Assessment of beddown alternatives for the F-35
research report
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Author
Publication
2013 - RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, California
Language
English
Word Count
27,250 words, Guess
Page Count
109 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL31128568M
- ISBN-139780833078070
- OCLC Control Number827724519
- Library of Congress Control Number2013005932
Classifications
- DDC358.4/383
- LCCUG1242.F5 M397 2013
Description
As currently planned, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter is the most costly aircraft acquisition program in Defense Department history. One approach to ensuring program affordability could be to increase the number of Primary Aerospace Vehicles Authorized (PAA) per combat-coded squadron, with a resulting reduction in the number of F-35 combat-coded squadrons. RAND explored the impact of increasing the PAA per squadron, adjusting the mix of PAA across the Active and Reserve Components, and adjusting the percentage of the Active Component PAA assigned to home-station locations in the continental United States. Researchers considered 28 beddown alternatives, with a maximum of 36 PAA per squadron, and determined that all beddowns could satisfy surge deployment requirements and most could also satisfy rotational requirements within specified deploy-to-dwell ratios. Increasing squadron size was determined to significantly reduce (a) the flying costs necessary to achieve pilot absorption requirements, (b) maintenance manpower requirements, and (c) total support equipment procurement costs, while little additional infrastructure capacity would be required under any of the 28 basing alternatives considered. Additional analysis suggested that assignment policy would have more effect on leader development than either squadron size or the active-reserve mix.
Subjects
Other Editions
- Assessment of beddown alternatives for the F-35
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