combat aircraft

(singke) #1
modeling and simulation we have done
over the years. I’ve  own more than
2,000 SRVLs in the simulator, and am
honored to have been able to do the
 rst one on board HMS Queen Elizabeth.’
Lt Christopher Mould, the ship’s
landing safety o cer — a job critical
to the  rst SRVL — said, ‘It was a pretty

intense experience. It’s the  rst time
we’ve ever done it. As the independent
checker, I have to make sure that what
we are seeing in the  ying control
center is also what the pilot is seeing
and call it as I see it.’
US Marine Corps Maj Michael Lippert
said he was, ‘watching this part of the

a safe fashion. It’s all about the  ying
qualities, the friction on the deck, the
visual landing aids and how the helmet-
mounted display [HMD] performs.’
Previously known as the Bedford
array, the SRVL array is a set of visual
aids on the deck that the pilot must line
up with the HMD symbology. Wilson
says that aligning the two is ‘tricky’.
While proving out the SRVL modeling
isn’t a focus of the initial embarkation,
Wilson said if the conditions were
right, with calm seas and the testing
going well, there may be a chance for
an early look at this.
The chance to check out SRVL was a
clear indication of how the program
has advanced. After the  rst landing,
Wilson said, ‘I’m excited and thrilled
to have achieved this. I’ve worked
on this for the past 17 years and it’s
fantastic to know that it’s matched the


Right: The
downwash from
the F-35B’s
engine in the
hover is readily
apparent in this
view alongside
the Queen
Elizabeth.
Crown Copyright/
LPhot Kyle Heller
Below: BF-04
strapped down
to the deck, with
the pilot still in the
cockpit.
Lockheed Martin/
Dane Widemann
Bottom: The two
Pax River F-35Bs
being used for
the trials race
towards the ship.
Lockheed Martin

http://www.combataircraft.net // December 2018 79

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