Overview of F-35 test flights
I'm trying to keep an overview of all AA-1 test flights. If you have any updates, special remarks about a certain flight or new dates please post them here.
Note that I will update this first post here with any updates that may follow below.
- #1: 15 Dec 2006 (Jon Beesley) [<a href="f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-6861.html">forum discussion</a>]
- #2: 08 Jan 2007 [<a href="f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-7080.html">forum discussion</a>]
- #3: 10 Jan 2007
- #4: 23 Jan 2007
- #5: 24 Jan 2007
- #6: 29 Jan 2007
- #7: 30 Jan 2007
- #8: 05 Mar 2007
- #9: 13 Mar 2007 (First afterburner take-off and first 360º rolls)
- #10: 04 April 2007 (First HMD flight)
- #11: 05 April 2007
- #12: 11 April 2007 (Jeff Knowles' first flight) [<a href="f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-8014.html">forum discussion</a>]
- #13: 12 April 2007 (Jon Beesley - First touch-and-go landing)
- #14: 18 April 2007 [<a href="f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-8111.html">forum discussion</a>]
- #15: 26 April 2007 (Jeff Knowles) [<a href="f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-8111.html">forum discussion</a>]
- #16: 26 April 2007 (Jeff Knowles)
- #17: 27 April 2007 (Jon Beesley) (1st time > 1 flight test in 24 hrs)
- #18: 02 May 2007
- #19: 03 May 2007 (Jeff Knowles - In-flight power failure) [<a href="f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-8137.html">forum discussion</a>]
- #20: 07 Dec 2007 (Tested engine performance and aircraft handling qualities at up to 20,000 feet as pilots and crew prepare for air refueling in the coming weeks)
- #21: 13 Dec 2007 (We think Jon Beesley was PIC and the chase plane was an Edwards AFB test F-16. Probably another fuel dump flight.)
- #22: 18 Dec 2007 (Beesley)
- #23: 19 Dec 2007 (Knowles)
- #24: 08, 09 or 10 Jan 2008 (Knowles as PIC and Beesley as chase.)
- #25: 10 Jan 2008 (Beesley)
- #26: 30 Jan 2008 (Lt. Col. James "Flipper" Kromberg, the first military service pilot to evaluate the F-35 Lightning II - <a href="news_article2729.html">news article</a>)
- #27: 30 Jan 2008 (Knowles)
Note that I will update this first post here with any updates that may follow below.
Last edited by Lieven on 02 Mar 2009, 21:59, edited 8 times in total.
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Since you're making up a master list, could you include the milestone events on each flight?
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The latest edition of Code One (V22#2) does that - up to a point. The list is not complete or official. I'll paraphrase from the text:
#1 - subsystem performance, air data system issue
#2 - first gear cycle, first formation flight (with gear up)
#3 - first military power takeoff
#4 - first low altitude maneuvering
#5 - first afterburner engine transient
#6 - fuel dump test, higher AoA maneuvers
#7 - speed brake operation (control surface deflection)
#8 - software fix for air data system issues seen on flight #1
#9 - first afterburner takeoff, close formations, power approaches, maneuver blocks to 16 deg AoA at 20Kft
#10 - first HMD flight, full stick 360 deg rolls, snap engine transients in AB, 15 kt crosswind landing
#11 - lower altitude maneuver blocks, speed brake maneuvers
(Flights 1-11 flown by Beesley)
#12 - Jeff Knowles first flight
#13 - Beesley, 30K ft altitude, touch & go landing, 17 deg AoA maneuver block
That's as far as the article goes... it's not online yet but should be soon, I've had my issue for more than a week.
#1 - subsystem performance, air data system issue
#2 - first gear cycle, first formation flight (with gear up)
#3 - first military power takeoff
#4 - first low altitude maneuvering
#5 - first afterburner engine transient
#6 - fuel dump test, higher AoA maneuvers
#7 - speed brake operation (control surface deflection)
#8 - software fix for air data system issues seen on flight #1
#9 - first afterburner takeoff, close formations, power approaches, maneuver blocks to 16 deg AoA at 20Kft
#10 - first HMD flight, full stick 360 deg rolls, snap engine transients in AB, 15 kt crosswind landing
#11 - lower altitude maneuver blocks, speed brake maneuvers
(Flights 1-11 flown by Beesley)
#12 - Jeff Knowles first flight
#13 - Beesley, 30K ft altitude, touch & go landing, 17 deg AoA maneuver block
That's as far as the article goes... it's not online yet but should be soon, I've had my issue for more than a week.
Reality Is For People Who Can't Handle Simulation
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@ habu
Somebody said this...
Can you shed some light as to what what the Code One Article actually says? It it mentions it at all that is.
Somebody said this...
Read the latest Code One Magazine by Lockheed. They were able to cruise in the high subsonic region at about 40 percent of available mil power. You can interpolate from there. I still don't like the 28k pound empty weight, but I love the fact that it'll carry 20k pounds of dinosaurs internally.
Can you shed some light as to what what the Code One Article actually says? It it mentions it at all that is.
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Yeah, that was me. Basically all it said about available power was that. Oh, it also said that he was "pleasantly surprised" to find out that at Mil it took about a 30 degree climb to keep it at 250. I was just alluding to how much excess power it has. The PW220 powered Vipers need full AB to get a 30 degree climb on takeoff (in a clean jet) and need at least full Mil to get in the high subsonic at altitude for comparison.
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Lieven wrote:Any dates for flight 22 and 23?
Flight 22 - Dec 18 (Jon, I think)
Flight 23 - Dec 19 (Knowles)
Flight 24 - Jan 08 (Knowles)
Flight 25 - Jan 10
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“Its not the critic who counts..The credit belongs to the man who does actually strive to do the deeds..”
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SnakeHandler wrote:Yeah, that was me. Basically all it said about available power was that. Oh, it also said that he was "pleasantly surprised" to find out that at Mil it took about a 30 degree climb to keep it at 250. I was just alluding to how much excess power it has. The PW220 powered Vipers need full AB to get a 30 degree climb on takeoff (in a clean jet) and need at least full Mil to get in the high subsonic at altitude for comparison.
Very interesting.............I can't tell you how many posts I've read that complain that the F-35 is either over weight or underpower or both!
Note: Haven't at least two of the Test Pilots remarked about the awesome power of the F-35. Especially, with the gear up.........
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SnakeHandler wrote:Yeah, that was me. Basically all it said about available power was that. Oh, it also said that he was "pleasantly surprised" to find out that at Mil it took about a 30 degree climb to keep it at 250. I was just alluding to how much excess power it has. The PW220 powered Vipers need full AB to get a 30 degree climb on takeoff (in a clean jet) and need at least full Mil to get in the high subsonic at altitude for comparison.
Do you have a link to your article?
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Corsair1963 wrote:[Do you have a link to your article?
I believe Beesley said that following his first F-35 flight. Check the Code One site for that article.
www.codeonemagazine.com
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