http://www.airforcesmonthly.com #364 JULY 2018 // 63
The SDD flight test programme began in
December 2006 when F-35A AA-1 took to
the air. Since then the joint government and
industry team has used 19 test aircraft to
conduct more than 9,200 sorties, accumulated
over 17,000 flight hours and executed
more than 65,000 test points that verified
the design, durability, software, sensors,
weapons capability and performance of
all three variants of the Lightning II.
The programme will officially conclude
when the aircraft’s initial operational test
and evaluation (IOT&E) is executed and
full-rate production is approved, planned
for late next year. Pre-IOT&E events are
already under way, and the evaluation
is scheduled to begin in September.
As part of the SDD, the team conducted
six at-sea detachments and performed more
than 1,500 vertical landing (VL) events with
the F-35B. The developmental flight test
team completed 183 weapon separation
trials, 46 weapons delivery accuracy (WDA)
releases and 33 mission effectiveness
tests, which included numerous multi-
ship missions that pitted up to eight F-35s
against advanced simulated threats.
Although SDD flight testing has been
accomplished, the programme will
continue to develop phased capability
improvements and modernise the F-35.
Peters said of the SDD phase: “It’s the end of
the primary stage of delivery [of the F-35] – the
initial fleet capability. We’ve been to all edges
of the flight envelope, we’ve tested all the
stores – both internally and externally, we’ve
fired missiles and dropped bombs, the sensor
suite is fully checked out and passed fit for
purpose. We’ve concluded what for now is the
primary test programme, with a large number
of deliverables, and we are now transitioning
out of a contractor-led development exercise
into a government sustainment programme.”
The Integrated Test Force (ITF) may have got
over the line for SDD, but the work shows no
sign of letting up. Indeed, according to Martin
Peters, the workload is actually expected to
pick up – it will just function in a different way.
“The HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier
is the big one for us this year,” explained
Peters. “It will encompass most of the
team. Then into 2019 we will also start our
integration work for the new Meteor [beyond-
visual-range air-to-air missile, BVRAAM] and
SPEAR Cap 3 [Selective Precision Effects
At Range Capability 3] weapon in order
to deliver capability in the mid-2020s.”
As the initial F-35Bs return to the UK to form the Royal
Air Force’s No 617 Squadron, Jamie Hunter talks to the
team that’s testing new weapons and taking the aircraft
to the Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier for the first time.
F-35
UK gears up for