F-35 Joint Strike Fighter News, Videos and pics Thread

Bernard

Junior Member
Other nations might need some F-22's

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on July 02, 2015 at 2:45 PM


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WASHINGTON: Do dogfights matter in the age of tactical stealth? If an F-16 can
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, does it matter? Does it matter if the earliest generation F-35 can’t outmaneuver an advanced model of the F-16 in an early test?

So many questions. We’ll try to answer them because the folks at War Is Boring got their hands on a hot document — an F-35 pilot’s evaluation of an early test of the F-35 against the F-16. Colleague David Axe got the scoop. Basically, the F-35 test pilot said the F-16 could outmanuever the F-35 in most cases during a close engagement, or what most people would call a dogfight.

Here’s where we get to the really complicated bit. Does it matter? Well, of course it matters if the F-35 pilot is in a dogfight and loses. But if you talk with Air Force and Marine pilots who’ve flown the Harrier, the F-18 and the F-16, every one of them I’ve talked with says the F-35 is a superior aircraft. They’ve said it on the USS Wasp. They’ve said it on the USS Enterprise and they’ve said it in the halls of the Pentagon and at Fort Worth, where the F-35 and the F-16 are made.

Why do they say this if an F-35 carrying no external weapons can’t out perform an F-16D loaded with heavy fuel pylons? You might well ask. Basically, it’s because the F-35’s stealth and sensors allow it to spot enemy aircraft long before they are spotted. The result? The F-35 gets a weapon lock and kills the enemy before the enemy knows the F-35 is there.

Few senior officials or pilots have spoken on the record about the F-35 in terms of what it can actually do in combat, though at least a half-dozen pilots have said publicly they would not trade their F-35s for an F-18, Harrier or an F-16. In the only interview the Air Force has done about the F-35’s capabilities and the first 10 days of a full-scale war,
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: “In the first moments of a conflict I’m not sending Growlers or F-16s or F-15Es anywhere close to that environment, so now I’m going to have to put my fifth gen [aircraft] in there and that’s where that radar cross-section and the exchange of the kill chain is so critical.”

At the same time, Hostage made it clear that the F-35 is not the plane to send in for hot dogfights. It is, instead, the first US aircraft built specifically for taking out advanced Integrated Air Defense Systems (IADS) such as the Russian S-300 and S-400. The plane that would lead the way to take out enemy fighters in close-up battles would be the F-22.

“The F-35 doesn’t have the altitude, doesn’t have the speed [of the F-22], but it can beat the F-22 in stealth,” Hostage told me, “The F-35 is geared to go out and take down the surface targets.” In fact, it takes eight F-35s to do what two F-22s can accomplish in the early stages of a war.

The F-35’s radar cross section is much smaller than the F-22’s, but that does not mean, Hostage concedes, that the F-35 is necessarily superior to the F-22 when we go to war. For those who wonder about the worth of the opinion of a general sitting behind a desk, bear in mind that Hostage flew the F-22, as well as most models of the F-15 and the F-16.

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I spoke to another pilot who has closely watched the F-35s development and has extensive combat experience, Dave Deptula, who now heads the Air Force Associations’s Mitchell Institute. He’s also a member of the Breaking Defense Board of Contributors. Deptula flew the F-15 and twice led joint task forces, in Iraq and in Afghanistan.

His bottom line about what the test pilot said: It’s “interesting, but not relevant to the issue of campaign level utility of the other very significant advantages the F-35 possesses in the areas of low observability, sensor capability, and information integration that provide the F-35 an enormous advantage relative to legacy aircraft. If one can target and kill your adversaries prior to the merge, what they can do at the merge really doesn’t matter now, does it?”

He believes “the anti-F-35 crowd are so focused on how we fought in the last century with old equipment that they can’t conceive of, or understand the information edge advantage aircraft like the F-22 and F-35 provide.”

He even disdains the term “fighter” for the F-35 and F-22. “I’ve said for years and will continue to do so until the defense troglodytes finally get it (and some are slowly coming around)—5th generation aircraft are not ‘fighters’—they are ‘sensor-shooters’ optimized for different threat regimes, and can perform the roles of “F,” “B,” “A,” “RC,” “E,”EA,” and AWACS aircraft of the past.”

Deptula says that one F-35 “can create effects that require dozens of legacy aircraft, and in some cases dozens of legacy aircraft simply cannot accomplish with one or two ‘F’-22s or ‘F’-35s can accomplish.” Dogfighting isn’t the sine qua non of air combat, he argues. Killing the enemy before he knows you’re there is. “Bottom line—it’s about the information, stupid.”

The official version of those opinions was issued by the F-35’s Joint Program Office:

“The F-35’s technology is designed to engage, shoot, and kill its enemy from long distances, not necessarily in visual “dogfighting” situations. There have been numerous occasions where a four-ship of F-35s has engaged a four-ship of F-16s in simulated combat scenarios and the F-35s won each of those encounters because of its sensors, weapons, and stealth technology.”

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And the JPO notes that this aircraft did not have the current mission systems software that allows it to spot enemies at a distance and was “not equipped with the weapons or software that allow the F-35 pilot to turn, aim a weapon with the helmet, and fire at an enemy without having to point the airplane at its target.”

The official Air Force comment on the story from
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simply says: “It is too soon to draw any final conclusions on the maneuverability of the aircraft. The F-35 is designed to be comparable to current tactical fighters in terms of maneuverability, but the design is optimized for stealth. This will allow it to operate in threat environments where the F-16 could not survive.” Hostage said virtually the same thing about the F-16 and the F-35 in our interview last year. The reasonable conclusion of all this: the F-35 is not a top dogfighting aircraft because it wasn’t designed to be one. And it wasn’t designed to be one because it is better to kill the enemy from a distance before the enemy can target you.

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Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
TE, we went through most of this earlier, the detractor's comments were outed...and then started to get repeated again, which is why I asked people to stop rehashing it above in Moderator's Comments.

Critical points are:

1) F-35s are restricted in their flight envelope right now. It has not been opened up.

2) The F-35 has some significant off angle capabilities and other sensor and weapons and queuing capabilities that are going to help a lot it in this arena.

Right now we do not know how much these things will offset the things you speak of...but they are being designed to matter a lot.

Until the envelope is opened up, and until the bird is operational with all of its capabilities available...there is no sense in being absolute one away or another. The proof will be in the pudding..

I believe when all of the above is done and in place, we are going to find that the F-35 is in fact going to turn and burn with the F-16 and be able to defeat most any aircraft even in the close in fighting. Others will disagree with that...but I believe it will be so, and time will tell.

But until the F-35 is opened up and fully operational...we only surmise.

The detractors want to do anything they can to place a stake in its heart...but they are going to fail at that.

As Equation likes to say...its the program. the people designing this bird and trying to get it to a fully opened up envelope and full operational capability really, really know what they are doing.

I predict they are not going to disappoint us.

No need, or desire for you to do that, Jura.

My own comments were directed at the source, and the quotes from those sources that were getting posted here. And those quotes from people who I believe either ought to have, or actually did, know better were detractor comments. Who definitely are detractors.

Particularly once they had been shown and proven as such.

They were not directed at you, my friend.

I would add to that Master Jura that Iron sharpens Iron here, there is not one of us who haven't been disgusted, who haven't been dinged here on this forum, who hasn't thought, I spend way to much time here??? but you have earned your place at the table here, this is a real forum, NOT a guided discussion. There is no place like HOME, and I know you feel the love of your brothers, more than that, respect, honor, and friendship, and we are all better men for the time spent with our "peers", men of honor, intelligence, and integrity.

We do however respect your wishes, but much prefer that you remain fully engaged in this discussion. Now back on topic, the information from that PIREP is extremely honest, you won't find such language and candor in many Air Forces, or in many flight test programs, that is the reason the F-35 will be such a great airplane, it is going through the fire right now, so that when the time comes, there won't be any surprises, nor disappointments, this bird will be ready for the big-league.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
...if you talk with Air Force and Marine pilots who’ve flown the Harrier, the F-18 and the F-16, every one of them I’ve talked with says the F-35 is a superior aircraft...and they’ve said it in the halls of the Pentagon and at Fort Worth, where the F-35 and the F-16 are made.

... at least a half-dozen pilots have said publicly they would not trade their F-35s for an F-18, Harrier or an F-16.

...the anti-F-35 crowd are so focused on how we fought in the last century with old equipment that they can’t conceive of, or understand the information edge advantage aircraft like the F-22 and F-35 provide.

There have been numerous occasions where a four-ship of F-35s has engaged a four-ship of F-16s in simulated combat scenarios and the F-35s won each of those encounters because of its sensors, weapons, and stealth technology.

It is too soon to draw any final conclusions on the maneuverability of the aircraft. The F-35 is designed to be comparable to current tactical fighters in terms of maneuverability, but the design is optimized for stealth. This will allow it to operate in threat environments where the F-16 could not survive.
We are continuing to rehash the same ground here.

This article has some good take aways...but they are saying basically the same thing that AFB, myself, and others have said since the David A. article came out.

We are starting to cover it ad nausium, and there are a lot of other things going on with the F-35 program beyond a continual rehash of those issues.

So let's put this to rest...now for the 3rd time... and move on.

If anyone wants to continue to stand on pronouncements that David A. and the War is Boring crowd made regarding the testing by AF-2 where they extrapolate things about the aircraft which that aircraft and that test was not really about in the first place...shelve it until the aircraft's flight envelope is fully open AND the aircraft achieves full operational capability.

Thanks.

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Jeff Head

General
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DVIDS said:
NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. – F-35A Lightning IIs from the 31st Test and Evaluation Squadron played the U.S. Army’s primary close air support platform during the latest iteration of the Green Flag exercise, GF 15-08, as the Air Force’s program works toward its goal of declaring initial operational capability by the end of this year.

The exercise, conducted ten times annually on the 1,200 square-mile ranges of the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California, pits more than 5,000 Army soldiers against simulated enemy forces in a two-week-long pre-deployment trial by fire.

“Green Flag trains us to never become victims of our terrain,” said U.S. Army Maj. Ian Lauer, NTC Operations Group operations officer. “It’s about understanding the context in which we’ll fight and using that understanding to build an aggressive advantage.”

Working alongside soldiers from the 1st Brigade Combat Team, Fort Bliss, Texas, were joint terminal attack controllers assigned to the 7th Air Support Operations Squadron who were are tasked with creating and maintaining that vital link between units on the ground and airpower soaring above.

Intelligent adversaries operating on the ground as well as the air, space, and cyberspace realms are constructed to test the soldiers and Airmen on their ability to persist and fight back in joint, multifaceted attacks.

During iteration 15-08, two F-35s took on a primary exercise role as the close air support providers, penetrating a contested and degraded battlespace, awaiting calls for fire from ground commanders below.

Developments in the F-35 program remain a high priority for Department of Defense and Air Force leadership alike, as pressure mounts to realize the system’s full capabilities. It’s a positive that for JTACs and air liaison officers calling shots from the sand, the sleek looking gray triangle darting through the clouds was doing its job effectively - just like those that came before it.

“We’re working for mass inter-agency effects here,” said U.S. Army Col. Matthew Moore, NTC Operations Group deputy commander. “We’re glad to have the support of the F-35s here and that it was able to play its role in what is a full team effort.”

Fourteen days of maneuvering against adversaries in vast desert mountain ranges makes Green Flag a test of the mind and body alike. But when help from the air was called upon, F-35 pilots from the 31st TES communicated and used their systems with precision.

They created strategic effects that left troops on the ground largely unaware and unconcerned of what airframe they might be using - seamless integration at its finest.
 

Jeff Head

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F35.com said:
Recently, the F-35 program reached 35,000 flight hours. Pilots from the United States, Australia, the U.K. and the Netherlands are in training. More than 140 aircraft are located at seven bases across the United States, and many more are scheduled to deliver in 2015. While the program gains momentum in the areas of flight test and pilot training, the production ramp-up rate, or ramp rate, will need to keep up. Thirty-six aircraft were delivered in 2014, but that number is going to more than double over the next three years. Here’s what you should know about how the program got to where it is today and how the ramp-up in production will happen.

1. Program Managers Are Sure the Program Will Meet Commitments

“My level of confidence that we will meet the production ramp-up rates required of us over the next few years is 100%,” says Dr. Don Kinard, a Lockheed Martin Senior Fellow and Production Rate Transition Lead on the F-35 program whose day-to-day job involves integrating various aspects of F-35 production operations to support rate transition.

“We can build the airplane. We now know exactly how to put the airplane together, so there’s not much else to learn there. We’ve essentially got it down, all we need to do is continue to improve quality, and build it faster and for less cost as we transition to rate,” explains Don.

To put it in perspective, the first production jet produced in 2011 took 153,000 hours to build. Recent deliveries are meeting the 50,000 hour mark, proving that the team has refined the production process significantly.

The tasks ahead now is adding duplicate tooling and capital, hire more mechanics and production supervision, strengthen the supply chain to provide the proper materials, continue to improve quality and implement initiatives to drive down the cost of the airplane. And the team is confident that they can do all of these things. Here are some of the ways they’ll achieve their goals.

2. Affordability and Meeting Cost Commitments Are a Priority

“We typically organize ourselves around the four Ms of manufacturing, which are manpower, materials, machines and methods, and we’ve added in an extra focus area of affordability” explains Kinard.

The cost of the F-35 has been consistently reduced over the years, with more than a 57 percent reduction in touch labor costs since the first Production contract.

Last year, an initiative called the Blueprint for Affordability was launched. This program funds ideas from customers, partners, suppliers and employees that can save time, money or resources.

Additionally, the Lockheed Martin Production Operations team launched an initiative called Performance Management Teams, or PMTs.

“PMT’s throughout the F-35 Program are taking on projects concerning safety, quality, cost, delivery, and people based off of ideas brought up from the represented workforce,” explains Kelly Lloyd, a PMT team lead. “With hundreds of action items being worked across the various teams, the mechanics are the focus point of idea generation and brainstorming potential solutions to current constraints or issues our build teams are facing.”

The teams are actively engaged in the workforce, creating an avenue for employees to have their voice heard by sharing suggestions to improve their work processes, to be involved in how decisions are made and directly impact the success of their team in a collaborative and open environment.

3. Concurrently Producing and Testing a Fighter to This Extent Has Never Been Done Before

On every fighter program in history, the process typically follows a pattern: produce development aircraft, test development aircraft, produce production aircraft, use production aircraft to train pilots, and improve production aircraft by what is learned on testing the development aircraft.

However, with the F-35 program, the whole game was changed when the U.S. government and its partners decided that the F-35 would be what is called a “concurrent” program. This means that while the jets that will be delivered to the customer are on the production line, their counterparts are simultaneously going through testing, where engineers and pilots are discovering improvements that can be made. While historical aircraft programs were concurrent to some extent, the F-35 program was more so than any other before it.

In 2011, the Office of the Secretary of Defense put together an independent manufacturing review team that determined, based on several factors, the rate at which the F-35 should be produced. Other programs such as F-16, F-18, and F-15 have met ramp rates even more aggressive than the F-35’s plan; but what sets the F-35 apart is the time allowed for maturation of the program with concurrency.

In 2017, the flight test program will be complete, ending the era of concurrency and allowing the production ramp to skyrocket even further.

4. Our International Partners are Major Contributors

Every F-35 that has been produced and will ever be produced will contain parts from partners and suppliers around the world.

“We rely heavily on our suppliers around the globe to deliver everything from major components down to nuts and bolts that are required to produce this airplane,” explains Tony Scarazzo, director of Global Supply Chain Partners for the F-35 program.

Just to name a few, the F-35’s suppliers include Fokker, a Dutch company that produces flaperons and outboard leading edge flap; Kongsberg, a Norwegian company that produces rudders and vertical tail leading edges; and Terma, who at the Paris Air Show announced a continued partnership with Lockheed Martin to produce horizontal tail leading and inboard edges.

Last year, the first vertical tails from Australia supplier Marand were installed on an F-35A, and the first center fuselage from Turkish Aerospace Industries in Ankara, Turkey, was installed on an F-35A in late 2014.

Additionally, Italy and Japan have invested in the program by building in-country Final Assembly and Check Out (FACO) facilities. Earlier this year, history was made when the first F-35A to be produced outside of the Fort Worth factory rolled out of the Cameri, Italy. The FACO facility in Nagoya, Japan, is under construction, with its first delivery expected in 2017.

Looking to the Future

“It takes a team of highly skilled and passionate men and women around the world to build this airplane,” summarizes Kinard.

“But the main reason I know we will achieve success is that we believe in the technology we’ve developed, but more importantly, we believe the people who work for us and our suppliers and partners, who, if given the proper support can and will meet the commitments we have to our customers.”[/center]

One hundred and forty aircraft delivered to seven US military bases. Thirty six aircraft delivered last year. Going to over 72 per year by 2017.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
56 FW

According the last Combat Aicraft Monthly a reputable magazine the 308th FS to Luke is shutting down and F-16 are going to be transfered to Holloman after, will be the 3rd Sqn of 56 FW to receive F-35A.

56th FW depends AETC, AIR EDUCATION AND TRAINING COMMAND is the more big Wing in the USAF, he is the F-16/35 OCU.
Before the arrival of F-35A had 6 Sqns with 120 F-16C/D mainly block 42 : 61, 62, 308, 309, 310, 311 FS all to Luke.

Now with the arrival of F-35A a part transferred to Holloman, 311 FS, 20 F-16C/D bl 42.
Possible a 2nd F-16 Sqn based at Luke go there to see.

To Luke now : 309, 310 FS with each 20 F-16C/D bl 42 in more now 61th must be complete with 24 F-35A, this month 62th will receive the first and later as i have said the 308th.
 

navyreco

Senior Member
F-35C Full AB, high AOA

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