necessarily a good thing).
5 years ago they hadn't yet put a man in space. In the 60s they still had cavalry. Like with horses. They are closing the gap in some things, but the degrees of change are different the more advanced you go. the diference between 60's and 70's tech is no where near as great as the difference between 90's and 00's tech. Aircraft. They just built their first home grown fighter and it is the equivalent of an F-16. That is 30 years behind. Their best airframes are still foriegn. Warships: After 30 years of R&D they still have no carrier. They ever bought two from Russia and still can't make it work. Their newest supposedly "advanced" DDGs just mounted phased arrays, 26 years behind the US. Their nuke subs are 60's era as far as capabilities. Their one ballistic nuke sub will sink intself if used, assuming it works at all. Basically all China does is wait for long enough for shareware to come out. After 26 years world technical expertise will advance enough that anyone can build a phased array radar, it is no longer state of the art. Meanwhile we are about to field the DDG-1000 with the next revolution in military sensors. If you think about it, what equipment does China have that is the ****, something no one can touch? |
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#27 |
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Originally posted by Kuciwalker
Satellites need not be nearly as expensive as they are. If there were a real threat then we would be able to mass produce them, cutting down costs immensely (a bunch of the cost is R&D and design and testing). And how do you get them into space? A slingshot? I don't think one can really mass produce sophisticated surveillance and communications equipment, nor would it make sense to mass produce those things. And again, the cost of putting them in place and the ability to put them into space is another bottleneck. Unless you think we can mass produce rocket launch sites. |
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#28 |
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Its far cheaper for the Chinese to shoot down a US spy satellite once they can do it with no problem than it is for the US to replace them, and certainly cheaper to gain parity on the battlefield by denying the US its space assets than investing the hundreds of billions of dollars it would take to match US space assets.
In a war where our space assets are being actively eroded it is possible to take countermeasures to make it a lot harder. For instance, regular course corrections or dummy satellites. |
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#31 |
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#32 |
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Originally posted by Tacc
The fact that the Federation continues to exploit its non-Earth workers, imposes artificial scarcity upon non-Earth worlds, has essentially allowed humans to dominate the entirety of government (despite almost certainly being a minority), the fact that it sometimes uses money for items that even under free market conditions no longer have cost (artificial scarcity, again), uses nominally worthless units of currency when dealing with foreign states, supports feudal regiemes that brutally oppress workers around the galaxy.... The Federation is not communist. You just described pretty much every 20th Communist state ![]() |
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#33 |
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Originally posted by Kuciwalker
The launch is only a part of the cost. The costs to design and test the satellite are larger. You have to do a lot of testing to make sure it will survive to orbit, and even more to make sure it will work probably once its there. Yes they can and yes it would if we were going to be sending a bunch into space. ![]() So your strategy would be to flood space with untested cheap satellites...great, so all the Chinese have to do is blow those up and create vast fields os space junk that would degrade our space assets anyways. Good job there.... Do you have anything serious to post on the topic? |
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#34 |
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Originally posted by GePap
You silly enough to think the missile the Chinese used to shoot down the satellite was a nuke?? ![]() Its far cheaper for the Chinese to shoot down a US spy satellite once they can do it with no problem than it is for the US to replace them, and certainly cheaper to gain parity on the battlefield by denying the US its space assets than investing the hundreds of billions of dollars it would take to match US space assets. Did you note this 'attack' was launched from their space centre? |
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#36 |
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