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F-35 to arrive at Shaw in 2017
The Item ^ | January 29, 2009 | EMMA RATLIFF

Posted on 01/29/2009 7:29:27 AM PST by Jet Jaguar

During the Greater Sumter Chamber of Commerce’s annual retreat this year attendees were given an in depth briefing by both Lt. Gen. Gary L. North of the U.S. Air Force and Charlie Savage, regional manager of Lockheed Martin, on the latest happenings at Shaw Air Force base and more specifically, the latest arrival date and progress update of the F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter to Shaw.

During the third day of the retreat held in Myrtle Beach, North, commander with the 9th Air Force, updated local business leaders on the status of the F-35 fighter, also known as AF-1, noting that the jet “is scheduled to deliver (to Shaw) in 2017.”

The fifth-generation aircraft will replace the fourth-generation F-16 and holds a hefty price tag of almost $80 million.

“There will be a release of the noise analysis that should be announced in March,” said Savage, who is based at Shaw Air Force Base.

Savage and North discussed upgrades that the aircraft will incorporate, such as stealth capability throughout the aircraft, including embedded antennas, aligned edges and special coatings and materials. The fighter will also conduct air-to-air and air-to-ground combat missions simultaneously.

Not only will the F-35 fighter’s capacity be upgraded, but construction and maintenance of the aircraft will be handled differently than that of the F-16. According to a release from Lockheed Martin, the manufacturer, “The AF-1, the first F-35 to have employed the moving assembly line at its full-rate production speed of 50 inches (127 millimeters) per hour … . The moving assembly line, designed to improve production quality and speed, is the first ever for a modern fighter. AF-1 becomes the first aircraft since World War II to use a moving assembly line at Lockheed Martin’s (formerly Consolidated Vultee, Convair and General Dynamics) Fort Worth factory.”

Also, according to Lockheed Martin, the F-35 will incorporate an “advanced aircraft sustainment, ‘maintenance’ concept, which not only employs built-in diagnostics to quickly identify the cause of malfunctioning parts so that the aircraft can be returned to service faster than in the past, but it also employs a prognostics concept that monitors all key components to assess their life expectancy so that maintenance personel can better predict failures, replace parts before they fail and better manage recources and time.”

At this point, Lockheed Martin is promoting the F-35 as “truly a generation apart from the F-16 due to advancements in technology and by meeting the demands of intensity in the battle space, scarcity of time and the demand of instantaneous interoperability, ‘fusion.’”

Lockheed Martin’s first successful F-35 flight took place on Dec. 15, 2006, at the facility in Fort Worth, Texas. Delivery of the aircraft to the armed services will not begin until 2010.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: aerospace; f35; shawafb; sumter
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To: TalonDJ

Me either, but procurement and delivery altogether seems way too slow.


21 posted on 01/29/2009 8:34:57 AM PST by Travis T. OJustice (Change is not a destination, just as hope is not a strategy.)
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To: meandog

Thanks for the pic. Not guilty


22 posted on 01/29/2009 8:35:19 AM PST by freeplancer (McCain Voters Catch the Lobsters-Obama Voters Eat Them)
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To: ROLF of the HILL COUNTRY

You’re completely wrong about that. It only took 143 days for our engineers to have a flying prototype of the first jet. (P-80 Shooting Star)


23 posted on 01/29/2009 8:46:04 AM PST by PSYCHO-FREEP (WHAT? Where did my tag line go? (ACORN))
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To: Professional Engineer

ping


24 posted on 01/29/2009 9:05:05 AM PST by Peanut Gallery ("Charming and inspiring as one man is, he alone cannot bring peace to Israel..." Rabbi Lazer Gurkow)
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To: PSYCHO-FREEP
It only took 143 days for our engineers to have a flying prototype of the first jet. (P-80 Shooting Star)

Time for you to hit the books. It took 143 days to produce the airframe which was mated to an existing British engine. Bell's P-59 first flew on 1 October 1942. The P-80 first flew on 8 January 1944, over 15 months later.

25 posted on 01/29/2009 10:00:09 PM PST by A.A. Cunningham
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