F-35, A New Tanker, And UAVs Top The Year For The Armed
Forces
The year in military aviation was highlighted by significant
milestones for the 5th generation Joint Strike Fighter and the
announcement that a U.S.-based company would build the replacement
for the aging KC-135 tanker.

But there were also significant experiments in hypersonic
aircraft, and a stealthy military spacecraft is, as far as we know,
still in orbit. Here are the top stories in military aviation for
2011.
January
Adm. John C. Harvey Jr., Commander, United States Fleet Forces
Command (USFFC), permanently
relieved Capt. Owen Honors of his duties
as commanding officer of USS Enterprise (CVN 65) for demonstrating
poor judgment while serving as executive officer of that ship.

Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates (pictured) announced a
series of efficiencies decisions designed to
save the Department of Defense more than $150
billion over the next five years primarily by reducing
overhead costs, improving business practices and culling excess or
troubled programs. Most of the resulting savings will be used
by the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force to invest in high
priority programs that strengthen warfighting capabilities.
The Chinese J-20 Black Eagle stealth fighter that is reportedly
being developed as a rival to the F-22 Raptor
flew for the first time, and the demonstration
may have been planned to coincide with a visit by Defense Secretary
Robert Gates.
The Marine Corps performed a significant maneuver with the
Corps’ short take-off and vertical landing variant of the
Joint Strike Fighter, the STOVL F-35B Lightning II. The BF-2,
a test version of the fighter jet, accomplished its
first vertical landing and conversion back to normal
flight.
The German government reached an agreement with Airbus to buy 53
of the A400M airlifters, and plans to sell 13 to outside parties.
The agreement reportedly
removes the final hurdle to completing the
long-overdue and over-budget transport aircraft.
The U.S. Navy announced the award of a $1.6 billion contract to
Boeing for
P-8A Poseidon aircraft Low-Rate Initial Production
(LRIP) of six aircraft. This first LRIP contract also
includes spares, logistics and training devices. Production of the
first LRIP aircraft was set to begin at Boeing's Renton, WA,
facility.
February
In a statement spanning 15 pages, Capt. Owen Honors
defended the practice of producing and showing a series of
videos some have described as "vulgar" and "profane".
Capt. Honors produced the videos while he was the XO of the
aircraft carrier U.S.S. Enterprise, and the controversy around them
cost him his command of that ship.

Northrop Grumman Corporation and the Navy conducted a successful
first flight of the X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System
Demonstration (UCAS-D) aircraft. The first flight was
conducted under hazy skies at Edwards Air Force Base (AFB), CA, on
February 4th, and began at 1409 PST and lasted 29 minutes.
After a series of extensive ground and simulator training
events, Lt. Cmdr. Eric "Magic" Buus completed the
first flight by a U.S. Navy test pilot in an
F-35.
The Boeing Company's
final proposal for the U.S. Air Force’s KC-X
tanker competition was submitted to the U.S. Air
Force. The proposal offers a fleet of Boeing NewGen Tankers --
multi-mission aircraft based on the 767 platform -- that Boeing
says will deliver superior capabilities to U.S. warfighters.
The C-17 Globemaster III was certified for
unlimited usage of hydroprocessed blended
biofuels known as hydrotreated renewable jet fuels,
Air Force officials said. "This certification marks the Air Force's
first platform to be fully certified using an HRJ blend," said Dr.
Kevin Geiss, the deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force for
energy.
In a technical milestone never before achieved, AeroVironment
says it has demonstrated controlled precision hovering and
fast-forward flight of a two-wing, flapping wing aircraft that
carries its own energy source, and
uses only the flapping wings for propulsion
and control.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates may have gotten his wish about
the more conservative GOP majority in the House, which
voted to cancel the F136 engine program. A
group of first-time legislators, many associated with the Tea
Party, broke with the more mainstream Republicans led by House
Speaker John Boehner to vote for $16 billion in defense spending
cuts, including the F136 engine.
Boeing will continue to build tankers for the U.S. Air Force.
Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley announced that the
$35 billion contract for the new tanker,
designated KC-46A, would be awarded to the U.S. planemaker.

The
first production model of the F-35 Lightning
II made its inaugural flight 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.
March
Air Force technicians
launched the second X-37B March 5, officials
said. The Orbital Test Vehicle-2 launch comes on the heels of the
successful flight of OTV-1, which made an autonomous landing at
Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA, Dec. 3 after 224 days in space.
According to officials, post-flight analysis of OTV-1 revealed
OTV-2 needed no significant changes, but detailed assessments of
the first mission are ongoing.
The first flight of the 2nd prototype of the
fifth generation Sukhoi aviation complex (PAK
FA) took place in Komsomolsk - on - Amur Thursday. The
plane was flown by Russian Federation test pilot Sergey Bogdan. The
flight lasted about 44 minutes, and landed on the factory airfield
runway.
The U.S. Air Force accepted MQ-1 Predator tail number 268,
the last manufactured for the service, in a
ceremony at General Atomics' Gray Butte Aeronautical Systems'
Flight Ops Facility. Col. James Beissner, Air Combat Command's
Chief Irregular Warfare Division, accepted the aircraft on behalf
of the Air Force in front of a crowd of more than 800.
The Pentagon
grounded the entire fleet of F-35 Lightning II
Joint Strike Fighters after an "A" model developed an oil leak and
suffered a double generator failure in flight. The setback comes
despite good progress reportedly being made in the flight testing
of the 5th generation fighter. Pentagon officials said the program
was moving along well in congressional testimony.
Sustainable Oils said Monday that a jet fuel derived from its
camelina powered the
successful test flight of a U.S. Air Force F-22 Raptor
aircraft. The aircraft was powered by a 50/50 fuel
blend of conventional petroleum-based JP-8 and biofuel derived from
camelina.

The Department of Defense
issued a "Stop Work" order to the
GE/Rolls-Royce Fighter Engine team instructing them to stop efforts
on the F136 for 2011 once the current funding runs out at the end
of March.
April
EADS and Airbus
concluded contract amendment negotiations with
OCCAR and the seven A400M launch customer nations. The contract
amendment was signed today in Seville by Patrick Bellouard,
Director of OCCAR – Executive Agency, and Airbus Military CEO
Domingo Ureña, in the presence of Spanish Minister of
Defence Carme Chacón. National armament directors and other
representatives from customer nations also attended the
ceremony.

The Marine Corps completed an aviation first, April 8, by flying
MV-22B Ospreys on the aircraft's longest movement to
date. Six Ospreys with Marine Medium Tiltrotor
Squadron 266 returned to the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit after a
trek from Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, to Souda Bay, Greece, with the
assistance of a pair of KC-130J Hercules from 2nd Marine Aircraft
Wing (Forward) who provided transport and aerial refueling
support.
A
special exhibit honoring the Centennial of Naval
Aviation opened at the Glenn H. Curtiss Museum
on April 30. The exhibit features the Museum's reproduction of
the 1911 Curtiss A-1 Triad, the U.S. Navy's first aircraft. Seated
in this seaplane are realistic figures of aviation pioneer and
Hammondsport native, Glenn Hammond Curtiss, with his student, Lt.
Theodore Ellyson, who was to become U.S. Naval Aviator number
1.
May
Boeing's
Phantom Ray unmanned airborne system (UAS) successfully
completed its first flight at NASA's Dryden Flight
Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, CA. The 17-minute flight
took place following a series of high-speed taxi tests in March
that validated ground guidance, navigation and control and verified
mission planning, pilot interface and operational procedures.
The U.S. Air Force accepted into its fleet the
first of a planned 1,763 production-model Lockheed Martin
F-35 Lightning II stealth fighters. The signing of
formal acceptance documents for the jet, known as AF-7, took place
at Lockheed Martin's F-35 final assembly plant in Fort Worth,
Texas, Thursday, May 5. The jet flew to Edwards Air Force Base, CA,
on Friday to begin its flight testing program.
The House Armed Services Committee (HASC) voted Wednesday to
allow GE and Rolls-Royce to continue the
self-funded development of the F136 engine.
The Pentagon formally canceled the alternative engine program last
month. The 54-5 vote came on an amendment to the House version of
the 2012 Pentagon spending bill.

The commanding officer of the Naval Flight Demonstration
Squadron was
relieved of command by chief of naval air
training May 27. Cmdr. Dave Koss requested that Rear Adm. Bill
Sizemore relieve him of his command following a lower-than-normal
maneuver during the team's last performance at the Lynchburg
Regional Air Show May 22.
June
A change of command ceremony for the Air Force Space and Missile
Systems Center took place Friday, June 3. Lt. Gen. Ellen M.
Pawlikowski became
the first female commander of the 5,000 people assigned to
SMC and responsible for executing the center's $10
billion annual budget to acquire and sustain most of the nation's
military space capabilities. She will assume command from Lt. Gen.
John T. "Tom" Sheridan, who has served as the commander since May
2008.
The Navy Flight Demonstration Squadron, the Blue Angels,
resumed all previously scheduled performances
for the 2011 season beginning with Quad City Air Show in Davenport,
Iowa. During the past two weeks, the Blue Angels completed rigorous
training and air show demonstration practice to integrate Capt.
Greg McWherter, the new commanding officer and flight leader, back
into the flight demonstration team.
File Photo

The B-17 restored by The Liberty Foundation in Miami
went down in a cornfield near Chicago. While
all seven people on board the aircraft survived, the rare warbird
was lost due to a post-crash fire.
A second test of the X-51A Waverider flew June 13, 2011, in the
Point Mugu Naval Air Test Range over the Pacific Ocean, bringing
significant hypersonic research data in a
less than successful flight test. The
hypersonic aircraft was successfully boosted to just over Mach 5,
and the scramjet engine lit but failed to transition to full
power.
The prototype of Evektor's new
EV-55M made its first flight from Kunovice
airport in the Czech Republic Friday. The airplane was flown by
Evektor test pilot Josef Charvát and military pilot Major
Jirí Hána. The EV-55M is a military variant of the
multi-purpose EV-55 Outback airplane, a high-wing, twin-engine,
turboprop airplane designed to carry 9 - 14 passengers or
4,000 pounds of cargo at a cruising speed of 220 knots.
July
The first production model F-35 Lightning II to be assigned to
the 33rd Fighter Wing
arrived at Eglin AFB in Florida Thursday at
1318 CDT after its more than 90-minute ferry flight from Fort
Worth, Texas. The aircraft, known as AF-9, will be used for
activities in concert with training F-35 pilots and maintainers who
begin coursework at the base's new F-35 Integrated Training Center
this fall.

Following the retirement of the Nimrod MR2 fleet last year, the
final two Nimrods, in service with 51 Squadron,
recently bowed out to a 700-strong audience of
serving and retired RAF personnel at a ceremony held at RAF
Waddington.
The first P-8A Poseidon production aircraft
completed its first flight on July 7, taking
off from Renton Field and landing three hours later at Boeing Field
in Seattle. The P-8A is the first of six low-rate initial
production (LRIP) aircraft Boeing is building for the U.S. Navy as
part of a $1.6 billion contract awarded in January.
August
Flight testing was been suspended for the F-35
Joint Strike Fighter for a third time after an Integrated Power
Package (IPP) failed on aircraft AF-4 during a ground maintenance
test run. The failure occurred at about 0830 local time at Edwards
AFB in California, according to a statement from the F-35 Program
Office.
In one of the deadliest days in the history of recent Afghan
military operations, a
NATO CH-47 Chinook was shot down by hostile forces of the
Taliban. The CH-47 went down in Afghanistan's Wardak
province. Sources speaking on behalf of the Taliban claim that 'it
fired a rocket at the helicopter during a battle' during which
eight militants were killed in a raid on their hideout.
DARPA’s
second flight test of the Falcon Hypersonic Technology
Vehicle 2 launched aboard an Air Force Minotaur
IV rocket. DARPA updates indicated that the launch appeared to go
well, but monitoring stations lost contact with the Falcon during
the glide phase of the flight.
The F-35 Joint Program Office authorized a
return to ground operations for the F-35 developmental test
(DT) aircraft. This was the first step in returning
the F-35 fleet to full flight operations. A precautionary
suspension of both ground and flight operations for the program was
issued Aug. 3.

Civil Air Patrol National Vice Commander Brig. Gen. Charles L.
“Chuck” Carr Jr. (pictured) of Columbus, Ohio, was
elected national commander by the CAP National
Board, one of the nonprofit organization’s
governing bodies, and Middle East Region Commander Col. Joseph R.
Vazquez of Richmond, Va., was elected national vice commander.
An RAF Red Arrows aircraft
went down in the midst of a Saturday afternoon
airshow at the Bournemouth (UK) Air Festival. The
nine-ship military formation aerobatic team was in the midst of
concluding a public demonstration flight when one aircraft
apparently separated from the formation and impacted the ground
close to the nearby Stour river.
The U.S. Air Force
cleared the F35 JSF to return to flight
testing following a two-week stand down. The program
had been suspended following a problem that cropped up in a power
system in one of the test airplanes stationed at Edwards Air Force
Base.
September
The U.S. Air Force
transferred the final sector of northern Iraq's airspace to
the Iraq Civil Aviation Authority on Aug. 25. With the
assumption of this sector, the ICAA received control of airspace in
Kirkuk from ground level to 15,000 feet.
The
Blue Angels' F/A-18 Hornet aircraft used a biofuel
blend during their performances at the Naval Air
Station Patuxent River, Md., Air Expo over the Labor Day weekend.
All six Hornets were powered by a 50/50 blend of conventional JP-5
jet fuel and a camelina-based biofuel.
Just weeks after the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter got back to
flight testing,
a new design problem has cropped up. An
aluminum beam in the wing structure has been found to be
"defective," an issue that could lower the aircraft's wing life
from 8,000 hours, or about 25 operational years, to just 1,200
hours, which equates to about five years of flying.

In a brief statement, the U.S. Air Force announced that the Air
Combat Command had
canceled the remaining 2011 schedule of air show
appearances for the F-22 Raptor. The action is
intended to permit F-22 wings to focus all flying activity toward
returning the F-22 to mission-ready status.
The KC-46 Tanker program
successfully completed its Integrated Baseline Review
(IBR) with the U.S. Air Force at Boeing program
headquarters in Mukilteo, WA. The assessment, attended by senior
Air Force program officials, validated the program’s
technical scope and finalized key milestones for the design and
development phase of the Air Force's next-generation aerial
refueling tanker.
October
The X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System Demonstration aircraft
reached a major milestone when it
retracted its landing gear and flew in its
cruise configuration for the first time.
File Photo

The official investigation into the downing of a CH-47 Chinook
helicopter in Afghanistan on August 6th indicates that the aircrew
was not at fault for the accident. The aircraft was
brought down by a rocket propelled grenade
(RPG) fired by Taliban militants with 38 people
fatally injured.
The FAA completed
final certification for Embraer's 314 Super Tucano
aircraft, paving the way for the airplane to be placed
on contract with Tactical Air Defense Services (TADF). The company
had acquired the airplane through a joint-venture Services
Agreement with Tactical Air Support ("TacAir").
The amphibious assault ship USS Wasp (LHD 1) headed back to its
homeport after spending three weeks at sea hosting the
initial sea trials of the F-35B Lightning II,
Joint Strike Fighter (JSF). The first F-35B landed on Wasp's flight
deck October 3, beginning an 18-day test period for the
aircraft.
CAP operations are being
severely restricted by the nation's budget
issues. The CAP said "To ensure Civil Air Patrol's
continued support for critical U.S. Air Force-assigned missions,
some aspects of the organization's operations are being temporarily
paused during the continuing federal budget uncertainty."
November
F-35 integrated test force personnel and F-35C test aircraft
CF-3 returned to NAS Patuxent River after completing
two major catapult test events. Starting this
past summer, the test team put the carrier variant of the Joint
Strike Fighter through its first set of catapult launches.
Some 436 captains and majors in the United States Air Force are
finding that joining the military was not necessarily a guarantee
against losing their jobs. The Air Force
plans to lay off that number of mid-grade
officers as part of a staffing level adjustment due
the services' highest retention rate in 16 years.
The U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command/Army Forces
Strategic Command conducted the
first test flight of the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon
(AHW) concept Thursday. A first-of-its-kind
glide vehicle, designed to fly within the earth’s atmosphere
at hypersonic speed and long range, was launched from the Pacific
Missile Range Facility, Kauai, Hawaii to the Reagan Test Site, U.S.
Army Kwajalein Atoll.

Hawker Beechcraft received official notification from the United
States Air Force that the Beechcraft AT-6 has been
excluded from continuing in the Light Air Support (LAS) bidding
process. As a result they have requested a review of
the USAF Light Air Support Bidding decision.
December
GE and Rolls announced they'll
discontinue further development of the F-136
alternate engine for the F-35. The decision has implications for
employment in Ohio and other states, and means the Pratt &
Whitney F135 engine, which won the original competition years ago,
will remain the sole engine used in the Joint Strike Fighter.
The USAF released
its official report on an accident which
occurred November 16th of last year in Alaska in which a pilot was
lost and an F-22 Raptor was destroyed. The report suggests that the
distraction caused by the pilots' attempt to activate the emergency
oxygen system was the primary cause of the accident.
The Japan Ministry of Defense announced its
selection of the F-35 Lightning II as the
Japan Air Self Defense Force's (JASDF) next generation fighter
aircraft, following the F-X competitive bid process.
US government
threw the book at a southern-Oregon
company it claims has sold "nonconforming, defective and
counterfeit products" to the Department of Defense on at least 392
separate occasions.
Hawker Beechcraft confirmed that they
will file a suit with the Court of Federal
Claims following notification late last week that the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) has declined to review its protest of
the decision by the U.S. Air Force to exclude the company's
Beechcraft AT-6 from the Light Air Support (LAS) competition.