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F-35 Completes First Weapons Separation Test

The F-35 Lightning II accomplished a significant test milestone Aug. 8 when the aircraft successfully released a weapon in flight.

BF-3, a short take-off and vertical landing F-35 variant, released an inert 1,000-pound GBU-32 Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) separation weapon over water in an Atlantic test range while traveling at 400 knots at an altitude of 4,200 feet.

“While this weapons separation test is just one event in a series of hundreds of flights and thousands of test points that we are executing this year, it does represent a significant entry into a new phase of testing for the F-35 program,” said Navy Capt. Erik Etz, director of test for F-35 naval variants. “Today’s release of a JDAM was the result of extraordinary effort by our team of maintainers, engineers, pilots and others who consistently work long hours to deliver F-35 warfighting capability to the U.S. services and our international partners.”

The release was the first time for any version of the F-35 to conduct an airborne weapon separation, as well as the first from an internal weapons bay for a fighter aircraft designated for the U.S. Marine Corps, the United Kingdom and Italy.
The milestone marks the start of validating the F-35’s capability to employ precision weapons and allow pilots to engage the enemy on the ground and in the air.

“[Using an internal weapons bay] speaks to how much capability the JSF is going to bring to the troops,” said Dan Levin, Lockheed Martin test pilot for the mission. “Stealth, fifth-generation avionics and precision weapons … coupled with the flexible mission capability of the short take-off and vertical landing F-35B is going to be huge for our warfighters.”

An aerial weapons separation test checks for proper release of the weapon from its carriage system and trajectory away from the aircraft. It is the culmination of a significant number of prerequisite tests, including ground fit checks, ground pit drops and aerial captive carriage and environment flights to ensure the system is working properly before expanding the test envelope in the air.

Aircraft and land-based test monitoring systems collected data from the successful separation, which is in review at the F-35 integrated test force at Naval Air Station Patuxent River.

Watch the weapon release test:

COMMENTS

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  • Viet71

    Who can challenge the United States and how?

    Why spend all the money on this platform?

    Spending money on cyber warfare seems to make much more sense. Except for the makers of the F-35.

  • Mike Ferguson

    DARPA, had some amazing research going on exo-skeletons and armored battle suits, The Land Warrior system and the weapons platform specifically made to function with the Land Warrior system the SABER.

    Yea, I know some of you are saying he wants Sci-Fi Powered Armor for our troops.

    Well, respectfully, your danged right I do!

    This project gave us basically no appreciable advantage over what our current air power. So instead of making a plane that just duplicates what we have or building a better tank, we should be working on turning one soldier into a tank.

  • aesthete

    and planes are fun — especially fast planes that look pretty. Who cares if they’re going to be grounded whenever we have a conflict, because they’re too expensive to fly and repair, finicky, hard to train on, and don’t do their missions well in the first place? The purpose of weapons systems are to suitably impress a cadre of top brass who haven’t been in a shooting war for decades — everybody knows that.

  • Viet71

    Which is why $$$ get spent on these weapons platforms.

  • Viet71

    The future of individual combat is in the cities and in the computer.

    It’s all about materials, computers, software, and other technology. Read: electrical engineers.