[ASD News: 3 February 2010 ]
(Fort
Worth, Texas, February 2, 2010) -- A
Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) F-35B Lightning
II short takeoff/vertical landing (STOVL)
stealth fighter today became the fifth F-35
to begin flight operations.
The jet, known as BF-3, departed the runway
near Lockheed Martin's Fort Worth plant at
4:02 p.m. CST for its first flight. During
the one-hour sortie, F-35 Chief Test Pilot
Jon Beesley tested the aircraft's handling
qualities, engine functionality, landing
gear operation and basic subsystem
performance.
BF-3 joins two other F-35Bs and one F-35A
conventional takeoff and landing (CTOL)
aircraft currently undergoing active flight
test. The first CTOL F-35, AA-1, is now
preparing for live-fire testing. The F-35
program continues to accelerate the time
from flight line arrival to first flight.
BF-3 was built and instrumented to conduct
flight sciences test work and will be used
primarily to evaluate vehicle systems and
expand the aircraft's aerodynamic and
structural-loads envelope. It will deploy
later this year to Naval Air Station
Patuxent River, Md., where it will carry and
release most of the weapons the F-35B will
employ in combat.
BF-3 and all other Lightning II aircraft
will be supported by the F-35 Autonomic
Logistics Information System and monitored
by the F-35 Autonomic Logistics Global
Sustainment Operations Center in Fort Worth.
F-35 sustainment is based upon the
principles of Performance-Based Logistics,
involving extensive partnering agreements
between government and industry. The F-35
team has developed an advanced sustainment
system capability with designed-in
sustainability that will reduce overall
life-cycle costs and ensure mission
readiness.
The F-35 Lightning II is a 5th generation
fighter, combining advanced stealth with
fighter speed and agility, fully fused
sensor information, network-enabled
operations, advanced sustainment, and lower
operational and support costs. Lockheed
Martin is developing the F-35 with its
principal industrial partners, Northrop
Grumman and BAE Systems. Two separate,
interchangeable F-35 engines are under
development: the Pratt & Whitney F135 and
the GE Rolls-Royce Fighter Engine Team F136.