Boeing delivers updated F-22 avionics software; final board requirement metReleased: 27 Oct 1999 SEATTLE (AFPN) -- Boeing delivered an updated F-22 avionics software package to its 757 flying test bed aircraft ahead of schedule. The update package included the F-22 Raptor's final two integrated avionics sensors -- electronic warfare, and communication, navigation and identification. The delivery completes the Defense Acquisition Board's 1999 requirements for the program - milestones that had to be met before the Pentagon could consider putting the F-22 into low-rate production. "Delivery of the Block 2 software to the flying test bed marks the second year the F-22 team has accomplished every program milestone required to demonstrate progress in weapon system development," said Brig. Gen. Michael Mushala, director of the F-22 System Program Office, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. "This is a great team accomplishment in keeping the program on track for a successful transition into future production of this fantastic weapon system." In conjunction with the delivery, Boeing completed a number of modifications to the test bed aircraft and to the CNI and EW systems, including missile-launch detectors, which were installed in the aircraft's cabin, on its "sensor wing" and on a special pod attached to the underside of the fuselage. The modifications, together with the updated Block 2 software, will provide the F-22 team its first opportunity to test multiple sensors in an airborne environment. "We'll now be able to take inputs from more than one sensor and process and display the information in an easy-to-use format, thereby increasing the pilot's situational awareness," said Bruce Ammerman, Boeing F-22 avionics integration/test manager. Boeing will begin flight-testing the updated avionics package in the coming weeks, with emphasis on missile launch detector performance for the first several months of testing. To date, F-22 avionics software has undergone more than 14,000 hours of rigorous testing in the company's Avionics Integration Lab and 360 hours on the FTB. Boeing currently is testing Block 3 software in the AIL. The FTB, a modified Boeing 757 jet, is helping reduce avionics development costs, risks and future F-22 flight test hours by enabling extensive in-flight testing, evaluation and troubleshooting before full avionics are ever installed and flown on the Raptor. Previous modifications to the test bed include installation of an F-22 forward fuselage section to the nose of the plane, installation of a sensor wing on the plane's crown and installation of a simulated F-22 cockpit in the test bed cabin. Boeing is teamed with Lockheed Martin and Pratt & Whitney to design and build the F-22 Raptor for the Air Force as a replacement for the F-15. Boeing supplies the F-22's wings, aft fuselage, radar, mission software, avionics integration and testing, as well as training and life-support systems.
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** Brig. Gen. Michael C. Mushala
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