African Pilot

US Air Force first F-15EX

On 10 March the USAF officially accepted the first F-15EX from Boeing at the company’s St. Louis facility. The USAF has ordered 144 F-15 ‘Strike Eagles’ from Boeing.

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The new fighter is a two-seat aircraft, though it can be operated by a single pilot with fly-by-wire flight controls, digital cockpit displays and advanced avionics systems, to include the Eagle Passive / Active Warning and Survivabil­ity System, an electronic warfare upgrade also being fielded on F-15E Strike Eagle models.

This is a big moment for the Air Force,” said Col. Sean Dorey, F-15EX programme manager with the Air Force Life Cycle Management Centre’s Fighters and Advanced Aircraft Directorat­e, responsibl­e for the acquisitio­n, modernisat­ion

and sustainmen­t of the aircraft.

“With its large weapons capacity, digital backbone and open architectu­re, the F-15EX will be a key element of our tactical

fighter fleet and complement 5th-generation assets. In addition, it is capable of carrying hypersonic weapons,

giving it a niche role in future near-peer conflicts.

The Air Force plans to acquire 144 F-15EXs from Boeing, to replace F-15C/D models and refresh the F-15 fleet. At an average age of more than 37 years, the F-15C/D fleet is fast approachin­g the end of its useful life and operating on the margins of structural integrity. The F-15EX provides a cost-effective and expedient solution to refresh the F-15C/D fleet and augment the F-15E fleet to meet National Defence Strategy capability and capacity requiremen­ts well into the 2040s, while preserving aircraft availabili­ty from significan­t impacts that service life extension and modernizat­ion programs would have on the F-15C/D fleet.

The process to acquire the F-15EX aircraft started in February of 2019, when Gen. David Goldfein, then-Air Force chief of staff, signed the F-15EX Rapid Fielding Requiremen­t Document to address readiness issues with an aging F-15 fleet. From there, the directorat­e’s F-15 Programme Office developed the acquisitio­n strategy, awarded the contract, conducted design and verificati­on reviews, and worked with Boeing to manufactur­e and test the aircraft in record time. “It has taken a team effort to get to this point,” Dorey added. “I am extremely proud of the team, to include members of the Propulsion Directorat­e, Simulators Program Office, Air Combat Command, Air National Guard, Air Force Materiel Command, Defence Contract Management Agency, the Air Staff, and our industry partners for achieving this first aircraft delivery milestone.”

“I commend the dedicated efforts of the entire team for bringing this platform online in record time and in the middle of a global pandemic,” said Gen. Arnold W. Bunch Jr., commander of Air Force Materiel Command. “With its open mission systems architectu­re and weapons capacity, the F-15EX will provide an outstandin­g capability for our nation for years to come.”

Following its acceptance, the new aircraft will be flown to Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, for testing. A second F-15EX will be delivered to Eglin AFB by the end of April 2021. The other six Lot 1 aircraft will be delivered to Eglin AFB in fiscal year 2023 and will undergo operationa­l testing. To expedite the testing needed to declare the F-15EX ready for operations, the team will use previous testing data from F-15 foreign military sales variants and US-only subsystems and Operationa­l Flight Programme software. Aircraft in Lots 2 and 3 are on track for delivery in FY 2024 and FY 2025 to Kingsley Field and Portland Air National Guard Bases, both in Oregon.

Currently, the 173rd Wing at Kingsley Field serves as the F-15C/D training school and will assume the same role for the F-15EX. The 142nd Wing at Portland will be the first operationa­l unit to fly the aircraft.

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