Issue Caused The Grounding Of The F-22 Raptor Fleet
Air Force officials continue to conduct an Aircraft Oxygen
Generation study, with members of the Air Force Scientific Advisory
Board taking the leading role. Secretary of the Air Force Michael
Donley directed the quick look study in the wake of recent F-22
Raptor incidents. Officials seek to identify a common thread among
the incidents and will report their findings to senior Air Force
leaders to help prevent such incidents from occurring in the
future.

In a July 13 memorandum to the secretary of defense, Secretary
Donley noted that pilots flying the F-22 have reported in-flight,
physiological events at a rate three times higher than crews from
other similar aircraft. The symptoms are similar to those resulting
from an inadequate oxygen supply which affected the performance of
the pilots experiencing them in varied ways.
"The Air Force takes flying-related incidents seriously. We met
with leaders, operators and maintainers in the F-22 community to
talk about the Scientific Advisory Board's oxygen generation
study," said Lt. Gen. "Hawk" Carlisle, the deputy chief of staff
for Operations, Plans and Requirements, Headquarters U.S. Air
Force. "As part of the meeting we were able to provide the latest
information on the status of the study and address their concerns
regarding a timely return to fly."
"This board is the secretary's brain trust," said Lt. Col.
Matthew Zuber, the Air Force SAB executive director. "It utilizes
the nation's best scientists and engineers to advise Air Force
senior leadership on science and technology issues."
The SAB, composed of special government employees, works with
Air Force officials to conduct three to five studies per year and
advises the secretary and the chief of staff on the findings, Zuber
said, adding that the Air Force has expanded the scope of the
scientific investigation beyond the F-22 to include such platforms
as the F-35 Lightning II, T-6A Texan II, F-16 Fighting Falcon and
the A-10 Thunderbolt II. The study has incorporated extensive
ground testing and limited flight testing as well.

The SAB study panel investigation is supported by the F-22
System Program Office, the Air Force Safety Center, industry
partners, Naval Air Systems Command and Air Force Research Labs.
"We're all in the same room and not holding back any effort to
determine whether these events are related to hypoxia, air
contaminants or other factors," Zuber said, adding that no
possibilities have been eliminated. This particular investigation,
Zuber explained, involves a strong fact-finding analysis with
deliberation among a cross-section of experts. The study will
benefit from technical data generated by flight test activities
conducted at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., laboratory tests
conducted by Air Force Research Labs, and contractor personnel, he
said. "The zero-risk solution is not to fly, and that's not a
long-term option; it's an inherently dangerous business to fly and
fight wars," Zuber said. "We want to make sure we mitigate risks to
a level that's appropriate for the urgency of the mission."
The SAB AOG study plans to provide the Air Force secretary and
Air Force chief of staff interim reports prior to the final report
projected for later this fall. Once complete, the product will be
releasable to the general public. Until the report is submitted, it
would be inappropriate to speculate on potential outcomes of the
study, Zuber said.