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F-35's Cooling Crisis: Design Flaws Fuel $2 Trillion Dilemma For Pentagon
Epoch Times ^ | 11/23/2024 | Mike Fredenburg

Posted on 11/23/2024 5:08:43 PM PST by SeekAndFind

The Pentagon is facing a difficult decision regarding the F-35’s chronic, crippling problems with overheating brought on by its insufficient cooling capacity.

Should the U.S. taxpayers pay for a costly upgrade to the stealth fighter’s cooling that will handle its immediate needs, or should U.S. taxpayers pay for a far more expensive upgrade that theoretically could handle increased future cooling needs?

Before we briefly address the two options facing the Pentagon, let’s look at why cooling capacity is so important for the F-35 and why the most expensive weapons system program in world history produced a plane that was destined to have inadequate cooling from the very beginning.

Having adequate cooling is vital because a fighter’s avionics, radar, and other electronics-based systems generate heat. While air cooling is always part of the cooling solution, modern fighters cram so much heat-producing electronics into a relatively small space that air cooling alone is insufficient.

Various types of liquid cooling are necessary, especially for power-hungry radars. This is particularly true of the F-35, which is advertised as a flying supercomputer crammed full of heat-producing computers, communications, and avionics equipment. When it comes to heat production, its powerful AN/APG-81 AESA radar leads the way.

The bottom line is that it takes a whole bunch of electronics to produce a whole bunch of heat to give the F-35 its much-touted capabilities and make it the world’s preeminent fighter.

Regardless of the validity of the claims to preeminence, there is zero doubt that the F-35’s designers designed a fighter that, from the outset, had insufficient cooling. This nearly intractable problem has been exacerbated as new capabilities are added, requiring more computing power and generating more heat. In particular, the group of new Block IV capabilities that we are told are necessary for the F-35 to fulfill its long overdue promise of being a dominant fifth-generation fighter will require a whole bunch more cooling.

The underlying issue powering the cooling crisis is that the F-35 design team only designed the F-35 with 14 kilowatts (kW) of cooling power. Yet the F-35 was not declared fully operational until Block 3F capabilities were incorporated—capabilities that required roughly 32 kW of cooling and have only recently been rolled out, some 30 years after development began on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The Block 3F upgrade necessitated modifying the F-35’s cooling system. It negatively impacted the longevity and reliability of the F-35’s F135 engine, which was already struggling with reliability issues.

So why was the F-35’s cooling capacity initially so under-specced?

The answer to this question is also the answer to most of the problems that have plagued a plane that came out of a design-by-committee process—a process that took what was supposed to be a low-cost, relatively lightweight replacement for the F-16 and the F/A-18 A and C Hornet that would complement bigger, more expensive fighters like the F-22 and the Navy’s F/A-18E/F Super Hornet.

Ultimately, what was supposed to be a relatively low-cost, lighter complement to large twin-engined fighters like the F-22 and F/A-18E/F became a single-engine fighter heavier than many twin-engined fighters.

The massive weight of the F-35 meant that Pratt & Whitney had to design an engine with a far higher power-to-weight ratio than the F-22’s still cutting-edge F119 engine. It also meant that the F-35 had to undergo a draconic weight reduction program where every ounce mattered. Pratt & Whitney succeeded in getting the power by ramping up the operating temperature far beyond what had ever been done for a production fighter engine.

Still, as time has proven, the massive increase in turbine inlet temperature to an insane 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit—900 to 1,100 degrees more than most other jet fighter engines—ensured that the engine would suffer from reliability and longevity issues. The fact that engine power is required for cooling only exacerbated the problem as power requirements for each F-35 capability upgrade added the need for more cooling, which meant the F-35 engine was subjected to more stress.

That this would be the case had to be understood by the F-35 design team, but they also understood that without the massive increase in engine power only possible by pushing the F-35 engine operating temperature far into bleeding edge territory, the F-35 program was dead in the water and that adding any weight for anything would also seriously jeopardize the program.

Consequently, the decision to under-spec the F-35 cooling capacity happened because incorporating enough cooling capacity into the F-35’s design to allow for reasonable growth would have added weight that would have reduced the range and payload of all the F-35 variants, but in particular, the Marine’s VTOL capable F-35 where any additional weight threatened to lower its range and payload combination below minimum acceptable performance parameters.

If truth be told, the capabilities crammed into the F-35 would have made sense for a two-engine design. However, changing the F-35 to a twin-engine design was a no-go because it would have immediately dispelled the illusion that the F-35 was going to be a low-cost replacement for the F-16. Just as importantly, there was no twin-engine vertical and take-off landing (VTOL) F-35 design for the Marine Corps.

So, in the end, the F-35 was released with an engine destined to be unreliable with a cooling capacity that no experienced aerospace engineer could have credibly claimed would meet future cooling needs.

This brings us back to the question of whether it makes sense to go with an expensive short-term solution or a costly longer-term cooling solution. From a sales perspective, this is a choice of two positives that the Pentagon would like us to focus on. But before committing to the options being presented, let’s consider that the current F-35 engines are wearing out faster than promised. The engine control units that will supposedly make them reliable are not due to have their design completed until 2029.

Also, consider that the program cost, including sustainment, is now projected to be over $2 trillion, 400 percent more in inflation-adjusted dollars than its 2007 GAO estimate. Further, as has happened so many times before, the cost estimate could grow once again.

Finally, there is no guarantee that the desperately needed engine core upgrade from Pratt & Whitney, which is supposed to be delivered in 2029, will be delivered on time or that it will actually make the F-35 engine reliable.

Consequently, given that the level of risk and costs for the F-35 program only seems to be growing, maybe we should think of a creative way to get our existing F-35s flying with some reasonable level of reliability. Before building new F-35s, a carefully chosen set of hardware and software capabilities that do not require increases in power and cooling should be considered.

Doing this would be a significant achievement!

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: boeing; cooling; design; dodindustrialcomplex; f35; fatamy; military
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1 posted on 11/23/2024 5:08:43 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Ask the Chinkanese how they solved the problem on their knock-offs.


2 posted on 11/23/2024 5:11:15 PM PST by Glad2bnuts
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To: SeekAndFind

$2 trillion for an airplane. This is insanity.


3 posted on 11/23/2024 5:16:32 PM PST by bigdaddy45
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To: SeekAndFind
The American military empire is in terminal collapse.
4 posted on 11/23/2024 5:16:41 PM PST by Jim Noble (Assez de mensonges et de phrases)
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To: SeekAndFind

Meanwhile, cheap effective drones are eating our lunch. SERIOUS bloodletting is called for at DoD and those sucking at their generous teat.


5 posted on 11/23/2024 5:19:35 PM PST by Nervous Tick ("First the Saturday people, then the Sunday people...": ISLAM is the problem!)
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To: Glad2bnuts

They execute people.


6 posted on 11/23/2024 5:26:28 PM PST by laplata (They want each crisis to take the greatest toll possible.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Sort of like big Pharma ... never cure just maintain. Big Mil/Industrial Complex ... never do it right, just constantly correct.


7 posted on 11/23/2024 5:29:01 PM PST by RetiredTexasVet (We used to be a Republic, we are now a Fascist Klepto-Thugocracy. until Jan 20, 2025)
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To: SeekAndFind

So in a war how many sorties are likely carrying how much ordnance, and what is the total bomb damage estimate before the capability is on a step decline and no longer available? What enemy military capability is estimated to remain at that point? Will the US survive as a sovereign nation?


8 posted on 11/23/2024 5:31:14 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: bigdaddy45

I read a Sci-Fi novel in high school, one side was poorly funded, a backwater type of people, the other the richest most advanced in the Solar system. While the rich advanced side was focused on the very best war equipment ever, the other was killing them cheaply. In short, the advanced nation or world lost, they were caught in between upgrades and were overwhelmed.

Like the US spending Billions to kill hundreds, they spend hundreds to kill multiple thousands.


9 posted on 11/23/2024 5:31:16 PM PST by Glad2bnuts
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To: laplata

Amusing quip, but our military is now built by management by committee and communist central planning. The Chinese are moving technologically at breakneck speed. They have become the rapid innovators while we are wallowing in the swill of our corrupt deep state fascist system.


10 posted on 11/23/2024 5:34:13 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: laplata
They execute people.

Capital punishment for certain particularly grievous "white collar" crimes is the one aspect of ChiCom culture that should be embraced by the United States.

11 posted on 11/23/2024 5:35:02 PM PST by DSH
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To: SeekAndFind

The F-35 is a dog. It is crap and insiders know it.

The F-35 is a shining example of what is wrong with the entire U.S. military and why America’s military cannot actually fight its way out of a wet paper bag.


12 posted on 11/23/2024 5:39:08 PM PST by Gnome1949
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To: SeekAndFind

As a guy who repaired state of the art fighters, and one who was a Boeing engineer.
I have one sentence of advice, get the politicians out of the design cycle.
That’s what has Effed up all our air planes - Democrats.


13 posted on 11/23/2024 5:39:43 PM PST by rellic (no such thing as a moderate Moslem or Democrat )
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To: bigdaddy45

Incremental unit cost is around $88 million.


14 posted on 11/23/2024 5:42:32 PM PST by steve86 (Numquam accusatus, numquam ad curiam ibit, numquam ad carcerem™)
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To: Gnome1949

I understand that it’s not even stealthy from behind.


15 posted on 11/23/2024 5:44:36 PM PST by The Duke (Not without incident.)
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To: Gnome1949

“The F-35 is a dog. It is crap and insiders know it.”

Funny how 14 countries have purchased over 1,000 of “dog and crap”.

And no one asked for their money back.


16 posted on 11/23/2024 5:46:23 PM PST by steve86 (Numquam accusatus, numquam ad curiam ibit, numquam ad carcerem™)
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To: Nervous Tick

Drones are not eating our lunch and even in Ukraine, countermeasures have taken a lot of steam out of drones and their early successes when nobody was prepared for them.


17 posted on 11/23/2024 5:50:57 PM PST by XRdsRev (Justice for Bernell Trammell, black Trump supporter, executed in the street in broad daylight 2020.)
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To: SeekAndFind

When you try to make a plane that pleases everybody including foreign countries (whose money went into this program), you get something that eventually pleases almost nobody.


18 posted on 11/23/2024 5:53:45 PM PST by XRdsRev (Justice for Bernell Trammell, black Trump supporter, executed in the street in broad daylight 2020.)
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To: rellic

Not just democrats, republicans too. They all want their piece of the pie.


19 posted on 11/23/2024 5:54:40 PM PST by XRdsRev (Justice for Bernell Trammell, black Trump supporter, executed in the street in broad daylight 2020.)
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To: Gnome1949

The F35 is the new F111.


20 posted on 11/23/2024 5:58:13 PM PST by henkster ("The masses are too stupid to understand our enlightened leadership" said every Marxist ever)
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