The F-35 supporters cannot argue back anymore. LM's CEO himself came out and said the F-35 is not combat-capable today.
This is what the user says:
Testing and reliability of the F-35 remain below par, but the Director of Operational Test and Evaluation says progress is being made.
www.airandspaceforces.com
Tech Refresh-3 remains in developmental testing, even as jets are being delivered. The DOT&E office doesn’t believe operational testing can begin in earned until 2026, two years after deliveries started.
“Aircraft modifications, flight test instrumentation, [open-air battle shaping] capabilities, and stable software will all be required before dedicated operational testing can begin on the TR-3 aircraft with the capabilities already fielded on the TR-2 aircraft,” the report states, while noting that such testing might start sooner if modifications and software mature faster than expected.
So LM has to completely "deliver" the TR-3 hardware, then DOT&E will "test" it over the course of a year. And then they will have to start "fixing" the cooling problem before introducing the B4 hardware and software. Then DOT&E will have to test it again. Then they have to "upgrade" the engine. Then DOT&E will have to test it again. Then they will have to "introduce" the rest of B4 hardware and software. Then DOT&E will have to test it again. Then the "combat-capable" F-35 will come with "full warfighting capability." So simple. And after all that, there's still an addendum left, the full warfighting capability is not good enough against China.
And look, Taiclet has presented the list of patsies who will fund it.
It could take some time, but I think if we can work with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE...
There are “some countries that could see F-21 or F-16, for India, for example, as a stepping stone to F-35.”
Transpanancy, Don't you love it. You will never see anything from the French that isn't a sales pitch.
5th gen aircrat are hard and this is LM's second and the US 6th stealth jet.
But don't worry the newcommers going from 4th to 6th gen will get it right first shot.
It seems some of the data in the report is 5 years old
From your link, you should have kept readiing
"The JPO is also working to address so-called readiness “degraders” with some success.
“Over the past year, we have eliminated over 20 top readiness degraders,” the JPO reported, adding that “a small number of degraders mask tremendous progress that’s been made. That said, our overall readiness rates remain unacceptable “
The JPO did note that units have high mission capable rates when they’re deployed, largely because they take a generous supply of spares with them.
“It’s essential to invest in spares and repair capacity in a timely manner, as well as attack every other aspect of readiness with our stakeholders,” the JPO said.
Lockheed said it will invest $350 million over the next five years “to improve capabilities and drive efficiency across the F-35 enterprise. These investments will enhance fidelity and capacity across our development, integration, and test labs, ultimately enabling us to shift defect discovery to the left.”
The company said the F-35 has “demonstrated high combat and deployed readiness since data was collected for this report, in some cases more than five years ago” and that it is working with the JPO and its industry partners to “propose, recommend and implement improvements to F-35 readiness.”
The report noted that there’s been an uptick in quality defects and deficiencies not being detected during the F-35 checkout and delivery process and not being discovered until the jets are at their operational units, though many of these are “minor.”
Lockheed claimed, however, that “the information and data contained within the DOT&E report is dated and does not reflect the current status of the program. The F-35 program has an exceptional safety record, especially for a complex, global aircraft program that spans 20 nations.” Some of the “quality escapes” include “minor items such as an incorrect serial number on paperwork,” the company said. These are being addressed.
The DOT&E office said the F-35 also suffers from cyber deficiencies which are actively “under review” by the JPO in a deep-dive assessment. One of these relates to “aircraft mission systems instabilities” that can “degrade mission performance and may require a pilot-initiated reset of mission systems in-flight, which could have severe consequences during combat, affecting overall mission reliability.”
The Autonomic Logistics Information System that is
meant to track F-35 data, predict part needs, and inform maintainers of each jet’s health “does not currently have the capability to automatically log these events in the Computerized Maintenance Management System (CMMS),” and pilots typically don’t manually log them in, the DOT&E said. The ALIS is being migrated to the Operational Data Integrated Network system.
The JPO said that over the last year, “we have conducted successful cybersecurity tests on ALIS/ODIN and continue to enhance our processes to stay ahead of emerging threats.” It noted that it has modernized and hardened its hardware and “enhanced [its] monitoring capabilities” for cyber vulnerabilities."