F-22 getting stealth and weapons upgrades
by noreply@blogger.com (brian wang) from NextBigFuture.com on (#2B8EV)
Lockheed Martin and the United States Air Force have been working on improving the performance of the F-22 Raptor's stealth coatings.
While the Raptor is by far the most capable air superiority fighter ever built, its Achilles' Heel since it entered service has been maintenance. The F-22's sensitive radar absorbent coatings have proven to be costly and difficult to repair, but the Air Force and Lockheed have been working on improving the performance. Those efforts are starting to payoff as Lockheed has completed work on the first Raptor to enter the company's Inlet Coating Repair (ICR) Speedline facility-delivering the aircraft back to the U.S. Air Force ahead of schedule.
Lockheed notes that the recent increase in the number of F-22 deployments-particularly the ongoing operations in the Middle East-have increased the demand to its stealth repair services. The jet always required periodic overhauls to maintain its very low radar signature, however, the current workload is greater than usual.
While the F-22 might no longer be in production, Lockheed is heavily involved in keeping the Raptor fleet flying. Lockheed provides sustainment services to the F-22 fleet through a comprehensive weapons management program called Follow-on Agile Sustainment for the Raptor (FASTeR). With a fleet of only 186 operational jets-of which only 120 are "combat-coded"-the Air Force needs every flyable Raptor it can get.
The Air Force is continually working to improve its F-22 fleet, which is the core of its air superiority capability. Currently, the Raptor fleet is operating in an Increment 3.2A/Upgrade 5 configuration that finally allows the jets to carry the AIM-9X Sidwinder high off-boresight missile, but the weapon won't be fully integrated into F-22's systems until the Increment 3.2B configuration is fielded. Even then, it won't be until later upgrades that the jet will be equipped with a helmet-mounted cuing system for that weapon
The F-22 was designed for a lifespan of 30 years and 8,000 flight hours, with a $100 million "structures retrofit program". Investigations are being made for upgrades to extend their useful lives further
F-22 Increment 3.2B Modernization (F-22 Inc 3.2B Mod) integrates the Air Intercept Missiles AIM-9X and AIM-120D into the F-22, adds Electronic Protection techniques, incorporates new hardware, enhances Geolocate capability, and expands IFDL (Intra-Flight Data Link) functionality.
The 3.2B mod is a $641 million upgrade
It is part of a $6.9 billion modernization program from 2013 to 2023
Read more
While the Raptor is by far the most capable air superiority fighter ever built, its Achilles' Heel since it entered service has been maintenance. The F-22's sensitive radar absorbent coatings have proven to be costly and difficult to repair, but the Air Force and Lockheed have been working on improving the performance. Those efforts are starting to payoff as Lockheed has completed work on the first Raptor to enter the company's Inlet Coating Repair (ICR) Speedline facility-delivering the aircraft back to the U.S. Air Force ahead of schedule.
Lockheed notes that the recent increase in the number of F-22 deployments-particularly the ongoing operations in the Middle East-have increased the demand to its stealth repair services. The jet always required periodic overhauls to maintain its very low radar signature, however, the current workload is greater than usual.
While the F-22 might no longer be in production, Lockheed is heavily involved in keeping the Raptor fleet flying. Lockheed provides sustainment services to the F-22 fleet through a comprehensive weapons management program called Follow-on Agile Sustainment for the Raptor (FASTeR). With a fleet of only 186 operational jets-of which only 120 are "combat-coded"-the Air Force needs every flyable Raptor it can get.
The Air Force is continually working to improve its F-22 fleet, which is the core of its air superiority capability. Currently, the Raptor fleet is operating in an Increment 3.2A/Upgrade 5 configuration that finally allows the jets to carry the AIM-9X Sidwinder high off-boresight missile, but the weapon won't be fully integrated into F-22's systems until the Increment 3.2B configuration is fielded. Even then, it won't be until later upgrades that the jet will be equipped with a helmet-mounted cuing system for that weapon
The F-22 was designed for a lifespan of 30 years and 8,000 flight hours, with a $100 million "structures retrofit program". Investigations are being made for upgrades to extend their useful lives further
F-22 Increment 3.2B Modernization (F-22 Inc 3.2B Mod) integrates the Air Intercept Missiles AIM-9X and AIM-120D into the F-22, adds Electronic Protection techniques, incorporates new hardware, enhances Geolocate capability, and expands IFDL (Intra-Flight Data Link) functionality.
The 3.2B mod is a $641 million upgrade
It is part of a $6.9 billion modernization program from 2013 to 2023
Read more