The Short Take Off / Vertical Landing variant of the Lightning
Ii Joint Strike Fighter (F-35B) made its first flight today
(June 11, 2008) at Fort Worth, Texas with Lockheed Martin test
pilot Graham Tomlinson at the controls. Tomlinson, a former
Royal Air Force Harrier pilot now employed by BAE Systems, performed
a conventional takeoff at 10:17 a.m. CDT from Lockheed Martin’s
Fort Worth facility. As planned, all initial F-35B flights will
be made using conventional takeoffs and landings, with transitions
to short takeoffs, hovers and vertical landings beginning early
next year. Tomlinson guided the jet to 15,000 feet and performed
a series of handling tests, engine-power variations and subsystems
checks before landing at 11:01 a.m. CDT.
The F-35B, known as BF-1, becomes the second Lightning II
to enter flight test, preceded by the conventional takeoff
and landing (CTOL) F-35A, which first flew in December 2006
and has completed 43 flights. The F-35B that flew today is
the second of 19 System Development and Demonstration aircraft
and the first to incorporate new weight-saving design features
that will apply to all future F-35 aircraft.
Though nearly identical in appearance to the F-35A, the F-35B
incorporates a counter-rotating shaft-driven lift fan positioned
directly behind the cockpit. The lift fan, produced by Rolls-Royce,
is turned by a drive shaft from the F-35’s massively
powerful single engine, which features a swiveling rear exhaust
nozzle that vectors thrust downward during vertical flight.
The lift fan, engine and stabilizing roll ducts beneath the
F-35B’s wings combine to produce 40,000 pounds of lifting
force.
Converting the F-35B from STOVL to conventional flight and
vice-versa requires only the push of a button by the pilot.
The system otherwise operates automatically.
The F-35B will be the first of the three Lightning II variants
to achieve Initial Operational Capability, beginning with
the Marines in 2012. The STOVL variant also will be used by
the United Kingdom’s Royal Air Force and Royal Navy,
and Italy’s Air Force and Navy. Israel is also considering
splitting its F-35 buy between conventional F-35As and the
STOVL B models. With the capability to operate from a variety
of ships or austere runways, the F-35B can deploy closer to
shore or near front lines, shrinking distance and time to
the target, increasing sortie rates and greatly reducing the
need for support assets.