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

zaphd

New Member
Registered Member
F-35 remains on track in Trump request
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


We have now a comparison with FY 2018 budget
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Qty
- 4 F-35V, from 8 planned to 4 but + 14 F/A-18 E/F from 0 planned to 14
So F/A-18 E/F surely a little less capable but USN get 18 fighters against 8 planned

Price
4 F-35C for ? considering with F-35B 24 units for 3,723.7 $M so about 620 $M for 4 F-35C : 155 mill/unit
14 F/A-18 E/F for 1,253.1 $M, 89 mill/unit

Price incl. support costs
You also need to account for advance procurement for future lots in that 3723M. Here's a breakdown of the cost between the B and C models from the full procurement budget document at that site you linked. 663M for 4 Cs so that's about 165M each. Bs come in at around 131M each, so you can see how economies of scale work in their favor.

Like you said these prices include some support costs (initial spares, perhaps). You could get an even more detailed breakdown in the full navy budget documents. For the final say on actual unit cost, we need to wait for Lockheed to be awarded the contract for the next batch.
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20170525-194854.png
    Screenshot_20170525-194854.png
    98 KB · Views: 2

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Israeli air force to receive unique test F-35

  • 24 MAY, 2017
  • SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM
  • BY: ARIE EGOZI
  • TEL AVIV


Israel's air force will take delivery of an additional Lockheed Martin F-35 in 2020 with a special suite of test instrumentation.

"This unique aircraft, which was not part of any other F-35 contract, will enable us to begin the work of upgrading the capabilities of this aircraft so that it answers our special operational requirements," says the commander of the air force's test centre, identified only as Lt Col Shlomy.

The unique test aircraft is being manufactured according to specifications that took two years to prepare, he adds. It will be used to enhance the type's capabilities during air-to-air and air-to-ground missions.

"All our platforms have been upgraded to enable stretching the flight envelope while using the unique weapon systems made by Israeli industry," Shlomy says.

Planned updates to Israel's operational F-35I "Adir" fighters will be "directly connected" to the type's scheduled maintenance programme, "in order to not disrupt the aim of the shortest time on the ground between complex missions".
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Mar 28, 2017
I now read F-35 program chief Bogdan to retire; deputy director to be his successor

source is DefenseNews
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and
Naval officer takes over F-35 program as Bogdan retires
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Leadership of the F-35 program passed from the Air Force to the Navy on Thursday, as the joint program office looks toward wrapping up the F-35 development program and the Navy’s initial operational capability declaration in 2018.

Vice Adm. Mat Winter, a naval officer who had served as deputy program executive office for six months, took the reins from current PEO Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan during a ceremony in Fort Meyer, Virginia, the JPO announced.

“The F-35 program is more than a program; it is truly a global enterprise built upon a broad spectrum of stakeholders joined together by a common goal — to support the warfighter,” Winter said, according to a news release.

“Our warfighters, stakeholders and JPO teammates have my commitment to provide timely continuous communications, make prudent transparent decisions, and deliver on our commitments through crisp, accountable execution,” he continued. “These core tenets of my commander’s intent will focus our thinking as we transition to the follow on development phase, ramp up to full rate production and expand global sustainment operations for the growing F-35 fleets and forces.”

Winter joined the JPO after serving as chief of naval operations. Before that, he spent years managing weapons programs acquisition, including as commander of the Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division, assistant commander for test and evaluation at Naval Air Systems Command, and PEO for the Navy’s unmanned aviation and strike weapons portfolio.

After graduating from the University of Notre Dame in 1984 with a degree in mechanical engineering, Winter was commissioned as a naval flight officer in 1985. He conducted several tours as an A-6E Intruder Bombardier/Navigator with Attack Squadrons 42, 85 and 34 before moving onto the acquisition world.

Bogdan will retire from the Air Force in June after more than four years of directing the F-35 program, which was in in danger of cancellation in 2012 when he took over. In his first public comments as F-35 JPO, Bogdan said the relationship between joint strike fighter manufacturer Lockheed Martin and the Pentagon was “the worst I've ever seen."

Bogdan’s tone eventually softened as Lockheed’s performance improved and costs decreased, but he acknowledged that the JPO’s interests and the company’s were not always in line. The program hit several key milestones under his watch, including the Marine Corps and Air Force IOCs, but he also hit Lockheed with a unilateral contract in 2016 after the firm refused to bend.

“It’s been an honor to serve alongside so many great leaders and support our nation and allies,” said Bogdan. “The F-35 weapon system is now operational and forward deployed. The size of the fleet continues to grow and we are rapidly expanding its capability. The F-35 will form the backbone of United States air combat superiority for decades to come and I know the program is in good hands as we transition leadership today to Vice Admiral Winter.”

Winter commended Bogdan during the ceremony, saying the latter’s leadership set the program on a course for success.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
The F-35s AIM-9X, Small Diameter Bomb & 500-lb JDAM to be Operational Soon
1ce18e0.jpg

SCOUT WARRIOR
Yesterday at 12:13 AM

Block 3F will increase the weapons delivery capacity of the JSF as well, giving it the ability to drop a Small Diameter Bomb, 500-pound JDAM (Joint Direct Attack Munition) and AIM-9X short-range air-to-air missile.

The Air Force expects to operationalize the F-35’s latest “3F” software iteration by October or September of this year, a development which will integrate additional technology and equip the stealth aircraft with a wider range of weapons such as the Small Diameter Bomb and AIM-9X, service leaders said.

After experiencing some challenges during developmental testing, the 3F software drop is now improved and sharpened up for delivery, Brig. Gen. Scott Pleus, director, F-35 Integration Office, told Scout Warrior amidst a small group of reporters.

Engineers made specific efforts to identify and resolve any emerging issues, he explained.

“They are encouraged by the things that they found during developmental testing. They have not seen any show-stoppers in stability or capability at all. There are no ongoing issues with the things they repaired,” Pleus said. “Pilots are very encouraged by what they have seen.”

Many of the JSF’s combat capabilities are woven into developmental software increments or “drops,” each designed to advance the platform’s technical abilities. There are more than 10 million individual lines of code in the JSF system.

Block 3F will increase the weapons delivery capacity of the JSF as well, giving it the ability to drop a Small Diameter Bomb, 500-pound JDAM (Joint Direct Attack Munition) and AIM-9X short-range air-to-air missile, service officials explained.

F-35A_flight_%28cropped%29.jpg


AIM-9X

The AIM-9X is an Air Force and Navy heat-seeking infrared missile.

The AIM-9X missile, which can also be fired at surface-to-air and air-to-surface, is currently in use on a number of existing fighter aircraft such as the Air Force’s F-15E and F-16 and the Navy’s F-18 Super Hornet.

Engineered by Raytheon, the newest AIM-9X Block II weapons are built with a redesigned fuse for increased safety and a lock-on-launch capability. The missile is also configured with a data link to support what’s called “beyond visual range” engagements, meaning targets at much farther ranges picked up by sensors or early warning radar. This could provide a fighter jet with an ability to destroy enemy targets in the air while remaining at a safer stand-off distance less exposed to hostile fire.

"The AIM-9X Sidewinder is an infrared-guided, air-to-air missile employing a focal plane array sensor for unparalleled target acquisition and tracking, augmented by jet vane control technology for extreme maneuverability against a variety of high performance threats,” Mark Justus, Raytheon AIM-9X program director, told Scout Warrior in a written statement last year. "The missile also has proven capability in air-to-surface and demonstrated capability in surface-to-air missions."

The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter fired an AIM-9X Sidewinder infrared-guided air-to-air missile for the first time over a Pacific Sea Test Range last year, Pentagon officials said.

The F-35 took off from Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., and launched the missile at 6,000 feet, an Air Force statement said..

Designed as part of the developmental trajectory for the emerging F-35, the test-firing of the AIM-9X was intended to further the missile's ability to fire “off-boresight." This is described as an ability to target and destroy air to air targets that are not in front of the aircraft with a direct or immediate line of sight, Pentagon officials explained.

Previous test data and observers have confirmed the F-35 identified and targeted the drone with its mission systems sensors, passed the target ‘track’ information to the missile, enabled the pilot to verify targeting information using the high off-boresight capability of the helmet mounted display and launched the AIM-9X from the aircraft to engage the target drone, a statement from the Pentagon's Joint Strike Fighter Program Office said.

“If you think of a boresight in terms of a firearm… that’s the adjustments made to an optical sight, to align the barrel of a firearm with the sights. If you think of it in aircraft terms… traditionally air-to-air missiles are fired at targets in front of the them,” Joint Strike Fighter Program Office spokesman Joe DellaVedova, told Scout Warrior.

The AIM-9X, he described, incorporates an agile thrust vector controlled airframe.

“For example, instead of having to position the aircraft directly in front or behind the enemy fighter… a high off-boresight weapon enables the pilot to just look to the left, right or up and down to engage a target, fire it and the missile locks on for the kill,” he explained.

Immediately prior to the test-launching of the AIM-9X, a test pilot employed an internally carried AIM-120C missile against another target drone. This target was beyond visual range and the AIM-120C was given a successful self-destruct signal right before target impact, Pentagon statements said.

030328-F-JZ000-018.JPG


The AIM-9X Block II is the current version of the AIM-9 Sidewinder short range missile family in use by more than 40 nations throughout the world, Justus added.

"The AIM-9X missile has been acquired by twenty international partners. It is configured for easy installation on a wide variety of modern fighter aircraft and we are excited to complete this milestone of the first AIM-9X live fire from the F-35 as we progress through the aircraft/missile integration activities," he said.

4th Software Drop

The 3F software drop is preceded by earlier increments, each one bringing new technical integration to the aircraft.

Block 2B builds upon the enhanced simulated weapons, datalink capabilities and early fused sensor integration of the earlier Block 2A software drop. Block 2B will enable the JSF to provide basic close-air support and fire an AMRAAM (Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missile), JDAM or GBU-12 (laser-guided aerial bomb), JSF program officials said.

Following Block 2B, Block 3i increases the combat capability even further, and Block 3F will bring a vastly increased ability to suppress enemy air defenses.

Called 3F, the service is already working on a 4th drop to be ready by 2020 or 2021. Following the drop of 3F, the aircraft will incorporate new software drops in two-year increments in order to stay ahead of the threat.

The first portion of Block 4 software funding, roughly $12 million, arrived in the 2014 budget, Air Force officials said.

Block 4 will include some unique partner weapons including British weapons, Turkish weapons and some of the other European country’s weapons that they want to get on their own plane, service officials explained.

Block 4 will also increase the weapons envelope for the U.S. variant of the fighter jet. A big part of the developmental calculus for Block 4 is to work on the kinds of enemy air defense systems and weaponry the aircraft may face from the 2020’s through the 2040’s and beyond.

In terms of weapons, Block 4 will eventually enable the F-35 to fire cutting edge weapons systems such as the Small Diameter Bomb II and GBU-54 – both air-dropped bombs able to destroy targets on-the-move.

The Small Diameter Bomb II uses a technology called a tri-mode seeker, drawing from infrared, millimeter wave and laser-guidance. The combination of these sensors allows the weapon to track and eliminate moving targets in all kinds of weather conditions.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Block 4 is not just for the US remember, but all the partner nations. Turkey is a Partner nation with 120 units on order.
these would include the SOM J air launched cruise missile and the the HGK guidance kit for Mk82 bombs.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
USS America, LHA-6, with eight F-35Bs aboard. Now that is nice!

Count 'em. Four forward and four aft.

tumblr_ohvn0n5lwO1sxm4gzo4_1280.jpg

Got a couple of V-22s and a AH-1Z Viper too!

@Obi Wan Russell @bd popeye @Air Force Brat @FORBIN @Jura @Equation @vesicles @Miragedriver ...thought you guys might like this. Even with eight F-35Bs, she makes an awesome weapon. She could carry up to 20.

I bet the UK is watching this closely and I bet these Marines are getting ready to help the UK out on their carriers by practicing in these numbers on our own LHD/LHAs.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
There's your "plug and play" babe right there, and it will be "plug and play,,, lots better than any past fighter!

The Israeli's are all over this bird, and it will be a "go getter", especially flown by IAF pilots, they have the right attitude, and will get their money's worth on this deal!
Nothing surprising going for a F-35I almost their own ;)

Block 4 is not just for the US remember, but all the partner nations. Turkey is a Partner nation with 120 units on order.
these would include the SOM J air launched cruise missile and the the HGK guidance kit for Mk82 bombs.
Except some prototypes or pre-series " tired " actualy used for tests all the Fleets for all countries are planned to be to last Block make sense.
 
Last edited:
Top