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Sjekk AINs nyheter her: https://tinyurl.com/2p8anddr
Cost Reductions Make F-35 a Winner in
Europe
by Chris Pocock
- July 18,
2022, 2:33 AM
The
F-35 “is a European airplane,” according to J.R. McDonald, Lockheed Martin v-p
for F-35 strategy and business development. At a briefing during the recent ILA
Berlin airshow, he noted that 10 European countries now had chosen the stealth
fighter and that the program generated “tens of thousands” of jobs in the
region. Since he spoke, Greece has lodged a letter of request to buy 20 F-35s
and possibly more later. The UK recently committed to a further 26, making a
total of 74.
The
F-35 Lightning II had a controversial development process, and questions remain
over availability, sustainment, and operating cost. On the latter, the
commander of Air Combat Command said that he doubted whether the U.S. Air Force
(USAF) would meet its goal of $25,000 per hour operating costs by 2025. Last
year, it was $36,000. Similar criticism came from. Will Roper, who then served
as the USAF’s acquisition chief.
However,
McDonald sought to refute the criticisms. He said that Lockheed Martin has made
a big effort on the cost per flight hour, which it halved since 2015. On
reliability, he noted that mean flight hours between failures had reached 9.6,
against a requirement of six. The maintenance man-hours per flight hour had
fallen to 4.7, from the target of nine. However, the latter two statistics
refer only to that portion of the cost of ownership for which Lockheed Martin
carries responsibility. That is 39 percent, with engine maker Pratt &
Whitney responsible for 14 percent and the U.S. services 47 percent. The F135
engine has suffered through plenty of problems, but they are not all Pratt
& Whitney’s fault.
McDonald
said that F-35 customers indicated that the cost of ownership now runs lower
than that for fourth-generation combat aircraft. The acquisition cost also is
comparable, with the F-35 now below $80 million, he added. Ownership and
acquisition costs account for the two key reasons why the F-35 has won so many
evaluations against the Boeing F/A-18 Super Hornet, the Dassault Rafale, the
Eurofighter Typhoon, and the Saab Gripen. In the past year alone, Canada,
Finland, Germany, and Switzerland have all chosen the F-35 rather than those
warplanes. In particular, McDonald noted that Finland and Switzerland “had been
very transparent” by publishing their evaluation data.
Of
these recent wins, the selection by Germany proved notable, as the country
previously had ruled out the F-35 as a potential Tornado replacement in favor
of the F/A-18 and EA-18G Growler, and additional Typhoons. The incoming Scholz
government reversed that decision and has agreed to buy 35 F-35As. They will
reside at Büchel, where they will take over the tactical nuclear role using
U.S.-owned B61-12 weapons. German F-35 crews will train in the U.S. at the
Foreign Military Sales Pilot Training Center being established at Ebbing Air
National Guard Base in Fort Smith, Arkansas, where Singapore will train its
F-16 and F-35B aircrew.
While
the European nations largely have embraced the F-35, the U.S. has also deployed
aircraft to the continent. The first permanently based F-35As are now at RAF
Lakenheath in Suffolk, where the 48th Fighter Wing parents the 493rd and 495th
Fighter Squadrons. The U.S. Force also temporarily deployed F-35As to
Spangdahlem in Germany to bolster NATO’s defense of its eastern borders. In
late June President Biden announced that the U.S. would deploy another two
squadrons of F-35As to the UK.
In the
meantime, the F-35’s 20-year development program hasn’t officially ended, and
Lockheed Martin is already working on an upgrade for new production aircraft.
The cost totals more than $12 billion, according to the U.S. Government
Accountability Office (GAO). It consists of “Technical Refresh 3,” which
replaces the core processor, upgrades the radar, enhances the electronic
warfare system, and introduces a panoramic display, which enables the
progressive introduction of new software with an open systems architecture, designated
separately as Block 4. That includes auto-GCAS (ground collision avoidance
system) integration.
One of
the most difficult F-35 developments proved to be the Autonomic Logistics
Information System (ALIS). Designed to track parts and schedule maintenance, it
never worked properly. The USAF had to bring in its top software hub, named
Kessel Run, to help Lockheed Martin resolve the problems. The contractor has
revamped the system and renamed it Operational Data Integrated Network (ODIN),
with new hardware, more powerful software, and more portability. McDonald noted
that ODIN “is not just tracking parts, it’s doing big data analysis to, for
instance, predict mean times between failures.”
Lockheed
Martin operates a European assembly line with Leonardo at Cameri in Italy.
Plans call for the production of aircraft for Italy and the Netherlands, but
other European countries will get some, although not all, of their jets from
Cameri. The U.S. company continues to court further opportunities in Europe,
such as Spain. Romania has also expressed an intention to buy the type.
Following Greece’s recent announcement, the next European country to buy F-35s
could be the Czech Republic. Lockheed Martin has responded to a request for
information from Prague for 18 to 24 aircraft. “They will decide this year
whether to move forward with us, or hold a competition,” McDonald predicted.
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