8/19/2013 - Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. -- Airmen
and Marines assigned to the F-35 Integrated Training Center at the 33rd
Fighter Wing here have consistently flown successful training sorties
and generated their 2,000th sortie Aug. 13 with an instructor pilot of
the Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron-501 (VMFAT-501), at the
controls.
Marine Maj. Adam Levine, who flew in a two-ship formation, said he was
surprised with the news upon landing but said that is typical since the
flightline members are focusing on safe and effective flying rather than
keeping pace with data tracked by those in statistical analysis.
"Every sortie, every takeoff, every hour is a win for the F-35
enterprise," he said. From his cockpit, Levine also witnessed the first
taxi of the U.S. Navy's F-35C carrier variant preparing for its maiden
flight from Eglin AFB.
With the Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy pressing forward to meet goals
of initial operating capability in the next few years for their
respective services, getting ample time in the air is crucial to meeting
their timelines.
"Flying the 2,000th sortie highlights the accomplishments of the entire
F-35 airpower team at Eglin AFB and moves us one step closer to the
aircraft's initial war fighting capability," said Col. Todd Canterbury,
the commander of the 33rd FW.
The Eglin AFB F-35A, B, and C variant joint training has been
accomplished while operational and developmental test missions at flight
test sites on the east and west coasts have been conducted
simultaneously -- a process known as concurrency.
In these last couple weeks, Eglin AFB officials sent a handful of their
pilots to Luke Air Force Base Ariz., to become the initial cadre of
F-35A leaders at the 61st Fighter Squadron, 56th Fighter Wing, said Col.
Stephen Jost, the commander of the 33rd Operations Group here. Luke
AFB's first joint strike fighters are scheduled to arrive in spring 2014
with plans to grow to 144 aircraft in the out years.
For now, the Eglin AFB-based flyers are expanding their training
curriculum as they double up to full aircraft strength in the spring
with all 24 Air Force F-35As expected to be on base. Jost will lead the
group's transition to the Block 2A aircraft, which carry upgraded
computer software, in the first quarter of calendar year 2014 in order
to accommodate more aircraft capabilities.
"We will increase the current syllabus from 6 student sorties to 8 and
even 9 depending on when we will be cleared by the test community to fly
at night," Jost said.
Aside from flight operations, this also entails transitioning the ground
school instruction such as flying more advanced scenarios in the full
mission simulator.
"The primary capability of Block 2A is use of the plane's multifunction advanced data link," he said.
Currently, voice transmission is the primary means of communication.
While Air Force planners is busy seeding Luke AFB with an initial F-35
team, the Marines have been doing the same for Marine Corps Air Station
Yuma, Ariz., just a short flight away.
Having trained up the initial cadre of U.S. and United Kingdom pilots
and maintainers at VMFAT-501, Marines at Eglin AFB continue to train
instructor pilots with a portion of the classes' students being
operational test pilots. These pilots are standing up MCAS Yuma's
operations at Marine Fighter Attack Squadron-121, Levine said.
In the near future, Eglin AFB's VMFAT-501 is preparing to conduct its
first local short take-off and vertical landing of the F-35B, an
accomplishment realized at MCAS Yuma in March that the VMFAT-501 helped
make possible. Meanwhile, the Navy's Strike Fighter Squadron 101 at
Eglin AFB, has conducted its first maintenance check flight yesterday,
is preparing for its first student flight this week.
In the upcoming years, when operating at full capacity, the Eglin AFB
fleet will grow to 59 aircraft with about 100 pilots and 2,100
maintainers graduating yearly.
The F-35 joint strike fighter program is a joint, multi-national
program. In addition to U.S. armed forces, the F-35 increases
operational flexibility and interoperability with the eight other
international partners participating in the development of the aircraft.
They are the United Kingdom, Italy, the Netherlands, Turkey, Canada,
Australia, Denmark, and Norway.
With so much history in the making, the F-35A, B and C fighter units at
Eglin AFB are making strides for airpower for years to come, officials
said.
"The versatile and high-tech aircraft will carry the U.S. Air Force,
Marine Corps and Navy into the next 50 years of air dominance, and the
men and women here can reflect back knowing they were among the pioneers
in its initial phases," Canterbury said.
Monday, August 19, 2013
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