combat aircraft

(singke) #1
WINNING

DESIGN

The Boeing/Saab aircraft is a twin-
tail design with a large cockpit
that features ‘stadium seating’,
plus leading-edge root extensions
(LERX) similar to that found on the
F/A-18 Hornet. Boeing’s T-X has
a single General Electric F404-
GE-402 engine and Boeing said
the aircraft’s ‘ighter-like design’
and performance with the twin-tail
coniguration will ‘provide excellent
control, inherent speed break
functionality, and safer air-refueling’.
Darryl Davis, president of Boeing’s
Phantom Works, said the aircraft
was designed to meet all program
requirements, and noted that it will
ofer high-angle of attack (AoA) and
high-g performance. ‘We can hit
every one of the requirements.’
The company also stressed that
the cockpit design ofers ideal
instructor positioning and visibility,
both for light instruction and for
advanced visual air combat training.
It has a modern, ighter-like cockpit
with a reconigurable large-area
display (LAD) that mimics those
found in the F-22 and F-35.

but production aircraft’. Leanne Caret
assured dissenters that the aircraft was
‘real, ready, and the right choice for
training pilots for generations to come’.
Referred to internally as the BTX-1,
Boeing carried out the irst light on
December 20, 2016, at its St Louis,
Missouri, facility. The company rapidly
lew all the required test points to satisfy
the USAF T-X team.
Although it was aggressive on cost, the
USAF was unwavering in its demand for
high performance. The turn performance
threshold was set at 6.5g but with an

This image:
Boeing executed
an efficient
flight-test plan
to prove the
attributes
of its T-X
aircraft and
satisfy USAF
requirements.
Left: Test
pilot Steve
‘Bull’ Schmidt
Schmidt says,
‘I consider it
the complete
package for
an advanced
jet trainer.
It has the
maneuverability,
the agility that
you’re looking
for when you’re
trying to train
somebody to fly
future combat
aircraft.’

INDUSTRY REPORT // T-X


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