Le Bourget, France Lockheed Martin has worked on so-called “fourth-to-fifth generation” information sharing technology that could connect USAF’s fleet of F-35s with its legacy fourth generation fleet, but so far no requirements have been put into a program of record, the company’s F-35 executive vice president said. Speaking during the Paris Air Show this week, Boeing executives forecasted a need for near-term upgrades and modifications for both the USAF and Japan’s F-15 fleet, because of the need to operate the Eagle alongside the F-22 and F-35. Lockheed has done its own work using “low-detection” technology, or stealthy communications, in a demo, F-35 Executive Vice President Lorraine Martin told Air Force Magazine. Martin said Lockheed’s “Project Missouri” was a successful demonstration last year to show the F-22 could transmit data and keep its stealthy profile. Link 16 is available now for the F-35, she also noted, and other companies are doing work on this problem as well. “We also want to do data-rich communications,” she added. “Because, why give yourself away if you don’t have to?” The technology is in the market, and while Air Combat Command has established the need for a fourth-to-fifth gen concept, as of yet no program has emerged from limited demonstrations. “Somebody has to say it’s a requirement … but today that doesn’t exist,” Martin added.
Trainees in Basic Military Training and technical school no longer have the option to try alternate PT drills if they fail an initial assessment, according to a policy change the Air Force made in April. The move is part of a larger shift out of the classroom and into hands-on,…