Lockheed
Martin officials are creeping closer to a solution to problems with the
tailhook design for the U.S. Navy F-35C.
The
original design failed to snag the arresting wire in early testing owing to two
problems: the point of the hook was not sharp enough to scoop under the wire
and securely grab it, and a dampener device was not sufficient to maintain a
hold on the wire. Essentially, the hook was bouncing upon landing, reducing the
likelihood of a successful arrested landing.
Lockheed
Martin, the F-35 prime contractor, has redesigned the hook to address those
problems. An interim version, which has a sharpened point but lacks the
dampener, was tested.
In three
of five recent attempts, the redesigned hook did capture the wire; the failures
were due to the pilot landing the aircraft too far from the wire for a
successful arresting. This testing “was highly successful in demonstrating that
when presented the wire . . . it will grab the wire,” says J.D. McFarlan,
Lockheed Martin’s vice president of test and evaluation for the F-35 program.
He briefed reporters Sept. 18 during the annual Air Force Assn. conference in
Washington.
These
failures to grab the wire were predicted by models based on where the pilots
landed the aircraft, McFarlan says. This, he notes, helps to validate the
modeling work done on the redesigned hook.
The
tailhook problems came to light nearly a year ago, and redesign work has been
in progress since. Company officials hope to test the final version of the new
arrest
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