Lockheed unveils pared-down F-35 trainer with same
software capability but a 90% reduced footprint
Dec 1, 04:34 PM
Lockheed Martin unveiled the F-35 Mission Rehearsal Trainer Lightning Integrated Training Environment simulator after 18 months of development using company funds. (Courtesy of Lockheed Martin)
ORLANDO, Fla. — Lockheed Martin has developed
an F-35 trainer
with less hardware that could see the U.S. and partner
countries expand their training capacity for less cost.
The company unveiled the F-35 Mission Rehearsal
Trainer Lightning Integrated Training Environment, or MRT LITE, simulator at
the annual Interservice/Industry Training,
Simulation and Education Conference. The reveal follows about
18 months of development and demonstrations with F-35 program customers, Erik
Etz, senior manager of new business, strategy and road maps, told reporters
Nov. 30.
Etz said the F-35 Full Mission Simulator, which is
set up in a dome with 360-degree visuals for a full cockpit experience, is the
most widely used F-35 training system, with more than 100 trainers delivered
across the globe.
MRT LITE runs the same software in a pared-down
footprint — 90% less hardware, the company noted, with eight MRT LITEs fitting
within the allotted space of a full mission simulator.
The LITE version has three screens for
forward-looking views only, “but there’s a need for more capacity at a number
of those [global training] sites. So based on that need, we decided to go ahead
and embark some internal investments to shrink the footprint associated with
the full-mission sim and created a device, a family of devices, that will
provide capacity at fixed sites,” Etz said.
In addition to the reduced views, the smaller
version excludes some switches and other interfaces needed for emergency-only
procedures, among other changes. But Etz, a former U.S. Navy fighter pilot,
said the trainer covers 75% of the F-35 mission set, including all the
beyond-visual-range tasks at the heart of fifth-generation fighter missions.
“Basically, our customers are asking for something
portable, something affordable and something that’s got a smaller footprint. So
this option really supplies that to them, all of it,” Raashi Quattlebaum, vice
president of F-35 training and logistics, told reporters during the briefing.
She added that the trainer was designed based on
customers’ requirements and needs, and that Lockheed doesn’t expect to have to
do much convincing when it comes time to sell the trainer to the U.S. Air
Force, Navy and Marine Corps as well as international customers of the jet.
Etz said the trainer is fully modular and can be
broken down and reassembled within hours, contributing to customers’ portable
requirement. He envisions this trainer not only supplementing the full dome
trainers at established sites but also being set up in trailers at ports and
airfields on demand, or even being set up on aircraft carriers for training
during deployments.
The company wouldn’t comment on the cost of the
system, nor would it detail the timeline for completing development and
beginning to get contracts signed, but Etz said he hopes to wrap up final
development soon. The system is already running all the unclassified software
but needs additional integration to run the classified software.
He added that a customer could buy “a number of
these” for the cost of one original MRT, and that Lockheed is talking to the
F-35 Joint Program Office and customers about getting these smaller trainers on
contract quickly, whether through a new contract or a modification to existing
F-35 deals.
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