Ved flere anledninger har jeg hatt innlegg om kjøleproblemene i flyet. All elektronikken krever kjøling, og oppgraderinger kan kreve enda mer kjøling. Dette problemet ble avdekket før Norge bestemte seg for å kjøpe flyet. Dette vil også påvirke leveranse til utlandet av typen, også til Norge og Danmark. (Red.)
Upgraded F-35 deliveries could slip to June 2024
Sep 6, 09:01 PM
Maj. Kristin Wolfe performs aerial acts over spectators during an air
show on Aug. 27, 2023, at Gowen Field in Boise, Idaho. Troubles with the F-35's
Technology Refresh 3 upgrades have led the Defense Department to halt
deliveries until they're fixed. (Master Sgt. Becky Vanshur/U.S. Air Force)
WASHINGTON — The F-35 Joint Program Office and
manufacturer Lockheed Martin on Wednesday said the first fighters upgraded with
new capabilities may not be
delivered until at least April 2024, and possibly as late as
next June.
This means the delivery of fighters with a slate
of improvements known as Technology
Refresh 3, or TR-3, will be at least a year behind schedule. And it
could mean nearly an entire year’s worth of F-35s — perhaps up to 150, if
production rates continue at full pace — could be parked at Lockheed Martin
facilities until the company can deliver them.
TR-3 is intended to give the aircraft better
displays, computer memory and processing power, and is necessary before a more
expansive modernization effort, dubbed Block 4, can be added to the fighter. It
was originally due in April 2023.
Problems with TR-3′s hardware and software caused
its development to slip behind. In a March
hearing, the F-35 program executive officer, Lt. Gen. Michael Schmidt, first said TR-3 would
arrive in April 2024.
The F-35 Joint Program Office earlier this year
said hardware issues had been addressed. But the office later said in June that
software issues remained with TR-3, and getting its programming to work with
the new hardware was proving difficult.
Lockheed Martin began rolling the first new
TR-3-enabled F-35s off its Fort Worth, Texas, production line in July. But
because the software remains unfinished, those fighters cannot participate in
check flights that are necessary for the Defense Department to accept delivery.
Lockheed is now storing these F-35s at Fort Worth.
In June, when the JPO announced the planned
delivery halt, it said it expected TR-3 to be ready between December 2023 and
April 2024.
JPO spokesman Russ Goemaere said in a Wednesday
email to Defense News that it has continued to update U.S. military leaders,
international partners and foreign governments purchasing the F-35 “about the
progress and challenges observed in testing TR-3 software in flight.”
But, Goemaere added, the TR-3 program still has
risks.
“Since our testimony to Congress in March 2023, we
have made significant progress in the TR-3 program, but have also experienced
challenges with TR-3 software maturity during flight test,” Goemaere said.
“Given remaining risk in the TR-3 program, we have updated our forecast for the
first delivery of a TR-3 configured F-35 to the time frame between April 2024
through June 2024. We continue to work very closely with industry partners,
particularly Lockheed Martin, to address program risk and deliver TR-3 to warfighters.”
Lockheed Martin said in a Wednesday release that
it now expects to deliver 97 F-35s, all in the previous TR-2 configuration. The
company originally planned to deliver roughly 147 to 153 of the fighters this
year.
Lockheed said it is continuing F-35 production,
expecting to build 156 this year, while continuing to work on finalizing the
development and testing of TR-3′s software.
The company also said it “remain[s] focused on
receiving the necessary hardware from our suppliers to deliver this critical
combat capability for the F-35,” identifying L3Harris Technologies’ work on the
fighter’s Integrated Core Processor as contributing to the challenges.
“The development of the Integrated Core Processor
by L3Harris has driven delays due to unexpected challenges associated with
hardware and software development, component and system integration testing and
system qualification testing,” Lockheed said. “The hardware development
challenges impacted hardware/software integration, compressing the software testing
schedule.”
Lockheed said it has sent its employees to
L3Harris to speed up the hardware delivery, and is working with RTX to help
with its delivery of the next-generation Electro-Optical Distributed Aperture
System, another TR-3 component.
In a statement to Defense News, L3Harris disputed
Lockheed’s claim that the Integrated Core Processor was part of the problem.
“L3Harris overcame some early design challenges
and delivered a fully quantifiable Integrated Core Processor to Lockheed Martin
well over a year ago,” L3Harris said. “In June ’22, L3Harris began delivering
flight test hardware after completing safety of flight qualification testing.
We continue to work closely with [Lockheed Martin] to support them in the
integration of their software into the TR3 hardware.”
Defense News has also reached out to RTX for
comment.
Lockheed’s prediction that 97 fighters would be
delivered this year is also a lower estimate than the 100 to 120 fighters CEO
Jim Taiclet offered in a July earnings call.
Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida recently
received its first four F-35s as part of its effort to transition from its old
training mission to a combat-capable F-35 fighter wing, according to Air Combat
Command head Gen. Mark Kelly, while speaking in a panel at the Defense News
Conference on Sept. 6 in Arlington, Virginia.
He added that other transitioning units, such as
the Alabama Air National Guard’s 187th Fighter Wing, are still likely to get
their first new F-35s on time.
Subsequent tranches of F-35s to complete those
units’ complements could take a hit from the delay, Kelly said. The severity of
the effect will depend on how long it is before F-35s start getting delivered
again, he explained.
Kelly said the Air Force remains “in lockstep”
with its industry partners on the F-35 and needs to help companies work through
this challenge, which he called “way-hard business.”
The delays in a unit receiving new fighters will
have a follow-on effect on the Air Force’s ability to manage itself worldwide,
Kelly said.
“When a unit converts to a new airplane, usually
by the time they get their last airplane, the clock starts and they need to be
ready to go a year or so later,” Kelly noted. “That will delay and will impact
… global force management.”
The Air Force will use its TR-2 F-35s until the
newer configuration becomes available, he said. But in a fight against an
advanced military able to employ serious electromagnetic threats, Kelly added,
the Air Force must be able to employ the most up-to-date capabilities.
“If we’re going to engage those threats, we’ve got
to have the fastest processing, the best jamming,” Kelly said. “That takes a
really agile, stable software load to unlock this Block 4 hardware and unlock
the EW [electronic warfare] that’s the secret sauce that we’re going to need.”
Lt. Gen. Jim Slife, deputy chief of staff for
operations and the nominee to be the service’s next vice chief of staff, said
that with the Air Force’s limited fighter capacity, it doesn’t have the ability
to choose whether to send a TR-2 or TR-3 F-35 to an unfolding crisis.
“It’s a knife’s edge of capacity that we’re
dealing with every day,” Slife said. “It’s frankly, check your pockets and see
what you have in your pocket [when an emergency unfolds], and that’s what goes.
Getting these jets on time and fielded is absolutely critical to our ability to
meet the global demand signal on a day-to-day basis.”
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