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

Friday at 8:15 AM
Jan 22, 2018
related:
UK submits bid for Belgium fighter competition, pitting Typhoon against F-35
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now What will Belgium choose — Typhoon or Lightning?
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While the German Tornado replacement requirement put the spotlight solidly on both the F-35 and the Typhoon, the Luftwaffe has been quietly discussing common ground with the Belgian Air Force, which too is in the midst of a similar competition to replace its F-16s. Like Germany, Belgium is evaluating both the Typhoon and the F-35 and both nations have critical elements to their recapitalization efforts — neither are F-35 partner nations and both have nuclear strike requirements. In fact, Belgium is the only existing F-16 European Partner Air Force (EPAF) nation that hasn’t signed up to the Lightning II. Whilst the nuclear mission is incredibly sensitive and Belgium is understood to have remained silent on the matter, it’s clearly a significant factor. The F-35 is already planned to include the B61-12 nuclear bomb in its inventory. While similar plans don’t currently exist for the Typhoon, it is believed that a similar nuclear capability could on the table for Eurofighter and that feasibility studies have been completed.

The competition in Belgium is in a critical phase, with best and final offers (BAFOs) being submitted on February 14. It’s a straight fight between the Typhoon and the Lightning II to supply 34 jets, with entry into service in 2023 and full transition by 2030. The Typhoon offer is from the UK government on behalf of the Eurofighter EPCs and it represents a full partnership with the RAF.

Anthony Gregory is the Campaign Director for Belgium at BAE Systems. He told Combat Aircraft: ‘Belgium is looking for a deep and enduring collaboration and this represents the most extensive partnership the RAF has ever put forward.’ The UK offer to Belgium is understood to include the full Project ‘Centurion’ weapons set and full integration into the TyTAN support model for the most efficient cost per flying hour. The aircraft on offer is understood to be a snapshot of what the RAF expects to be flying in 2023 — probably a P4E-vision with the E-Scan radar, Striker II helmet, SPEAR 3 and the full UK weapons set; Meteor, ASRAAM, Storm Shadow, Brimstone and Paveway IV.

Traditionally, Belgium has enjoyed a close working relationship with the Royal Netherlands Air Force, but the Dutch involvement as a Tier 2 partner in the F-35 program means their Benelux brothers are currently left on the sidelines and standing to incur a significant cost to buy into the Lightning II program. Gregory points to the UK and US Air Force models of partnering F-35 with the F-22 or the Typhoon, the ‘complementary mix’ of assets — the Typhoon being the high-end air defender, and the F-35 not being as well suited to quick reaction alert (QRA) or air policing. So, partnering Typhoon with F-35 could provide a rounded solution for the Benelux.
actually noticed this French connection today:
Belgium wants to buy Rafale fighters for naval capability, says French lawmaker
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“The Belgians are interested in the Rafale,” he told The Defense Journalists Association. “Why? If they buy the Rafale, it will be the naval Rafale.”
 
here's a good one:

"... Lockheed Martin Vice President and General Manager for Training and Logistics Solutions Amy Gowder told reporters Feb. 21.

Speaking at the unit’s Orlando, Fla., facility, Gowder confirmed that ALIS 3.0 had completed “flight testing” at Nellis AFB, Nev., although this is an in-house company term and the system does not actually fly."

from inside of ALIS 3.0 Testing Complete But Improvements Are Slow
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The F-35’s Autonomic Logistics Integration System, or ALIS, completed operational testing on Feb. 19 and fielded units will be updated with this version on a priority basis, based on which units have the most pressing need, Lockheed Martin Vice President and General Manager for Training and Logistics Solutions Amy Gowder told reporters Feb. 21.

Speaking at the unit’s Orlando, Fla., facility, Gowder confirmed that ALIS 3.0 had completed “flight testing” at Nellis AFB, Nev., although this is an in-house company term and the system does not actually fly.

ALIS is a series of mobile servers mounted in two vertical racks—one classified and one not—that gathers and processes the flight experience of all the F-35 jets in a squadron, automatically ordering parts and maintenance actions as required. The 13 or so servers are transportable and go with the unit when it deploys. Lockheed and its F-35 military customers are looking at a somewhat smaller system that could deploy with a detachment of, say, six jets, as the Air Force has said it will be doing more frequently.

A team of installers travels to F-35 operating locations and updates ALIS hardware over a weekend, when missions are typically not flown, Gowder explained. Units receiving the update first will be those that are operational and flying real-world missions, followed by those doing training.

Despite it being the most up-to-date version of the logistics system, Gowder said Lockheed recognizes it must improve ALIS 3.0, as one of the major elements in its sustainment cost reduction efforts.

“One area [that] we do know” needs improvement is in the number of ALIS administrators, Gowder acknowledged. There are eight needed per squadron, and that must come down, she said, because manpower is a “key driver” of sustainment costs. Future versions will be more centralized to reduce the number of people needed to feed and maintain aircraft information.

She said the company is also looking to improve “usability liability” issues, which means that some ALIS functions actually take longer to perform than they do in legacy logistics systems. The Joint Program Office is allowing Lockheed to “roll in fixes” to both earlier versions and 3.0 to “improve usability.”

Another area slow to pay off is in automated test. ALIS performs this function at the unit part level, but not yet for the overall system, which Gowder said is “where the big bang for the buck is.”

The company and JPO are deeply into discussions about version 4.0, which was originally slated to be released in 2019, but Gowder suggested that target won’t be met, because of new requirements being added and the differing needs of international users.

“We may choose to defer some nice-to-have” features from 4.0 to accelerate more urgently needed improvements, such as cybersecurity, she noted. The focus will continue to be on “quality data integrity,” Gowder noted. The propulsion system—the F135 engine and its performance and parts—was added to ALIS in 2017, greatly expanding the amount of data it amasses and tracks. The company is trying to make sure that flaws from “legacy” logistics systems don’t migrate into ALIS when data is ported over to it.

Gowder asserted that the release of 3.0 fixes some of the problems that have led to F-35 sustainment costs taking too long to come down, and as it spreads throughout the fleet in 2018, “I think you’ll see a big improvement” in sustainability this year, she predicted. With a further update in 2019, more progress should be made, she added.
 
noticed in Twitter now
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Joint flight of F-35B Royal Navy, F-35B USMC, F-35C the US Navy and the F-35A the U.S. Air Force

DEOK8lLXsAITYCA.jpg
 
repeating Feb 16, 2017
US Air Force 'must' retrofit so that LockMart makes even more profit out of all copies including the oldest, huh? that's ludicrous (but real world hahaha) and the US Air Force would be better off if it ditched the old Lots and used the resources on moving on in the program ... is what I think
as F-35 Fleet Unlikely to Reach a Common Configuration
2/23/2018
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The Air Force is sticking with a level of about 48 F-35s a year because “that’s the balance point” between the desire to modernize the fighter force and USAF’s other modernization needs, Air Combat Command chief Gen. Mike Holmes told reporters at
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. He added that the expense of modification will likely rule out ever getting the fleet to a common configuration.

Holmes said he’d “love” to buy more F-35s, because the average age of his fighter fleet is about 30 years, and buying at a rate under 60 a year has “no effect on average age, you still have a 30-year-old average fleet.” At 80 a year over 10 years, the average age could be reduced to 20 years, and “if you could get to 100, you could drive that age down to … an age and a capability that we’d be happier with.”

But fighter modernization has to compete with nuclear modernization, ISR, space, and remotely piloted aircraft, among other needs, and after doing those calculations, “that number comes out [at] about 48 [F-35s] a year.”

Holmes acknowledged there are “tradeoffs” between buying new jets now versus waiting for improved blocks of F-35s, because earlier models would have to be retrofitted to a more desirable standard, at a potentially unaffordable cost. “We look forward to getting that increased capability” in later iterations, he said, but it hasn’t been determined “what capabilities do you need to buy back to make those [earlier] airplanes useful against the peer competitor” and what it would take to “make them useful again.”

Asked if the jets that are now used to train aviators learning to fly the F-35 would be brought up to combat standard or left in an earlier configuration—as F-22 training aircraft are—Holmes said “I think it’s unlikely that all the jets will ever be brought up to a common, single standard.” Some of the airplanes “have hardware things that would be really expensive to change, some of them, it might be a matter of software or components. But we’ll work through that.”
 

Obi Wan Russell

Jedi Master
VIP Professional
FIRST OPERATIONAL UK F35B LIGHTNING SQUADRON TO STAND UP FORMALLY - 17 APRIL 2018
The UK Joint Lightning Force Commander has revealed that 617 (The Dambusters) Squadron will formally stand up as the UK's first operational F35B Lightning FGR 1 unit on 17 April 18 at their present training base of USMCAS Beaufort, USA.
They will then bring the first 9 of their F35Bs to the UK in two waves via Voyager Air to Air Refuelling (AAR) and their home base of RAF Marham sometime during late June or early July 2018 (precise date yet to be decided).22279721_10159399575205627_2090575440250430454_n.jpg
 

SteelBird

Colonel
I think this is not a good news but the Japanese are so rich, huh?

Japan’s projected per-plane cost for acquiring US F-35A soars

he estimated per-plane cost to Japan of acquiring a single US F-35A stealth fighter soared by about 53 percent to US$137.6 million (14.7 billion yen) in FY 2017 from an estimated US$90 million (9.6 billion yen) in FY 2012, according to a
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.

Japan Defense Ministry officials attributed the catapulting price on the currency impact of a weaker yen. But some defense analysts blamed the surging costs on Japan’s procurement of the aircraft from the US government’s Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program.

Asahi noted FMS sales are considered part of the defense aid that the US provides to its allies. Because of this, buyers like Japan tend to pay the asking price, versus what might have been paid by purchasing the plane directly from Lockheed Martin, its manufacturer.

“As the F-35A is aircraft loaded with sensitive features, it is difficult to verify whether the cost is reasonable,” a senior Defense Ministry official was quoted as saying. “It is true that we tend to accept the US asking price.”

Asahi said Japan is expected to deploy a total of 42 F-35A advanced fighters in stages, starting from fiscal 2018, as a successor to its aging, US-made F-4 Phantom fighters.
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