Lockheed Martin F-35 has 873 deficiencies
By Garrett Reim31
January 2020
The Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II has 873 unresolved deficiencies
and new problems are being discovered regularly, making reducing the number of
issues with the aircraft difficult.
That’s the conclusion of the latest scathing assessment of the stealth
fighter from the Annual Report for the US Department of Defense’s (DoD) Office
of the Director of Operational Test & Evaluation (DOT&E), released to
the US Congress on 30 January.
“Although the programme is working to fix deficiencies, new discoveries
are still being made, resulting in only a minor decrease in the overall number
of deficiencies,” says the report.
The F-35’s problems include 13 Category 1 deficiencies. Such problems “may
cause death or severe injury; may cause loss or major damage to a weapon
system; critically restricts the combat readiness capabilities of the using
organisation; or results in a production line stoppage,” according to the US
Air Force’s (USAF) definition.
The F-35’s deficiencies are compounded by maintenance problems which
hobbled the aircraft’s mission capable rate below the DoD’s goal of 80%. The
mission capable rate is the percentage of aircraft capable of performing at
least one mission, excluding aircraft in depot maintenance or undergoing major
repairs.
“No significant portion of the fleet, including the combat-coded fleet,
was able to achieve and sustain the DoD mission capable rate goal of 80%,” says
the DOT&E. “However, individual units have been able to achieve the 80%
target for short periods during deployed operations.”
Lockheed Martin did not respond to questions about when deficiencies
with the F-35 would be fixed, saying it is still reviewing the DOT&E
report.
“The F-35 continues to mature and is the most lethal, survivable and
connected fighter in the world,” the company says. “Reliability continues to
improve, with the global fleet averaging greater than 65% mission capable rates
and operational units consistently performing near 75%.”
Some of the aircraft’s lingering problems appear to be connected to the
F-35 Joint Program Office and Lockheed Martin’s recently adopted Continuous
Capability Development and Delivery process, a method of delivering software
fixes and additional functions every six months. The process is modeled on a
Silicon Valley method of delivering bite-sized chunks of code changes to
customers called agile software development.
Lockheed Martin was openly optimistic in 2019 about the agile method’s
ability to turn around the F-35’s troublesome software, which totals more than
8 million lines of code. However, DOT&E says the concept has been
problematic.
“Software changes, intended to introduce new capabilities or fix
deficiencies, often introduced stability problems and adversely affected other
functionality,” says the weapons evaluator’s report. “Due to these
inefficiencies, along with a large amount of planned new capabilities,
DOT&E considers the program’s current Revision 13 master schedule to be
high risk.”
Hardware problems persist too. For example, USAF “units flying newer
F-35A aircraft discovered cracks in the outer mold-line coatings and the
underlying chine longeron skin, near the gun muzzle, after aircraft returned
from flights when the gun was employed”, according to the report.
The F-35A’s internally mounted 25mm gun also remains inaccurate.
“Investigations into the gun mounts of the F-35A revealed misalignments
that result in muzzle alignment errors,” says DOT&E. “As a result, the true
alignment of each F-35A gun is not known, so the programme is considering
options to re-boresight and correct gun alignments.”
It is not known if
those changes will fix the aircraft’s problems, as further testing would be
needed, notes the Pentagon. The US Marine Corps’ F-35B and the US Navy’s F-35C,
which carry 25mm guns in external pods, were accurate in air-to-ground firing
tests, the report says.
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