F-35 Lightning II developments

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atla
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by atla »

atla
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by atla »

And the newest USA GAO report about the JSF. Great choice that JSF...:clap:

http://www.jsfnieuws.nl/?p=1111
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Piet Luijken »

Not uncommon for modern fighter, just look at Typhoon: still working on the ultimate softwate for all its systems, and one-third non-operational.

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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Coati »

No: CR-054-14
March 25, 2014
CONTRACTS
NAVY
Lockheed Martin Corp., Fort Worth, Texas, is being awarded a $698,032,385 fixed-price-incentive, firm target, advanced acquisition contract to procure long lead parts, materials and components in support of 57 Low Rate Initial Production Lot IX F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) aircraft, including: 26 F-35A Conventional Takeoff and Landing (CTOL) aircraft for the Air Force; six F-35B Short Takeoff Vertical Landing (STOVL) aircraft for the Marine Corps; two F-35C Carrier Variant aircraft for the Navy; six F-35A CTOL aircraft for the government of Norway; one F-35A CTOL for the government of Italy; seven F-35A CTOL aircraft for the government of Israel; two CTOL aircraft for the government of Japan; six F-35B STOVL for the United Kingdom, and one F-35B STOVL aircraft for the government of Italy. Work will be performed in Fort Worth, Texas, and is expected to be completed in May 2015. Fiscal 2014 aircraft procurement, Air Force, Marine Corps, Navy funds and international partner funds in the amount of $698,032,384 are being obligated on this award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 2304(c)(1). The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Md., is the contracting activity (N00019-14-C-0002).

http://www.defense.gov/contracts/contra ... actid=5248

Whats new: the 6 F-35s for the UK (they were expected to order a bunch of 14, most probably 6 in this batch and 8 in the next), only one F-35A for Italy so far instead of 3, de rest as expected.
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by aviodromefriend »

Clearance for the first trans-Atlantic crossing seems to be considered for this July. Two or three machines would visit Fairford and Farnborough, if it will happen.
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by atla »

Nu op JSFnieuws:

Kans neemt toe: “Niet meer, eerder minder F-35’s”
Inmiddels is, zoals bekend sinds november 2013 de parlementaire goedkeuring binnen. Nu nog de inspanning om Nederland zo ver te krijgen, dat dit er meer worden. Want of de 37 toestellen betaalbaar zijn, moet in 2015 bij de contractonderhandelingen blijken. Intussen gaan er steeds sterkere geruchten binnen het Ministerie van Defensie, dat zelfs de aanschaf van 37 toestellen een serieus probleem lijkt te worden, eerder moet gedacht worden aan een neerwaartse bijstelling (richting 30-32?), dan aan een opwaartse bijstelling :(
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Coati »

atla wrote:Nu op JSFnieuws:
Kans neemt toe: “Niet meer, eerder minder F-35’s”
Inmiddels is, zoals bekend sinds november 2013 de parlementaire goedkeuring binnen. Nu nog de inspanning om Nederland zo ver te krijgen, dat dit er meer worden. Want of de 37 toestellen betaalbaar zijn, moet in 2015 bij de contractonderhandelingen blijken. Intussen gaan er steeds sterkere geruchten binnen het Ministerie van Defensie, dat zelfs de aanschaf van 37 toestellen een serieus probleem lijkt te worden, eerder moet gedacht worden aan een neerwaartse bijstelling (richting 30-32?), dan aan een opwaartse bijstelling :(
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by wamovements »

sdamico wrote:F-35 'Lightning 41' departed to Eglin (VPS) today (March 20).

SD
Was this 11-5027 or 11-5029?

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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by sharpshooter »

I saw F-35A 11-5037 fly on thursday afternoon, March 20th. Don't know if it was the first flight or so. Still in primer no sqn mks. Does anyone know to which unit it will go?
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Coati »

Canada: No F-35 Buys Before 2018

By DAVID PUGLIESE
Posted: Sunday Apr 6, 2014

Canada has told the US government it won't be in a position to purchase the F-35 fighter jet until 2018, a move that critics of the aircraft say intentionally delays the controversial procurement until after the next federal election.

The decision has a number of ramifications. It will allow the ruling Conservative Party government to claim during the 2015 election campaign that no decision has yet been made on the purchase of a new fighter jet.

But if the Conservatives are defeated in that election, set for October 2015, it could mean further delays or even a cancellation of the proposed buy, since the country's other political parties have raised concerns about the acquisition. Both the Liberal Party and the New Democratic Party favor an open competition for a new fighter jet.

The F-35 Joint Program Office in the US has amended the Canadian "buy profile," which indicates numbers of aircraft and timelines of the purchase.

"This moves the notional date of first delivery of aircraft from 2017 to 2018," the Canadian government noted in a statement. No official reason was provided by Canada for the change in dates.

But industry, military and government officials say the change means a final decision won't need to be made until after 2015.

"This whole thing is designed to delay and to get the Conservatives past the next election so they don't have to come clean with Canadians about their F-35 plans," Liberal Party defense critic Joyce Murray said.

Her analysis was echoed by Jack Harris, defense critic with the official opposition New Democratic Party, as well as Alan Williams, the Department of National Defence's former head of procurement who approved Canada's participation in the F-35 program.

Canada's Conservative Party government committed in 2010 to purchasing 65 F-35s, but the acquisition soon became a major political albatross around the neck of Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Opposition MPs alleged his government misled Canadians on the F-35's price and performance.

In March 2011, the majority of the members of Parliament supported a motion that declared the Conservative government in contempt of Parliament over its withholding of information about the F-35, as well as other key financial documents on other issues. That motion of non-confidence in the government led to the federal election in May 2011, but despite the controversy, the Conservative Party was re-elected.

But in April 2012, Canadian Auditor General Michael Ferguson found Department of National Defence officials had withheld key information from Parliament about the fighter jet, underestimated costs and didn't follow proper procurement rules.

In December 2012, the government, under continuing fire over the increasing cost of the F-35s, announced it would put the procurement on a temporary hold and examine other aircraft.

That process continues, but senior officers from the Royal Canadian Air Force have publicly stated they are preparing for the eventual delivery of the F-35.

Until the evaluation of other aircraft is complete, the government will not decide on how to proceed, said Pierre-Alain Bujold, a spokesman for Public Works and Government Services Canada. That department handles federal procurements.

Bujold said the "work is being completed as expeditiously as possible," but the department could not provide any timelines on when it might be finished or a final decision on an acquisition made.

That's because the process is a public relations exercise, former defense procurement chief Alan Williams alleges.

"It's all designed to buy the government time so they can pick the opportune moment to announce the purchase of the F-35," Williams said.

Jack Harris, defense critic with the official opposition New Democratic Party, said the F-35 acquisition has the potential to hurt the Conservative government's image with voters in the upcoming election.

"They portray themselves as strong fiscal managers, but they have bungled numerous defense procurement files, particularly the F-35," he said. "They don't want this mess hanging over their heads during an election campaign."

In his 2012 examination, Ferguson found that although Department of National Defence officials were publicly claiming the F-35 purchase would cost CAN $14.7 billion (US $13 billion), they had already quietly estimated the actual price tag to be $25 billion.

Mike Barton, a spokesman for Lockheed Martin Canada, said the delay will not affect the F-35 program. When Canada is ready to place its order for the planes, the company will respond, he said.

Canada is still a partner in the program and has not informed the US government or Lockheed Martin of any plans to change that.

Canada operates 78 modernized CF-18 fighters and was planning to replace those with the F-35A, the conventional-takeoff-and-landing version of the F-35. ?

Email: dpugliese@defensenews.com.

http://mobile.defensenews.com/article/304060010
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Coati »

http://www.aviationweek.com/Article.asp ... 678532.xml

Denmark Kicks Off Fighter Contest
By Anthony Osborne tony.osborne@aviationweek.com
Source: AWIN First

April 14, 2014
Credit: Tony Osborne

Denmark has fired the starting pistol in its contest for a new fighter aircraft, sending out requests for information to four manufacturers.

Officials from the New Combat Aircraft Program have sent what they call Requests for Binding Information (RBI) to Boeing for the F/A-18F Super Hornet, to Eurofighter for the Typhoon, to Lockheed Martin for the F-35A and to Saab for the Gripen E, as the country looks to replace its aging fleet of F-16 Fighting Falcons. Dassault and its Rafale have not been invited.Candidates are expected to return the information in July, with officials due to make a selection on the aircraft in mid-2015 based on the platform’s ability to be updated during its operational life, its operations and maintenance costs, and also a willingness by the companies to develop industrial relationships with Danish industry.The new aircraft are likely to enter service between 2020-2024, by which time the Danish F-16s will be up to 45 years old.

“This is a comprehensive and detailed information gathering to help provide the New Combat Aircraft Program with the best possible data base to analyze and evaluate the candidate aircraft on the various assessment areas,” Danish officials say.

Copenhagen announced in March last year that as part of its defense plan 2013-2017, it would embark on a search for a new fighter aircraft, an initiative originally started in 2005 but shelved in 2010.

Denmark is already a Level 3 signatory to the Joint Strike Fighter program, having signed up in 2002. Indeed, one of its F-16Bs is stationed at Edwards AFB, Calif., to support the aircraft’s flight test program. But being a signatory to the program does not oblige it to purchase the aircraft, and Danish industry has reportedly expressed disappointment about the amount of business won from the F-35 program.
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by sdamico »

wamovements wrote:
sdamico wrote:F-35 'Lightning 41' departed to Eglin (VPS) today (March 20).

SD
Was this 11-5027 or 11-5029?

Regards
Dennis Peteri
Sorry, Dennis, but I wasn't able to note the serial.

SD
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Stratofreighter »

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/nationa ... mm-premium
April 23, 2014 12:00AM :wink:

THE Abbott government has committed Australia to its biggest-ever defence purchase, ordering 58 more Joint Strike Fighters for the Royal Australian Air Force at a cost of $12.4 billion.

The cost includes $1.6bn in new facilities and infrastructure to be built for the new aircraft at RAAF Base Williamtown in NSW and RAAF Base Tindal in the Northern Territory.
November 2024 update at FokkerNews.nl....
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Coati »

Some more info here:

The 58 aircraft will comprise a second tranche of the Australian Defence Force’s Air 6000 Phase 2A/2B new air combat capability (NACC) project. The first tranche totalled 14 A-model jets, two of which are currently in final production as part of the multinational programme’s sixth lot of low-rate initial production (LRIP). A contract covering long-lead production items for the other 12 during LRIP blocks eight and nine is currently being negotiated with the USA.
The first two RAAF aircraft are scheduled to be delivered to the USAF’s integrated training centre at Luke AFB in Arizona by the end of the year, while the service’s first pilot for the type will begin training at Eglin AFB in California in December, and the second at Luke in April 2015. Australia's first F-35A unit will be 3 Sqn, based at RAAF Williamtown in New South Wales. Its first four aircraft are to be ferried to Australia in 2018 to support operational evaluation activities, before the type achieves initial operating capability in 2020.

More at the link:

http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articl ... er-398443/
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Re: F-35 Lightning II JSF developments

Post by Coati »

And confirmed:

PM confirms RAAF order for 58 F-35As

The Australian government has approved the purchase of a further 58 Lockheed Martin F-35A Lightning IIs to allow the replacement of the RAAF’s fleet of F/A-18A/B ‘classic’ Hornets. Prime Minister Tony Abbott made the formal announcement – which would take Australia’s F-35 acquisition to 72 jets, after a first batch of 14 F-35As was approved by the previous Labor government – in Canberra on Wednesday.

The 58 additional jets will be acquired at a cost of $12.4 billion, a pricetag that includes $1.4 billion in facilities work at RAAF Bases Williamtown and Tindal, plus training, spare parts, weapons and support equipment.

So 72 jets for Australia as planned. In the future another 28 might be purchased.

http://australianaviation.com.au/2014/0 ... 58-f-35as/
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