Mon, Feb 28, 2011
Test Pilot Gigliotti: "Aircraft Was Rock Solid"
The first production model of the F-35 Lightning II made its
inaugural flight Friday in preparation for delivery to the U.S. Air
Force this spring. The jet will head to Edwards Air Force Base, CA,
to support developmental testing shortly after the Air Force takes
delivery.
“The aircraft was rock-solid from takeoff to landing, and
successfully completed all the tests we put it through during the
flight,” said Lockheed Martin Test Pilot Bill Gigliotti.
“The Air Force is getting a great jet that represents a huge
leap in capability, and we’re looking forward to getting it
into the hands of the service pilots in just a few more
weeks.”
During the flight, the conventional takeoff and landing (CTOL)
F-35A variant, known as AF-6, underwent basic flight maneuvering
and engine tests. Test Pilot Gigliotti took off from Naval Air
Station Fort Worth Joint Reserve Base at 1505 CST and landed at
1605. The jet will continue flight tests in Fort Worth for about a
month before it is accepted by the Air Force.
The F-35A CTOL variant – designed to meet U.S. Air Force
requirements – is also the primary export version of the
Lightning II. The air forces of Italy, the Netherlands, Turkey,
Canada, Australia, Denmark, Norway and Israel will employ the
F-35A.
Deliveries of the F-35B short takeoff/vertical landing variant
to the U.S. Marine Corps also begin this year, while deliveries of
the F-35C carrier variant to the U.S. Navy start in 2012. Seventeen
F-35s have entered testing since December 2006, and have logged
more than 650 flights and numerous ground tests.
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