Pentagon har ved flere anledninger kritisert våpengrenene som igjen går på Lockheed-Martin for lav operativ F-35 evne. Motoren har vært i fokus, og en helt ny motor har vært foreslått. Nå leser jeg under at det blir en voldsom oppgradering/endring av motorens viktigste deler, noe som vil koste lille Norge så store beløp at ingen kan eller tør nå si hva det vil koste. (Red.)
Raytheon Targets F135 Engine Core Upgrade for 24 F-35 Squadrons by 2030
By Frank Wolfe | December
13, 2022
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F-35, Japanese Air
Self-Defense Force (JASDF), JASDF, Lockheed Martin, Pratt &
Whitney
A formation of Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) F-35A Lighting II's
conduct a flyover during the Misawa Air Fest at Misawa Air Base, Japan, on
Sept. 11 (U.S. Air Force Photo)
Raytheon Technologies [RTX] said that it is able to
outfit 24 F-35 squadrons with an Engine Core Upgrade (ECU) for the company’s
Pratt & Whitney F135 engine by 2030—seven squadrons in 2029 and 17 in
2030—compared to just two F-35 squadrons that could receive a new engine under
the Adaptive Engine Transition Program (AETP) in 2030.
The ECU and Raytheon’s proposed Emergency Power and Cooling System
(EPACS), which is to achieve Technology Readiness Level 6 next year, are to
provide a seven percent increase in performance range and thrust for the Lockheed
Martin [LMT] F-35 fighter, more than twice the cooling of the F135 to
accomodate new weapons in F-35 Block 4, and a more than $40 billion savings in
life cycle costs.
DoD’s upcoming fiscal 2024
budget may lay out the future engine path for the F-35—whether
that be the Pratt & Whitney proposed F135 ECU or a new power plant, such
as General Electric‘s [GE] proposed XA100 Tri-Variant Adaptive
(TVA) engine (Defense Daily, Oct. 11).
Raytheon suggested that DoD could not accelerate AETP development and
fielding.
“As to why we can’t do XA faster, it has to do with the fact that the
ECU is a core upgrade, meaning 70 percent of the material likely will stay
common,” Jen Latka, Pratt & Whitney’s vice president for F135 programs,
told reporters in a virtual briefing/question and answer session on Dec. 13.
“There’s no touching the [engine] fan. We’re not touching the back end of the
engine. It [ECU] is limited in scope to the core. We are limiting the
technologies that we bring in to what is absolutely necessary.”
“The supply base that we currently have is the supply base that will
manufacture ECU,” she said. “They’re already up and established, and there
won’t be massive changes…On the other hand, when you look at how historically
how long it takes to ramp a brand-new center line engine, let alone one that
has never flown before so we’ll have a tremendous amount of learning and we’ll
need a very robust flight test program, given it’s only engine on this
aircraft, that’s gonna take a lot of time. The test program will take a lot of
time, and then standing up the supply chain and the supply base and ramping
them to full rate is going to take years.”
Regarding the F135 and the Pratt & Whitney F119 engine for the U.S.
Air Force F-22 fighter by Lockheed Martin, “we didn’t get to [a build] rate
[of] 150 every year overnight,” Latka said. “It took many years. It [AETP] is a
completely new engine with completely new parts to manufacture.”
Raytheon also said that AETP is “significantly heavier” than the 3,750
pound dry weight F135, but declined to disclose how much heavier and referred
that question to the F-35 Joint Program Office (JPO). Defense Daily will
add any response from the F-35 JPO.
The ECU was formerly known as the Engine Enhancement Program but the
F-35 JPO changed the name recently.
Pratt & Whitney recently received a more than $115 million
contract for ECU work through May next year (Defense Daily,
Dec. 5).
Technology Refresh 3 (TR3)–spurred by the L3Harris [LHX]
integrated core processor–is the computer backbone for Block 4, which is to
have 88 unique features and to integrate 16 new weapons on the F-35. The F-35
program has said that the fighter will need a new or significantly upgraded
engine with improved electrical power and cooling capacity to accommodate the
53 new capabilities slated for F-35 Block 4.
In October, 48 representatives urged DoD to invest in next generation,
adaptive propulsion for fighters in a letter co-sponsored by Sens. Rob Portman
(R-Ohio) and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio).
In all, 13 of 16 Ohio representatives signed the letter.
General Electric’s GE Aviation subsidiary has its headquarters in
Evendale, Ohio outside of Cincinnati.
GE has said that it began working with the F-35 JPO in the fall of last
year on evaluating whether GE could alter the proposed XA100 for the U.S. Air
Force’s AETP to fit on the U.S. Marine Corps F-35B.
Since 2016, the Air Force has funded the AETP.
The F-35 program has said that while the XA100 TVA is based on the
F-35A’s F135 engine, the TVA would require an independent development program.
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