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Captain_Obvious
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Visual comparison of the F-16, F-35, F-22
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America’s brand-new F-35 Lightning II is currently undergoing a series of tests over Fort Worth, Texas. The third flight on Wednesday tested the aircraft at 23,000 feet, the highest altitude the aircraft has ever been. And this week, Lockheed Martin’s chief test pilot Jon Beesley — the only man on the planet to have flown the F-35 — plans to take the jet even higher.

The F-35 is not the first fighter ever tested by Beesley, a 56-year-old former Air Force officer and grandfather of six. He also is the second man in the world to fly the Air Force’s latest air supremacy fighter, the F-22 Raptor (designed to replace the F-15 Eagle). And he was one of the first to fly the now aging F-117 Nighthawk (the world’s “first operational stealth aircraft”).

Like the Raptor and the Nighthawk, the F-35 is a stealth fighter. But it is the first-ever aircraft designed to replace four existing aircraft from three services. In full production, it will replace currently operational fighters like the Air Force’s F-16 Fighting Falcon and the “tank killing” A-10 Thunderbolt, the Navy and Marine Corps’ F-18 Hornet, and the Marines’ AV-8 Harrier “jump jet.”

On Wednesday afternoon, a few hours after testing the F-35, Beesley explained why the new nine-G, Mach 1.6 (just over 1,200 miles per hour) fighter is unlike anything ever flown.

“I’ve never felt any airplane that had better performance coming off the ground,” Beesley tells National Review Online. “I had a very good idea of how I would climb out, but [because the single Pratt and Whitney F135 engine generates more thrust than any fighter engine ever built] I had to keep pulling the nose up. I was thinking, ‘this is interesting.’”

MORE FIGHTING THAN FLYING
In September, I talked with with Marine Lt. Col. Arthur “Turbo” Tomassetti. Tomassetti, who had flown the X-35 (the stripped-down experimental version of what would evolve into the current F-35) explained that, “Mission stuff — killing things and blowing things up — should be what is most challenging. You don’t need to complicate a pilot’s life by making the hardest part of his combat mission getting back aboard ship.”

According to Tomassetti, the fighter pilot needs to be more fighter than pilot.

That’s exactly what the F-35 is designed to do.
F-35 Lightning II
The new F-35 Lightning II

“What people do best in airplanes is think,” says Beesley. “So you need to make the airplane very natural and intuitive to fly, and that’s what Turbo was talking about when he said turning the man into more of a fighter. The best fighting we do is with our minds, and we can do that more effectively if we are spending less time flying.”

He adds, “I grew up flying F-4s, and you had to spend a lot of time thinking about how to fly that airplane or it would bite you. That takes away time from what you need to be focusing on,” which of course is fighting.

Beesley first took the F-35 up on its maiden flight in mid-December. He tested her a second time on Monday, January 8, pushing her up to 20,000. Then on Wednesday morning, he took her 3,000 feet higher.

“We open the envelope a little more each time,” he says. “This morning, I went up high at almost point-eight mach, did some air data work, looked at the handling and stability qualities, did some other things and then came home.”

THREE IN ONE
Several things make the F-35 unique.

First, it is being produced in three variants, which is why it will replace the four currently operational jets. The variants include:

•A CTOL (conventional takeoff-and-landing), for the Air Force.
•A STOVL (short takeoff-vertical landing), for the Marine Corps.
•A carrier takeoff-and-landing, for the Navy.

Second, because it is basically designed as a family of three warplanes — and 70-80 percent of each variant is common to the other two — it is said by Lockheed officials to be far more cost effective throughout the life of the program, about 30-plus years.

One jet in three versions means one assembly line instead of three.

Still, the jets aren’t cheap: About $45 million to $60 million per copy, with the CTOL fighter on the low end, and the more expensive models being the increased bells-and-whistles STOVL and carrier jets.

The third factor is performance.

“This is the plane that — because of its stealth — will be able to go in and kick down the door on the first day of a war,” says Beesley. “If you look at last three wars, the first wave aircraft were the stealthy airplanes. Now we are coming into an era where rather than 50 stealthy airplanes, like the F-117; commanders of the future might have 500 to 1,000 to choose from.”

KILLING MULTIPLE TARGETS
In addition to stealth, speed, and maneuverability; the F-35 has increased range, and it carries a greater payload than the legacy fighters it is replacing (also a greater payload capability than the new F-22). It is able to simultaneously fight at least eight enemy planes, and, at the same time, lock-on to as many as 16 enemy ground targets. And it can track literally hundreds of targets for 360 degrees and at tracking distances that — though classified — far exceed the distances of the legacy jets.

The F-35 was officially christened the Lightning II last summer. The first Lightning was the old P-38 Lightning, also a Lockheed-built airplane, of World War II fame. That Lightning shot down more enemy planes (including the plane transporting Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto over the Solomons) than any other U.S. warplane in the Pacific theater.

Lockheed Martin plans to begin production of its F-35 later this year. Another 2,781 F-35’s are currently scheduled to be built over the next three decades. Most of those will be built for the U.S. and the United Kingdom (138 planned for the U.K.’s Royal Navy and Air Force). That number does not include airplanes for an additional seven partnering nations — Australia, Canada, Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, and Turkey — that have a vested interest in the F-35. If all partnering nations purchase F-35s, the number could increase to more than 4,500.

Beesley is slated to ride the Lightning II for a fourth time, Tuesday.

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MzM3M...jFlZWZjZjhiMmI=
NuShooz
Wow, nice.

Wouldnt mind training to fly one of those thing, but they only take the cream of the crop for its pilots.
santoloco
this is a nice jet!
tinman01
From what I have read about it, it lookss to be an awsome weapons platform. Sharing so many parts with its siblings will also save money. Instead of training techs for 4 completely different aircraft you train for 1 base model, then just have specialty classes. Then warehousing parts will be simplified. Tools standardized. Nice...
The 1 down fall I see and this is because I am a navy man in is the single engine... The A-7 was the last operation navy jet that was single engine.
thatsjustsick
Isn't the F35 Lightning II almost the same price as a Eurofighter Typhoon, and if so, isn't the Eurofighter Typhoon more effective in Air to Air combat? Can an F-22 take on two F-35 or two Typhoon. If not, why would you bother with the fighter that costs twice as much, when two is more effective?
Hola
NICE DAM IT!

The vent on its side makes it look futuristic
love2.gif


Lockheed martin sure leads
KT80
those new jets would probrably be use to blow the sh-it out of some poor arab country .....why the hell do the USa have trillions to spend on war machines yet it cost an arm and a leg to see a doctor if u don't have insurance
tinman01
QUOTE(thatsjustsick @ Jan 18 2007, 09:54 PM) [snapback]2662591[/snapback]

Isn't the F35 Lightning II almost the same price as a Eurofighter Typhoon, and if so, isn't the Eurofighter Typhoon more effective in Air to Air combat? Can an F-22 take on two F-35 or two Typhoon. If not, why would you bother with the fighter that costs twice as much, when two is more effective?

I think in the long run it will cost less than the F-22. Its cost savings are big in the fact 1 plane for 4 branches instead of 4 completely different aircraft, maintenance systems, parts etc. Also they will only need 2 training programs to learn to fly it instead of 4.
LN080291
For some reason, I dislike the design.
LN080291
double
Siyete
I believe that the F-22 raptor is the best plane the US has
tinman01
QUOTE(Siyete @ Jan 19 2007, 12:06 AM) [snapback]2662908[/snapback]

I believe that the F-22 raptor is the best plane the US has

It is the best fighter...
But for best Multirole? F-35 will win it. If it delivers the performance as advertised...
Silent_Nanashi
QUOTE(LN080291 @ Jan 18 2007, 09:36 PM) [snapback]2662700[/snapback]

For some reason, I dislike the design.


Why? Whats you reason for not liking it? Is it because its American?

Its faults are hard to find. It has stealth features and is the second most advanced warplane in the world. The f35 and f22 are milestones in the aerospace industry. Theyre among the first with supercruise, that means it can fly supersonic for the entire duration of the mission.

Also:
While the F22 does have bombing capabilities, I hear that a totally new F22 bomber version is in development. If you followed the F22 developement, youve heard of the YF23, lockheed martin wants to use that as a base.
tinman01
QUOTE(Silent_Nanashi @ Jan 19 2007, 07:03 PM) [snapback]2664695[/snapback]

Why? Whats you reason for not liking it? Is it because its American?

Its faults are hard to find. It has stealth features and is the second most advanced warplane in the world. The f35 and f22 are milestones in the aerospace industry. Theyre among the first with supercruise, that means it can fly supersonic for the entire duration of the mission.

Also:
While the F22 does have bombing capabilities, I hear that a totally new F22 bomber version is in development. If you followed the F22 developement, youve heard of the YF23, lockheed martin wants to use that as a base.

I would love to see it happen..
FooFighter
AWW YEAHHH!!!
LN080291
QUOTE(Silent_Nanashi @ Jan 19 2007, 07:03 PM) [snapback]2664695[/snapback]

Why? Whats you reason for not liking it? Is it because its American?

Its faults are hard to find. It has stealth features and is the second most advanced warplane in the world. The f35 and f22 are milestones in the aerospace industry. Theyre among the first with supercruise, that means it can fly supersonic for the entire duration of the mission.

Also:
While the F22 does have bombing capabilities, I hear that a totally new F22 bomber version is in development. If you followed the F22 developement, youve heard of the YF23, lockheed martin wants to use that as a base.

Pffft, Dislike it because it's American my @$$,
I dislike it because I think it's ugly laugh.gif
Da Hawaiian
I rather think the design is nifty
mhz
SWeeeT! biggthumpup.gif Check this out

Helmet Mounted Display System
Vision Systems International, LLC (VSI) is developing the most advanced and capable Helmet Mounted Display System (HMDS) for the F-35. Utilizing extensive design experience gained on successful production Helmet Mounted Displays (HMD), the F-35 HMDS will replace the traditional Head-Up-Display (HUD) while offering true sensor fusion.

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tinman01
I want one of those helmets for my car..
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