Your numbers for Korea aren‘t correct. ROK ordered additional 20 F-35A (Dec. 2023) in latest block for $3.1 billion. But that deal also included costs for building a domestic maintenance, repair & overhaul depot.Let us look at recent purchases of non partner countries’ f35 orders regarding how much it really costs to buy these planes that are 78million dollar a piece on paper, after inflation corrected to date :
Finland (2022)
64 planes 9.6 billion dollars : 160 million dollar a piece.
Poland (2020)
32 planes 4.6 billion dollars : 174 million dollar a piece.
Switzerland ((2022)
35 planes 6 billion dollars : 183 million dollar a piece
South Korea (2023)
25 planes 5.06 billion dollars : 208 million dollars a piece
Germany (2022)
35 planes for 10.9 billion dollars : 332 million dollars a piece
( German purchase included extensive missiles and weapons)
Even a partner country like Netherlands had to pay 1.1 billion dollars for additional 9 planes in 2019. That is 150 million a piece after inflation correction. They had calculated in 2007 that with the upkeep and maintenance costs, the bare plane was going to cost them 215 million a piece. That is 315 million dollars a piece with today’s dollar.
These stealth planes are not cheap to buy and keep. Our KAAN will not be an exception. On top of it they do not carry a lot of missiles and weapons. Their internal compartments have limited space. Not every missile or weapon will fit. So you are not utilising the full power potential of your engines and plane.
In “beast mode” they can carry plenty of weapons but then they are not stealthy and any different than your run of the mill 4th to 4.5 generation plane.
A plane like Eurofighter that is stealthy enough but not as stealthy as a F35 is actually a more practical way to go and may prove to be more useful plane under general battle conditions.
Use of stealth planes is here to stay. We need them. But they have to be complemented with good Rafale and Eurofighter type fighters.
So 100-150 KAANs are good for TuAF. But we need more capable 4.5 gen fighters. Even if it means downgrading KAAN to 4.5 gen level to make it more affordable..
So, way under $150 million a piece
South Korea To Establish F-35 Maintenance Depot By 2027 | Aviation Week Network
South Korea is working to establish its own F-35 MRO depot at Cheongju AB by 2027.
That being said, until a fighter jet is fully developed, tested, mass produced and operated no outsider will know the real costs.
KF-21‘s unit price was estimated at $ 65 mil. but now first 20x Block I will cost per piece:
- $70 mil. per airframe & sub-systems (KAI)
- $20 mil. for 2x licensed-built F-414k engines (GE/Hanwha)
- $2 mil. for GaN AESA radar (Hanwha)
est. $92 mil. per unit for KF-21 Block I
Keep it mind, that all production deals also included partially development costs for the different systems, so the prices for later blocks will be much lower.
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