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

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Brat it doesn't matter if it's a brand new T50 Trainer, Grippen Aggressor or a F16C+. The point of dissimilar air combat training is to have the pilots face a dissimilar threat. As the F35A moves to be the norm for the USAF that means Flying F35A as the main force. Matching F35A vs F35A is a unlikely event and would result in Pilots expecting an enemy to act the same way as he or she does.
The Reason I like These commercial Red Air is they bring in types not used by the USAF and USN changing the dynamics of the match. Instead of F16C vs F16C it's F16C vs Mirage. now the two machines and pilots are thinking differently and operating with different strengths.

And Mirage F1 i have more détails soon :) i think formers F1CT or CR ?
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We have one Alpha Jet Sqn ( 16 birds ) for these mission as UK have one with Hawks so poor for have true fighters :(
More seriously 2 F-22 Wings have one T-38 Sqn good idea cheaper, the 3th to Elmendorf train with Agressors Sqn to Eielson, T-38 used also for B-2 and U-2 crew.
 
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according to DefenseNews
Pentagon targets lower-tier suppliers on new $60M F-35 affordability effort
17 hours ago

The F-35 program office and Lockheed Martin are kicking off a second round of cost-cutting initiatives in the hopes of driving unit costs of an A-model to $80 million by 2020, and this time, more focus will be on Lockheed’s expansive supply chain.

The Pentagon on Monday awarded Lockheed $60 million for “cost savings projects to reduce the cost of the F-35 joint strike fighter air system.”

On Tuesday, Joe DellaVedova, spokesman for the F-35 joint program office, confirmed that payment would fund the second phase of Blueprint for Affordability, referred to as BFA, which will begin to reap savings as early as the twelfth low rate initial production lot.

While the first BFA effort resulted mostly in changes made by the three biggest companies involved in the F-35 program — prime contractor Lockheed Martin; Northrop Grumman, which produces the center fuselage; and BAE Systems, which makes the rear aft fuselage — the latest effort will target other businesses further down the supply chain.

“BFA 2 is aimed at driving production savings deeper into the supply chain,” DellaVedova said, adding that at least 25 percent of the $60 million award has been earmarked for companies other than Lockheed, Northrop and BAE.

A Lockheed news release issued in July 2016 noted that more 20 “sub-tier suppliers” had already received funding as part of the effort.

During the Air Force Association’s annual conference last week, Lockheed’s F-35 program head explained that the JPO had opted to try a new funding structure for the second BFA effort.

In the original BFA, Lockheed, Northrop and BAE put forth an initial investment of about $170 million for improvements to processes and infrastructure that would cut the cost of joint strike fighter production, said Jeff Babione, the company’s executive vice president and general manager.

Then, once the companies proved that it had shaved costs during the eight, ninth and tenth batches of production, the Defense Department would pay back that investment plus a fee.

Altogether, Lockheed estimates that the more than 200 projects completed during the first BFA program will save the Pentagon more than $4 billion over the life of the program.

During BFA2, the government will make the upfront investment and also incentivize cost savings, meaning that Lockheed and its suppliers could earn even more money depending on the success of its initiatives.

“It’s a slightly different business model. I would say it doesn’t change things significantly,” Babione said.

“I think we have the first half of dozen projects underway,” he added. “There are hundreds of projects that are in the queue that just need to a have the time and energy put [in]. Remember, we had BFA 1, and we got to a point where we ran out of money, but we didn’t run out of projects. So, we just took all the projects that were left over and we dropped them in the hopper at the beginning.”

Many of Lockheed’s suppliers say they have independently funded new cost-saving technologies and processes, even without Blueprint for Affordability money.

Orbital ATK — which produces 35 percent of the F-35’s composite structures, including the upper and lower wing skins, nacelle components and inlet ducts — has proposed more than 40 projects to Lockheed Martin as part of BFA, said Richard Passmore, Orbital’s director of military structures programs.

Four of those are currently under consideration for the second phase. One project would simply get rid of a second thickness inspection of wing covers that Orbital believes is duplicative and unnecessary, given Lockheed’s ability to apply liquid or hard shims to eliminate any gaps between structures, according to an Orbital ATK spokesman. Another would improve the processes on how finished parts are marked before being shipped off.

Lockheed has not previously funded any of the Orbital ATK’s suggested affordability projects, but the company has put some into place with its own money, Passmore said.

For instance, Orbital ATK was having quality control issues with nacelles, which are made of a “fiber-placed composite” where carbon fibers are layered together, impregnated with resin and then cured.

“Five years ago, 70 percent of the parts Orbital ATK was producing were either too thick, didn’t meet thickness requirements or had this effect of OCW, outer contour wave, in the components,” Passmore said.

The company internally funded a number of projects and changed some of its manufacturing processes, such as when to “debulk” the structure and how to cure it, he said.

“Today, Orbital ATK is producing at a rate of 98 percent zero defect.”
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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
@Air Force Brat @FORBIN @Equation @vesicles @tphuang @Obi Wan Russell @bd popeye @dtulsa @Bernard @Asif Ijaz @Blackstone

Brat, you will especially like this...you too Popeye and Obi Wan.

Look at the wing on thet baby and its lines. This is a stealth aircraft that can carry a lot of fuel and a lot of ordinance.

...and they keep on testing her getting ready for her to go IOC.

I love this pic.

View attachment 42302

Yep, I love this picture, and here we have an aircraft with LOTS OF LIFT, and I'm telling you,,,, the Raptor looks "organic" from 20 ft,,, like a thing alive... the F-35 "feels organic",,, if you didn't know better, you would swear its wearing a skin.. and it is, a radar wave absorbing skin!

Those who continue to call stealth "smoke and mirrors" are exactly right, and terribly wrong,, this is an amazing airplane,,, I'm wondering in a "who's the best" "Top Gun" kinda way?? This airplane is never going to go head to head with the Raptor, in a "Mano-A-Mano" way,,, but mark my word,,, one day, maybe that day has already come,,, she's gonna sneak up on the Queen, and say "BOO!"

and Jeff, I'd be sad if we are the only two SDF members who see her for who she is,,, yes, look at that beautiful little airplane, just beautiful!
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Yep, I love this picture, and here we have an aircraft with LOTS OF LIFT, and I'm telling you,,,, the Raptor looks "organic" from 20 ft,,, like a thing alive... the F-35 "feels organic",,, if you didn't know better, you would swear its wearing a skin.. and it is, a radar wave absorbing skin!

Those who continue to call stealth "smoke and mirrors" are exactly right, and terribly wrong,, this is an amazing airplane,,, I'm wondering in a "who's the best" "Top Gun" kinda way?? This airplane is never going to go head to head with the Raptor, in a "Mano-A-Mano" way,,, but mark my word,,, one day, maybe that day has already come,,, she's gonna sneak up on the Queen, and say "BOO!"

and Jeff, I'd be sad if we are the only two SDF members who see her for who she is,,, yes, look at that beautiful little airplane, just beautiful!
Yes my frreind, and I am about to embark on a major project...perhaps with my conditioon, the last major one like it that I dio...but that's still in God's Hand.

Anyhow, I am building the 2030s airwing for the Ford class, and going to put it on a 1350 scale USS Enterprise, CVN-80. Which, BTW, has just recently cut first metal.

so, in the 2030s you will see plenty of F-35Cs mated up wth the new 6th gen aircraft.

...and I am building an airwing right now to represent that.

My carrier model (of a Nimitz) will be here in two weeks, and I will have 54 aircraft witing for her when she gets here and I start fabricating her over from a Nimit to a Ford.

Here's how those little 1/350 aircraft look as they come off my lines:

cvn-80b-01.jpg
cvn-80b-02.jpg

...and here they are on the deck of the Reagan that I built just to see how they look.

cvn-80b-03.jpg

It is going to be nice.

I intend to completely finish out and light the hanger deck like I did on the Reagan...but I am thinking about putting rail guns and lasers on, along woth a couple of RAMs and CIWS, to giver her the modern close in defenses as well.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Yes my frreind, and I am about to embark on a major project...perhaps with my conditioon, the last major one like it that I dio...but that's still in God's Hand.

Anyhow, I am building the 2030s airwing for the Ford class, and going to put it on a 1350 scale USS Enterprise, CVN-80. Which, BTW, has just recently cut first metal.

so, in the 2030s you will see plenty of F-35Cs mated up wth the new 6th gen aircraft.

...and I am building an airwing right now to represent that.

My carrier model (of a Nimitz) will be here in two weeks, and I will have 54 aircraft witing for her when she gets here and I start fabricating her over from a Nimit to a Ford.

Here's how those little 1/350 aircraft look as they come off my lines:

View attachment 42303
View attachment 42304

...and here they are on the deck of the Reagan that I built just to see how they look.

View attachment 42305

It is going to be nice.

I intend to completely finish out and light the hanger deck like I did on the Reagan...but I am thinking about putting rail guns and lasers on, along woth a couple of RAMs and CIWS, to giver her the modern close in defenses as well.

Awesome Jeff, and we continue to pray for the "Life of Jesus in YOU!", praying for his healing touch Brother,,, but as you have stated, our "days are in His Hands"! kinda scary though,,, I trust Him, and love Him more,,, but as you, I feel like there is so much more I want to do for my family.

I had triple by-pass 8 years ago,,, some days I'm a little "pooped out",, and wonder what is going on in there... LOL
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
F-35 program office to finish tests of key weapon this year

WASHINGTON — By the end of the year, the F-35 program office will wrap up testing of a key munition that will allow U.S. Air Force F-35A jets to hit moving targets, the Pentagon’s F-35 program head said Sept. 18.

The director of the Air Force’s F-35 integration office told Defense News in February that the service hoped to integrate Raytheon’s GBU-49 munition into the “A” model’s weapons loadout in time for full combat capability.
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
A Knight on so close to Rocket Man :)
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Not in Japan :confused: coz a part of this Sqn 6 on 16 F-35B don't have yet joined Iwakuni for soon

F-35B Hot Loads With AIM-120's

MARINE CORPS AIR STATION YUMA, Ariz. -- MARINE CORPS AIR STATION YUMA, Ariz.

– Hot-loading is when an aircraft lands and has ordnance loaded while the engine is still running. Marines from Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 121 conducted a hot-load in F-35B Lightning II’s at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz. on Sept. 21, 2017. This hot-load was conducted using AMRAMM AIM-120 missiles. VMFA-121 is a part of Marine Aircraft Group 12, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing.

The exercise was a validation/verification conducted during Weapons and Tactics Instructors course 1-18. WTI is an exercise that takes service members from all over the world in a joint training exercise for mission readiness. WTI is hosted by Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Squadron one.
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May 17, 2017
what gives?
Germany asks U.S. for classified briefing on Lockheed's F-35 fighter
Wed May 17, 2017 | 11:01am EDT
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sorta related (dated September 29, 2017):
Germany asks for Boeing fighter data as weighs order options
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Germany has asked the U.S. military for classified data on two Boeing fighter jets as it looks to replace its ageing Tornado warplanes from 2025, giving a boost to the U.S. company locked in a trade dispute with Canada and Britain.

A letter sent by the German defence ministry’s planning division, reviewed by Reuters, said it had identified Boeing’s F-15 and F/A-18E/F fighters as potential candidates to replace the Tornado jets, which entered service in 1981.

A classified briefing is expected to take place in mid-November, following a similar briefing provided by U.S. officials about the Lockheed Martin Corp F-35 fighter jet in July.

The ministry has said it is also seeking information from European aerospace giant Airbus, which builds the Eurofighter Typhoon along with Britain’s BAE Systems and Italy’s Leonardo.

The development is a boost for Boeing at a time when it is under fire from Canada and Britain after its complaint prompted the United States to impose a preliminary 220-percent duty on CSeries jets built by Bombardier.

Boeing said it was working with the U.S. government to provide the information that Germany had requested.

Germany, due to decide in mid-2018 about how to replace the Tornado planes, announced plans in July to build a European fighter jet together with France. But the new jet is unlikely to be available by 2025, when Germany’s fleet of Tornado fighters are slated to start going out of service.

Sources familiar with the process said Germany was pursuing a two-pronged approach under which it would buy an existing fighter to replace the Tornado, while working with France on a new European jet to replace its Eurofighters at a later point.

Analysts said the Tornado replacement order could be worth tens of billions of dollars, although Germany is still reviewing how many jets to buy and at what pace.

The letter said a formal request for information about the pricing and availability of all three U.S. fighter jets was being compiled and would be issued by the end of the month.

BOEING UNDER FIRE
Britain told Boeing this week that future defence contracts could be in jeopardy because of its trade dispute with Canada’s Bombardier, noting that U.S. tariffs would put up to 4,200 jobs at risk at a plant in the British province of Northern Ireland that makes the CSeries jet’s carbon wings.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has also said he will not go ahead with plans to buy 18 Boeing F/A-18 Super Hornet jets unless the dispute is dropped.

Any move by Germany to buy a U.S. warplane could run into political resistance from strong labour unions and Airbus, which has also raised concerns about the ministry’s plans to choose between two U.S. helicopters for its heavy lift programme.

Britain, the Netherlands, Norway, Turkey and Italy - key NATO allies of Germany - are already buying the F-35 fighter jet to replace their current aircraft, and other European countries such as Switzerland, Belgium and Finland are also looking at purchasing the fifth-generation warplane at time when tensions with Russia are running high.

Military sources say buying a U.S. jet could make sense for Germany given technical challenges with the Eurofighter.
 
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