The Lockheed Martin F-35 programme on 7 April reached the first flight milestone more than one year behind schedule with an aircraft equipped with a full suite of advanced sensors.

The BF-4 flight test aircraft was airborne for 45min, reaching an altitude of 15,500ft (4,700m). Besides standard flight tests, test pilot David Nelson also “checked” the operation of the mission systems, Lockheed says. The previous schedule called for first flight of BF-4 in March 2009.

 F-35 BF-4 - Lockheed Martin
© Lockheed Martin

The F-35 features what Lockheed describes as the “most comprehensive sensor package ever to fly in a fighter”. This includes the Northrop Grumman APG-81 active electronically scanned array radar, the Lockheed electro-optical targeting system, Northrop distributed aperture system, BAE Systems electronic warfare system and VSI helmet-mounted display system.

Short take-off and vertical landing BF-4 also is the first F-35 flight test aircraft equipped with a Block 1 software package.

Lockheed now has flown five different flight test aircraft, including the now-retired AA-1 airframe.

Source: Flight International