Dette var et potensielt problem som dukket opp allerede før F-35 ble valgt som vårt nye jagerfly. Varselet kom fra konkurrenten Boeing som promoterte sin F-18 og ble neppe tatt for annet enn et innspill i debatten. Kilde: Per-Oscar Jacobsen. (Red.)
Overtaxed F-35 engines rack up $38 billion in
extra maintenance costs
By Ryan Finnerty2 June 2023
Overtaxing the
Pratt & Whitney (P&W) F135 engine on the Lockheed Martin F-35 stealth
fighter is costing the Pentagon billions of dollars in unexpected maintenance
costs.
Auditors from the
US Government Accountability Office (GAO) say a failure to design in adequate
cooling capability for the jet’s advanced sensors and radar has already added
an extra $38 billion to the total life-cycle cost of the USA’s F-35 programme.
Source: Lockheed Martin
Sensor advances,
plus flawed projections by procurement officials, has left F-35’s cooling
system underpowered
That problem is
expected to worsen as Lockheed rolls out the much-anticipated Block 4 upgrade to the F-35, which will
further increase the aircraft’s electronic sensing capabilities, including
data transmission at 5G speeds.
“The addition of
Block 4 will require more cooling capacity,” the GAO says in a 30 May report.
The F-35’s
Honeywell-designed power and thermal management system (PTMS) uses bleed air
taken from the F135 engine to cool onboard sensors.
“They’re two
different systems, but they work in a symbiotic way,” says Jennifer Latka,
vice-president of F135 engines at P&W, speaking following the report’s
release.
Sensor
improvements to the F-35, along with bureaucratic mishandling of the jet’s
symbiotic cooling system, have left the fifth-generation fighter pulling
electrical power and air cooling beyond its design specifications.
The GAO says
Lockheed discovered the cooling issue in 2008, and in 2013 requested a design
revision to address the problem. However, the Pentagon denied that request,
citing cost and schedule impacts.
“Programme
officials decided to continue with the F135 engine’s original design with the
understanding that there would be increased wear and tear, more maintenance,
and reduced life on the engine because it would need to provide more air
pressure to the PTMS than its design intended,” the GAO notes.
Instead,
additional bleed air is diverted from the F135 engine into the PTMS to provide
the necessary cooling. This causes excess wear on the engine’s turbine,
resulting in a shorter lifespan and more frequent overhauls.
Government
auditors note P&W designed the F135 engine to meet the air pressure
specifications the company was given at the time. Executives at the Raytheon
Technologies subsidiary say the recent GAO report supports their calls to
upgrade the F-35’s powerplant.
“We do feel that
the GAO report actually validates the government’s decision to pursue the
engine core upgrade on the F135,” says Latka.
After months of jockeying between P&W and
rival engine maker GE Aerospace, the US Air Force in March threw its support behind P&W’s engine
core upgrade (ECU) proposal for the F135. GE had been pushing for the service
to adopt an entirely new engine for the aircraft.
Source: Lockheed Martin
Lockheed Martin
conducts final assembly of the F-35 at its plant in Fort Worth, Texas
The ECU package
“restores the engine life completely”, according to Latka, while also providing
additional electrical power output and cooling capability the F-35
needs. “We are trying to keep up with the growth that we know is coming.”
She notes the ECU
improvements to the existing engine will provide the F-35 with enough power and
cooling capability to meet current needs, as well as the future Block 4
requirements.
However, both
P&W and the GAO say the Pentagon will need to upgrade not just the F135
engine, but also the existing Honeywell PTMS if it plans to continue adding
capability to the F-35 beyond the Block 4 plans.
“When we go beyond
Block 4, there has got to be an upgraded PTMS,” says Latka.
Without such
improvements, the GAO notes, the F-35’s engine will again experience reduced
wear-time as additional radar and communications capabilities are added to jet.
“The engine will
need to provide even more air pressure to PTMS to support future capabilities,
which will further reduce engine life,” the GAO report notes.
To date, the
Pentagon has not determined how it plans to modernise the F-35 PTMS, meaning a
solution is still years away. The joint procurement office that oversees F-35
acquisitions for the USA and foreign buyers says it has not yet determined the
power and cooling requirements beyond 2035.
In the nearer
term, P&W will be ready to start delivering core upgrades for the
F135 starting in 2028, the company told
FlightGlobal in March. Those improvements should be sufficient to address the
power and cooling needs of the current sensor improvement effort, according to
Latka: “The engine core upgrade fully enables Block 4,” she says.
The cost of the
Block 4 improvements has ballooned to over $16 billion – a 55% increase from
the $10.6 billion estimate provided by the Pentagon in 2018.
Meanwhile,
Lockheed says it is currently flight testing the Technical Refresh-3 (TR-3) update to the
F-35 that will enable functioning of the Block 4 package. Chief executive James
Taiclet described the process as being “in the very late innings” during an
April call with investors.
TR-3 is scheduled
for inclusion on production aircraft in July, the GAO report reveals, as part
of the first Lot 15 F-35s.
While that will
set the stage for delivery of Block 4, those improvements will not be rolled
out at least until fiscal year 2029, according to Pentagon
and GAO documents – three years behind the original schedule.
Auditors at the
GAO remain critical of the Block 4 development process, calling the Pentagon’s
cost reporting “inadequate”.
“Congress lacks critical information
for overseeing the broader Block 4 effort and holding the programme and
contractor accountable,” the watchdog says.
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