Correct, thanks!Coati wrote:Must be BF-7, that is the only aircraft ready to be delivered on the flight line at Fort Worth right now.sdamico wrote:Another F-35 delivery today (BF-7?) to Eglin/VPS, using callsign LITNG5.
Rgds,
SD
http://www.flightglobal.com/assets/geta ... emid=44502PICTURES: F-35 bulks up with external weapons load
Lockheed Martin's F-35 has been flown for the first time with an external weapons load, with a conventional take-off and landing (CTOL) aircraft having completed a sortie with two Raytheon AIM-9X Sidewinder air-to-air missiles beneath its outboard wing stations.
Flown from Edwards AFB in California on 16 February, the F-35A also carried a load of two Raytheon AIM-120 AMRAAM air-to-air missiles and two GBU-31 908kg (2,000lb) precision guided-bombs within its two internal weapons bays.
"No weapons were delivered during the mission," said Lockheed, which added that the sortie was focused on "further expanding the programme's flight test envelope".
The test aircraft is also pictured with four additional external weapons stations mounted under its wing, with each of these capable of carrying one 908kg bomb.
According to Lockheed, the F-35A is capable of carrying a maximum load of 8,170kg across its 10 weapons stations. When required to operate as a stealth asset, operators will fly the type with internal stores only.
Engine For First Dutch JSF Aircraft
Source: Government of the Netherlands
Published Friday, February 17, 2012 - 07:15
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The first Joint Strike Fighter designated for the Netherlands has had its jet engine installed. The Netherlands has thus far ordered two of these F-35 fighter aircraft as test aircraft.
Personnel of Lockheed Martin installed the Pratt & Whitney engine, which measures 5.5 by almost 1.5 metres. Production is running according to schedule.
Testing
The aircraft, to which the air force will give tail number F-001, was transferred to the last assembly line in the factory in October 2011.
Lockheed Martin has scheduled ground tests for late March 2012.
That will include testing of the fuel system and the radar equipment. That phase will be followed by the first test flights.
http://www.flightglobal.com/assets/geta ... emid=44588PICTURES: F-35B flies with gun pod installed
Lockheed Martin's short take-off and vertical landing F-35B has made its first flight with a key weapon system for the US Marine Corps installed.
Flown from the US Navy's Patuxent River test site in Maryland on 22 February, test aircraft BF-2 carried a 25mm gun pod on a centreline weapons station, in addition to two Raytheon AIM-9X Sidewinder air-to-air missiles beneath its outboard wing stations.
"Significant weapons testing for the F-35B and F-35C variants is scheduled for 2012, including fit checks, captive carriage, pit drop and aerial drop tests," said Lockheed.
Meanwhile, Royal Air Force experimental test pilot Sqn Ldr Jim Schofield has become the first UK pilot to fly the carrier variant F-35C, having performed a sortie in test aircraft CF-2 from Patuxent River.
Turkey plans to buy 100 US F-35 fighters: report
Published Thursday, February 23, 2012
Turkey is planning to purchase 100 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters worth US$16 billion in an attempt to meet its future air force needs, Defense Minister Ismet Yilmaz was quoted as saying Thursday.
"Turkey plans to buy 100 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters, two of which will be delivered in 2015," Yilmaz told the daily Milliyet.
It is the first public announcement by Ankara of how much the program will cost.
Turkey has long planned to purchase about 100 jets to replace its aging F-4 and F-16 fleet, but increasing costs have hampered the acquisitions.
Look upon it this way. In situations like we see in Afghanistan, the hardpoints can be used to maximize warload. NATO's opponents there propably can't even spell RADAR let alone use it.jp 74 wrote:Why buy an jsf with all these hardpoints.
The radar cross section must be ==censored== with all these hardpoints.
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