Texas, USA -- The U.S. Air Force
authorized extending the service life of the Lockheed Martin F-16's designed
service life to 12,000 Equivalent Flight Hours far beyond the aircraft's original
design service life of 8,000 hours. Following F-16 Service Life Extension
Program (SLEP) structural modifications, the U.S. Air Force could safely
operate Block 40-52 aircraft to 2048 and beyond. The Air Force and Lockheed
Martin also reduced projected service life costs for the Block 40-52 fleet,
paving the way for safe, cost-effective F-16 flight operations decades into the
future.
"This accomplishment is the result of more than seven years
of test, development, design, analysis and partnership between the U.S. Air
Force and Lockheed Martin," said Susan Ouzts, vice president of Lockheed Martin's F-16
program. "Combined with F-16 avionics modernization programs like the
F-16V, SLEP modifications demonstrate that the Fighting Falcon remains a highly
capable and affordable 4th Generation option for the U.S. Air Force and
international F-16 customers."
Validation of the extended flight hour limit directly supports
the SLEP goal of extending the service life of up to 300 F-16C/D Block 40-52
aircraft. SLEP and related avionics upgrades to the Air Force's F-16C/D fleet
can safely and effectively augment the current fighter force structure as U.S.
and allied combat air fleets recapitalize with F-35 Lightning IIs.
A second phase, or Part II, of the F-16 SLEP airworthiness
process continues with the request for Military Type Certificate (MTC), which
will be submitted to the Air Force's Technical Airworthiness Authority in the
coming months. Part II seeks to validate further extending the F-16's
operational life based on final service life analysis from extended durability
testing.
For
additional information, visit our website:
lockheedmartin.com/f16
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