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F-35B And The Curse

May 2, 2009: Testing of the STOVL (vertical takeoff and landing) version of the new F-35 recently showed that its F135 engine, the most powerful to ever be used in a fighter, demonstrated its ability to provide more power (41,100 pounds of thrust) than was basically required (40,550 pounds). Tests three years earlier revealed that the heat from the F-35Bs engines will damage the aluminum matting used for rapidly constructed airfields. The F-35B engine heat won't damage the decks of current aircraft carriers, but the aluminum matting is toast, so to speak, and will have to be replaced with sturdier stuff.

The F-35B is larger, and puts out more engine blast, than the current STOVL aircraft, the AV-8 Harrier. The AV-8 first entered service in 1969. That early version was used mainly by the British Royal Navy and the U.S. Marine Corps. It was a 11 ton aircraft (7 tons when taking off vertically) that carried about two tons of weapons. In the 1980s, a more powerful 14 ton version was developed, which could carry three tons of weapons.

The F-35B, which will replace the Harrier, is a 27 ton aircraft that can carry six tons of weapons and is stealthy. In vertical takeoff mode, the F-35B will carry about twice the weapons as the Harrier, and have about twice the range (800 kilometers).

There's one Harrier trait the F-35B hopes to avoid. The Harrier has the highest accident rate of any jet fighter. This is largely because of its vertical flight capabilities, which give it an accident rate similar to that of helicopters. The U.S. Marine Corps has lost a third of its 397 Harriers to such accidents in 32 years. In the last twenty years, India has lost half of its 30 Harrier vertical takeoff fighters to accidents. Other users have had similar experiences. It remains to be seen how much less accident prone the F-35B will be.

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kirby1       5/2/2009 5:27:51 PM
Not an expert, but will fly by wire technology make these kinds of accidents less systematic, or more so? I suppose it depends upon the skills of the programmer and the training of the pilot. I've always heard that fly by wire can help a good pilot stay alive (By preventing him from making mistakes and losing control) but get a great pilot killed (By preventing him from applying creative solutions or taking the sort of risks necessary to recover.)
 

 
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arodrig6       5/2/2009 9:06:23 PM

Not an expert, but will fly by wire technology make these kinds of accidents less systematic, or more so? I suppose it depends upon the skills of the programmer and the training of the pilot. I've always heard that fly by wire can help a good pilot stay alive (By preventing him from making mistakes and losing control) but get a great pilot killed (By preventing him from applying creative solutions or taking the sort of risks necessary to recover.)


It may have been true that fly-by-wire could get a great pilot killed at one point, but my understanding is that now it is required for all pilots, no matter the skill level.   Modern planes like the F-35 are aerodynamically UNstable along every axis, and require constant computer monitoring and adjustment even to maintain level flight.
 
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sjdoc    The return of Marsden matting   5/4/2009 2:56:49 AM
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"The F-35B engine heat won't damage the decks of current aircraft carriers, but the aluminum matting is toast, so to speak, and will have to be replaced with sturdier stuff."
 
Marsden Matting gets to come back now, I suppose.  The original product was manufactured of steel, which made it heavy as the devil, but robust to the point at which World War II production run remnants of this pierced steel planking (PSP) are still being used for various purposes all over the world. 
 
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