Pentagon Dumbs Down Stealth Fighter Requirements
Eases rules in order to allow production as part of troubled program
America's latest stealth fighter just got heavier, slower and more sluggish.
For the second time in a year, the Pentagon has eased the performance requirements of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF). The reduced specs — including a slower acceleration and turning rate — lower the bar for the troubled trillion-dollar JSF program, allowing it to proceed toward full-rate production despite ongoing problems with the plane's complex design. Under the old specs, the stealth fighter, due to enter service in 2018 or 2019, probably wouldn't pass its Pentagon-mandated final exams.
At the same time, newly identified safety problems could force F-35-smith Lockheed Martin to add fire-suppression gear that will only increase the plane's weight and further decrease its maneuverability. The JSF is meant to be a jack of all trades, equally capable of dropping bombs and fighting other aircraft — the latter requiring extreme nimbleness in the air.
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I love sweet planes as much as the next red blooded American, but for FFS this thing is a white elephant if there ever was one.
Jack of all trades? Master of none.