US
Air Force eyes September for next phase of re-engining B-52 bombers
Apr 19, 03:54 PM
A KC-135 refuels a B-52 Stratofortess from McGhee Tyson Air National Guard Base, Tenn., on Oct. 6, 2022. (Airman 1st Class Jenna Bond/U.S. Air Force)
WASHINGTON
— The U.S. Air Force expects to seek a Milestone B decision on the program to
put new engines on B-52H Stratofortress bombers in
September.
The
completion of the Milestone B review will allow the Commercial Engine Replacement Program to
begin engineering and manufacturing development as well as transition away from
the middle tier of acquisition rapid prototyping effort under which it now
operates, service acquisition chief Andrew Hunter told lawmakers Tuesday.
“I
have a fairly high degree of confidence we’ll be ready in the fall” for the
program to enter the engineering and manufacturing development phase, Hunter
said at a hearing before the House Armed Services Committee’s sea power panel.
Rolls-Royce is now
testing the F130 engines that will be installed on B-52 Stratofortress bombers
at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. (Rolls-Royce)
Rolls-Royce
and Boeing are working on the effort to replace the B-52H’s current Pratt &
Whitney-made, decades-old TF33 engines with new F130 engines. This is meant to
keep the Cold War-era bomber — the newest of which entered service in 1962 —
flying into the 2050s as the B-52J.
Hunter said the B-52′s new commercial-derivative engines will be able to use a broader supply chain than the current TF33 engines, which frequently break and have problems with parts availability.
The
Commercial Engine Replacement Program, or CERP, will also update the B-52′s
flight systems, cockpit throttles and displays, Hunter said.
Another
planned upgrade to modernize the B-52′s radar will “dramatically improve” the
bomber’s situational awareness and ability to accurately strike targets, he
added. Communications upgrades are also meant to increase the bombers’ ability
to exchange data and collaborate with other Air Force aircraft or units to
strike targets.
“It’s
all three programs working together,” Hunter said. “When you look at it, this
is an almost complete overhaul of the mission systems of the B-52, and that is
what will enable it to operate well into the future.”
Part
of CERP’s current rapid prototyping effort involved creating a digital twin of
the new engine to test it and catch problems before engines are physically
built. Hunter said this digital prototyping work has “done quite a bit of risk
reduction on the program.”
Rolls-Royce
is also testing the new F130 engines at an outdoor test facility at NASA’s
Stennis Space Center in Mississippi, the company said in March.
Hunter
told lawmakers that as part of that testing work, Rolls-Royce put a pair of
F130 engines in a pod that simulates the pylons from which they will hang on
the B-52, and conducted test runs of the engines. Those tests yielded
information on how well the engines perform and what kind of vibrations they
create when running.
Once
CERP completes Milestone B, Hunter said, it will become a formal acquisition
program of record.
Lt.
Gen. Richard Moore, the Air Force’s deputy chief of staff for plans and
programs, said in a potential war against China, the service wouldn’t expect
the B-52 to fly in dangerous, contested airspace the way the stealthy B-21
Raider would. Instead, Moore said, the B-52 would use its considerable payload
capability to fire standoff munitions out of range of Chinese defenses.
Moore
said the Air Force has not decided whether to pursue a future “clean-sheet”
bomber to replace the B-52 in the decades to come. The service is first
focusing on deciding how many B-21s it will end up buying, and is working on
the Next Generation Air Dominance fighter system, as well as next-generation
refueling and mobility aircraft, Moore explained.
The
Air Force decided to dramatically accelerate acquisition of its next-generation
aerial refueling system by about 15 years due to the increasing threat from
China, Moore added.
“Certainly
the same thing could happen to the bomber portfolio,” Moore said. “If we find
out there’s an emerging threat that the B-21 is not capable of handling, we
would look to replace or add to the bomber fleet with something that could
handle that threat.”
The
Air Force isn’t there yet, Moore noted, and the service believes the B-21 will
be able to handle the threats on the horizon. If the Air Force decides it needs
to bolster its capabilities to handle an emerging threat, Moore explained, it
would probably update its weapons rather than its airframes.
“What
we see from the Chinese is rapid spiraling of weapons capability, and I think
that might be a more likely place where we would attempt to counter the threat,
rather than a clean-sheet design,” Moore said. “But I certainly wouldn’t rule
that out, and it may be that we don’t have a choice.”
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