Boeing and Saab complete
first T-X flight
20 DECEMBER, 2016 - SOURCE:
FLIGHTGLOBAL. - BY: LEIGH GIANGRECO - WASHINGTON DC
Boeing and Saab’s
bid for the US Air Force trainer competition took flight from St. Louis,
Missouri, on 20 December, demonstrating the clean-sheet design’s performance
for the first time.
During a 55min flight, the
single-engined jet climbed close to 11,000ft and reached speeds of up to 230kt
(430km/h), Steve Schmidt, lead T-X test pilot, told reporters. Boeing will
persevere through the chilly Missouri winter to gather flight performance data
for the T-X competition, which the company must deliver by 30 June 2017.
“I think our biggest challenge
is we’re in St. Louis in the wintertime,” Schmidt says. “Other than that, we
can get the data we need in the time allotted to submit a proposal. We’ve had
time to plan for it and can execute it.”For both Boeing and Saab, the
quick turnaround from design to flight for a production jet is rare, according
to Boeing T-X programme manager Ted Torgerson. Typically, a company
could spend six to eight years developing a jet. With T-X, the team cut that
timeline in half.“We made a commitment to design,
develop and fly by the end of 2016 and today we delivered on that promise,”
Torgerson says. “At this time last year, we were in critical design review
[CDR]. So we went from CDR to first flight in 12 months.”
BoeingBoeing and Saab first revealed
its T-X conteder to much fanfare in September. The team designed two jets, the
second of which is completing ground testing and should fly by early 2017,
according to Boeing. The trainer system also includes ground-based trainers and
simulation.The twin, canted tail aircraft
is powered by a single 17,700lb-thrust GE Aviation F404-402 with afterburner.
The aft cockpit of the two-seater is stepped up to allow the second pilot
improved visibility, Torgerson says. The stadium seating is an improved feature
from the legacy Northrop T-38, he says.“When we interviewed a lot of
instructors flying the current T-38 they didn’t like the current visibility to
look at the aimpoint on landing,” he says. “Now you can see the aim point over
the pilot’s head.”The team is gunning for the
coveted air force contract, which would replaced the service’s fleet of more
than 400 T-38s. T-X is slated to reach initial operational capability by 2024
and Boeing estimates the air force will release its final request for proposal
by 30 December.
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