Thursday, April 28, 2016

Five Of Six Air Force F-35 Fighter Jets Could Not Take Off During Testing

An F-35 Lightning II taxis to the parking ramp Nov. 11, 2015, at Luke Air Force Base, Ariz. U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Timothy Boyer

Clay Dillow, Fortune: Only One of Six Air Force F-35s Could Actually Take Off During Testing

Software glitches continue to dog the nation’s newest fighter jet.

Five of six Air Force F-35 fighter jets were unable to take off during a recent exercise due to software bugs that continue to hamstring the world’s most sophisticated—and most expensive—warplane.

During a mock deployment at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho, just one of the $100 million Lockheed Martin LMT -0.04% F-35s was able to boot its software successfully and get itself airborne during an exercise designed to test the readiness of the F-35, FlightGlobal reports. Nonetheless, the Air Force plans to declare its F-35s combat-ready later this year.

Details surrounding the failed exercise were disclosed earlier this week in written testimony presented to Congress by J. Michael Gilmore, the Pentagon’s chief weapons tester.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: If only 1 out of 6 F-35s can actually take off during a test, how can they then do this test/exercise .... A-10 vs. F-35: Air Force warplanes to face off (CNN).

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Nobody knows nobody's paying attention it's just steal from the US government