U.S. Navy’s F/A-XX in Design Maturation, Competing
Companies Announced
Brian Everstine August
27, 2023
Credit:
Northrop Grumman
SPARKS, Nevada—The U.S. Navy’s
secretive next-generation fighter program has completed concept refinement and
has moved into a design maturation phase, while the service has officially
announced the companies vying for the contracts.
Confirming the long-expected names,
the Navy announced Aug. 26 that Boeing, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman
are in the running for the airframe, while GE Aerospace and Pratt & Whitney
are competing for the engine.
The announcement follows the U.S.
Air Force’s connection of these companies to its separate Next Generation Air
Dominance (NGAD) platform. In June, Northrop Grumman announced that it was not
pursuing the Air Force’s NGAD as a prime contractor.
In a statement to Aerospace DAILY,
Tom Jones, president of Northrop’s Aeronautics Systems, says the company is
pursuing F/A-XX development work and that the company is “well positioned” to
perform on advanced aircraft programs based on its B-21 bomber, work on the
F-35, components for the F/A-18 and the Navy’s E-2D Advanced Hawkeye.
“Our focus and investment in digital
engineering, advanced manufacturing and legacy in designing and fielding
aircraft with advanced mission systems allow us to rapidly design, execute, and
sustain current and future systems,” Jones says.
Boeing in a statement pointed to
recent investments in the company’s infrastructure such as a series of new
advanced production facilities at its St. Louis site for how it is positioning
itself for the future fighter programs.
“Boeing fighters are the backbone of
today’s carrier air wing, and we’re using what we’ve learned to inform the
multibillion-dollar strategic investment we’re making in advanced open mission
systems and brand-new, all-digital factories of the future,” says Steve
Nordlund, Boeing’s vice president of air dominance. “We are fully committed to
helping the U.S. Navy achieve its future vision.”
The potential engine providers are
the same for the Air Force’s program—however, the Navy has been more secretive
about this development, as well. The Air Force is undertaking a program called
Next Generation Adaptive Propulsion for its NGAD.
During a panel discussion Aug. 26 at
the Tailhook Symposium here, Cmdr. Mark Cochran—the F/A-XX requirements officer
in the Navy’s Air Warfare Division N98—says the Navy is prioritizing
operational reach on top of operational capacity for the program. This means a
family of systems, coupled with Collaborative Combat Aircraft, to counter
advanced threats at long distances.
The F/A-XX needs to use advanced
weapons and data links, with planners focusing on what apertures will be on the
aircraft for sensing and communications.
In July, the White House connected
the F/A-XX program with a special access program in the budget called Link
Plumeria. This classified program is the Pentagon’s fourth-largest research and
development program, with $11.5 billion for fiscal 2023-27 included in the
Defense Department’s recent budget request.
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