More progress for a program that seems like it had so little for so long. The first US Navy squadron operating the F-35C Lightning II, Strike Fighter Squadron One Zero One, the “Grim Reapers,” just returned to their home station at Eglin AFB, Florida from a two-week visit to NAS Fallon, Nevada.
With the overall objective being to participate in air-to-air training alongside Topgun instructors in F/A-18s at the Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center, the visit was another step on the road to the Navy’s IOC (Initial Operational Capability) in the new 5th-Generation fighter, tentatively scheduled for 2018.
VFA-101 pilots’ first order of business was to assess established strike fighter tactics, techniques, and procedures with a new dynamic: Super Hornets and Joint Strike Fighters flying missions together as they’re scheduled to do for the foreseeable future. The next, and just as important objective, was carrying out another detachment with the F-35, which will becom part of its standard work-up cycle–like all other Naval Aviation units.
The final item on VFA-101’s to-do list was to give NAS Fallon and its tenant commands a sample of what it will be like to have another aircraft type in its ranks, once they start receiving the first of their eventual six Lightning IIs. The base will undertake some modifications to infrastructure, such as the addition of outdoor canopies to protect the F-35 cockpits from the Nevada heat, as mentioned by NAS Fallon spokesman Zip Upham.
SEE ALSO: US officials: Russia is positioning tanks at a key Syrian airfield
Join the conversation about this story »
NOW WATCH: This $200 million plane is called the 'most lethal fighter aircraft in the world'