Vel, ingen ny artikkel, men i dette tilfellet har vi god tid.... Det er for øvrig meget spesielt at en har valgt britiske motorer til flyet.
Sjekk video av Damage Inc II som gjøres klar før flytting til Tinker AFB, Oklahoma: https://tinyurl.com/yn7d7t9w For ordens skyld kan nevnes at det var en B-52G (58-0254) som tilhørte 93rd Bomb Wing. som hadde nose art Damage Inc. Den er hogget og tilhørte 93rd Bomb Wing:
Can Boeing And Suppliers Keep The
B-52J Transformation On Track?
Steve Trimble May 19, 2023
Minus tail surfaces, engines and a right wing, the long-retired “Damage Inc. II” B-52 mockup is now installed in the high-bay facility of Boeing’s Oklahoma City engineering center and charged with one more mission: Help keep an $11 billion revamp of the B-52 on track.
Five years have passed since the U.S. Air Force
decided to reenlist the venerable Stratofortress for several decades of
continued service. With the Northrop Grumman B-21 set under the 2018 Bomber
Vector plan to replace the Rockwell International B-1B and Northrop B-2 bombers
over the next two decades, the B-52 is planned to keep flying as a long-range,
missile-carrying partner to the stealthy, penetrating Raider.
·
Physical
prototypes are to double-check digital models
·
Engineering
and manufacturing development phase to start soon
An eight-engine bomber fleet that completed production
in 1962, however, requires significant changes to remain relevant until perhaps
2062.
To avoid obsolescence and extend the B-52’s range by
more than 20%, the 16,000-lb.-thrust Pratt & Whitney TF33 turbofans are
being replaced by BR725-derived Rolls-Royce F130 engines, a modification that
requires sweeping changes to internal structures and electronics.
An unreliable mechanically scanned APQ-166 radar, last
updated in the 1980s, is being replaced by a modern active, electronically
scanned array (AESA), which will allow the B-52 to search the sky, land and sea
for threats en route to its missile launch positions.
In combination with other major upgrades, such as the
Raytheon AGM-181 Long-Range Standoff missile and new satellite links, the first
of 76 redesignated B-52Js should become operational within the next decade. The
upgraded fleet will be tasked with lobbing up to 70,000 lb. of long-range
missiles at targets from a safe distance hundreds or thousands of miles away.
These multiple, overlapping modernization efforts
provoke some anxiety about a fleet with an average age of more than 61 years.
Col. Louis Ruscetta, the Air Force’s B-52 senior materiel leader, encounters
concerns every time he briefs a senior officer.
“I don’t do a four-star [general] briefing without
someone asking the question: ‘Lou, how are you going to do all this?’” Ruscetta
told a small group of reporters granted access to the high-bay facility—and
Damage Inc. II—on May 17.
On the list of Ruscetta’s responses, Damage Inc. II—a
partial B-52H airframe transferred to Oklahoma City last year from the Air
Force’s boneyard in Tucson, Arizona—is near the top.
In an age of digital engineering models and virtual
prototypes, Damage Inc. II is a throwback, representing a physical test asset
to verify that Boeing’s computerized assumptions correspond to reality. For a
clean-sheet prototype, a digital prototype is a useful way to verify a 2D
design on paper into a 3D model. Since the B-52 already exists, engineers have
the luxury of validating a digital model in the real world.
“We still need to recognize that there’s a physical
reality to things,” says Jennifer Wong, Boeing’s senior director for
bombers.
The placement of an oil can within the nacelle of a
right-hand F130 engine may appear accessible in the 3D digital model, for
example. But what looks correct on a screen sometimes looks different when an
engineer is on a ladder under the wing of a B-52 wearing representative cold
weather gear.
Even the physical model of Damage Inc. II has
limitations. An aircraft fleet built in the early 1960s and repaired over
several decades is subject to a multitude of unrecorded variations beneath the
outer skin. To get an idea of the scale of the nonconformances between
different B-52s in the fleet today, Boeing engineers selected a sample for
inspection. Although fleet-wide design variations have not been mapped out, the
company is confident it knows generally what to expect.
Replacing
the B-52’s engines is not as simple as removing TF33s and installing F130s. The
slightly different dimensions of the Rolls-Royce turbofans change the flutter
envelope, so each of the four two-engine pods are mounted higher on new pylons,
says Erik LaVasque, Boeing’s B-52 deputy program manager. With the higher
position and slightly wider nacelles, more of the exhaust force from the F130
pods is directed at the B-52’s four Fowler flaps. As a result, Boeing is
strengthening the flap tracks to support the additional load.
Transitioning from the TF33 to the F130 also changes
the electronics in the cockpit. The eight thrust levers are now connected by
wires through a series of pulleys directly to the TF33’s mechanical engine
controls. Boeing is rewiring the B-52 for the thrust levers to produce a
digital signal with an interpretation of the crew’s thrust commands for the
F130’s full authority digital engine control (FADEC). The FADECs on each of the
eight engines also are designed to send performance updates to newly installed
data concentrator units, which would send alerts to the crew if faults were
detected.
As the crew is exposed to more system performance data
in real time, cockpit displays are being transformed. Two cathode ray tube
displays on each side of the cockpit are to be replaced by a single
multifunction touch screen.
In addition to a thrust upgrade, the B-52 is receiving
a major boost in electrical power. The 45-kVA generators on each TF33 are being
replaced with eight 65-kVA generators, increasing onboard power capacity by 44%
to a total of 520 kVA. The additional power supply is designed to cover the
needs of the new radar, with ample room for growth as the Air Force fields
future sensors and weapons, Ruscetta said.
The Radar Modernization Program (RMP) is installing a
hybrid Raytheon AESA radar. A modified version of the front-end array from the
Boeing F/A-18E/F’s APG-79 is being integrated with a new variant of the radar
processor inside the APG-82 on the Boeing F-15E and F-15EX.
“This is probably one of the most critical [B-52
upgrade] programs that we’re doing,” Ruscetta said.
In the absence of stealth or supersonic speed, the
survivability rating of the B-52J would be measured by its ability to avoid
threats. A payload of long-range weapons is intended to keep the aircraft
safely distant from an enemy’s air defense system. If that fails, the radar is
intended to make the crew aware of any pop-up threats before the B-52 is within
intercept range.
Splicing a modern radar onto a 1950s-era bomber involves
deeper changes, however. The radar upgrade comes as the Air Force reduces the
B-52 crew to four members from five, with the functions of the defensive system
operator transferred to the radar/navigator and navigator stations below the
cockpit. Moreover, the Cold War-era sensor displays are to be replaced with two
L3Harris Technologies multifunction touch screens measuring 20 X 8 in. on both
stations, says Mike Riggs, Boeing’s RMP director. Boeing also is installing two
powerful new mission computers to support the new radar.
Ushering each of these overlapping upgrades through
the acquisition system has been challenging. The Air Force launched the B-52
Commercial Engine Replacement Program (CERP) in 2019 with a rapid prototyping
format, which is allowed by the Pentagon’s Middle Tier of Acquisition
authority. But new Air Force leadership decided last year to convert the
program into a traditional structure, with an engineering and manufacturing
development (EMD) milestone scheduled for this September.
The B-52 CERP remains on track to enter service in
2030, following the RMP upgrade two years earlier. But the schedule could be
revisited for the EMD decision, which is to set an acquisition planning
baseline required by traditional contracting rules, Ruscetta said.
The Air Force tried to minimize development risk by
selecting off-the-shelf hardware, including the Rolls-Royce engine and the
Raytheon radar. Those decisions shifted the risk to the structural and
electronic changes required to support the F130s, as well as new software code
to adapt a fighter radar for the B-52 mission, Ruscetta said.
In addition to the digital and physical prototypes,
the Air Force also is expanding test capacity. A normal flight-test fleet of
two instrumented B-52Hs has been doubled to support the AGM-181 program. A
total of four more B-52Hs are planned to be instrumented for CERP and RMP
flight testing, Ruscetta said, with up to two more aircraft available to join
flight testing if needed.
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