BBC Science Focus

JUANITA BAWAGAN

- Stephen is a journalist for BBC Top Gear magazine. by STEPHEN DOBIE

Why are so many BAME patients dying from COVID-19? Science writer Juanita picks apart the web of factors.

weapons remotely. Or a gaggle of nimble fourth-gen fighters behind it that’ll swoop in and do the dirty work.

“The human still decides whether to fire a missile or drop a bomb,” Beck assures us. “There is a morality around warfare and some ethical decisions. At the moment no machine will ever make those. That’s why we’re still in the cockpit.

“That is fundamenta­l to the way the RAF and Royal Navy do business. But we’ve got there by getting smarter and smarter. I’m in a great position now where my uncertaint­y of what’s going on is negligible. With certainty, I know ‘that’s the enemy, I know he’s doing a bad thing and I’ve got to make the decision to drop the bomb’.

“People think the move into fifth-generation jets is about stealth. It isn’t. It’s about informatio­n. Whoever has the most – which is of decision quality – will win the fight,” Beck says.

INFORMATIO­N WINS

With informatio­n the F-35’s biggest weapon, it’s something that needs sternly protecting. So Marham’s 150-strong cyber team is on the clock 24/7. All of the jet’s systems can be taken offline at any second, allowing it to function even if the cloud it usually connects to has been compromise­d.

The Lightning II’s intelligen­ce stretches to predicting its own needs, so after each flight its maintenanc­e crew will plug it into the network, where the jet will advise what – if anything – failed during the flight or needs some attention in the near future.

I’m taken on a tour of Marham and spend an hour in the classroom. This is where the maintenanc­e crew learn their trade, on something unemotiona­lly named the Air System Maintenanc­e Training (ASMT) system. In short, it’s a virtual fighter jet that you move an avatar around, with a bank of tools to drag in to help you learn every possible servicing or repair job before you’re let loose on a real-life jet. It operates a lot like virtual reality, but without the discombobu­lating headset.

As well as reserving any rookie errors for a mock environmen­t, the virtual system also saves the hours it can take to laboriousl­y remove panels to get under a real F-35’s skin. The fighter jet is so hard to get inside because the panels are often masked over so that no gaps or rivets break its sleekness. The craft needs to be as smooth as possible so that it can evade radar and maintain its exceptiona­lly high stealth levels. Not only is the removal of

“PEOPLE THINK THE MOVE INTO FIFTH-GENERATION JETS IS ABOUT STEALTH. IT ISN’T. IT’S ABOUT INFORMATIO­N”

panels tricky, the resealing process once you’ve popped them back on is drawn out, too.

Next door to the ASMT room is the laboratory where students learn how to fix this ‘low observatio­n’ surface of the craft. While this lab also has computeris­ed processes, with its focus on fine craftsmans­hip it feels like more of a blast from the past. There’s even a paper sheet on the wall to help both trainers and trainees convert from the F-35’s imperial measuremen­ts – betraying the aircraft’s US manufactur­er – into the metric they most likely know.

One big question looms large, though. Is the F-35 just too clinically adept to make its pilot a hero?

“Not when you’re doing ‘doggers’, as we call them,” Beck says. “We fly a thing called angle of attack [AOA]. While a Tornado could go 19AOA, we’re going to 50AOA. We just keep going up, and the last person to stop going

5 up will win that fight. And that’s absolutely exhilarati­ng. If I tried that in a Tornado I’d be in a parachute. There is a bit of romance about flying older planes, but we’re a profession­al force and it’s more about what the jet can do. The dogfight takes place on the informatio­n spectrum now.

“All the controls only move for human comfort, the jet doesn’t need them to operate. They’re about making it easier for pilots to comprehend. It’s making me feel good by moving left. You ask the jet ‘can I do something’ and the jet will do it if it’s safe to do so. It won’t let you fly into the ground or into another jet, it’ll just say ‘no!’ It’s just breathtaki­ng, it really is.”

So there’s little chance you’ll end up in the disastrous flat spin that leads to Goose’s galling demise in the original Top Gun, then.

“I like talking about the jet, it’s my second favourite subject,” concludes Beck, with a wry grin. “What’s the first? I’m a pilot…”

Maybe there’s a little bit of Maverick in him after all.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE The lab where you learn how to maintain the jet’s stealthy surface. It contains significan­tly fewer screens than other training rooms, as students hone a precision hand skill. Out on aircraft carriers, the jet’s brain will detect blemishes in its invisible armour to tell its crew exactly what needs patching up
ABOVE The lab where you learn how to maintain the jet’s stealthy surface. It contains significan­tly fewer screens than other training rooms, as students hone a precision hand skill. Out on aircraft carriers, the jet’s brain will detect blemishes in its invisible armour to tell its crew exactly what needs patching up
 ??  ?? Learning how to virtually maintain an F-35 on the Air System Maintenanc­e Training system has boundless benefits: no costly mistakes on a £100m jet, quick and easy access through panels, and the ability to peek into gaps that your head would never fit into on the real thing LEFT
Learning how to virtually maintain an F-35 on the Air System Maintenanc­e Training system has boundless benefits: no costly mistakes on a £100m jet, quick and easy access through panels, and the ability to peek into gaps that your head would never fit into on the real thing LEFT
 ??  ?? BELOW Jim Beck is station commander at RAF Marham and has flown F-35s more than anyone else on site. He’s racked up 900 missions since 2014: 300 in the air and 600 on the simulator
BELOW Jim Beck is station commander at RAF Marham and has flown F-35s more than anyone else on site. He’s racked up 900 missions since 2014: 300 in the air and 600 on the simulator

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