Are you sure about the 2nd Italian F-35B?Bjorn wrote: This is the LRIP X overview (Italic data not confirmed but educated guess.):
Italy: (1) BL-02; MM7XXX; 169599
Not to be found in the original order of 90 LRIP X aircraft.
Are you sure about the 2nd Italian F-35B?Bjorn wrote: This is the LRIP X overview (Italic data not confirmed but educated guess.):
Italy: (1) BL-02; MM7XXX; 169599
Melchior, just as the single Italian F-35A isn't included in the 90 airframe order either, but with a one FY number gap between USAF and Norway we can assume this one is for the Italian airfame. Same goes for the F-35B I guess. But as I stated this is still an educated guess. We will probably know when the first F-35C is delivered and what BuNo that one has and how large the BuNo gap between the last USMC F-35B is and the first USNavy F-35C. If it's a four number gap, we know the Italian one is included. Unless they changed the order of BuNo sequence ones more. Time will tell .Melchior Timmers wrote:Are you sure about the 2nd Italian F-35B?Bjorn wrote: This is the LRIP X overview (Italic data not confirmed but educated guess.):
Italy: (1) BL-02; MM7XXX; 169599
Not to be found in the original order of 90 LRIP X aircraft.
https://www.defensenews.com/air/2018/03 ... ad-states/EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, FL, UNITED STATES
02.27.2018
Photo by Airman 1st Class Emily Smallwood
33rd Fighter Wing/Public Affairs
From left,
U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class William Hinkle, 33rd Aircraft Maintenance Squadron crew chief, Major Christopher Collins, 58th Fighter Squadron assistant director of operations, and A1C Cody Cheeley, 33 AMXS crew chief,
celebrate by giving a gorilla roar
in front of a F-35A Lightning II Feb. 27, 2018, at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.
Tail number 5017 is the first F-35A
to reach 1,000 flight hours outside of the aircraft test community.
(U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Emily Smallwood/Released)
Stealth features responsible for half of F-35 defects, Lockheed program head states
As the production rate of Lockheed Martin’s F-35 joint strike fighter goes up,
the company is wrestling with quality escapes involving the jet’s low observability features,
which now amount to about half of all defects on the aircraft,
the company’s vice president of the program revealed Monday.
Speaking to reporters at Lockheed’s media day on Monday,
Jeff Babione acknowledged that low observability, or LO,
capabilities in particular are posing a challenge to the company.
In part, that’s because they are so unique and because production is ramping up quickly.
Numbers changed a few times. Total should be 90 now according to the latest numbers.Starfighter_F-104G wrote:I had 74 LRIP11 F-35s for US plus 20 adding
48 F-34A + 10= 58
18 F-35B + 6 = 24
8 F-35C + 4 = 12
-----------------
total 94 for US
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