What's new

F-35B Begins New ‘Operational Readiness Inspection’ This Week Before IOC Decision

F-22Raptor

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
16,980
Reaction score
3
Country
United States
Location
United States
PENTAGON – The Marine Corps added one final test before deciding whether to declare initial operational capability for the Lockheed Martin F-35B Joint Strike Fighter (JSF): a first-ever Operational Readiness Inspection.

The ORI for the first F-35B squadron, Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 121, is scheduled to begin today and will last four or five days. An inspection team – with members from Headquarters Marine Corps, the Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Squadron One (MAWTS-1) school and the Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron (VMFA-T) 501 – will “assess them from a maintenance perspective, a sustainment perspective and an operations perspective,” deputy commandant for aviation Lt. Gen. Jon Davis told USNI News on July 8.

“We have a team of about 12 people going out to assess everything from maintenance to NATOPS (Naval Air Training and Operating Procedures Standardization) knowledge,” he said.
“There’s 10 items on a Commander of Naval Air Forces inspection, maintenance inspection; we’re going to go out and out of those 10 say, give us these five. And then we’ll look and if there’s problems with those five we’ll go deeper.”

In addition to that maintenance test, the ORI will also include assessments of five areas of flight operations with live ordnance at up to a division-level context. The last day will be a “surge day,” during which every person in the squadron will be involved in a mission set either on actual planes or in a simulator.

At the end of the week, Davis will meet with the assessment team in person to go over the results.

“We’ll assess, we’ll take a look, we’ll look for the goods and the others,” he said.
“And then what I’ll do is I’ll look in the aggregate about the requirements for this squadron being able to go to war with an F-35 and sustain operations from a deployed base, and I’ll make a recommendation to [Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Joseph] Dunford based on what I see out there, and he’ll either declare IOC or he won’t.”

Davis admitted his key concern is spare parts.

“Do we have the depth in supply to support a combat deployment?” he said.
“If there’s any one area I’m worried about, it’s that.”

When Davis became deputy commandant for aviation last year, he said he had a chart with the status of 14 different areas, color-coded green, yellow or red based on their readiness levels.

“When I got here a year ago … there was not a lot of green, a lot of yellow, some red. That chart right now is pretty much all green. Still a little bit of yellow in spares, we’re going to assess that. But for the most part we’re in good shape.”

He said the crews are well trained and the aircraft itself brings a greater capability than the F-18 Super Hornet, AV-8B Harrier and EA-6B Prowler it replaces combined. But the logistics supply chain needs to be solid because once Dunford declares IOC, the first squadron could deploy at any time.

“Just like the V-22, we declared IOC in 2007; a couple weeks later, we deployed to Iraq right away,” Davis said. VMFA 121 is set for a permanent change of station to Japan in January 2017, but they could potentially deploy sooner if called upon. Therefore, Davis said, his threshold for recommending an IOC declaration is, “could we take this squadron and go over to the Middle East tomorrow after Gen. Dunford declares IOC, yes or no?”

Davis said he would not prejudge the results of the ORI, but he expects the squadron will prove ready for IOC. During operational testing aboard USS Wasp (LHD-1), JSF-trained pilots worked alongside the ship’s crew that had never worked with the aircraft before, creating a steep learning curve for both the Marines and the sailors onboard. But Davis said everything went well – they flew all required test points, qualified all pilots for day operations, qualified some for night operations, and trained some of the landing safety officers and deck crew for future JSF operations.

The Marines even flew an F-35 engine out to the ship on a cradle slung under an MV-22 Osprey, which many believed would be challenging if not impossible to do, Davis said.

After dropping live ordnance earlier this month, all that stands between the F-35B and its introduction to the fleet is the ORI – an assessment that comes from the British military. Davis said he did an exchange tour when he was a captain, and before certifying the first GR5-variant Harrier squadron, an assessment team came in to ensure the squadron could meet the full range of NATO requirements. Davis said he liked the idea of having one last check from those who know the program best before officially green-lighting the squadron, and he decided several months ago to bring the tradition to the U.S.

“A lot of people said, or had conjecture, that the Marines, me, were just going to declare IOC regardless. You have 10 jets, you’re going to declare,” he said.
“We have a very stringent requirement for what the airplanes are able to do, and we were hell-bent on measuring and making sure we had what we said we were going to have in order to declare initial operating capability.”

F-35B Begins New 'Operational Readiness Inspection' This Week Before IOC Decision - USNI News
 
Bro, Most probably, Turkey will be the first which is going to station F-35B on LHD in Mediterranean to wave our proud flag on deep waters...
Cabatlı we are getting our first pair this year right ?

"Turkey said in 2012 it was sticking to its plans to buy 100 of the planes with an initial order of two planes for delivery in 2015."
Turkey to Order Four More F-35 Fighter Jets | F-35 Lightning II

UPDATE 1-Turkey to order four more F-35 fighter jets - Davutoglu| Reuters

"We are planning to use funds from our Defense Industry Support Fund for the first four aircraft. Two are set for delivery in 2015, and another two for 2016,” the procurement official said."
Turkey to Buy Two Planes in Second F-35 Shipment - The Journal of Turkish Weekly
 
Cabatlı we are getting our first pair this year right ?

"Turkey said in 2012 it was sticking to its plans to buy 100 of the planes with an initial order of two planes for delivery in 2015."
Turkey to Order Four More F-35 Fighter Jets | F-35 Lightning II

UPDATE 1-Turkey to order four more F-35 fighter jets - Davutoglu| Reuters

"We are planning to use funds from our Defense Industry Support Fund for the first four aircraft. Two are set for delivery in 2015, and another two for 2016,” the procurement official said."
Turkey to Buy Two Planes in Second F-35 Shipment - The Journal of Turkish Weekly


Bro, If nothing changed, It was planned to take delivery first F-35A in 2018. The schedule is being delayed cause of requesting more matured F-35 variant to be stationed in Malatya airbase.
 
Excellent!! A little step ahead for TCG Levent :yahoo:. Operational Readiness Inspection is very important to reach IOC.

@isoo @cabatli_53 @Sinan @xenon54 @T-123456 @xxxKULxxx and the rest of the gang :smokin:
Although nothing official yet everything points towards F-35B on Turkish LHD right?
Oh boy we still have to wait many years to see the first F-35 taking off from our LHD, man i cant wait. :(
 
Although nothing official yet everything points towards F-35B on Turkish LHD right?
Oh boy we still have to wait many years to see the first F-35 taking off from our LHD, man i cant wait. :(

Nope. The decision was given prior to future possible threat perceptions and operational use of Navy abroad. We won't hear officials for a long time like at least two years maybe. But it's 100% certain that Navy will buy F35Bs. :)
 
Back
Top Bottom