Fire prevents F-35 stealth fighter carrier fly-past
Britain’s new £70 million F-35 stealth fighter will not attend the naming ceremony of the UK’s aircraft carrier after an engine fire grounded the jets in America.
Officials have had to cancel an expected fly-past at the ceremony in Scotland on Friday because all the new fighter jets are undergoing checks after fire tore through one US plane last week.
Engineers are now trying to ensure the planes are ready to cross the Atlantic to make their international debut at the Royal International Air Tattoo at Fairford next week.
The fire is the latest difficulty to strike the F-35 programme which has become the Pentagon’s costliest weapons programme.
Britain has said it will buy at least 48 jump jet F-35Bs and the new planes will fly from the 65,000 ton HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier. Three British planes have been delivered and are being tested by British pilots in the US before they are due to enter service in 2018.
A US Air Force F-35 was badly damaged when it caught fire last week as it prepared for take-off at an airbase in Florida. Defence officials have now ordered inspections of all the F-35 Pratt & Whitney engines and are examining debris found on the runway after the blaze.
The fire delayed plans to fly three US Marine and one RAF F-35 across the Atlantic earlier this week in time for the naming of HMS Queen Elizabeth at Rosyth Dockyard. US officials said last month they hoped the plane would make its international debut at the ceremony.
An RAF source added: “This is flight safety. The last thing we want to do is park an F-35 in the Atlantic.”
The F-35, also called the Lightning II, is lauded as the most advanced fighter ever built, but the programme has been dogged by cost overruns and delays.
