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

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Well...we kn ow that both S. Korea and Japna are going to have the F-35A...I mean we arleady knew that was going to happen.

I think, with both of themhaving very decent Jump carriers that it would not be surprising at all to hear of them buying a couple of squadrons each of the Bravos. No...would not be surprising at all.

@TerraN_EmpirE @Obi Wan Russell @bd popeye

Yep, Master Jura, I love your "CSG Light" Dude, now that illustrates just how potent the real deal will be when we get those Charlie's out to the Nimitz class!

we and out partners will be able to put tremendous airpower where and when we want it with tremendous back up close by,, a layered approach!
 
Yep, Master Jura, I love your "CSG Light" Dude, ...
thank you, the story is developing as I write, LOL

Mar 4, 2018
as I said, it's going to be interesting to watch this development, 'CSG Lite'

centered on an LHD with F-35Bs

"For example, while the upgunned ESG won’t have an equivalent of a CSG’s E-2 Hawkeye airborne early warning radar aircraft, the F-35’s onboard sensors could expand the targeting ability of the three-ship SAG." (the sentence from the USNI News posted Nov 25, 2016)

paired with Aegis of AB destroyer(s) etc.

hope it's obvious CSG Lite is my classification LOL!
 
Mar 16, 2018
according to DefenseNews Taiwan renews interest in F-35 to counter Chinese first strike
source:
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now
Give Taiwan the F-35 to deter China, top senators tell Trump
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Two key GOP senators are pressing U.S. President Donald Trump to share
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or
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fighter jet to upgrade Taiwan’s aging air power and deter China.
“If Taiwan’s air defense fleet is allowed to degenerate in number and quality, I am concerned that it would be destabilizing and would encourage Chinese aggression to ensue,” the letter reads. “Additionally, I am concerned that Taiwan’s military weakness and the inability to mount a credible air force would place an undue burden on forward-deployed U.S. forces in North East Asia.”

Those upgrades include fitting the F-16 with the active electronically scanned Northrop Grumman AN/APG-83 Scalable Agile Beam Radar, a new mission computer and an electronic warfare suite.

Taiwan is reportedly interested in the F-35B short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing version, through which Taiwan would aim to maintain air power if China attacked its runways in a first strike.

“The survivability of the F-35B and modern long-range sensors could help Taiwan intercept Chinese missiles, promoting deterrence well into the next decade,” the letter reads. “The F-35B would not only provide a modern fifth-generation fighter, but would also bolster their capabilities in next-generation warfare.”

Earlier this month, Chinese President Xi Jinping issued a warning to Taiwan, which China views as a breakaway province. However, Washington provides arms to Taipei under the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, and Trump days ago signed a bill to make it easier for the U.S. and Taiwan to exchange official visits.

In June, China demanded Washington reverse its decision to sell Taiwan $1.42 billion worth of arms, saying it contradicted a “consensus” that Xi reached with Trump during talks in Florida last year.

Inhofe in February completed a congressional trip to the Asia-Pacific region, which included a visit to Taiwan.

Sens. John Cornyn and Jim Inhofe sent the letter to Trump on Monday, days after Taiwan defense officials
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in the F-35. Cornyn, of Texas, is the Senate’s No. 2 Republican, and Inhofe, of Oklahoma, is the Senate Armed Services Committee’s No. 2 Republican.

The F-16V — billed as the most advanced fourth-generation fighter — would be a cost-effective alternative to the fifth-generation F-35, the letter argues. The lawmakers also said it would address the “quantitative and qualitative challenges” of Taiwan’s air defense fleet.

Of 144 F-16s Taiwan bought from the U.S. in 1993, 15 are in the U.S. for training purposes and 24 more will be offline for upgrades on a rolling basis through 2023. That means Taiwan is likely able to field only 65 F-16s at any given time in defense of the island — “not enough to maintain a credible defense,” the letter reads.
 
from inside of
Check out this new video with the Air Force’s coolest future tech
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:

Loyal Wingman

An F-35 pilot, surrounded by a ring of
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, sends several of the drones ahead to strike a target. This is the concept
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one of AFRL’s most anticipated efforts.

AFRL is
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that will allow fighter pilots to control multiple drones, and industry has stepped up with technologies that could further enable the technology.

For instance, in 2017, Lockheed Martin flew a demonstration with an unmanned F-16 teamed with a manned fighter. Kratos Defense and Security Solutions has also tested two drones, the Mako and Valkyrie, which were developed for the program.
5a3579ace1d1aa4dacf813b071bcf61b.jpg
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
US Navy completes fleet carrier qualifications for F-35C

  • 26 MARCH, 2018
  • SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM
  • BY: GARRETT REIM
  • LOS ANGELES


The US has completed carrier qualifications for the Lockheed Martin F-35C Lightning II aboard the Nimitz-class USS Abraham Lincoln on the Atlantic Ocean from 17 March to 21 March.

Two squadrons -- VFA-125 and VFA-101 -- accomplished day and night qualifications with 140 "traps", each denoting a successful landing on the carrier deck. The milestone clears the F-35C to begin operational testing on the carrier later this year, which will determine if the US Navy can obtain their initial operational capability target for the aircraft in fiscal year 2019.

getasset.aspx


F-35C performs touch and go during fleet carrier qualifications: Image courtesy US Navy

The F-35C was qualified alongside other carrier-borne aircraft, said Rear Adm Dale Horan, director of the navy's F-35C Fleet Integration Office.

"It's personally interesting for me, but also professionally, it's really neat to see this aircraft out there with other aircraft; we haven't done that before,” he said. “Previously, all the (carrier qualification) evolutions have just been F-35s."

The qualification event tested the operation of the F-35C's folding-wing feature, as the aircraft manoeuvred on the deck and in the hangar with Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornets and EA-18G Growlers.

The navy's F-35C has a longer wingspan than the US Air Force’s F-35A and the US Marine Corps’ F-35B because it needs the additional lift to fly at slower speeds without stalling as it approaches an aircraft carrier to land.
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And the BEAT BEAT BEAT goes on!
 
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