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Fri, Mar 09, 2012

Pentagon Adjusts JSF Performance Requirements

Makes Changes In Some Key Benchmarks For The 5th Generation Fighter

The Pentagon has proposed some adjustments in the performance requirements for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, including its expected combat radius. The changes still need to be approved by the Joint Requirement Oversight Council (JROC).

About a year ago, the JROC adjusted the F-35A combat radius from 590 nautical miles to 584, based on updated engine bleed estimates. In an effort to compensate, a new revised requirement under consideration by the Council assumes near-perfect altitude and cruise speeds in a less-demanding flight profile, which extends the F-35A range to 613 nautical miles.

Defenseinsider.com reports that the combat range estimation for the STOVL variant for the Marine Corps is about 15 percent less than the F-35A model. Performance for the "B" model were also relaxed, extending the short takeoff distance to 600 feet from an estimate of 544 feet when carrying a standard load of munitions cited in the April 2011 report.

The JROC reassess programs which have exceeded their original baseline costs by 25 percent as a matter of policy. One goal of the review is to determine if acquisition costs and other estimates can be improved by easing program requirements. (Images from file)

FMI: www.defense.gov


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