Author Topic: Lockheed aims to deliver all 36 F-35 jets in 2013, sees progress on program  (Read 496 times)

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Reuters

Lockheed Martin Corp still expects to deliver the final seven of 36 F-35 fighter jets to the U.S. government from its Fort Worth, Texas facility, before year-end despite a five-day halt in test flights due to bad weather over the past week, the company’s F-35 program manager has said.

Lorraine Martin, executive vice president and F-35 general manager, said on Dec. 14 that 2013 has been a transformative year for the $392 billion program, marking the beginning of pilot and maintainer training, reductions in production costs, and progress on software, weapons testing and other technical issues.

She said the program - the Pentagon’s most expensive weapons program - remained intensely focused on finishing development and flight testing of the next-generation fighter over the next three years, as well as driving down the cost of building and operating the planes.

“The program is on stronger footing than ever before,” Martin told 2,000 workers and guests at a ceremony celebrating completion of the 100th F-35 at the company’s mile-long plant in Fort Worth that included patriotic songs and videos.

The Fort Worth area was shut down by a crippling ice storm late last week causing delays in flight testing required before Lockheed can turn the new F-35 jets over to the government.

Delivering the 36 jets in 2013 is important for Lockheed which is trying to demonstrate improved performance on a program that is years behind schedule and 70 percent over initial cost projections.

Martin told reporters that 2014 would be another key year for the program, with the Navy’s C-model due to carry out sea trials on an aircraft carrier next summer, the first jet to be completed at a new assembly plant in Italy, and the first jet for Australia to be delivered.

Speaking in Washington, Air Force Chief of Staff General Mark Welsh underscored the importance of the F-35 to ensure U.S. air superiority and said current “legacy” fighters would not survive a future fight against stealthy next-generation fighters being developed by Russia and China.

“Operationally, we need the F-35. This is not a good time to walk away from the F-35 program in any way, shape or form,” he told a Pentagon briefing. He said truncating the F-35 program would raise the cost of the remaining jets.

Lockheed is building three models of the radar-evading fighter for the U.S. military and eight countries that helped fund its development: Britain, Canada, Australia, Turkey, Norway, Italy, Denmark and the Netherlands. Japan and Israel have also ordered the plane, and South Korea has signaled its plan to buy at least 40 F-35s as well.

Air Force Lieutenant General Chris Bogdan, the Pentagon’s F-35 program manager, told a defense conference last week that the program had a “tragic past,” but the cost of the plane was coming down, flight testing was continuing, and most technical issues had been addressed.

The last batch of F-35 A-models cost around $107 million, including the engines, but Martin said the company expected to beat that cost in the eighth production contract to be negotiated early next year.

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