An F-35 engine failed during a pre-delivery test due to a vibration problem in March 2020, nearly three years before a similar issue caused an alarming fighter mishap in Fort Worth, Texas, Defense News has learned.
The F-35 Joint Program Office and Pratt & Whitney, the Raytheon-owned maker of the F135 engines that power the F-35, said in a statement to Defense News that Pratt immediately informed the JPO after the 2020 vibration failure occurred.
The next day, experts from Pratt & Whitney, the JPO, and the military services that fly the F-35 began a full systems engineering investigation to find the root cause of the problem and develop a path forward, the JPO and Pratt & Whitney said.
After the four-month investigation, the experts decided the engines needed additional pre-acceptance procedures to test and screen them and, when necessary, take action to mitigate any vibration issues that were discovered.
Poster Comment:
If you are only willing to pay $115 million for a plane, you cannot expect it to fly without falling out of the sky!!