Silicon Valley getting back to its roots: the Y Combinator cruise missile - eviltoast
  • skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 months ago

    explosive is something like 20$/kg, rocket propellant (if used) would be somewhere in the same ballpark. it’s cruise missile so another big cost will be small jet engine, electronics are a bulk of the cost, yeah. electronics are also what is responsible for bunch of new capabilities. new seekers? TERCOM (not on sea but yknow), maybe datalink? camera to feed image back to operator? good inertial guidance can get pricey. harden it all against jamming and EMP, keep all pieces non-chinese and assembled in usa, keep paper trail and things get expensive. and it all needs software too, and software has to be kept classified, so all devs have to have clearance

    for 155mm artillery shell something like third of the cost is fuze, with second most expensive component being casing (30kg-ish piece of steel rather precisely machined on lathe and heat treated in specific way)

    • skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 months ago

      paper trail is a real issue. there was a huge noise few months ago about some small part of a pump (a gasket or something) from honeywell that went into F-35, that was found out to be made in china. they had to find alternatives asap

    • skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 months ago

      especially in case of antiship missiles (and bunker busters) casing is single piece (or few-piece, welded) of forged low alloy steel that weights a fuckton and has to be reasonably strong. it’s not just a particularly violent crafts class project that is bits of steel held up by epoxy, like what you can get away with in anti-air missile