By Mitch Shaw , Hilltop Times correspondent / Published
December 29, 2015
F-35A Lightning II Conventional Takeoff and Landing Variant
HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah (AFNS) -- Lockheed Martin and the
Pentagon's F-35 Joint Program Office say they've finished delivering jets for
2015, increasing their yield from last year by 25 percent.
Joe DellaVedova, a spokesman with the F-35 office at the Pentagon,
said 45 F-35s were delivered, which met Lockheed and the program office's
delivery goal for the year and exceeded last year's deliveries by nine jets.
"Meeting aircraft production goals is a critical
stepping stone in demonstrating the program is ready for the expected
significant production ramp up," Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan, the F-35 program’s
executive officer, said in a press release.
Lorraine Martin, Lockheed's F-35 program general manager,
said the 2015 deliveries were "a clear demonstration of our growing
maturity and stability."
The performance boost represents good news for Hill Air
Force Base, which accepted its first two jets in September and will continue to
count on a steady income of fighters until 2019 to fill three F-35 squadrons.
Base spokesman Rich Essary said it has received a total five
jets so far, with the next one scheduled to arrive in January. Essary said the
plan is for Hill AFB to continue to accept jets at a rate of one or two each
month until they receive their full allotment of 72.
By August 2016, the base hopes to have 15 jets in place in
order to reach what the Air Force calls "initial operational
capability," which means Hill AFB has met the minimum goal to use the jets
for normal operations.
On Dec. 11, Maj. Jayson Rickard, a reservist with the 466th
Fighter Squadron, flew the 100th F-35 sortie at Hill AFB since the first combat
aircraft arrived in September.
Of the 45 jets delivered in 2015, the lion's share has gone
to the Air Force, which has received 26 F-35As. The Marine Corps received eight
F-35Bs and the Marines and the Navy each accepted four F-35Cs, which can take
off and land vertically from aircraft carriers.
DellaVedova said 154 operational F-35s have been delivered
to the Department of Defense and partner nations since the program's inception.
The fleet has more than 45,000 flight hours. The multirole fighter will
eventually replace the Air Force's entire fleet of F-16 Fighting Falcons and
A-10 Thunderbolt IIs.
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