F-35 Sim Incorporates Real, Not Emulated, Software
F-35 training underpinned by simulation, not emulation
With initial operational capability (IOC) for the Pentagon’s newest fighter expected next summer for the U.S. Marine Corps, and the following year for the Air Force, pilot training is a major focus moving forward.
But the design of the single-seat, stealthy fighter does not allow for buddy rides. When a student pilot steps into the cockpit of the F-35 for his first check-out flight, he is flying solo.
With a price exceeding $100 million and cost per flying hour for the A-model at roughly $24,000, each mission has to count. But Lockheed Martin says pilots are getting the education they need, thanks to improved simulation technology incorporated into the program’s full-mission simulators (FMS).
The simulators employ the actual F-35 software used by flying aircraft, while many training simulators for legacy aircraft rely more on emulation than simulation, says Mike Luntz, Lockheed Martin’s F-35 training system director. “We fly the same software, just like the jet does,” he says.
Already, five FMS are installed at Eglin AFB, Florida, the initial training base for F-35 pilots and maintainers. Another two are at Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS), in Yuma, Arizona—where the first squadron of Marine F-35Bs will be based—and two more at MCAS Beaufort, South Carolina, which will be the service’s main training base.
“They are the same software setup. They are the same hardware setup. They are very high-fidelity simulators,” Luntz says. “There are differences in the side panels between the actual CV, CTOL and Stovl. And because of the high fidelity of the simulators we have panels that we place in there that are actually removable . . . and we swap those side panels out,” to accommodate the unique controls for the F-35B short takeoff and vertical landing (Stovl) version for the Marines, U.K., and Italy, and F-35C carrier variant for the Navy. The A-model, optimized for conventional takeoff and landing (CTOL), will constitute the bulk of the fleet.
While about 40% of an F-16 pilot’s training is done in the simulator, the F-35 pilot’s education is at least 60% simulator based [emphasis added]. This is possible because of the fidelity of the simulator technology, Luntz says. Older simulators are motion-based, or mounted on a platform that moves with the pilot to add physicality to the maneuvers as he inputs commands. The F-35 FMS, however, is fixed. But the training is not lacking, Luntz asserts...
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