Norge skal operere varianten F-35A som ikke har dette problemet - (Red.)
The Hidden Troubles of the F-35
The Marine Corps’ ‘No. 1 priority’ for the F-35 involves a rough landing
in hot environments
22 hours ago
It’s a key part of the F-35B’s
short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing capability, known as STOVL. And normally,
everything in a “mode four” landing goes smoothly. But on this day, when the
pilot triggered the thrust to slow his descent, something went wrong.
The engine, working hard on a day that temperatures
cracked 90 degrees Fahrenheit while trying to lift a plane that was heavier
than most returning to base, wouldn’t generate the needed thrust for a safe,
ideal landing.
The pilot got the plane down, but was shaken enough by
the situation to write up an incident report that would eventually be marked as
“high” concern by the F-35 program office.
“May result in unanticipated and uncontrolled sink,
leading to hard landing or potential ejection/loss of aircraft, particularly in
the presence of HGI [hot gas ingestion],” reads a summary of the issue, which
was obtained by Defense News as part of a cache of “for official use only”
documents that detail major concerns with the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.
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