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

Equation

Lieutenant General
That coating is darker than I have seen?? lighting??? I do like it though, heck, I'm to the place that this girl is looking especially sweet in her factory non corrosive coatings, funny how airplanes just grow on you, I was especially sold after those high AOA tests, show she has a real fighter mojo going, she just don't want to quit flying. I admire that, more than that she is developing her own mojo, kinda like a flying NINJA! so I def like her black pajamas.

But NOTHING replaces your "honey badger" (F-22).:D;)
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
But NOTHING replaces your "honey badger" (F-22).:D;)

Of course not, first was the North American P-51, North American F-86, Lockheed F-104, jump to F-15, which should still be my number 1, sorry sweetie?? got caught up with Anna Chapman/Mig-29, then her big sister Sukhoi Su-27---who was number one on looks and performance, OVT is my thang, but after watching the F-22 fly, well, there is NO comparison, shes a sweetie with warm fuzzies all over, and built like a brick out-house?? the F-35 is her hot little sister, cute, but could be trouble?
 

Bernard

Junior Member
Charting the International Path for the F-35

Jun 14, 2015
1704
As the F-35 reaches higher production rates toward the end of the Low Rate Initial Production Phase, the US is pressing international partners and foreign customers to commit to F-35 orders. To be able to benefit from cost reduction, customers must commit to a multi-year block purchase of 450 aircraft.

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will be reaching a critical milestone next month — the declaration of the first US Marine Corps
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unit, VFMA-121, operational and combat ready at its home base in Yuma, AZ. The squadron recently deployed at sea for its first operational test (OT-1), on USS Wasp (LHD-1). Taking part in the test were four of the ten aircraft operating with VFMA-121 and two from VFMA-501, from Beaufort, SC. Along with 120 marines and technicians deployed at sea for two weeks, they conducted 100 flight missions with the new F-35B Short Take Off, Vertical Landing (STOVL) aircraft.

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Marine corps ground crews loading armmament on an F-35B on board USS Wasp during a night drill, as part of OT-1 tests. Photo: US Marine Corps
The deployment evaluated the operational and logistic footprint of a full detachment of six F-35Bs at sea, aboard U.S. Navy amphibious ships. During OT-1 the Marines safely conducted 100 F-35B takeoffs and landings during day and night for extended range operations, and confirmed the reliability of the Block 2B software configuration. The test also evaluated the inter-operability of aircraft-to-ship network communications and trained officers handling the aircraft on board and technicians providing maintenance activities and weapons loading and offloading.

The next milestone in the Marine Corps’ F-35B program is the initial operating capability (IOC), scheduled to take place this summer, following the final operational readiness inspection (ORI) in July.

“As the Marine Corps supports the President’s strategy to rebalance in the Pacific, we’re bringing the most advanced technologies and capabilities of our force to the region with the F-35. The continued development and fielding of the Short Take Off, Vertical Landing Lightning II remains the centerpiece of this effort,” U.S. Marine Corps Deputy Commandant for Aviation Lieutenant General Jon Davis said.

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Part of the test included the delivery of a complete F-135 powerplant to the Wasp, by V-22 tilt rotor aircraft. Photo: US Marine Corps.
The first deployment is scheduled to take place in 2017, when VMFA-121 will deploy to Iwakuni, Japan. According to the current Marine Corps Aviation Plan, the F-35 is slated to replace completely the EA-6B Prowler by 2019, and the AV-8B Harrier by 2026. The Legacy F/A-18 Hornet will follow, with a scheduled sundown in 2030.

Also in 2017 Israel will become the first international operator of the F-35A, when its first squadron is scheduled to become operational at the Israel Air Force (IAF) Nevatim Airbase. The first two F-35As are expected to land in Israel in December 2016. Other international air forces are scheduled to receive F-35s before Israel, but these are to remain in the USA for training. Israel has opted to train its pilots and technicians at home, and to deploy the new aircraft in Israel as soon as possible.

Israel has ordered two squadrons of conventional F-35As, but future orders could also include F-35Bs, given the Israeli concern of its air bases being targeted by ballistic missiles with precision attack capabilities.

Norway will be the third country beginning F-35 operations that year, along with the first deliveries to Japan and Israel. Norway has funded the procurement of 22 F-35s, from the 52 it plans to operate. Japan will receive 42 of these jets, Israel has committed to buy 33 of the planes.

The delivery of F-35Bs to the Royal Air Force (RAF), scheduled to begin operations with No. 617 Squadron from RAF Marham in Norfolk, is expected to take place by 2018. The Royal Air Force and Royal Navy plan to operate 138 F-35B STOVL aircraft. The British F-35s are expected to fly from Queen Elizabeth-Class aircraft carriers. By 2020 two US Air Force F-35A squadrons will also be based permanently in the UK, at RAF Lakenheath.

The first delivery to Australia is also expected by late 2018. Australia plans to operate about 100 aircraft. Turkey is also expected to buy about 100 F-35As, the first will be delivered in 2018 as the Republic of Korea that will also receive the first of its 40 F-35As that year.

A year later the Netherlands is scheduled to receive the first eight aircraft ordered last year. Italy will receive 90 F-35 aircraft — 60 F-35A conventional takeoff and landing variants and 30 F-35B STOVL jets, to replace 253 Legacy fighters.

The British crews are already training for carrier operations; sixteen Royal Navy and Royal Air Force members were embedded aboard the Wasp last month to support the US Marine Corps’ operational tests. “United Kingdom participation in the F-35 program has been absolutely critical to our success,” said Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan, Program Executive Officer for the F-35 Lightning II Joint Program Office. “The Royal Navy plans to integrate the F-35 with the two new Queen Elizabeth II aircraft carriers, as they gradually phase out the Tornado GR4 from RAF service. F-35 brings a complementary next-generation level of survivability and lethality,” said Royal Navy Lt. Cmdr. Neil Mathieson, the UK’s F-35B Ship Integration Lead.

“Our Queen Elizabeth-Class carriers are the largest and most powerful warships ever built in the U.K.,” said Mathieson. “They are capable of the widest range of roles, from defense diplomacy and humanitarian assistance to full combat operations, providing flexibility and choice throughout their 50-year life.”

According to Mathieson the unique, low observable nature of the F-35 will allow strike forces deployed from the new carriers unprecedented access to very-high-threat environments, allowing the U.K. to conduct operations across the full range of operational scenarios, day or night, in fair or inclement weather.

The program office anticipates additional orders of +750 aircraft, beyond the +3,000 already received, bringing the total projected production to about 4,000. (The F-16 program produced 4,500 in nearly 4 decades.) This production volume exceeds any other aircraft currently in production or planning. Right now all customers get identical aircraft – either F-35As or F-35Bs (STOVL).

These two models will replace nine different types and models of 4th Generation fighters. F-35 development has been proceeding since 2001, and it is the most tested aircraft in history. Air forces are expected to operate the F-35s for the next 30 to 40 years. Therefore, when the thousands of F-35s are deployed, they will constitute a huge market for sustainment and support.

Air Force Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan, F-35 Program Executive Officer, says he is targeting at least 150 F-35s for each of those Block Buy years, for a cumulative total of more than 450 U.S. and export aircraft.

As the F-35 reaches higher production rates toward the end of the Low Rate Initial Production Phase, the US is pressing international partners and foreign customers to commit to F-35 orders. To be able to benefit from cost reduction, customers must commit to a multi-year block purchase. While the US is prepared to accept such commitments, some of the international partners have not yet decided if or how many of the aircraft they will buy. While export sales represent about 40 percent of production for the next years,
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has firm orders for only 30 of the aircraft, Aviation Week reports.

Under the Block Buy Plan the US and its international partners would place orders for a period of three years – from FY 2018 through 2020, giving prime contractors and suppliers the incentive to invest in cost-reduction products and more leverage in their own purchases. To benefit from the cost savings, customers will have to commit to the program by 2016. Those who do not take part in this block purchase will encounter cost increases.

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Six of the US Marine Corps F-35B deployed on board USS Wasp for OT-1. Photo: US Marine Corps


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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
US Air Force activates first F-35A combat unit

The US Air Force activated its first combat squadron to fly the Lockheed Martin F-35A Lightning II. During a ceremony at Hill Air Force Base in Utah on 17 July, the 34th Fighter Squadron stood up from the ashes.
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Right now don't have F-35A, the first in september.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
US Air Force activates first F-35A combat unit

The US Air Force activated its first combat squadron to fly the Lockheed Martin F-35A Lightning II. During a ceremony at Hill Air Force Base in Utah on 17 July, the 34th Fighter Squadron stood up from the ashes.
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Right now don't have F-35A, the first in september.

Where is David Axe and his band of pessimist naysayers at?;)
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
US Air Force activates first F-35A combat unit

The US Air Force activated its first combat squadron to fly the Lockheed Martin F-35A Lightning II.
Officially from Hill Air Force Base:

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US Air Force said:
HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah (AFNS) -- The jets won't arrive for another few months, but Hill Air Force Base activated its first F-35 Lightning II fighter squadron during a ceremony here July 17.

The 34th Fighter Squadron -- affectionately known as the Rude Rams -- was reactivated, marking the beginning of the F-35's combat era for both the 388th and 419th Fighter Wings. The fighter squadron is a historic one, with a past that can be traced back to Word War II, which included participation in conflicts from Vietnam and the first Gulf War to Iraq and Afghanistan, post 9/11.

The squadron was mothballed as an F-16 Fighting Falcon unit in 2010 as part of an Air Force restructuring plan to retire planes and save money, but it returns to accommodate the F-16's replacement, becoming the first operational Air Force unit to fly combat-coded F-35s.

Col. David B. Lyons, the current 388th FW commander and former commander of the 34th FS, said the reactivation is one of the highlights of his career. He led the squadron when it was deactivated in 2010.

"This has got to be one of the finest days of my military career," he said. "To see this squadron shut down in 2010 was heartbreaking, but somebody, somewhere had the good sense to bring it back to duty."

Lt. Col. George Watkins, the new commander of the squadron, said that while the first operational F-35 is not slated to arrive at the base until September, the new squadron shouldn't have trouble keeping busy until then.

The first group of F-35 maintainers, which will make up the 34th Aircraft Maintenance Unit, have been at Hill AFB for two months, completing mostly administrative work critical to the upcoming aircraft transition.

Watkins said the Airmen have been writing programs on how the unit will maintain the F-35 in peace and wartime scenarios and have created a flying hours program that includes directives for training, off-station sorties, contingency scenarios, local flying and any major modifications to the aircraft.

"There (is) a lot of work to be done before we get that first jet," Watkins said.

The initial group of F-35 maintainers from the 419th FW are in training, and the first 419th FW pilot to fly the F-35 will begin training this fall.

When the F-35s begin to arrive at Hill AFB, they'll be divided among three fighter squadrons and flown and maintained by members of both the 388th FW and its Reserve component, the 419th FW.

"There are slated to be a total of 72 F-35s at Hill AFB by 2019, with approximately 35-40 pilots in each of the three fighter squadrons.

Hill officials hope to have 15 jets by August 2016 and reach a status known as "initial operational capability," which means the fighter wings meet the minimum operational capabilities to use the jet for normal operations."

The 34th FS is scheduled to have five qualified pilots during the first month of flying, taking turns in what will be two F-35s on base. The 388th FW is sending pilots through training at Eglin AFB, Florida, and Luke AFB, Arizona. By January 2016, the wing will have 10 pilots qualified to fly the F-35, including Watkins and Lyons, who both finished their training earlier this year.

The colonels answered to those who have criticized the F-35 program for its expense and apparent lack of performance. The most recent cost estimate for operating and supporting the F-35 fleet exceeds $1 trillion and a leaked internal brief written by a test pilot who was flying the F-35 during a January test run revealed the jet was losing dogfights to the F-16.

"Things aren't perfect, but things are still in development and you can see the potential," Lyons said, adding that the F-35 flies similarly to the F-16, but by fusing many different sensors together, makes the pilot's job easier in the cockpit.

Fighter Wing Spokesman Nathan Simmons said that by the time the F-35 is in full operation at Hill in 2019, the 388th will have added more than 260 active-duty positions.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Officially from Hill Air Force Base:

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Roger that, and the F-35A is making her first public appearance at a civilian venue at EAA AirVenture this week. Static displays and flybys are scheduled, as well as flight demos by the F-22, should be a great week at Oshkosh, my little brother Dan will be there, maybe he will get us some pics?
 
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