By Capt. Jason Smith, Air Eeducation and Training Command
Public Affairs / Published March 20, 2015
JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-RANDOLPH, Texas (AFNS) -- Air Force
officials released requirements for the T-X trainer aircraft family of systems
that will replace the T-38 Talon, March 20.
The release is the first under the service’s new ‘Bending
the Cost Curve’ initiative and follows Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee
James’ emphasis on increased dialogue with industry to build affordability into
the acquisition process.
“The industry dialogue will help guide Air Force evaluation
of threshold and objective requirements, producing better informed
cost-capability decisions,” James said.
“The T-X requirements are being released approximately 10
months earlier than under the normal acquisition process and is part of an
ongoing effort for more deliberate and open engagement with industry,” said
Brig. Gen. Dawn Dunlop, the director of plans, programs and requirements at Air
Education and Training Command.
The initial draft requirements were released in 2012,
allowing industry to make more informed, early design decisions, Dunlop said.
Ultimately, the collaboration will shape a more capable and affordable pilot
training system for the Air Force.
The T-38 is no longer a practical trainer to prepare Air
Force pilots for newer, more advanced aircraft, Dunlop said. Currently, 12 of
18 advanced pilot training tasks can’t be completed with the T-38, relying on
fighter and bomber formal training units to complete the training at a much
greater cost.
“Cockpit and sensor management are fundamentally different
today in 4th- and 5th-generation aircraft than it was when the T-38 was built
in 1961,” Dunlop said. “While the T-38 has been upgraded to a glass cockpit,
the inability to upgrade the T-38’s performance and simulated sensor capability
presents a growing challenge each year to effectively teach the critical skills
essential to today’s military pilots.”
A second issue for the T-38, according to Dunlop, is
aircraft sustainment. The T-38s assigned to AETC have not met the command’s
requirement for 75-percent availability since 2011, meaning many are not
mission capable and unavailable for training.
The T-X requirements identify three key performance
characteristics for the advanced pilot training mission: sustained G, simulator
visual acuity and performance, and aircraft sustainment. While there are just
over 100 requirements in all, these were the most critical to ensure the T-X
Family of Systems closes training gaps and creates strategic agility for the
future.
A highlight in the requirements is embedded training with
synthetic sensors and data link. Significant progress has been made the past
decade in synthetic training that very closely approximates the real system.
Currently, nine partner air forces already have advanced pilot training systems
that take advantage of these increased capabilities.
The Air Force plans to award a contract for 350 T-Xs to
replace the 431 AETC T-38s in the fall of 2017, with initial operational
capability by the end of 2023. The service will accept proposals for currently
fielded and clean-sheet designs to meet the Air Force’s undergraduate pilot and
introduction to fighter fundamentals training needs.
One requirement not part of the release is for the T-X to
serve in a “red air” or adversary role, during live-fly exercises. The fiscal
year 2016 budget includes approximately $40 million across the Future Year
Defense Plan in Stores-Aircraft Interface funds as a wedge to provide future
planning or development options related to T-X.
“The money for the Stores-Aircraft Interface project should
be considered separately from the Advanced Replacement T-X program,” said Gen.
Robin Rand, the commander of AETC. “A T-X variant is just one option for red
air if we decide there’s a requirement for it.”
The requirements released March 20 were shaped by
cross-talks between major command leaders, program office discussions and
partner buy-in, Rand said.
“The T-X offers the right capabilities to train our Air
Force pilots well into the future,” Rand continued. “It’s designed to meet our
nation’s needs, reduce inefficiencies, and increase effectiveness while keeping
the cost as low as possible.”
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