The F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) continues to be a good news, bad news saga. Just when the program appears to be overcoming scheduling delays and technical glitches, the Obama administration says it will purchase 179 fewer aircraft than once planned during the years immediately ahead. The Pentagon will seek 13 fewer airframes in its fiscal year 2013 budget proposal, 29 JSFs instead of 42. In 2013, 2015 and 2016, the Pentagon will buy 29, 44 and 61 Lightning IIs respectively, a sharp drop from a once-planned 62, 81 and 108. Stretching out the schedule at the mile-long, windowless plant in Fort Worth where F-35s are manufactured will allow the U.S. Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy more time for developmental, testing and correction of deficiencies before planes become operational. Vice Adm. David "DJ" Venlet, the JSF's military program manager—and a former F-14 Tomcat back seater with a Libyan Sukhoi Su-22 aerial victory in his logbook—said in January that the longstanding policy of pursuing development and operations side-by-side is not working. The planned total production for U.S. forces is unchanged at 2,443 aircraft.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Flight Journal 06/2012
The F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) continues to be a good news, bad news saga. Just when the program appears to be overcoming scheduling delays and technical glitches, the Obama administration says it will purchase 179 fewer aircraft than once planned during the years immediately ahead. The Pentagon will seek 13 fewer airframes in its fiscal year 2013 budget proposal, 29 JSFs instead of 42. In 2013, 2015 and 2016, the Pentagon will buy 29, 44 and 61 Lightning IIs respectively, a sharp drop from a once-planned 62, 81 and 108. Stretching out the schedule at the mile-long, windowless plant in Fort Worth where F-35s are manufactured will allow the U.S. Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy more time for developmental, testing and correction of deficiencies before planes become operational. Vice Adm. David "DJ" Venlet, the JSF's military program manager—and a former F-14 Tomcat back seater with a Libyan Sukhoi Su-22 aerial victory in his logbook—said in January that the longstanding policy of pursuing development and operations side-by-side is not working. The planned total production for U.S. forces is unchanged at 2,443 aircraft.
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