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

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
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Unfortunately , pilot Captain Eugene J. Devlin died during one of Thunderbird's demonstrations in 1964 . Version of F-105 was B , with lots of flaws .

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Thanks for posting this Chief, I believe I saw the Birds at Sewart AFB shortly after their transition back into the Ds, Bob Hoover was there with Ole Yeller! and he used the taxi-way to take-off as part of his air-show routine in the Aero Commander Shrike, that he looped, rolled, shut down one engine and did the same, the shut down the other engine and repeated capping the airshow with a dead-stick landing.

Back to the 105s, I had seen the story a long time ago, the accident aircraft was involved in a prior air to air refueling incident where the drogue beat on the spine of the aircraft, and that aircraft had a serious repair to the main fuselage longeron or spine, the support brace for the spine was also trapezoidal shaped rather than the specified rectangular shape where it was engineered to strengthen the spine??

Very sad, and indeed these two incidents illustrate very well that the century series fighters were only slightly less dangerous to the operator than to the bad guy? This further illustrates just how sweet these new generation of fighters are to fly, they are indeed pussy-cats compared to even the early four gens, though the F-15 is no doubt a sweety, she can and will "bite" given the wrong set of circumstances.

Even the F-35B is a pussy-cat, those computer enhanced FCS's make life so much safer, and with the outstanding egress provided by the new gen ejection seats? life is just much better all the way around.
 
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
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More :)

F-35C-Sierra-Nevada.jpg

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The Aviationist said:
Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 101, the “Grim Reapers,” based at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, deployed with its F-35s to NAS Lemoore, the future basing site for the F-35C.

VFA-101, the U.S. Navy newest
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based at Eglin AFB, Florida, deployed to NAS Lemoore, California, for a six-day visit to the future basing site for the F-35C (the
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), that is scheduled to receive 10 JSFs by 2017.

A former
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, the VF-101 “Grim Reapers” was disbanded after
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and was reactivated in 2012 to receive the controversial plane that is going to become the backbone of the U.S. carrier air wings strike capabilities: in fact, by 2025, the Navy’s aircraft carrier will operate a mix of F-35Cs,
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, EA-18G Growlers electronic attack aircraft, E-2D Hawkeye battle management and control aircraft, MH-60R/S helicopters and Osprey tilt-rotor Carrier Onboard Delivery aircraft.

During the six-day visit, two
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flew in formation over the Sierra Nevada mountain range with an
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and an
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belonging to VFA-122 from Naval Air Station (NAS) Lemoore.
 
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training etc.:
Marines overhaul air-to-air combat tactics while integrating F-35 fighter jet
Marine Corps fighter pilots are refining a new plan for air-to-air combat as they integrate the F-35B Joint Strike Fighter with older jets, and it will mirror aspects of how the Air Force adapted its fleet to the F-22 Raptor.

The concept is called the Hornet Standard Game Plan, said Marine Col. James Adams, who oversees advanced tactical training for pilots. It is named after the F/A-18 Hornet jet, which the Marine Corps and Navy have used for years and continue to fly in missions against the Islamic State militant group over Iraq and Syria.

The tactics taught are classified, but an unclassified summary of the program provided to The Washington Post said the plan amounts to “an overhaul of air-to-air employment tactics” that improves how older fighter jets interact with each other and with the new F-35. It also will help the pilots coordinate with troops running mobile ground radar systems below, the summary said.

“This improvement of coordination applies to all services and increases the likelihood of mission success when executing air-to-air combat operations in a joint environment,” the summary said. It adds: “While unable to release the detailed, classified portion of the specific tactics, it is important to note that they allow for real-time decision-making against a thinking and breathing enemy.”

Adams said that many of the tactics for the F-35B and Hornets will be adopted from lessons the Air Force learned as it fielded the F-22 Raptor, an advanced fighter jet, beginning in 2005 alongside older formations still flying the F-16 Fight Falcon. The plan was taught for the first time to students who graduate later this week from the Weapons and Tactics Instructor course, a seven-week class at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma in Arizona that teaches mission planning, tactics and the use of bombs, missiles and other weapons, Adams said.

“It’s not something you can to overnight,” Adams said. “It’s going to take time to get everyone used to the new terminology and the new tactics, and then train with them.”

The plan was developed to account for the new capabilities the F-35 has. The plane is considered the most expensive weapons system ever, and was developed with new sensors that drastically improve situational awareness for pilots and radar-evading stealth technology. There are three variants of the plane, including the “B” model the Marines fly, which can take off vertically.

The transition also calls for Marine pilots and air controllers to adopt language and terminology common in the Air Force, rather than what they learn in the Navy’s famous “Top Gun” course, Adams said. Fighter pilots from other countries partnered with the United States use the Air Force system, and it made sense for the Marines to do so to improve communication, he said.

The new program comes as the Marine Corps is preparing to meet another major milestone in the fielding of the F-35. It expects its initial F-35 squadron at Yuma to reach initial operational capability this year, a designation that would mean it has at least 10 fighter jets and Marines trained and equipped to launch a variety of missions with them, including close-air support, air interdiction and armed reconnaissance.
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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
training etc.:
Marines overhaul air-to-air combat tactics while integrating F-35 fighter jet

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Well of course they are.

The F-35B for the Marines is going to be flown, operated, and engaged in combat different than what they would do with an AV-8B.

Also different than with their F-18s.

They HAVE to do this for this new aircraft.
 
news from The House:
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The House Armed Services Committee wants to add up to six F-35B STOVL jets to the
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budget, even as it demands new oversight into Lockheed Martin’s
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. The House draft National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2016 would not add any
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, the Navy variant. Instead, it will include up to a dozen additional Boeing
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, the current carrier-based fighter. The Navy had requested both the F-18s and eight additional F-35Cs in its unfunded requirements list, but the committee decided to only plus up the older, proven plane. Meanwhile, on the ground, HASC would add an unspecified sum to upgun the Army’s eight-wheel-drive
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armored vehicles, built by General Dynamics, against
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.

In a press briefing this morning on the Tactical Air & Land Forces subcommittee’s portion of the bill, committee staff declined to give specific figures. The staffers said that exact dollar figures remain in flux across subcommittee jurisdictions, so it was premature to say exactly how many fighter aircraft would be added. What they would say was that subcommittee members were striving to meet the targets in the Navy and Marine Corps’ Unfunded Requirements List: six F-35Bs and 12 F-18s.

Adding the F-35Bs says more about the members’ love for the Marine Corps than it does about the F-35 program. The subcommittee language demands a Government Accountability Office study of
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(Autonomic Logistics Information System) and a study by a
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of the
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.

The subcommittee also asked the Army to report on its complex
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, its long-term options for
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, and its plan to upgrade
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UH-60A Black Hawk helicopters, which the legislators want to accelerate. At the same time, the mark-up makes modest (but, again, unspecified) additions to Army procurement programs such as the Hercules recovery vehicle — essentially a tracked tow-truck for tanks — and Javelin anti-tank missiles — which the
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are currently begging for to counter to Russian armored vehicles.

The most tantalizing item was the provision to upgun some Stryker vehicles, which are currently the Army’s heaviest weapons in Europe in the absence of a full-up
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. This item is apparently a “late-breaking” response to a still-evolving requirement for
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.

“It is related to an emerging…operational need statement [ONS] to potentially upgrade some current Stryker vehicles with more effective weapons,” one Hill staffer told me. “[It’s] still in staffing in the Pentagon, [and] it is not clear what exactly the
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has in mind yet.”

Language about the A-10’s retirement won’t be available until the full committee markup next Wednesday, staff said.
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related to my preceding post:
Navy Leans Toward Building More Super Hornets After F-35C Delays
The
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is considering extending production of its
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beyond 2017 because of delays in production of the Navy’s carrier-launched
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and increased demands on the Hornet fleet, service leaders said.

Navy leaders had planned to halt production of the F/A-18 Super Hornet at Boeing’s St. Louis plant in 2017 as the service prepared to replace Hornets with Joint Strike Fighters.

In order to reduce operational risk, Navy aviation leaders have said the service needs two to three additional squadrons of Super Hornets as older
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reach the end of their useful service life.

“We have looked at the F-18 inventory as part of our overall inventory management. The CNO (Chief of Naval Operations) has testified that looking at our inventory from now into the mid-2020s and 2030s — we need about two to three squadrons of Super Hornets to really reduce risk going forward as we procure F-35Cs,” Rear Adm. Michael Manazir, airector of air warfare, told Military.com in an interview.

A carrier air wing consists of about 44 strike aircraft made up of two 10-aircraft squadrons and two 12-plane squadrons complemented by several
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. Therefore, the Navy’s stated need for additional squadrons would require the addition of more than 20 new aircraft.

The current composition of most carrier-based air wings includes 24 Super Hornets and 20 Hornets. The Navy plans to replace the existing Hornets with F-35Cs.

When the F/A-18A and F/A-18C reach 8,000 flight hours, they are sent into the depot for service life extension upgrades with the hope of getting the airframes to 10,000 hours. However, many of the older aircraft are in need of substantial repairs and, at the moment, as many as 54 percent of the Navy’s fleet of older Hornets are not in service.

The depots cannot keep up with the demand to repair airplanes due to the deployment of F-18s, industry and Navy officials have explained.

“How many hours do I have left on the F-18-A and F-18C? I have to manage my procurement strategy to get an integrated air wing into the future,” Manazir said.

The Navy had been planning for the Super Hornets to serve well into the 2030s, but now service leaders say that timeline will need to extend into the 2040s. Manazir explained that the Navy plans to begin buying 20 F-35Cs a year by 2020.

“I’ve been flying F-A-18s to the tune of about 350 hours per year per tail. If I am flying at that rate, I need to replace those airplanes — 35 to 39 airplanes per year. As F-35C continues to push out and we are not buying 35 to 39 airplanes — you will see a deficit. We need strike fighters. We need some relatively near term,” Manazir explained.

The Navy recently placed 12 Super Hornets and eight Joint Strike Fighter F-35Cs on the 2016 unfunded requirements list, a wish list of extra items annually sent over to Congress as lawmakers prepare to mark up the annual budget.

The F/A-18 production line includes production of the F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet as well as the
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electronic warfare aircraft. So far, the Navy, Boeing and its partners have built and delivered about 500 F/A-18 E/F aircraft, Navy officials said.

Overall, the F-18 program plans to acquire 563 F/A-18E/F Super Hornets; however, that number appears to be on the rise. The A, C and D models are no longer being made.

Boeing officials have said they need to decide about the production line at some point later this year, indicating a need to make a decision about whether to buy what’s called long-lead production items.

The F/A-18 industrial footprint spreads across 44 states and is responsible for more than $6 billion in estimated annual economic impact, including 90,000 direct and indirect jobs.

The Navy is considering a series of upgrades to the F/A-18 Super Hornet aircraft designed to increase the range and performance of the aircraft, Manazir added.

These proposed upgrades include the use of conformal fuel tanks, avionics enhancements and an external weapons pod designed to reduce the aircraft’s radar signature.

If the Navy decides to pursue these Boeing-funded upgrades to the aircraft, it is possible the Navy could also buy more than the 563 proposed, Navy officials said. Citing affordability concerns, Manazir said it was unlikely that all of the proposed upgrades would take place simultaneously.

Manazir added that the Navy plans for the Super Hornet to operate with the F-35C, although plenty of questions remain whether the Super Hornets would neutralize the F-35’s stealth characteristics.

The Navy is also involved in an ongoing joint study to assess the need for E/A-18G Growler jamming or electronic attack aircraft.

“We have enough Growlers to support the Navy mission, but what joint airborne electronic attack missions will we need to support in the future? Right now, we have 153 of them. If the joint fight requires more Growlers, then those would also come off the same line,” he explained.

The rapid technological improvement of potential adversaries’ air defense systems has created a circumstance wherein the F-35C’s stealth technology will at times need to work in tandem with the support of Growler electronic jamming aircraft.

“Maneuvering inside all of the bands of the spectrum is very important. If there is a strike fighter that is optimized for a certain part of the spectrum, you have to worry about dominating the rest of the spectrum,” Manazir explained. “If you are going to operate against high-end integrated air defense systems, you will have to have a combination of low-radar cross-section and probably some kind of jamming characteristics.”
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Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
related to my preceding post:
Navy Leans Toward Building More Super Hornets After F-35C Delays

source:
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Yes, Navy Secretary Mabus stated last week that the F-35 was the Navy's last manned manned fighter, thankfully Air Force Secretary Welsh doesn't buy that? Read todays AFM Daily Report for General Welsh's response??? that's why the Navy is flying the F-18 as opposed to the F-22C??? there is no doubt a bias against aviator's there that makes as much sense as stating the "Ford, is the Navy's last manned Aircraft Carrier??"

That's why that F-18 has an F-22 painted on its cockpit railing??:cool:
 
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