Pentagon report cites "lack of maturity" of Lockheed F-35 jet

  • Thread starter ttystikk
  • Start date
  • Tagged users None
ttystikk

ttystikk

6,892
313
In summary, this program is 12 years old and at $396 billion dollars (before inevitable overruns!), has the amazing distinction of being the SINGLE MOST EXPENSIVE DEFENSE CONTRACT IN THE HISTORY OF MANKIND. And the dumb motherfuckers STILL can't get it right?!? Just in case it isn't blindingly obvious, the real reason for programs like these is to enrich the wealthy at the expense of the rest of us- this is totally unnecessary technology, as Boeing has already demonstrated that the era of the manned fighter plane is over, with several operating UCAV (Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle, aka 'fighter drone') prototypes. I make the argument that this program actually DESTABILIZES the United States, due to its outrageous cost, its total obsolescence even before pen was ever put to drawing paper, and its obvious purpose in extracting wealth from our nation's taxpayers (most of whom are middle class or poor) to enrich a tiny minority.

Article follows link: Pentagon report cites "lack of maturity" of Lockheed F-35 jet


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Lockheed Martin Corp's's new F-35 fighter jet has completed over a third of its planned flight tests, but it Still faces problems with the helmet needed to fly the plane, software development and weapons integration, according to a report by the Pentagon's chief weapons tester.
The 18-page report, sent to Congress on Friday, included a detailed account of those issues and others, which it said underscored the "lack of maturity" of the $396 billion (245.4 billion pounds) weapons program, the Pentagon's most expensive ever.
The program exceeded the number of flight tests and specific system tests planned for 2012 but lagged in some areas due to unresolved problems and newly discovered issues, the report said. It said Lockheed did not accomplish all the tests planned for 2012, but boosted the year's total of specific tests by bringing forward some evaluations planned in later years.
The program has already completed over 20,000 tests, but has 39,579 more such tests.
The report highlighted the continued growing pains of the ambitious Lockheed fighter program, which began in 2001 and has been restructured three times in recent years to slow down production and allow more progress on the development program.
Lockheed said the F-35 program continued to show progress on flight test, software development and other aspects of the reworked plan, and was demonstrating exceptional stability -- more than any other legacy aircraft development program.
"It's more important to look at the overall plan rather than year by year totals," Lockheed spokesman Michael Rein said in an emailed statement. "While we remain diligent to ensure deferred test objectives are ultimately completed, the aggregate plan remains on track."
Lockheed is building three different models of the F-35 fighter jet for the U.S. military and eight countries that helped pay for its development: Britain, Canada, Italy, Turkey, Denmark, the Netherlands, Australia and Norway.
The Pentagon plans to buy 2,443 of the warplanes in coming decades, although many analysts believe U.S. budget constraints and deficits will eventually reduce that overall number.
"The lag in accomplishing the intended 2012 flight testing content defers testing to following years, and in the meantime, will contribute to the program delivering less capability in the production aircraft in the near term," said the report prepared by Michael Gilmore, the Pentagon's director of operational test and evaluation.
Gilmore said the program remained saddled by a high level of concurrency or overlap between development, production and testing. The Pentagon planned that overlap from the start, but its top weapons buyer, Frank Kendall, has said that in retrospect, that approach amounted to "acquisition malpractice."
CONDUCTING FLIGHT TESTS
The report said the program conducted 1,092 flight tests in 2012, 18 percent more than the 927 flight tests planned, running more tests than scheduled for the Marine Corps B-model and the Navy's C-model or carrier variant.
But it fell short of the flight tests planned for the Air Force's conventional takeoff A-model. That model completed 30 percent less test points than planned due to operating limits on the plane and problems with the weapon bay doors, it said.
It said flight tests were also limited by problems with the air refuelling system, which led to restrictions on all A-model planes and required new instrumentation to isolate the cause.
The plane's stealthy coatings - which make it nearly invisible to enemy radars - were also peeling off on horizontal tail surfaces due to higher-than-expected temperatures during high-speed, high-altitude flights, the report said.
The Marine Corps version of the plane flew more than planned but lagged its target for test points by 49 percent due to issues with the weapon bay doors and an engine lift fan needed for that B-model's vertical landings, the report said.
The lift fan is built by Rolls Royce, a supplier to the engine maker, Pratt & Whitney, a unit of United Technologies Corp.
The weight of the new plane remained fairly steady over the past year, and the mean time between critical failures increased, but the plane's performance remained below the level expected for this point in the program, the report said.
The report also cited continuing delays with Lockheed's delivery of software for the new fighter, noting that software packages needed to support flight test were delayed or not complete when delivered.
It said the complex helmet that integrates data for the pilot from all the plane's sensors was still facing issues, as is a computerized logistics system.
Weapons integration testing was delayed by a number of factors, including problems with the performance of a radar system and in tracking targets.
Durability testing of the Marine's B-model had to be halted in December after multiple cracks were found on the underside of the plane's fuselage, the report said.
It also cited problems with the ability of the Navy's C-model to transfer video and imagery data to ships, and said one live-fire test revealed a potentially serious problem with the coolant system, which was now being addressed.
More work was also needed on a system aimed at protecting the plane from fuel tank explosions caused by lightning, the report concluded, noting that flight operations were currently banned within 25 miles of known lightning conditions.
No immediate comment was available from the Pentagon's F-35 program office.
(Reporting By Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Philip Barbara and Michael Perry)
 
ttystikk

ttystikk

6,892
313
Just to add insult to injury, this $396 BILLION DOLLAR BOONDOGGLE is happening during a time of relative peace- that is, it's not as if we are in or entering a war for our survival. These are your tax dollars, people- are you sure you don't care? Vast thefts like this from our national treasury bankrupt our future as a nation- and last I checked, we weren't exactly running a fat budget surplus!
 
ttystikk

ttystikk

6,892
313
bussiness as always...

This is advanced citizenship, friends; what these people do with our tax dollars very much affects us all, in ways large and small.

It is time the american public got actively involved with oversight of out out of control system of organized corruption- or there won't be a future for any of us.

Come on guys- you think The Roman Empire fell just because some clock ran out? It was entrenched, systematic corruption of everything that made the system so heavy its weight couldn't be bourne any more... and then when the whole thing collapsed it killed the poor AND the rich. How? The poor died of starvation- the rich died of complacency... and the sword.
 
Top Bottom