Bouncing too Much to Find the Enemy

R. Jeffrey Smith
iWatch News / News Analysis
Published: Monday 18 June 2012
The GAO report says: These shortfalls may lead to a helmet unable to fully meet warfighter requirements — unsuitable for flight tasks and weapons delivery, as well as creating an unmanageable pilot workload, and may place limitations on the [F-35’s] operational environment.
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A host of problems plague the military’s newest jet fighter, the F-35, but one of the simplest yet most troublesome is identified in a new government audit as unreadable “symbology.”

The problem exists inside a small item at the heart of what makes the F-35 the world’s most sophisticated aircraft — if only it could be made to work. Namely, the pilot’s helmet visor. On the world’s most advanced, fifth-generation military aircraft, the visor is meant to be much more than a sun shield. It is supposed to do wondrous things.

Acting like a small, see-through movie screen, it is designed to display data showing how the plane is performing, where enemy targets are, and which weapons the pilot can use to handle them. As the pilot swivels his head, the display is meant to adapt, creating a direct link — as in a science-fiction movie — between the pilot and the aircraft’s unprecedented computing power.

The visor is, according to the Government Accountability Office’s latest annual report on the F-35’s development, “integral to the mission systems architecture.” In other words, the plane was more or less designed around the unique capabilities of that fancy helmet appendage.

Just one problem: It doesn’t work. In flight tests, the visor’s “symbology” has evidently been unreadable, because the plane itself has been bouncing up and down in the air more than expected. The effect is probably like trying to read an e-book while riding a bicycle along a boulder-strewn path.

“Display jitter,” the GAO report says in a footnote, “is the undesired shaking of display, making symbology unreadable … [due to] worse than expected vibrations, known as aircraft buffet.”

Unfortunately for the plane’s designers, jitter and buffeting are only part of the problems undermining the visor’s use. The others are a persistent delay in displaying key sensor data — making the visor symbols outdated as the aircraft streaks through the air at speeds up to 1,200 mph — and an inability to show night vision readings properly.

So what’s the big deal? It’s just a visor. Well, the GAO report says “these shortfalls may lead to a helmet unable to fully meet warfighter requirements — unsuitable for flight tasks and weapons delivery, as well as creating an unmanageable pilot workload, and may place limitations on the [F-35’s] operational environment.”

In short, if the visor doesn’t work, the plane may not be able to do all the impressive things that the Pentagon is spending more than $1.5 trillion — over the next 30 or so years — to make it do. The GAO said this alarm was sounded by the program officials interviewed by its investigators.

A new visor is under development, at an estimated cost of just $80 million, so the Air Force may have a backup if the original visor’s kinks cannot be worked out. But according to the GAO, the alternate visor won’t be as capable. An Air Force spokesman did not respond to a request for comment, but DODBuzz.com quoted the F-35 program director in March as promising that the helmet troubles are "being addressed," partly through the backup visor.

The director, Vice Adm. David Venlet, told a defense conference that the plane was just having "normal teething problems."

A few things went well for the F-35 program last year. A version being made for the Marines, capable of short takeoffs and landings, “performed better than expected” in flight tests. And the Air Force was able to double the number of test flights it performed the previous year. The volume of changes made to engineering drawings of the plane’s components every month — even while the plane is in early production — has started to decline.

But there wasn’t a lot of other good news in the report. Although the program was extensively restructured by senior Pentagon officials last year, by adding many millions of dollars and stretching out key deadlines, it still managed to meet only six of its eleven objectives for the period. Many of these goals were administrative. Among the uncompleted tasks: an interim upgrade of the plane’s software and a redesign of its tailhook.

The plane has had no difficulty being launched by catapults, a key prerequisite for its use by the Navy aboard aircraft carriers. But so far, it has not been able to use its tailhook to catch a cable and stop suddenly — which is also, well, crucial for operations on an aircraft carrier. Generally speaking, Navy pilots need a place to land when their missions are complete.

Venlet has called the tailhook troubles "a damping-bouncing issue" that could not have been foreseen. It is being redesigned, but the GAO warns that “other aircraft structural modifications may also be required.” The discovery of cracks in the plane’s bulkhead, an upright wall in its fuselage, will require costly repairs, and other parts are showing unexpectedly early signs of wear. Flight tests so far have shown “different structural loads than predicted,” the GAO disclosed, a sure sign that unplanned work lies ahead. “Aircraft reliability and parts shortages” contributed to testing shortfalls last year.

In an October report, a special testing team of Air Force, Navy, and British officers found shortcomings in “aircraft handling characteristics and shortfalls in maneuvering performance,” according to a GAO summary of the officers’ report. Besides flagging the troubled helmet, they complained about poor management of spare parts supplies, excessive repair time for the plane’s delicate radar-absorbing skin, and “poor maintainability performance.”

The Pentagon has increasingly been at loggerheads with the chief contractor, Lockheed Martin, over the work ahead. Already, cost overruns on four early production contracts have totaled $1 billion, with the government on the hook to pay just over two-thirds this amount. But Uncle Sam’s ambition is still to buy 365 of the planes (out of 2,457) at a cost of $69 billion, before completing so-called developmental flight tests — the spins in the sky that are needed to make sure everything is operating properly.

Until those tests are finished, the GAO said — repeating a theme the government watchdog has sounded for the past seven years — the F-35 program is “very susceptible to discovering costly design and technical problems after many aircraft have been fielded.” The auditors expressed worry as a result that the Pentagon may not be able to afford the program in its current form and urged that it conduct a study now of the impact of future budget cuts.

In a written reply, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense David G. Ahern said the Pentagon conducts such studies all the time, but “does not believe there is value” in making them public. He also said that any such analysis would have to consider the impact of any cuts in a broad context, including the “industrial base,” the size of the existing fighter fleet, and Washington’s deals to sell the plane to foreign allies.

Reprinted by permission from iWatch News



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3 comments on "Bouncing too Much to Find the Enemy"

Charles Thomas

June 19, 2012 9:48pm

"Performed better than expected"= nobody died.

"Jittering", "shaking"= technical problem solved decades ago with Hollywood video movie making. Ask any industry camera man.

Problems solved within the next thirty years= flying figure eights over a combat zone under control of "locals" using 70 year old AK47s and other hand held "outdated" weapons. Bottom line--"boots on the ground" or stay the damn home.

Wouldn't it be simpler to just send a check to every voter within a congressman's district rather than ear-marking funds to develop a non-functional weapons system within his district. There maybe funds left over to improve some of the roads, and best of all, nobody dies.

pitch1934

June 18, 2012 1:57pm

Haven't we been told over and over that the F-35 is not wanted by the military? Isn't it a fact that the F-35 is being pushed by certain memebers of congress who have plants that manufacture parts of the plane in their disctricts and states? Who has the balls to actually stand up and say, "This plane will be obsolete before it flies"? By the way, how many of these members of congress and senators are saying that the government doesn't create jobs?

Riconui

June 18, 2012 1:34pm

My impression is that by the time the problems have been worked out on the F-35, if they ever are, the manned fighter concept will be obsolete, replaced by semi-autonomous fighter drones. (And I'm not implying that any of these developments are unqualified positives). Taking the arc of fighter development, it's emphatically clear that the role of manned fighters is limited at best and doomed in the long haul. Simply put, there is no manned fighter that can sustain more than about a 9 G turn for anything but limited amounts of time. A fighter drone can sustain 12 or more Gs for as long as it has fuel to remain aloft. Drones, having eliminated the pilot, require no weighty life support, instruments that need to be readable by a pilot or an ejection seat. And even if one is caught in the sights of an enemy, the actual "pilot" of the drone simply dials up another unit and fights on, video game style. No doubt such technology will eventually find it's way down the ranks until wars are fought almost exclusively by drones of one sort or another; drone fighter bombers; drone tanks; drone infantrymen(?), and humans will be able to measure the success of their war campaigns by the number of civilian bodies that stack up. In the meantime, the taxpayers will continue to pay up, and technology like the F-35 will continue to burn through the proceeds and those not included in the country club elite that benefit from all this largesse will find a way to make an economy out of delivering pizzas to each other.