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

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Brat...I just LOVE seeing that Charlie on the carrier deck, taking off, landing, flying overhead.

Look at ALL OF THAT WING my friend!

View attachment 30643 View attachment 30644 View attachment 30645

Gorgeous yes, and as I always say, the wing is the thing, but I don't want to forget that fabulous fuselage, and all that LockMart "lifting body" goodness?, the A is quite amazing, and like the Raptor, it has lots of lift as well as having been to 9.9Gs in testing and 105 degrees angle of attack, so the A has lots of lift, but I definitely like the C wing and tailfeathers, and no doubt a lovely place to store fuel.

and yes, though I'm just the lowly Air Force Brat, as an aviator, I put on my Navy Wings an love every minute of that C model coming aboard ship, and I am very impressed with the "glide path" control through the flaps, just amazing. and even more amazing is we have have BD Popeye back in the wheel-house.

I trust you are healing my brother, your posts have taken on that "HeadMaster" excellence once again, wouldn't want you to lose that "combat edge"!

also note that the "brother" is carring a lot of positive alpha as he smokes the mains on deck! all good, lots of lift, and lots of "tractability" in that bird!
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
has lots of lift, but I definitely like the C wing and tailfeathers, and no doubt a lovely place to store fuel.
Sure carry a bit more fuel as a F-22... but reinforced airframes, gear so finaly the CR is of 1130 km bs 1080 for A, remains very good and especialy better than Hornet he replace in first 700 km... Supe r Hornet 900 km undoubtely for a good fighter her more bad spécifications, main problems for a fighter of 30 t in more.. for the rest get an ASEA a little less good as F-35 but decent, 11 HP, possible 12 AAM, can be armed armed with 6 bombs max good A2G load.

F-14 had CR of 1200 km, A-6E 1400 clearly better.

After an UAV light bomber can help F-35 can easy have a CR of 1500/1700 km without cockpit you have room for fuel, with 2 t of bombs inferior but can do good job.

The range with new threads... is very important CVN needs to be to distance.
It is completely clear now impossible 2 CV in the Taiwan Strait as in 1996...
i don' t want say CAW is to low but need to take more precautions now.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
How many degrees in general more low to better ?

I'm glad you asked, in the old days, for the 100 series fighters, max AOA was likely around 15 degrees, and then you departed and all kinds of BAD STUFF would happen, the F-15, F-16 in the 18 to 25 degree range, and the F-35 is nominally limited to 50 degrees angle of attack or twice the AOA of an F-16. (note that in flight test without the AOA limiter, it was initially flown to 73 degrees AOA, and as testing progressed, eventually to the 105 degree limit) [also note that those numbers are never seen in practical flight applications, but they do show how much lift is actually available, and how much MARGIN is built in for safety]

So while you see aircraft pitching to the vertical, the AOA may in fact be very low, and another aircraft at low speed in level flight, may have a very high AOA. So the F-35 is simply a much safer aircraft, and extremely departure resistant in comparison to the F-16, in fact the F-16 has two longitudinal strakes mounted on the aft fuselage to "enhance directional control, and to provide a downward pitching action should the aircraft in fact be "departed" or "stalled", that will provide longitudinal stability to maintain directional control and inhibit a spin, and an upward pitching moment to lift the tail and lower the nose and "break" the stall.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Like much your comments of driver :)

Back to Navalized fighers one Ex. : Rafale Navy weighs 500 kgs in more than AF variant with more robust landing gear, airframe.

US Navy makes F-35C carrier qualification push

The US Navy continued a three-year campaign to build the Lockheed Martin F-35C’s sea legs with the third and last shipboard deployment of the development test phase for the carrier-based variant starting on 14 August.

Five production aircraft from the navy’s Eglin AFB-based training squadron joined two test F-35Cs — numbered CF-3 and CF-5 — onboard the USS George Washington aircraft carrier in the Atlantic Ocean for a two-seek series of flight tests, as well as deck and hangar suitability checks.

The third carrier deployment since November 2014 for the single-engined fighter is focusing on expanding the F-35C’s flight envelope with take-offs and landing, including various configurations of external stores, a semi-automated landing mode called Delta Flight Path and take-offs and landings in cross-wind conditions.

The F-35C also is being scrutinized for how its redesigned arresting hook performs the George Washington’s flight deck. In the first round of carrier testing aboard the USS Nimitz in November 2014, the F-35C’s resculpted tailhook performed flawlessly, with no unplanned missed landings in 122 attempts, according to a 2016 report by the Pentagon’s Office of Test Evaluation. Such testing includes some planned missed approaches to evaluate how the aircraft performs during a go-around.

But a follow-up deployment last October aboard the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower resulted in seven “bolters” in 62 attempted carrier landings. Those results may have been skewed, however, because one of the four arresting wires on the Eisenhower’s deck was out of service during the demonstration.

In dozens of attempted landings from 14 August to 17 August on the Washington, the F-35Cs had reported no unplanned missed landings, according to the F-35 joint programme office.

Carrier suitability also evaluates how the F-35C is maintained at sea. Operations require maintainers to perform checks of engines and auxiliary power units (APUs) below-deck inside the carrier’s hangar. The functional APU in the F-35C — Honeywell’s integrated power package (IPP) — vents hot exhaust upward from the top of the fuselage. The navy’s maintainers are monitoring whether the heat damages the hangar ceiling and how the emissions escape from within the hangar bay.

The F-35C also introduces a new innovation in flight controls for cold-sweat-inducing carriers landings. Under the “Magic Carpet” programme, the navy integrated direct lift controls into the throttle and coupled that with a new Delta Flight Path law to partially automate the glideslope path, with the pilot required to make only minor corrections after “calling the ball” on final approach to the carrier.

Passing the carrier qualifications is one of the final steps in the overall F-35 programme’s 15-year-old system development and demonstration (SDD) programme. The F-35C is scheduled to become the last of the three variants to achieve initial operational capability in 2018, following operational clearances for the US Air Force’s F-35A in July and the Marine Corps’ F-35B a year before.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Like much your comments of driver :)

Back to Navalized fighers one Ex. : Rafale Navy weighs 500 kgs in more than AF variant with more robust landing gear, airframe.

"Five production aircraft from the navy’s Eglin AFB-based training squadron joined two test F-35Cs — numbered CF-3 and CF-5 — onboard the USS George Washington aircraft carrier in the Atlantic Ocean for a two-seek series of flight tests, as well as deck and hangar suitability checks."
That's seven F-35Cs on the carrier.

I can't wait to see pics of all seven of them lined up on that carrier.

You can bet there will be photo ops of that very thing coming out.

Mmmm...smells so sweet...I can smell it from here. Mmmm...mmm, Mom's got something good cooking up over there.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
I definitely like the C wing and tailfeathers, and no doubt a lovely place to store fuel.
Here...look at all of that gorgeous wing!

dt-iii-landing-carousel__main.jpg


Brat said:
trust you are healing my brother, your posts have taken on that "HeadMaster" excellence once again, wouldn't want you to lose that "combat edge"!
The Lord has been good to me my friend. They saved me from certain paralysis this time around and the work they did there and on other places where the cancer is in the bone was very successful.

The tumpors in my liver are another matter. They have some test/targeted Chem they want me to tory. One of its side effects is potential damage to the liver. And I know other patients with my cancer who have gotten deathly ill and had to stop it.

I had another scan last week and the liver tumor has not grown at all...so I am going to leave it alone.

If it goes bonkers on my...I may reconsider. But I want to maximize the amount of "feeling good" that I can for Momma and the grandkids especially.

The rest is in the good Lord's Hands...and I am fine with that. His will will be what I want to have happen, whatever that may be.
 

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
Here...look at all of that gorgeous wing!

View attachment 30699


The Lord has been good to me my friend. They saved me from certain paralysis this time around and the work they did there and on other places where the cancer is in the bone was very successful.

The tumpors in my liver are another matter. They have some test/targeted Chem they want me to tory. One of its side effects is potential damage to the liver. And I know other patients with my cancer who have gotten deathly ill and had to stop it.

I had another scan last week and the liver tumor has not grown at all...so I am going to leave it alone.

If it goes bonkers on my...I may reconsider. But I want to maximize the amount of "feeling good" that I can for Momma and the grandkids especially.

The rest is in the good Lord's Hands...and I am fine with that. His will will be what I want to have happen, whatever that may be.

May you live the rest of your days happy and in peace Jeff
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
May you live the rest of your days happy and in peace Jeff
Thabnk you my friend...I hope to just that.

I have an angle for a wife who has helped me so much, and whom I have no doubt through her love and care, got me through the initial crisis in 2009-2010. I do not think I would have made it then without her.

She has continued to help me so much ever since.

I have a bunch of grand kids (11 of them) who love their papa and keep me going...and my own children, all five of them who are constantly praying for me, seeing how I am doing, and helping in any way they can.

Finally, I have faith in God and know He is aware of my travails and loves me, and has a place for me, with my Mom and Dad, two brothers, all of my grandparents, who are all already there.

I have been blessed far beyond what I deserve...and hope to be able to help others as I continue to battle this cancer.

Ultimately, it is in God's hands...and I rust Him and His Son completely. It is a big part of who I am and my faith....and I am thankful for it.

If you ever get the chance, read the words to the Hymn, "BE still my soul." it is one of my favorites and I sing it to myself, and sometimes out loud when I am out walking, and it helps me stay grounded in my faith and understand that everything will be all right.
 
..., whatever that may be.
hold up Jeff!
Navy F-35C Landed So Precisely, It Tore Up a Runway
Before seven of the Navy’s carrier-variant F-35 Joint Strike Fighters embarked aboard the carrier USS George Washington for its third and final round of developmental testing, they completed a required ashore training period, practicing landings at Choctaw Naval Outlying Field near Pensacola, Florida. The landings went well — maybe a little too well.

“They were landing in the same spot on the runway every time, tearing up where the hook touches down,” Vice Adm. Mike Shoemaker, head of Naval Air Forces, told an audience at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. Thursday. “So we quickly realized, we needed to either fix the runway or adjust, put some variants in the system. So that’s how precise this new system is.”

The new system in question is called Delta Flight Path, a built-in F-35C technology that controls glide slope and minimizes the number of variables pilots to monitor as they complete arrested carrier landings. A parallel system known as MAGIC CARPET, short for Maritime Augmented Guidance with Integrated Controls for Carrier Approach and Recovery Precision Enabling Technologies, is being developed for use with the Navy’s F/A-18 E/F Super Hornets and EA-18G Growlers. Together, these systems may allow carriers to operate with fewer tankers, leaving more room for other aircraft, Shoemaker said.

Military.com reported on the implications of this new landing technology from the carrier George Washington earlier this week, as the first operational pilot-instructors with Strike Fighter Squadron 101, out of Oceana, Virginia, began daytime carrier qualifications on the aircraft. On Thursday, Shoemaker had an update on the ongoing carrier tests.

Of about 100 F-35C arrested landings completed on the carrier, he said, 80 percent engaged the 3-wire, meaning the aircraft had touched down at the ideal spot. As of Monday, there had been zero bolters, when the aircraft misses an arresting wire and must circle the carrier for another attempt.

“I think that’s going to give us the ability to look at the way we work up and expand the number of sorties. I think it will change the way we operate around the ship … in terms of the number of tankers you have to have up, daytime and nighttime,” he said. “I think that will give us a lot of flexibility in the air wing in the way we use those strike fighters.”

Tankers, or in-air refueling aircraft, come into play because they as required to be at the ready when aircraft make arrested landings in case they run low on fuel during landing attempts. Fewer bolters means, prospectively, a reduced tanker requirement.

“Right now we configure maybe six to eight tankers aboard the ship,” Shoemaker said. “I don’t think we need to to that many. That will give us flexibility on our strike fighter numbers, increase the Growler numbers, which I know we’re going to do, and probably E2D [Advanced Hawkeye carrier-launched radar aircraft] as well.”

The F-35C’s last developmental testing phase is set to wrap up Aug. 23. MAGIC CARPET is expected to be introduced to the fleet in 2019, officials have said.
source:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Top