What's new

Lockheed Martin's F-35C Lightning II Carrier Variant Undergoes Drop Testing

Metallic

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 22, 2009
Messages
1,645
Reaction score
0
Lockheed Martin's F-35C Lightning II Carrier Variant Undergoes Drop Testing
UNITED STATES - 9 APRIL 2010

Lockheed Martin's F-35C Lightning II carrier variant ground-test article, CG-1, undergoes drop testing at Vought Aircraft in Dallas – one of 53 tests planned for CG-1 at Vought.

On March 27, CG-1, was dropped 95 inches at 20 feet per second, with an 8.8-degree pitch, 2-degree roll, and 133-knot wheel speed, simulating a carrier-deck landing. During the testing, 500 sensors are monitored, with 2,500 points collected per second.

The F-35C will be the U.S. Navy's first stealth fighter.

In addition to ground testing, flight test continues, with more than 170 test flights logged. During the first quarter of 2010, the three F-35B test aircraft at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md., outperformed flight test requirements, completing 33 flights compared to the 29 required. Twenty-eight of the flights took place at Patuxent River, with the remaining five conducted from Lockheed Martin’s Fort Worth plant.

F-35C Lightning II Carrier Variant Undergoes Drop Testing






Source: Lockheed Martin
 
Last edited:
.
Vought Test Lab Performs Series of Drop Tests on F-35C for Lockheed Martin
UNITED STATES - 7 MAY 2010

DALLAS, MAY 7, 2010 – The anticipation was palpable as Vought engineers and our customer watched Lockheed Martin’s F-35C Lightning II Carrier Variant dangle from its harnessed position just below the rafters in building 94 at the Jefferson Street site. When the wheels reached their 138 knot speed, the countdown began. 10, 9, 8, 7… The lanyard releasing the quick release safety latch was pulled and the jet was dropped. It was over in five brief seconds.

This “drop test” is done to simulate a landing on an aircraft carrier. As a fighter jet approaches the deck of a carrier, forty-six thousand pounds of airplane is traveling at 138 knots and hitting the deck with a thud, stressing the airframe and especially the jet’s landing gear with thousands of pounds of pressure. Every part of the gear must withstand that tremendous stress time after time with no structural failure.

So how can we assure that the gear is suitable for carrier landings, and there won’t be any catastrophic failures? How do we prove that the design engineering was correct? That’s where Vought’s Test Lab comes in. The lab is capable of lifting a fully-loaded, fullscale aircraft up to eleven feet above the floor … and dropping it. Lockheed Martin has contracted with us to drop test the F-35C Lightning II Carrier Variant, a fifth-generation, single-seat, single-engine stealth fighter.

Hundreds of wires snake along the sleek lines of the light green jet, connected to an array of instruments that are streaming signals back to a computer for correlation to computer models that engineers spent many months designing. This data acquisition system is measuring every quiver, shudder, and pulse that is emitted from the test jet. Technically speaking, however, F-35 Drop Test Director Tom Foster says they are measuring strain, acceleration, deflection and load data. This is where the rubber meets the flight deck, so to speak.

There are 512 data channels connected to this aircraft. Twenty-five hundred data samples are gathered per second per channel during each drop test for this aircraft. Per Eric Moore, Test Control and Data Acquisition group lead, high speed video of each landing gear is simultaneously recorded at two thousand frames per second and synchronized with the aircraft test data for post-test, image-to-data correlation. In other words, each high speed video picture can be directly compared to the load and deflection data measured and recorded on each landing gear. This was not possible in the old days when high speed film-based cameras and analog recording equipment was used in this application.

Eventually, there will be about 53 landing gear drop tests at various aircraft roll, pitch and landing sync rates performed on this one jet. A stack of bombs in the corner of the room awaits their turn alongside a row of missiles to be loaded onto the jet to test for maximum landing weight conditions. Of course, they are dummy ordnance but they are fabricated to weigh in as a real load.

Today, Vought is one of only two test labs remaining in the United States that has full-scale carrier suitability drop test capabilities. The other is at Boeing, St. Louis. According to John Vaught, Test Lab Manager, the F-35 Drop Test Program in total represents a very high level of complexity generally not seen on previous drop test programs. “The ability and know-how to do these drop tests are very unique,” he said.

With the level and type of test capabilities the labs possess, Vought has a long, and very reputable history of accomplishing carrier suitability testing for the Navy, said John. “We can go all the way back to the XC-142, F-8, A-7, S3A, and now the F-35. All of these legacy aircraft programs required fullscale drop testing to qualify for aircraft carrier operations. Full-scale dynamic tests of this nature present a very complex test set of problems to run,” he said.

The F-35 tests at Vought should be completed within the next few months; then it will go back to Lockheed Martin for a series of additional tests. They estimate that the Carrier Variant F-35C will attain first flight in the second quarter of 2010.

71687548.jpg



Source: Vought Aircraft Industries, Inc.
 
.
Good read, i wonder how the F-35 would fair against the F-22 in mock combat?
 
.
Good read, i wonder how the F-35 would fair against the F-22 in mock combat?

F-22 would still have the lower RCS. So chances are the F-22 would see the F-35 first. I would bet it comes down to counter measures. The F-22 has already demonstrated an ability with it's ECM suite. To keep other aircraft from getting a lock on even at close range. The F-35 I am sure has similar abilities. Close in with Guns the F-22 will win for sure.
 
.
There was a thread here about how first F-18 downed raptor and then f-16 downed a raptor.What's the story Thomas?Is it Possible.
 
.
F-22 would still have the lower RCS. So chances are the F-22 would see the F-35 first. I would bet it comes down to counter measures. The F-22 has already demonstrated an ability with it's ECM suite. To keep other aircraft from getting a lock on even at close range. The F-35 I am sure has similar abilities. Close in with Guns the F-22 will win for sure.

True, the F-22 does have the smaller rcs and the better manuverability but the F-35 has some very unique systems, one that stands out is DAS with its IRST. I don't beleive the F-22 has IRST? It should be interesting once they pit them head to head.
 
.

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom