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Aviation Lovers is in Toronto!
The comparison between the top speeds of the Saab Gripen E and the Lockheed Martin F-35 highlights a fundamental difference in design philosophy.
The Gripen E is a Mach 2.0 aircraft, capable of reaching speeds of approximately 2,450 km/h at altitude.
In contrast, the F-35 is rated at Mach 1.6, or about 1,960 km/h.
When you do the math, the Gripen’s top speed is exactly 1.25 times faster than that of the F-35 ($1.6 \times 1.25 = 2.0$).
This "speed gap" is not an accident; while the F-35 was designed to prioritize low-observable stealth and sensor fusion, often trading raw speed for a smaller radar cross-section, the Gripen was engineered as a high-speed, agile interceptor capable of rapid response and "supercruise" (sustaining supersonic flight without using fuel-heavy afterburners).
For a country like Canada, this 25% speed advantage has practical implications for Arctic sovereignty. In the vast, open stretches of the North, the ability to close the distance to an unidentified aircraft quickly is a vital part of the "interception" mission that the Avro Arrow was originally built for.
While the F-35 relies on being a "silent killer" that enemies never see coming, the Gripen E uses its superior kinematic performance and Mach 2.0 dash speed to reach a target area faster.
This makes the Gripen a spiritual successor to the high-speed doctrine of the 1950s, providing the "sprint" capability necessary to police the world’s second-largest airspace effectively.
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