Lockheed Wraps Up F-35 Structural Testing/ ship trial onboard USS Wasp to start the 3rd of October.
Lockheed Martin’s Joint Strike Fighter program has achieved one of five major milestones linked to the company’s ability to earn financial reward in 2011 with the recent completion of static structural testing.
The goal was achieved after completion of static testing on the F-35C; earlier work was done on the A and B versions, says Tom Burbage, executive vice president for F-35 integration.
This is arguably the least complex of the five goals for 2011, but it is a step in the right direction after the program struggled in 2010.
After taking a more than $600 million hit to the available award fee in 2010, the company is eligible for $35 million in awards this year. Seven million dollars is associated with each of the following milestones:
• Conducting F-35B shipboard trials.
• Executing catapult launch and trap landing testing.
• Start of training with the Block 1B software.
• Release of Block 2 software for flight testing.
• Static-model trials for the F-35C carrier version.
Burbage says the prerequisite work is complete in advance of moving two specially instrumented F-35B short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing (Stovl) aircraft to the amphibious ship Wasp in the first week of October. This will kick off a series of shipboard tests to assess the interface between the stealthy, single-engine jet and the ship. During those trials, the test force plans to conduct 67 vertical landings on the ship.
Separately, the F-35 test team and the U.S. Navy conducted a series of jet-blast deflector trials. These were designed to assess the effect of flight operations, including catapult launches, on the ship’s jet blast deflectors, which shield the ship and other aircraft from hot exhaust. Burbage says no changes are required for the jet blast deflectors to introduce the F-35C into the carrier fleet. The F-35C will begin testing on an aircraft carrier next spring, Burbage says.
To date, the program has executed 156 Stovl tests. Lockheed Martin officials say that despite a halt in test flights, they are 8% ahead of plans in year-to-date flights.
So far in 2011, flight activities are as follows:
• F-35A conventional takeoff and landing version: 314 flights;
• F-35B Stovl: 226 flights;
• F-35C carrier version: 102 flights.
Despite progress in testing, the program continues to face headwinds in funding. Burbage says the company is still assessing the effect of a deep funding cut proposed by the Senate Appropriations defense subcommittee in the fiscal 2013 budget.
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