F-22 RAPTOR SOARS IN FIRST FLIGHT, MARIETTA, Ga. (September
7, 1997), The first Lockheed Martin-Boeing F-22 Raptor air
dominance fighter for the U. S. Air Force was flown for the
first time today, taking to the skies over Marietta and north
Georgia.
F-22 Chief Test Pilot Paul Metz flew the aircraft from
Dobbins Air Reserve Base here, lifting off the runway at
140 knots with the aircraft's two Pratt & Whitney
F119-PW-100 engines at military power. The aircraft reached
an altitude of 15,000 feet in less than three minutes, then
was put through a series of power changes to test aircraft
handling characteristics and engine performance
Flying chase for first flight in two F-16 aircraft were Lt.
Col. Steve Rainey, slated to be the first Air Force pilot
to fly the F-22, and Lockheed Martin Tactical Aircraft
Systems F-22 test pilot Jon Beesley.
Midway through the flight, Metz climbed to 20,000 feet and
retracted the F-22's landing gear. He then conducted more
engine transients, evaluated the jet's performance in
"clean" configuration, and flew formation on Beesley's F-16
to evaluate precision handling characteristics before
landing back at Dobbins ARB. The flight lasted just over an
hour.
"Bringing the airplane to first flight marks the end of the
beginning, to steal a phrase from Winston Churchill, and it
is the greatest single event so far in this fantastic
program," said Tom Burbage, the F-22 Team Program Office
General Manager. "The entire Air Force/contractor team has
worked very hard over the past six years to develop the
F-22 and get to this point. Now it is time to test the
Raptor, start production on schedule, and then get the
aircraft fielded."
"The F-22 takes military aviation into a new era," added
Walter N. Bylciw, Pratt & Whitney senior vice
president-F119 program. "We are honored to have played a
role in this historic event, and to continue as partners in
a program so vital to the peace and security of our
nation."
The F-22 will be ferried to the Air Force Flight Test
Center at Edwards AFB, Calif., in the spring of 1998. Once
there, the F-22's performance will be measured at all
required flight regimes.
The first aircraft, referred to as Aircraft 4001, will
undergo roughly 50 test flights prior to delivery of the
second aircraft (Aircraft 4002) to Edwards in mid 1998.
Aircraft 4002 is now in final assembly at Lockheed Martin
Aeronautical Systems in Marietta and is scheduled for
completion in late spring 1998.
The F-22 is widely regarded as the most advanced fighter in
the world, combining a revolutionary leap in technology and
capability with reduced support requirements and
maintenance costs. It will replace the aging F-15 as
America's front-line air superiority fighter, with
deliveries beginning in 2002.
The F-22's combination of stealth, integrated avionics,
maneuverability, and supercruise (supersonic flight without
afterburner) will give Raptor pilots a "first-look,
first-shot, first-kill" capability against the aircraft of
any potential enemy.
The F-22 is designed to provide not just air superiority,
but air dominance, winning quickly and decisively with few
U. S. and allied casualties. The F-22 also has an inherent
near-precision air-to-ground capability.
"This first flight was very successful and the Raptor has
wings," said Metz, who is also the F-22 Team's chief test
pilot. "Now we have to make sure it has talons."