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Grounded US F-35 fighter jet fleet to resume flights | Grounded US F-35 fighter jet fleet to resume flights |
(35 minutes later) | |
The Pentagon has said it will resume flights on its F-35 fighter jets, after the whole fleet was grounded last week. | The Pentagon has said it will resume flights on its F-35 fighter jets, after the whole fleet was grounded last week. |
A cracked turbine blade found on a plane prompted the suspension. But tests showed that this was a "unique" problem and not a design flaw, engine maker Pratt and Whitney said. | |
Thousands of F-35s are due to be made for the US and its foreign partners. | Thousands of F-35s are due to be made for the US and its foreign partners. |
The F-35 is the Pentagon's most expensive weapons programme, with a cost of nearly $400bn (£260bn). | The F-35 is the Pentagon's most expensive weapons programme, with a cost of nearly $400bn (£260bn). |
The fault was detected during a routine inspection of an air force version of the jet (F-35A) at Edwards Air Force Base in California, | The fault was detected during a routine inspection of an air force version of the jet (F-35A) at Edwards Air Force Base in California, |
But on Thursday a spokesman for Pratt and Whitney, Matthew Bates, told Reuters news agency: "The team has determined that root cause is sufficiently understood for the F-35 to safely resume flights," | But on Thursday a spokesman for Pratt and Whitney, Matthew Bates, told Reuters news agency: "The team has determined that root cause is sufficiently understood for the F-35 to safely resume flights," |
Extensive tests on the plane's engine revealed the crack was a result of the "unique operating environment" of the test flight, and was not a widespread issue, he added. | Extensive tests on the plane's engine revealed the crack was a result of the "unique operating environment" of the test flight, and was not a widespread issue, he added. |
The engine had been running at high temperatures for four times longer than a normal F-35 flight, causing a separation of the "grain boundary" on one blade, Mr Bates explained. | The engine had been running at high temperatures for four times longer than a normal F-35 flight, causing a separation of the "grain boundary" on one blade, Mr Bates explained. |
The Pentagon later confirmed that all its 51 planes had been cleared to resume flights. | The Pentagon later confirmed that all its 51 planes had been cleared to resume flights. |
Last week's order to ground the planes - in the US air force, army and Marine Corps - marked the second time in two months planes from the F-35 range have been grounded. | Last week's order to ground the planes - in the US air force, army and Marine Corps - marked the second time in two months planes from the F-35 range have been grounded. |
The Marine Corps variant (F-35B), a short take-off and vertical landing variant (STOVL), was grounded for nearly a month after a manufacturing defect caused a fuel line to detach just before a training flight in January. | The Marine Corps variant (F-35B), a short take-off and vertical landing variant (STOVL), was grounded for nearly a month after a manufacturing defect caused a fuel line to detach just before a training flight in January. |
The F-35 programme includes partners from nine countries. | The F-35 programme includes partners from nine countries. |
The construction of the plane has been plagued by problems - it is seven years behind schedule and has required numerous re-designs because of delays in software delivery and bulkhead cracks. | The construction of the plane has been plagued by problems - it is seven years behind schedule and has required numerous re-designs because of delays in software delivery and bulkhead cracks. |
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