Pilot Safe at US Military Plane Crash in S. Korea

During a training mission, an F-16 jet fighter of the US Air Force crashed in Gunsan, South Korea. Fortunately, the pilot ejected to safety before the aircraft crashed into a rice paddy around noon on Wednesday.

According to a US military statement: “The (lone) pilot safely ejected before the plane crashed. Emergency response teams are on scene at this time.” The statement also said that there are no serious injuries or damage to the ground.

Earlier reports from a local fire station officer misstated that the pilot was injured and that the aircraft involved was an A-10 Tank Buster.

South Korean and US troops are currently conducting “Foal Eagle,” an annual joint military exercise. However, it is not clear whether the F-16 is part of the exercise.

North Korea ferociously oppose the joint military exercises of the two countries, tagging it as a rehearsal for invasion. But South Korea and the US stated that the exercises are just for defensive purposes.

Currently, there are 28,500 US troops in South Korean. US military presence has been in the country since the 1950-53 war.

 

Pacific Aircraft offers desktop model planes of F-16 jet fighters and other US military model airplanes. Each custom model airplanes are handcrafted and painted intricately, capturing more detail than other model airplanes in the market.

 

Source: AFP

Lockheed Dismisses Korea F-35 Schedule Issue

SINGAPORE — A Pentagon decision to reduce near-term F-35 purchases will not hinder Lockheed Martin from meeting South Korea’s demand for an early 2016 first delivery under the F-X3 fighter program, insists David Scott, director of F-35 international customer engagement for the prime contractor.

Current production capacity can build 48 aircraft annually, and with the U.S. looking to buy around 30 aircraft per year, there are slots to meet South Korea’s demands, as well as other near-term international buyers such as Japan, Turkey, Italy and Norway.

A Joint Strike Fighter steering board will convene soon to update and reconcile purchase plans. If there is need for extra tooling to be acquired either at Lockheed Martin or in the F-35 supply chain, there would be time to do so, Scott says.

The South Korean competition to supply 60 fighters will pit the F-35A against the Boeing F-15 Silent Eagle and, potentially, European bidders.

The international buys also will help maintain production of F-35s at a more economical rate, Scott notes.

Lockheed Martin would need a waiver to sell the fighter to South Korea because of a U.S. prohibition of exporting hardware before an aircraft has entered service with the U.S. The waiver is likely to be granted, though, with the U.S. government having already granted one for Japan.

Still unclear is what the next big F-35 competition will be overseas. The focus, after South Korea, likely will shift to solidifying plans with Singapore, Australia and others already involved in the program at various levels.

F-35

 

-aviationweek.com

-aerospaceweb.org

Fighters vie in Korean F-X Phase 3 program

South Korea aims to choose a supplier for 60 advanced fighters next year, balancing industrial ambitions against a need to deter North Korea and concerns about emerging Chinese and Russian air-to-air threats.

Contenders for the F-X Phase 3 program are the Boeing F-15SE Silent Eagle, Eurofighter Typhoon and Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

Each has merits. Local industry is helping to develop the Silent Eagle, a stealthier version of the F-15K, and makes major parts for all F-15s, while the air force shows strong signs of wanting the F-35’s stealth for the crucial strike mission. In a market dominated by U.S. manufacturers, the Typhoon must rely heavily on its flight performance and on Eurofighter’s great scope for technology transfer.

The Typhoon was little more than a stalking horse in F-X Phase 1, in which Boeing won an order for 40 F-15Ks in 2002. Only Boeing bid for F-X Phase 2, resulting in a contract for 21 more F-15Ks in 2008. The F-X requirement emerged in the late 1980s and has met repeated budgetary delays. Phase 3 will not move to a decision next year unless parliament allocates money for the aircraft.

The Phase 3 aircraft would partly replace F-4 Phantoms and F-5 Tigers, and would be replaced in the strike role by 2030 by a domestically developed combat drone. Even with the new aircraft, the fighter force will drop to 400 from 500 by 2020.

South Korea faces more than 300 North Korean heavy artillery pieces in range of Seoul, and, far from the border, an uncertain number of nuclear ballistic missiles of unknown quality. The ability to rapidly knock out guns and missiles that threaten cities while pounding command bunkers is critically important. The air threat from North Korea is not an immediate concern.

South Korean fighters would not fly more than 1,000 km (621 mi.) to destroy North Korean nuclear missiles. The most northerly F-15K base is 430 km from Pyongyang. Also, China and Russia may introduce their own stealth fighters—the Chengdu J-20 and Sukhoi PAK-FA, respectively—this decade.

An ability to penetrate hostile airspace covertly, the strongest selling point of the F-35, is an “immensely important capability,” said air force Col. Taek-Hwan Song, at a seminar in Seoul in May. Song, leader of the department that plans air force requirements, expressed a relaxed view on the affordability of the F-35 and its schedule for service entry, despite cost overruns and delays. “A general misunderstanding about the fifth-generation stealth fighter is that it is expensive; it’s never too expensive,” he said. As for the aim of putting the F-X Phase 3 aircraft into service in 2018, just as the U.S. Air Force makes the F-35 operational, he notes that South Korea’s definition of operational is less demanding than that of USAF.

The Silent Eagle has the advantage of offering more work to Korea Aerospace Industries, which builds the wings and forward fuselages of F-15s for all customers and is helping to develop and make the conformal weapon bays fitted on the sides of the proposed stealthier version, for munitions, equipment and fuel. The stealthier F-15 would also have much commonality with 60 F-15Ks, cutting operational costs, though the version would be unique to South Korea unless Saudi Arabia, a potential customer, also buys it.

The Typhoon has an advantage over U.S. competitors on the issue of technology transfer that South Korea demands for its proposed KF-X fighter in the 2020s, since Eurofighter partners EADS and BAE Systems are not subject to Washington’s strict controls. Moreover, U.S. support for Asian fighter programs has consistently avoided creating competitors for U.S. aircraft.

Eurofighter says its aircraft can counter stealthy attackers. A flight of Typhoons flying in a wall formation can detect them at operationally useful ranges by sharing and triangulating azimuth data from passive sensors. Typhoons may even have detected Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptors that way last year.

Such counter-stealth capability would be valued against the J-20 and PAK-FA, but one F-X Phase 3 program official says an excellent strike capability would be valued more highly. Unless the South Korean air force, structured for combined operations with the U.S. Air Force against North Korea, transformed into a force for unilateral action, chances for a non-U.S. aircraft buy seem low.

 

-aviationweek.com

Lockheed Delivers F-15 Sniper Pods

Recently, Lockheed Martin announced that it delivered F-15 Sniper pods to the South Korean air force for immediate deployment in full flight operations.

Marc Nazon, program manager for Fixed Wing Fire Control at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, said, ”Sniper pods provide the (South Korean air force) with updated targeting and non-traditional intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities for the F-15K fleet.”

Nazon also said, “We look forward to continued support and training to ensure that (South Korean air force) pilots and maintainers have a full command of the Sniper pod’s capabilities.”

The Sniper pod identifies targets at long ranges and offers the capability to relay high-resolution streaming video using a downlink to ground forces for non-traditional intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and rapid target coordination.

Lockheed Martin in 2009 demonstrated the benefits of Sniper pod’s capability for the South Korean air force by successfully flying the device on F-15K and the KF-16 aircraft with a common Sniper pod software load.

This capability allows operators to readily deploy the pod on various aircraft types, significantly reducing targeting pod life-cycle costs.

Sniper pods are flying on U.S. Air Force and multinational F-16, F-15, B-1, F-18, Harrier, A-10 and B-52 aircraft.

-officialwire.com

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