Uploaded by 2219363193

Kicking the F-35’s Tires

advertisement
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
1 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
The F-35 program serves as the ideal case study to understand the
Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex. The program encapsulates all
the problems with the business of purchasing weapons in the United
States. More
Accountability
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
Trouble when the rubber meets the runway
B Y M A R K T H O M P S O N | F I L E D U N D E R A N A LY S I S | F E B R U A R Y 0 5 , 2 0 1 8
6 MINUTE READ
The F-35 fighter’s demanding landings have reduced tire wear, especially on the Marines’ version of the plane. (Photo:
USAF / March Copeland)
U.S. Army Lieutenant Benjamin Foulois put the first wheels on a Wright
Brothers’ aeroplane in 1910. After more than a century, the U.S. military is still
trying to get it right. The latest bump in the runway involves the F-35 fighter,
which has been bedeviled by tire problems, especially on the version being
built for the Marines.
Folks might not comprehend the challenges associated with the F-35’s 10
million lines of computer code, its slo-mo helmet imagery, or its buggy
Autonomic Logistics Information System, designed to keep the warplane
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
2 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
ready for action. But they understand tires because most of us buy them and
ride on them every day. Sure, F-35 tires and those on the family SUV are
worlds apart. But they’re both round and black, and that’s good enough for
most taxpayers.
Think of it as military procurement in
There are three
microcosm: Taxpayers will have paid
kinds of F-35s—for
to develop it, but what they paid for
won’t actually do what it is supposed
to do.
the Air Force, the
Navy and the
Marines—and they
all fly in the sky. But
how they get there,
and return safely to dirt (or deck), differs: the Air Force’s F-35A uses
traditional runways, the Navy’s F-35C has to endure punishing carrier takeoffs
and landings, and the Marines’ F-35B, with its swiveling engine, is designed for
short takeoffs and vertical landings from austere airfields.
The Pentagon’s new chief weapons-tester (on the job only since Dec. 11)
raised the tiresome issue in his office’s latest annual report, released Jan. 23.
“The program has struggled to find a tire for the F-35B that is strong enough
for conventional high-speed landings, soft enough to cushion vertical landings,
and still light enough for the existing aircraft structure,” Robert Behler, a
former Air Force test pilot, noted. “Average F-35B tire life is below 10 landings,
well below the requirement for 25 conventional full-stop landings.” The
problem, he added, won’t be fixed until after the F-35’s “System Development
and Demonstration” phase wraps up, perhaps next year.
Think of it as military procurement in microcosm: Taxpayers will have paid to
develop it, but what they paid for won’t actually do what it is supposed to do.
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
3 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
Marines and their troubled F-35B tire in Yuma, Ariz., in September. (Photo: US Marines / Koby I.
Saunders)
Nonetheless, the U.S. military loves the plane. "The F-35B’s ability to conduct
operations from expeditionary airstrips or sea-based carriers provides our
nation with its first 5th generation strike fighter, which will transform the way
we fight and win,” Marine General Joe Dunford said as Marine commandant in
2015, before being tapped as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Military-aircraft tires have a life that’s brutish and short. They’re swapped out
far more often than those on commercial airliners and pressurized 10 times
more than your car’s. They’re pounded during takeoffs and landings,
generating smoke as they skid upon touching down until their rotation catches
up with the plane’s speed.
This wasn’t supposed to be a problem in 2018. The F-35 people have been
saying for years that tire fixes are just around (sorry) the corner. "Those tires
today are coming off the airplane way, way, way too frequently," the Air Force
general running the program said five years ago.
His minions got the message. They explored thicker treads. “Tire wear must be
improved for the F-35B variant, and we have taken concrete actions to fix this
problem," an F-35 spokesman said back in 2013, when the tires couldn’t do
more than 10 landings—just like today.
The tires cost about $1,500 each. That works out to $300 per flight just to
burn rubber. They’re made by Britain’s Dunlop Aircraft Tyres Ltd. “World-class
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
4 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
aircraft tyres,” the company says atop its website. “And nothing else.”
(Goodyear and Michelin make the tires for the Air Force and Navy F-35s. To
confuse things even more, the Dunlop company making the F-35 tires is not
affiliated with Dunlop car tires, which since 1999 have been part of Goodyear.)
This isn’t the first time the issue has caught the attention of the Pentagon’s
Operational Test and Evaluation Office. “Tire assemblies on all F-35 variants do
not last as long as expected and require very frequent replacement,” Michael
Gilmore, Behler’s predecessor as the Defense Department’s top weaponstester, noted in 2014. “The program is seeking redesigned tires for all variants
to reduce maintenance down time for tire replacements.”
The F-35’s tires are keeping too many F-35s on the ground too often. (Source: DOT&E FY 2016
Annual Report, page 92)
In 2015, the F-35 boss was still grumbling about the Marines’ F-35 tires. “This
is more of a manufacturing problem than anything else,” he said. “We know
exactly what the tire needs to look like.”
Yet manufacturing the tire isn’t its only shortfall, as handy Air Force mechanics
have shown at two different F-35 bases. Tire-swapping airmen at Eglin Air
Force Base didn’t like the three tool boxes for their work that came with the
F-35 to their Florida base. They were able to cut the number of tools checked
out for changing F-35 tires from 287 to 52, all in a single box. "It takes a lot
less time now, compared to lugging out three boxes and a huge cart," an Air
Force wrench-turner said in 2013. "Also, there's a lot less risk of losing tools
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
5 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
now with one box as opposed to three boxes."
The wheel shop at Hill Air Force Base got real good at changing tires on the
Utah base’s F-16s using a hydraulic tool to separate tires from rims. When they
got a similar machine for use on the F-35, they were surprised at its
inefficiency. So they adopted their tried-and-true F-16 machine for the F-35’s
tires instead. "Using the legacy machine means that we can load the F-35 tires
by rolling them on instead of lifting them on as we have to do on the newer,
manual machine," an airman noted in 2016. "This saves a lot of time because
only two personnel are involved, not four. By using the automated process, it
takes half the time, which allows us to provide assets to the warfighter a lot
quicker."
Such fixes are disconcerting in a $1.5 trillion program—the most expensive in
world history. No wonder the Pentagon says it can’t afford to fly the F-35.
“Right now, we can’t afford the sustainment costs we have on the F-35,” Ellen
Lord, the Defense Department’s top weapons buyer, said Jan. 31.
The F-35 tire tale isn’t about reaching for the stars with new military
technology and falling short. This isn’t, after all, rocket science. Rather, it’s
about exaggerating the threat that drove the need to build the plane before its
blueprints were finished, leaving taxpayers holding the bag for tires that can
only do 40 percent of what was pledged.
One veteran pilot believes the Pentagon is stuck with the lousy tires. “I suspect
it will be much less expensive to keep the present tire and write it off after 10
instead of 25 landings,” says Merrill McPeak, the Air Force’s top officer from
1990 to 1994, who has flown more than 6,000 hours in six different kinds of
USAF fighters. “The avoided cost of finding or developing a Goldilocks tire will,
I expect, pay for a warehouse full of tires that look more like Cinderella’s older
sisters.”
The tires are emblematic of other Pentagon procurement nightmares. It’s that
comparability—like prior purchases of coffee pots costing $7,622 and $640
toilet seats—that grabs taxpayers’ attention. The most recent case is the Air
Force contract to replace the refrigerators on Air Force One for $24 million.
All these items, like the F-35’s tires, were custom-made for the military. The
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
6 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
iceboxes on the president’s plane, for example, have to chill 3,000 meals to
feed passengers and crew for weeks without resupplying (didn’t see a single
headline on the purchase with that nuance).
That Air Force One requirement is ridiculous, but that’s another column.
Such requirements—one plane shared among three services, including one
that can hop into or out of the air—has led to the F-35 fiasco. It also leads to a
disturbing thought: if they can’t get a century-old technology right, what other
snafus will surface only when war breaks out and the rubber really meets the
road?
Pentagon procurements can sometimes sum up all that’s wrong with military spending. (Source:
Mark Thompson personal collection)
Help us shine a light on government waste,
corruption, and abuse of power.
From exposing fraud in the use of COVID-19 relief funds to holding our elected officials
accountable for getting resources to those who need them most, POGO fights day in and
day out for a more effective government that better serves the people it’s supposed to
serve—you. But we can only continue to do this with your help.
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
7 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
$35
$50
$100
$250
Other
Center for
Defense
Information
The Center for Defense
Information at POGO aims to
secure far more effective and
ethical military forces at
significantly lower cost.
AUTHOR
Mark Thompson
Mark Thompson writes
for the Center for
Defense Information at
POGO.
Accountability
Military-Industrial Circus
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Kicking the F-35’s Tires
8 of 8
https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2018/02/kicking-f-35s-tires/
PRESS CENTER
NEWSLETTERS
C O N TA C T U S
P U B L I C AT I O N S
CAREERS
TA K E A C T I O N
BRIEFING
REPORT CORRUPTION
©2021 POGO | PRIVACY POLICY
PROJECT ON GOVERNMENT OVERSIGHT
7/9/2021, 5:54 pm
Download