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

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F-35 Program Office Moves Up Implementation of Automatic Anti-Collision Avoidance System
1/31/2018
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“Expediting this lifesaving technology into the F-35 fleet by 2019 is estimated to prevent the loss of three aircraft, and more importantly, save the lives of three pilots,” F-35 Program Executive Vice Adm. Mat Winter said in a news release.
The F-35 Joint Program Office announced it will implement anti-ground collision software into the fleet five years earlier than planned.

Automatic Ground Collision Avoidance System (Auto-GCAS) software, which was developed by the Air Force Research Laboratory, was first installed in F-16s in 2014, according to a program office release. Since then, “seven pilots and six F-16 aircraft” have reportedly been saved by the system, causing the JPO to place “a premium” on speedy implementation.

“Expediting this lifesaving technology into the F-35 fleet by 2019 is estimated to prevent the loss of three aircraft, and more importantly, save the lives of three pilots,” F-35 Program Executive Vice Adm. Mat Winter said in a news release. “Over the service life of the F-35 fleet, having Auto-GCAS is estimated to prevent more than 26 ground collisions from happening.”

The F-35 fleet is currently equipped with a manual ground control avoidance system, which requires a pilot to be able to see and hear the system prompting manual control to fly away from the ground. This system is not effective if a pilot is spatially disoriented or incapacitated.

The new system is designed to determine when impact with the ground is imminent, and automatically maneuver by initiating a 5-G pull to recover. The software uses GPS position and system altitude, compared to an onboard Digital Terrain Database.

The program office’s announcement comes shortly after the Pentagon’s weapons tester released its annual report on F-35 development, claiming the F-35’s operational suitability is below requirements and that the overall fleet’s readiness is below the services’ expectations. The program office, in a Tuesday response, claimed the F-35 enterprise reached “critical milestones” in 2017 including completing Block 3F weapons testing.

The Pentagon’s evaluation focused on initial Block 3F software, which are “combat-ready loads” in the fleet today. This software covers critical mission threads, including strategic attack, close air support, suppression/destruction of enemy air defenses, and air superiority. The 2017 Director of Operational Test and Evaluation
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outlines issues with successfully flying these mission sets, including the lack of a video data link to computer time-on-target for close air support and air-to-ground weapons tests that found problems with targeting joint direct attack munitions.

However, the program office said “report delivery timelines did not allow the DOT&E assessment to include final Block 3F software delivered under the System Development and Demonstration Program,” which “improves warfighting capability performance with enhanced sensors and targeting, improved data links, improved threat countermeasures, and enhanced weapons capability to include air-to-air missiles, air-to-ground munitions, and weapons employment throughout the full aircraft flight envelope.”
 
here's a good one, inside
Pentagon ‘can't afford the sustainment costs‘ on F-35, Lord says
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“One of the things we’ve been talking about a lot is that we will be data driven. So we are frankly wasting people’s time if we sit around with opinions and concepts,” Lord said.
Sustainment costs on the F-35 are poised to become unaffordable, and that’s a big challenge for Ellen Lord, the Pentagon’s
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undersecretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment.

As a result, Lord is focused on testing
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on the fifth-generation stealth fighter, including leveraging big data analytics for sustainment purposes.

“Right now, we can’t
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we have on the F-35. And we’re committed to changing that,” Lord told reporters at a Jan. 31 roundtable, adding that the plane is the “most significant” program in the Department of Defense.

The A&S head described the jet as an “awesome aircraft” in all three of its variants, but acknowledged that “the threat is rapidly evolving and we want to make sure we get the development work done to make sure by 2025” that there is new capability on the plane.

It’s not the first warning on F-35 sustainment costs in recent weeks. On Jan. 18, Will Roper, the nominee to be for Air Force acquisition chief, said he was “deeply concerned” about sustainment on the F-35, saying it would be one of the first things he would tackle if confirmed.

With just over 250 joint strike fighters absorbed into the fleet already, the Defense Department is experiencing a number of problems sustaining the aircraft. In an October report, the Government Accountability Office laid out numerous challenges, including long maintenance times for parts, a spare parts shortage and delayed updates to the F-35’s logistics system.

After the report was released, the F-35 joint program office stated that although it was factually accurate based on the data gathered at the time, it “does not fully account for the critical work the F-35 sustainment team has led over the past several months to accelerate depot capability and capacity, implement solutions to increase spare parts and reduce overall sustainment costs.”

Lord said her team is “in the process” of detailing six acquisition professionals from her team just to focus on the sustainment issue for the jet, working hand in hand with the F-35 joint program office. The goal, she said is to go to the basics of how sustainment is done and to try new methods for driving costs down.

“It’s really deconstructing a program, as you always would, but [F-35] being a large complex program with international partners, [foreign military sales] coming up, there’s a complexity to it that benefits from fresh eyes that are familiar with the program routinely looking at and asking questions,” she explained.

Because F-35 is such a massive program, the hope is to prove out these fresh approaches and then drag them onto other sets of major defense acquisition programs, including the use of
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to find ways to cut costs.

“One of the things we’ve been talking about a lot is that we will be data driven. So we are frankly wasting people’s time if we sit around with opinions and concepts,” Lord said. “If that is not backed up by analytical rigor and the data behind it. So, we’re practicing all of that on the F-35. I think we’re getting a little sharper in all the areas.”
 
Thursday at 8:46 PM
inside
F-35 Program Office Moves Up Implementation of Automatic Anti-Collision Avoidance System
1/31/2018
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:

“Expediting this lifesaving technology into the F-35 fleet by 2019 is estimated to prevent the loss of three aircraft, and more importantly, save the lives of three pilots,” F-35 Program Executive Vice Adm. Mat Winter said in a news release.
related:
New Software Will Prevent F-35 Pilots from Flying into the Ground
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Even experienced fighter pilots are at risk of a phenomenon known as Controlled Flight Into Terrain, or CFIT.

In 2016,
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during
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training at
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, California.

Bottom line: When you're multitasking in mid-air at speeds of up to 1,000 miles per hour, it's easy to get disoriented.

But the military's
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is about to get a new automatic technology that will prevent pilots from flying into the ground by mistake. And it's coming about five years earlier than scheduled.

The F-35 Joint Program Office announced this week that the aircraft will receive the automatic ground collision avoidance system, or Auto-GCAS, software that initiates an automatic recovery maneuver when "impact with the ground is imminent."

It uses
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positioning and altitude readings to predict upcoming collisions, according to a JPO release.

When a crash is imminent, the system warns the pilot to prompt a recovery maneuver. But if no action is taken, Auto-GCAS will take over, righting the aircraft and executing a 5-G pull to get the plane safely off its collision course.

Only after the threat has been avoided does the system hand controls back to the pilot.

Auto-GCAS has been in use by the
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's
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fleet since 2014 and has been credited with saving the lives of seven pilots in six different aircraft.

In
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, an Arizona
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pilot was saved after losing consciousness in the cockpit and entering a dive. Unclassified footage of the episode shows the aircraft headed for the ground like a missile before the system intervenes.

"As the first recorded save happened just four months after completion of [F-16] testing, the F-35 Joint Program Office has placed a premium on the quickest possible implementation of Auto-GCAS," JPO officials said in the release.

The move comes as the
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'
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prepares to depart on its first shipboard
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in the Pacific later this year, closely followed by another deployment that is expected to include operations in the Middle East.

Officials with the Joint Program Office did not immediately provide responses to Military.com questions about which aircraft squadrons or which variant would be the first to receive Auto-GCAS. But it's supposed to be installed across the fleet by 2019.

The program executive officer for the F-35, Vice Adm. Mat Winter, said officials estimate expediting the technology, given existing statistics, will save three aircraft and three pilots.

"Our acquisition team is working with the warfighters to ensure Auto-GCAS is in every F-35," Winter said in a statement. "... Over the service life of the F-35 fleet, having Auto-GCAS is estimated to prevent more than 26 ground collisions from happening."
 
Jan 26, 2018
now a supposed success story Italy receives first F-35B assembled outside the US
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and now the caption is (oops have to retype, it's up on
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now)
LATEST PHOTO:
The first F-35B assembled outside the US landed at NAS Patuxent River on Jan. 31 after completing a transatlantic flight from Cameri Air Base in northern Italy
20180202_Italian_F-35B-1.jpg
 
Mar 9, 2017
I now watched an old vid
which I found inside a new article
Meet The First Female F-35 Pilot
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and now (dated Jan 29, 2018)
U.S. Air Force To Get Second Female F-35 Pilot
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The U.S. Air Force finally is ready to welcome its second female
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pilot, now that enough aircraft have been upgraded with a new ejection seat designed to accommodate lightweight aircrew. As of Jan. 23, a government-industry team here at Luke AFB had
retrofitted eight F-35As with the new ejection seat, which eventually will equip the entire fleet, maintainers told Aerospace DAILY during a recent visit. That is enough to allow the pilot, who is transitioning from another fighter, to begin training in the F-35 in February, Air Force spokeswoman Maj. Rebecca Heyse said.

The Air Force declined to provide additional details on the pilot, including her name, or make her available for interviews until she progresses further in her training.

The first and only other woman to fly the F-35, Lt. Col. Christine Mau, recently retired. Mau, a former
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Strike Eagle pilot and deputy commander of the 33rd Fighter Wing Operations Group, completed her first training flight in the F-35 at Eglin AFB, Florida, in May 2015.

The Air Force banned pilots under 136 lb. from flying the F-35 in 2015, after discovering the design of the escape system posed a significant risk of neck damage or death during ejection to aircrew in that weight range. The service officially lifted the weight restriction in May 2017, after accepting seat-maker Martin-Baker’s plan to integrate a series of modifications to the seat that would allow lightweight pilots to safely fly the F-35.

But integration of the modifications—a lightweight switch to delay deployment of the main parachute and a fabric “head support panel” between the parachute risers to protect the pilot’s head from moving backward during parachute opening—has been taking longer than planned due to challenges incorporating the new seat data into the fighter’s fleet management system, the Autonomic Logistics and Information System, Aerospace DAILY reported in September.

Retrofitting more than 200 early versions of the F-35 already out in the fleet with the new configuration of the Martin-Baker seat will not be completed until about summer 2019, according to F-35 Joint Program Office spokesman Joe DellaVedova.

All new F-35s coming off the production line in Lot 10 and beyond will have the latest version of the seat, complete with the lightweight modification, DellaVedova noted. With the upgraded seat, the F-35 will be able to accommodate pilots weighing 103-245 lb.

But until all the F-35s in the fleet are equipped with the new lightweight seat, the number of female F-35 pilots—who are typically smaller than their male counterparts—will be limited.

“It is a significant problem,” said Lt. Col. Kathryn Gaetke, commander of the 309th Fighter Squadron and a career
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pilot, during a Jan. 24 interview here.

Gaetke believes the danger posed by the unmodified ejection seat to lightweight pilots did not deter women from wanting to fly the F-35. But the weight restriction and lack of sufficient upgraded aircraft have "deterred people from choosing women to fly the F-35,” she said.

Gaetke added that she “absolutely” saw women come through the pipeline who were routed to a different fighter instead of the F-35.

“It’s not like they chose people and then said, ‘Oh, you were out because of your weight,’ but I think there’s definitely, absolutely been some tough decisions,” Gaetke said. “Nobody wanted to make that the reason, nobody wanted to exclude that population. It was just the nature of the beast.”
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
The F-35 is already showing the absolute success it will be.

Hundreds and then thousands avaialble for Air Forcs aorund the world in the Alpha format.

Hundreds of Bravos available for LPH.CVH, DDH, LPD, LPA vessels around the world. A VTOL/STOL supersonic, steaklth 5th generation strike aircraft for the US and its allies vessels of thee types...or from forrd based airfields and landing areas.

Hundreds of Charlies available as the next generation carrier strike aircraft...a supersonic, stealth, 5th gen strike aircraft off of CATOBAR carriers of the US Navy.

...and all at a very reasonable proce given it significant apabilities...partiuiclarly the CTOL version.

It will be the absolute most wide spread, most successful and powerful 5th gen stealth strike aircrat in the world and ultimately delivered in its thousands, will set the stage for absolute perfromance all over the world.
 
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according to DefenseNews Air Force F-35 put through its paces in first Asia-Pacific deployment
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Look at the skies above Kadena Air Base on the Japanese island of Okinawa and twice daily you’ll get a glimpse of U.S. Air Force F-35 fighter jets taking off, only to land several hours later. Watch the base itself and you’ll see maintainers working round the clock to ensure the service’s newest fighter jets are ready to go.

It’s been about three months since more than 300 airmen relocated from Hill Air Force Base, Utah, to Japan for the
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. The first of 12 jets arrived at Kadena in late October for a six-month deployment — the longest period the 34th Fighter Squadron has spent away from home.

Although the Lockheed Martin-manufactured jets
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since their arrival in Japan, the pace of operations has been relentless.

“We’re approaching 1,000 flight hours and 500 sorties, we’ll probably have that here in the next week and a half or two weeks,” Master Sgt. Brian Sarafin, F-35A production superintendent for the 34th Aircraft Maintenance Unit, told Defense News in a Jan. 24 interview.

On any given day, the 12 F-35s at Kadena could be expected to make anywhere from 12 to 14 total sorties, meaning every plane must be quickly inspected and repaired so it is ready to fly.

“They have been doing a lot of flying with the F-15s here stationed at Kadena. That’s almost a daily thing ― that they will meet up with F-15s from here,” Sarafin said. “And I believe that they’ve also met up with the [Japan Air Self-Defense Force] airplanes a time or two as well.”

About 20 F-35A pilots relocated to Okinawa, and they fly about two to three times a week, said Capt. Ryan Huber, the 34th Fighter Squadron’s flight commander. Most of those hours are spent training, but pilots also participate in
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, held in South Korea in December, where operators got to practice skills such as enemy infiltration and precision strike with U.S. military and South Korean jets.

“Some of my flights included operations with our USAF F-15C Eagle counterparts and Republic of Korea F-16s,” he said. “The experience was enlightening, as it allowed us to learn the intricacies of each other’s operating capabilities to further strengthen what we bring as a whole to the fight.”

A normal workweek for maintainers goes like this: Every morning, usually from Monday to Friday, about eight jets will fly a mission of about one to two hours in length. A morning shift of maintainers will be on hand to help launch and recover those jets, as well as to turn them for the second set of flights — usually flown by four to six F-35s — later that afternoon, Sarafin said.

A second “swing shift” of maintainers will come in before the second round of sorties have landed, and once those aircraft are back on the ground, they will begin necessary repairs to get the jets back into the air the following day. That work is continued by a third shift of maintainers, who clock in at about midnight.

“It’s a big revolving door every single day to make sure our aircraft are ready,” Sarafin said.

The Air Force’s data sponge

Tensions between the U.S. and North Korea exploded over the past year as North Korea ramped up testing of intercontinental ballistic missiles, including the Hwasong-15, which the North claims can hit the continental United States. U.S. President Donald Trump’s own comments promising “fire and fury” have kicked off debate about the administration’s willingness to escalate to a full-blown war.

Amid this delicate geopolitical landscape, the U.S. Air Force has been careful to characterize its F-35 operations at Kadena as a “long-planned deployment … designed to demonstrate the continuing U.S. commitment to stability and security in the region,” as it noted in an October news release. The deployment had been in the works since 2016, when Deborah Lee James, then the Air Force secretary under the Obama administration, announced that the “A” models could travel to the Asia-Pacific as early as 2017.

Although the aircraft would be available in case of a contingency — and although the collection of B-2 and B-1 bombers in Guam, F-35s in Japan, and F-15s in South Korea send a powerful message to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un about the U.S. military’s capabilities — it’s unlikely that the U.S. Air Force will operate its F-35s in an attempt to provoke North Korea, said John Venable, a senior fellow for the Heritage Foundation and a former F-16 pilot.

“I don’t think we’re going to pulse the boundary,” he said. “I don’t think that there will be anything inflammatory done in an overt posturing.”

But the F-35s operating in Japan — the Air Force’s “A” models at Kadena as well as the Marine Corps’ F-35Bs, which will deployed aboard the amphibious assault ship Wasp this year — could still play a vital role in enhancing the U.S. military’s understanding of North Korea’s own military activities, especially given the jet’s classified electronic warfare package and data fusion capability that brings together imagery from the aircraft’s myriad active and passive sensors.

“I don’t know if it’s actually monitoring the television channels that people are watching in their homes or if, as soon of they get airborne, they start doing a really good assessment of what’s happening in the North,” Venable said.

“When you have the guys out on the Wasp and they’re flying, if they’re flying 100 miles off the coast of North Korea, you can bet your bottom dollar that they’re scooping up gobs and gobs of information of what’s going on inside the peninsula and then the northern side of the peninsula. And the same thing is going on with the [’A’ models].”

Go ask ALIS

Although agencies like the Government Accountability Office and the Pentagon’s independent weapons tester have
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, Sarafin said the 34th hasn’t run into any major complications during its deployment in Japan.

“We haven’t had major surprises since we’ve been here. The jets have been performing pretty well, and we have not had many maintenance nondeliveries. When we first got here, we went over 130 sorties without dropping a single one, which was great for us and kind of unheard of for a new platform like that,” he said.

So far, the most critical challenge on the maintenance side has been setting up the aircraft’s Autonomic Logistics Information System, which allows operators to order spare parts, walk through maintenance procedures and plan missions. The 34th is using the latest version, ALIS 2.0.2.4, during this deployment.

“It’s much quicker. We have a lot of access to all the data we need on the aircraft,” Sarafin said. “Is it a perfect system? No, but it’s much better than it has been in the past few years.”

During the first days of the deployment, maintenance crews had difficulty readying the supply system and getting parts delivered on time due to customs hiccups.

But “it’s been hashed out fairly quickly,” said Sarafin, adding that the squadron did not lose any sorties due to a lack of parts. “We’re operating here almost as efficiently as we do at home station now.”

One of the new features of ALIS 2.0.2 allows the user to view and monitor data from the aircraft’s Pratt & Whitney F135 engine, which was developed specifically for the F-35. Before getting the current ALIS version, maintainers would have to download the engine data, burn it to a disc and then hand it over to a Pratt & Whitney employee, who would look at the data and ensure that the engine was safe to fly the next sortie.

“It was a time-consuming process. Sometimes you’re talking two to four hours to get the data, which could then delay your time and [decrease] the possibility of having an aircraft ready the next year,” he said. Now, because engine data flows through ALIS, it can be downloaded in five to ten minutes after the plane lands.
 
inside
SINGAPORE: Lockheed favours incremental F-35 software updates
07 February, 2018
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"The plan will see smaller updates applied more frequently ..."

and a customer charged more frequently, no? LOL!
Lockheed Martin’s aeronautics head believes a new software update regime for the F-35 fighter will greatly improve efficiency, and also says that sustainment for the type is improving.

The plan will see smaller updates applied more frequently, as opposed to sweeping, all-inclusive updates applied every few years. Lockheed says “our plan is to move ahead with it for the F-35 as part of follow-on modernisation.”

The idea is akin to Microsoft’s Windows 10, which uses frequent small updates, as opposed to older versions of Windows, where only large updates are applied infrequently.

“The approach is a great one that we very much embrace,” says Orlando Carvalho, executive vice-president of aeronautics at Lockheed Martin. “Instead of waiting a long period of time for a new capability – and by long periods we’re talking years – you can save time with agile loading as opposed to one big block update.”

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Carvalho says the approach is dubbed C2D2, an acronym for Continuous Capability Development and Delivery.

“Instead of waiting years for the whole set, I can divvy the work up into smaller, bite-sized pieces, and within six months I can get something out. It might be less impactful [than a large update], but you’re not waiting three years to get everything at once.”

Carvalho adds that it is likely to make the airworthiness process easier. Given that the base software will already have been certified, airworthiness authorities will only need to deal with incremental updates.

“It’s easier to look at a bite-sized piece, as opposed to looking at a long laundry list at the end, that makes a much greater impact to the base software. It actually makes airworthiness better.”

One area where the F-35 has come in for some criticism of late is sustainment, following a negative report by the Pentagon’s Director of Operational Test and Evaluation.

Carvalho admitted that there have been some shortcomings in spares and support, but that these are being addressed as the programme matures and the F-35 becomes more reliable.

“We have 260 aircraft that are largely supporting training,” he says. “Our sustainment processes are quickly maturing, as we’re supporting more and more airplanes. Part of this is to make sure there are enough spares in the field to support the availability the services are looking for. At the same time, not only is there the procurement of spares, but the repair capacity. You need to have this capacity to repair things coming off the airplane.”

Lockheed is working to get more efficient about sourcing spares and build up the right quantities.

“It’s an area that has not improved significantly the last few years, and we recognise that, but I believe today a lot of those processes are coming together that will enable this to improve.”

Carvalho adds that more recent production models of the aircraft are more reliable than aircraft produced earlier in the programme’s history. This factor, combined with better spares and maintenance support, should greatly improve aircraft availability in future.
 
this is interesting:
"... Lockheed’s director of F-35 international business development ... says there are presently 165 JSFs in various stages of production, and the delivery target for 2018 is 91 aircraft: a 37% increase compared to last year’s delivery of 66."
F-35 Expanding Footprint in Asia-Pacific
Feb 6, 2018
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’s
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will expand its presence in the Asia-Pacific region this year, as Australia, Japan, and South Korea begin populating their first Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) bases.

As a prelude to the coming expansion of the F-35 in Asia, two U.S.
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F-35Bs belonging to the Marine Fighter Attack Squadron-121 “Green Knights” arrived at Changi on Feb. 3 as part of the U.S. delegation to the Singapore Airshow.

Steve Over, Lockheed’s director of F-35 international business development, tells ShowNews this is the first time the JSF has appeared at the show. A full-scale mockup of the aircraft has visited in the past and is on display again this year.

The F-35s are being joined by two U.S. Air Force 525th Fighter Sqdn.
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Raptors, also built by Lockheed, which are coming in from Elmendorf AFB, Alaska.

Although not stated by the U.S.
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, the presence of America’s two most sophisticated fifth-generation stealth fighters at the show sends a powerful message to friend and foe alike that Washington will defend its interests, and allies, in the region.

For Lockheed (CS02), the stealth show is an invaluable chance to tout progress on the F-35 and talk up its expanding presence in the region. Although F-22 assembly ended in 2012, production of the F-35 is scaling up to satisfy hundreds of orders from the U.S. military, eight partner nations and three foreign military sales customers (Israel, Japan and South Korea).

Over says there are presently 165 JSFs in various stages of production, and the delivery target for 2018 is 91 aircraft: a 37% increase compared to last year’s delivery of 66.

In 2019, production throughput across the three F-35 assembly lines in the U.S. (Fort Worth), Italy (Cameri), and Japan (Nagoya) will increase another 54%, with a target of about 140 units.

Lockheed has not yet booked orders from Singapore, but the nation remains an active security-cooperative participant. Singapore has been evaluating both the F-35A and F-35B, but no orders seem imminent.

Rather than pining over the lack of orders by Singapore, Over says Lockheed is keenly focused on executing existing programs and making good on commitments. “We’re focused on ramping this global supply chain to full-rate production and figuring out how to deliver sustainment affordably,” he says.

After 17 years of development, the aircraft is about one month away from completing development and transitioning into operational test and evaluation. Australia, Japan and South Korea also have significant milestones coming up.

On Jan. 26, the Japan Air Self-Defense Force 3rd Air Wing’s first operational F-35A, aircraft No. 6 (AX-6), arrived at Misawa Air Base to begin forming the nation’s first JSF squadron. A ceremony marking the milestone is planned for Feb. 24.

Nine more aircraft are expected to follow within Japan’s 2018 fiscal year. This is the second of 38 F-35As to be delivered from Japan’s Nagoya final assembly and checkout facility. Tokyo ordered a total of 42 aircraft, and the first four built in Fort Worth are now supporting training operations at Luke AFB, Arizona. Aircraft No. 5, the first built in Nagoya, is presently at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, undergoing electromagnetic environmental effects testing.

Meanwhile, the first six of 40 F-35As for South Korea are marching down the assembly line in Fort Worth, with a rollout ceremony expected in late March. Lockheed expects to build 40 airplanes for Seoul over the next four years.

Initially, South Korea’s aircraft will go to Luke for pilot training but this year, at least one aircraft will make its way to the first operational base in Cheongju. The base right now hosts McDonnell Douglas F-4E Phantoms.

In another major milestone, the first operational aircraft for the
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will arrive down under at RAAF Base Williamtown in December. The initial batch of Aussie F-35s are supporting multinational training at Luke, but Owens says another eight are now under construction.

The Australian parliament has approved the purchase of 72 F-35As, although Canberra has previously considered buying as many as 100. The first operational RAAF squadron will be ready for combat around 2020.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
this is interesting:
"... Lockheed’s director of F-35 international business development ... says there are presently 165 JSFs in various stages of production, and the delivery target for 2018 is 91 aircraft: a 37% increase compared to last year’s delivery of 66."
F-35 Expanding Footprint in Asia-Pacific
Feb 6, 2018
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The F-35 has become a very successful aircraft, and is the single most effective fighter aircraft in production today, while it is a slight tick off the F-22, just as the Virginia class nuke boats are not quite seawolf class, it will be effective against both op-for air defences, air or ground!
 
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