More Cracks Found In F-35B's Second-Life Testing
Cracks on an F-35B’s primary support structure found last year are more extensive than previously thought, triggering a halt in ground-based durability testing until the fourth quarter of this year.
The initial cracks were found on section 496, a primary wing carrythrough bulkhead, last fall, prompting officials to stop the ground-based testing at hour 9,400 during the second life’s worth of use — or second 8,000 hr. of equivalent flight hours — to investigate the issue.
Since then, cracking also has been discovered on adjacent bulkheads, according to Joe Dellavedova, spokesman for the F-35 Joint Program Office. “Subsequent inspection of surrounding structures in light of this discovery found additional cracks in two of the other adjacent bulkheads,” he says.
Because the discoveries were found to occur beyond the first 8,000 hr. of use, the issue is not affecting flight operations for the young F-35B fleet. These issues are also, thus far, limited to the B model that employs a sophisticated lift-fan for vertical takeoff and landing operations for the U.S. Marine Corps. The U.K. and Italy also are expected to buy the F-35B.
Dellavedova says the issue is not expected to jeopardize the Marines’ plans to declare initial operational capability with the F-35B in July 2015.
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Queso wrote:Ground them all and send them to the desert. Bring back the F-15, at least it takes them 27 years of service to start having problems with cracks.
captoveur wrote:Queso wrote:Ground them all and send them to the desert. Bring back the F-15, at least it takes them 27 years of service to start having problems with cracks.
You know.. The F-15 line is still open
captoveur wrote:F-15
AndesSMF wrote:captoveur wrote:F-15
Designed by McD...somehow I think that their airplanes are long-lived creatures.
paul mcallister wrote:Personally I think the UK were crazy to retire the Harrier/Sea Harrier until the F-35 was almost ready to go.
paul mcallister wrote:I doubt the F-35 will prove to be what most air arms expect of it,and it will end up being a very expensive compromise.
AndesSMF wrote:Did the Harriers have any issues or were they just 'old'?