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Aussie Digger
Guest
Flight testing is at about 700 flights now (687 prior to March 8). Admittedly most of the fleet was grounded last week, but 7 are back in the air now and 55 flights in total are planned for March 2011, with at least 24 out of these 55 having been flown by March 8.At some point it simply has to be accepted that the F-35 program has been managed very poorly, as the current program manager Adm Vinlet stated to Congress on March 15th, and that delays keep getting announced. Now USAF IOC is stated to have another 2 year delay from 2016 to 2018 in the 2nd panels USAF submitted remarks to the above hearing.
At this point the program has completed around 500 of 7,700 test flights. Based on what is known now IOC will be 2018. Would a fool assume 2018 or that with 7,200 test flights to go that perhaps some more design changes will be required causing further delays?
The USN is buying more new F/A-18E/F's to compensate for delays in F-35 as well as planning for a long range LO strike UCAS to complement the F-18's and eventual F-35's. Long term they are working on another aircraft to replace the F-18's.
The USAF not buying any new tactical fighters for a generation and betting the farm on the F-35 was a hideous mistake. If not more F-22's then they should have purchased more F-15/16's. The only result of this poor decision will be a reduction in force structure as they will not be able to afford large enough yearly buys of F-35's to support the current force.
One can be a strong supporter of the F-35 and still be realistic about it's ongoing problems.
You can say the progam has been poorly managed or you can say that perhaps the program was overly ambitious to start with. Certainly the idea of coupling the F-35B STOVL aircraft capability into the same basic airframe for F-35 variants doesn't seem like such a hot idea with the benefit of hindsight, nor does the idea of coupling the test and development phase of the 3 variant together seem such a good idea, now that one variant has run into more development trouble than the other two and they've had to be "de-coupled" not yet a third of the way through the development phase.
However, such comments are with the benefit of hindsight. If you wish, you can pick apart virtually any such program, but what you can't do is deny that for whatever reason the USA set for itself an enormous challenge, that will in all likelyhood be met.
Let us hope that in future a slightly more realistic approach is agreed upon earlier. Meanwhile I'll enjoy the unprecedented insight into what it takes to build a modern 5th Gen fighter aircraft.
And videos like these, where you can see some very interesting things...
[nomedia="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQyf2jeElyg&feature=feedu"]YouTube - F-35 Flight Test Highlights[/nomedia]