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Lockheed to test F-35B durability under $148.4M contract

By Ed Adamczyk
Lockheed Martin Corp. secured a $148.4 million contract to arrange durability testing procedures on F-35B aircraft. File Photo by Debbie Hill/UPI
Lockheed Martin Corp. secured a $148.4 million contract to arrange durability testing procedures on F-35B aircraft. File Photo by Debbie Hill/UPI | License Photo

Oct. 28 (UPI) -- Lockheed Martin Corp. was awarded a $148.4 million contract for durability testing support of F-35B aircraft for the U.S. Marine Corps, the Defense Department announced.

The company's Lockheed Martin Aeronautics division will oversee the test configuration, test article build, the test plan, the testing itself, and teardown and analysis of the vertical-takeoff-and-landing variant of the plane to ascertain its minimum projected 8,000 flight hours/30-year service life, the Pentagon said Friday.

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The order, arranged against a previously issued basic offering agreement, is in support of U.S. Marine Corps and non-Department of Defense aircraft.

Lockheed Martin is the builder of all three F-35 Lightning II variants, including the vertical take-off and landing version for the Marines. The air forces of five countries fly the VTOL variant or have ordered them.

A total of 435 F-35s have been built in the three configurations, and Lockheed Martin anticipates building hundreds more, though a week ago a Pentagon official said a new delay in testing the plane could keep the aircraft from full production status for up to 13 more months.

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The new Navy contract calls for work at Lockheed Martin facilities in Texas, California and Britain to be completed by July 2032.

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