Brumby
Major
Firstly, welcome back from your self imposed hiatus. LOL.Jul 3, 2015
in the meantime, I was (almost) fooled by
after F-35B IOC was described as such a success in
F-35 OT-1 By the Numbers
while later the hard data were obtained (), made available in
which you may (and some of you won'tread to check this graphics:
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which is yet another
F-35 OT-1 By the Numbers
so I have been skeptical about the official success stories, as in (recent examples posted here):
With regards to your comments regarding operational testing (OT), I am not entirely clear what is your main point. It would be helpful if you wish to connect two events and their corresponding documents to reference specifically to specific contents within those document(s) that you wish to anchor your points. This will ensure greater clarity on the nature of your intended conversation.
I am taking the liberty to connect the dots and also to assume what is on your mind which I think is your contention on the degree, depth, complexity and realism of the operational testing relative to real world conditions. In other words, they are cosmetic rather than substantive testing.


The issue raised while reasonable is also highly subject to many qualifiers just as the proverbial question on "how long is a piece of string". In fact one of the key challenge in adequate testing of fifth generation platforms is putting together a threat environment sufficient to test their capabilities because after all they are designed to go against the most complex and advanced threats that could conceivably be placed in their path. Operational testing is not a snap shot event but a continuous stream of events to work on the capabilities of the platform.
Testing 5th generation platform effectiveness is a major challenge.


Setting up such test I believe is a complex exercise. In this particular situations, the focus was on how capable the F-35's were able to meet the mission task and not a test on sortie generation which you seem to imply.Jun 23, 2016
from inside: "... 88 sorties ... Seven F-35As ... June 6-17 ..." deployment, so it's, on average, almost exactly, one sortie per one day per one aircraft ... with no info about the duration of those flights
I remember reading a recent article reporting that the 2nd squadron will not have a full complement of aircraft until 2018. If you are equating a news headline description as a program problem you may be overly critical.Wednesday at 2:06 PM
from inside: "... the squadron received its first two F-35B aircraft on May 9 — three days after it completed its final flights with the Harrier. Officials did not immediately respond to a request about when the remaining joint strike fighters made by Lockheed Martin Corp. would join the squadron. ..." so in my opinion, the headline is pathetic
is all this just the business as usual? LOL