Posted on 02/05/2019 5:10:40 AM PST by sukhoi-30mki
An F-35B Lightning II is launched from USS Wasp. (Image credit: U.S. Navy)
F-35B Lightning II aircraft, attached to the F-35B detachment of the Flying Tigers of Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron (VMM) 262 (Reinforced), are currently in the Indo-Pacific region deployed aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp (LHD 1).
Wasp, flagship of Wasp Amphibious Ready Group, with embarked 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU), is operating in the region to enhance interoperability with partners and serve as a ready-response force for any type of contingency.
F-35B flying in Third Day of War configuration. (Image credit: U.S. Marine Corps).
Images being released these days show the Marines STOVL (Short Take Off Vertical Landing) aircraft in VMFA-121 markings carrying external weapons during blue water ops, a configuration being tested for quite some time and known as CAS (Close Air Support) Beast Mode (or Bomb Truck).
In particular, the aircraft are loaded with 2x AIM-9X (on the outer pylons) and 4x GBU-12 500-lb LGB (Laser Guided Bombs).
This configuration involving external loads is also referred to as a Third Day of War configuration as opposed to a First Day of War one in which the F-35 would carry weapons internally to maintain low radar cross-section and observability from sensors.
As we explained in a previous story: as a conflict evolves and enemy air defense assets including sensors, air defense missile and gun systems and enemy aircraft are degraded by airstrikes (conducted also by F-35s in Stealth Mode) the environment becomes more permissive: in such a scenario the F-35 no longer relies on low-observable capabilities for survivability so it can shift to carrying large external loads.
LO (Low Observability) is required for penetrating defended airspaces and knocking out defenses at the beginning of a conflict, but after the careful work of surface-to-air missile hunting is done (two, three days, who really knows?), the F-35 is expected to go beast.
In Beast Mode, exploiting the internal weapon bays, the F-35A can carry 2x AIM-9X (external pylons), 2x AIM-120 AMRAAM (internal bomb bay) and 4x GBU-31 2,000-lb (pylons) and 2x GBU-31 PGMs (internal bay). Its not clear whether the F-35B can launch from a Wasp-class amphibious assault ship in this configuration.
On Sept. 27, 2018, U.S. Marine Corps F-35B jets made their combat debut. U.S. Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 211, the Wake Island Avengers, of the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit, used their F-35B Lighting II Joint Strike Fighters to hit insurgent targets in Afghanistans Kandahar Province launching from U.S. Navy Wasp-class amphibious assault ship USS Essex (LHD-2) on station in the Persian Gulf. The aircraft used in the strike were loaded with GBU-32 1000-lb JDAM (Joint Direct Attack Munitions) but were also equipped with the externally mounted GAU-22 25mm gun pod in addition to the weapons in the internal bays. And sported the radar reflectors too.
At least two aircraft, modex CF-00 and CF-01, made a stopover in Kandahar Air Field after the air strike, before returning to the aircraft carrier.
An F-35B takes off with 2x AIM-9x and 2x GBU-12 LGBs (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sarah Myers)
Back to the Beast Mode, F-35B have launched from the flight deck of amphibious assault ship USS America (LHA 6) with inert 500-pound GBU-12 Paveway II laser-guided test bombs during operational testing and the third phase of developmental testing for the STOVL stealth aircraft conducted by Marine Operational Test and Evaluation Squadron 1 (VMX-1), Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 211 (VMFA-211) and Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 23 (VX-23) in 2016. Still, the ones just released are probably the very first images of the aircraft launching in Beast Mode operationally.
According to a Pentagon test office document recently obtained by Bloomberg, Durability testing data indicates service-life of initial F-35B short-takeoff-vertical landing jets bought by Marine Corps is well under expected service life of 8,000 fleet hours; may be as low as 2,100″ hours.
This would mean that some of the early F-35B jets would start hitting service life limit in 2026.
It’s magical, an F-35 that turns into an F-16 on the third day of War.
It is a great replacement for the Harrier Jump Jet though.
“They buried that little nugget. Wow, that is criminally bad.”
The issue is not buried, and it applies to the earliest models.
Here’s a quote from a much better article;
Items identified in the Annual DOT&E report are well understood and have been resolved in partnership with the F-35 Joint Program Office or have an agreed path forward to resolution, Lockheed said in a statement to Aerospace DAILY.
Planned design changes should allow the early F-35Bs to meet the service life requirement of 8,000 flight hours, a program source says.”
http://aviationweek.com/defense/oldest-f-35b-could-hit-service-life-limit-2026
You dont really understand the concept of sarcasm, do you? Ha ha.
An adversary might be able to sink one.
But they will have crossed the Rubicon of nuclear war if they do.
And they know it.
OK, got it. But my point stands. Obviously in a broad sense they know we are there and coming back. But they are blind to sorties and their specific targets.
You are right. I understand the first attack is the blind them. Command and control, radar.
By the fourth day, I imagine we could put sirens on the struts.
And how many cruise missiles and drones could be had for the price of one F-35?
—
Lets not forget the hungry and the homeless!
but if you feed the homeless to the hungry there are two issues taken care of and if you teach the hungry how to prepare "the other meat" they can then, fend for themselves.
obviously the /s tag needs to be used by me more often
All this whiz bang sht is a national constitutional mandate, not money for schools from the feds.
School is not a right, except in the minds of communists, who, ironically, like to bash the military and weapon industry...
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