T-38 må jobbe ufortrødent videre, 65 år etter at flyet fløy første gang. Vi som har fløyet den glemmer det ikke så lett... Nå sliter "The white rocket" med reservedeler. (Red.)
T-7 trainer production delayed again as Air Force, Boeing adjust plan
Thursday,
Jan 16, 2025
The Air Force's new T-7 approach will allow for more testing before a production contract is awarded, which officials hope will reduce risk on the program. (Boeing)
The
Air Force is further delaying the production contract for its newest trainer
aircraft, the T-7 Red Hawk, and will expand its testing in a major
reorganization of the program’s acquisition strategy.
The
service originally planned to award Boeing a contract to build the first
production T-7s in fiscal 2025 and would have bought seven jets this year.
Under the Air Force and Boeing’s revised plan, the service will now award that
contract in 2026, Air Force acquisition chief Andrew Hunter said in a Wednesday
release.
“Acquisition
programs cannot be stagnant, even when they are fixed-price,” Hunter said.
“This is why I’ve directed the T-7A team to implement updates to reduce risk
and increase our confidence in the aircraft design, all to ensure we can
deliver the T-7A to the warfighter when needed.”
The
Air Force will also buy four additional production-representative test T-7s using 2025 research
and development funds that will be delivered in fiscal 2026. This will nearly
double the fleet of five test aircraft now being flown at locations that
include Edwards Air Force Base in California.
“We
appreciate the partnership with the U.S. Air Force and are committed to
providing our warfighters with the safest, most-advanced training system in the
world,” said Steve Parker, interim president and chief executive for Boeing
Defense, Space and Security, in a statement. “This innovative approach allows
us to provide a production-ready configuration to the Air Force prior to
low-rate initial production, further reducing any future risk to production.
This will accelerate the path to delivering this critical capability on the
timeline the Air Force needs.”
The
Air Force is in the process of buying about 350 of Boeing’s T-7s, which will replace the
aging T-38 Talon trainer fleet. The T-7 is a fifth-generation aircraft trainer
that will make it easier to teach new pilots to fly fighters, such as the F-35,
as well as bombers. Boeing has touted its digital design as an advancement in
how planes are made.
But
the T-7 program has been beset by design, testing and production issues that
have caused its schedule to slip behind repeatedly. The service originally
expected to buy the first operational T-7s in 2023, but problems with its
ejection systems and flight control software pushed that to 2024, and then to
2025. It is now expected to be three years behind the original plan.
In
February 2024, Boeing said it would delay delivery of its next test T-7 by
several months due to quality problems with some parts. The company also said
supply chain issues were forcing it to postpone the planned start of low-rate
initial production by several months.
At
the time, Boeing said the fifth engineering and manufacturing development jet
would be delivered around March or April 2024. But in Wednesday’s release, the
Air Force said the fifth jet was delivered in December 2024.
The
additional test jets will allow Air Education and Training Command to speed up
its test plans, as well as its development of a curriculum for flying the T-7,
Hunter said. With the jets, the service will be able to stick to its plan of
achieving initial operational capability in fiscal 2027.
“Procuring
these [test jets] in FY25 also allows the Air Force and Boeing to improve
manufacturing readiness prior to entering the production phase for the entire
run of over 350 T-7As,” Hunter said. “Decreasing overlap between development,
testing and production lowers the likelihood of potential costly refits of a
significant number of aircraft.”
Hunter
also said the new acquisition plan includes “using a management approach which
incentivizes Boeing to address emergent issues that were not part of the
contract that was signed in 2018 and to accelerate elements of the program.”
An
Air Force official told Defense News one of those “emergent issues” was the
service’s desire to increase the T-7′s range.
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