Lockheed Martin has launched an offensive to combat complaints from pilots who have refused to fly its F-22s over concerns about oxygen deprivation while in the cockpit.
The company took its campaign to the skies - er, Twitter - to try to combat growing negative publicity about its Raptors.
The Air Force has been looking into about a dozen unexplained incidents related to hypoxia, or oxygen deficiency, with pilots but has been unable to pinpoint the cause, Air Combat Command has said.
Pilots began experiencing problems about four years ago.
“For some reason, the onboard oxygen generating system and the environmental control system that feeds it may be inputting some contaminant,” Gen. Gregory Martin, a retired Air Force veteran, told CNN affiliate WAVY in Virginia.
For a while, the problem was the subject of only a spattering of media reports, but Lockheed Martin went on the offensive (or defensive, depending whom you ask) by launching a Twitter campaign praising the fleet as "60 Minutes" aired a segment on the problems with the Raptors and interviewed decorated pilots who were refusing to fly them.
Gen. Mike Hostage of Air Combat Command recently spoke about the issue, which has plagued the fleet since problems with the F-22s' oxygen supply system were reported in 2008.
The jets have been grounded to examine the problem, but in September 2011, the Raptors were again cleared and allowed to fly. In January 2011, the jets were limited to altitudes under 25,000 feet during an investigation into a November 2010 crash. Flying above that altitude could cause a pilot to black out from lack of oxygen and lose control.
The Air Force has made sure to add emergency oxygen deployment handles should a pilot encounter any issues.
"We are diligently pursuing a variety of hypotheses to try and understand and characterize the exact circumstances we've been experiencing," Hostage said.
As the "60 Minutes" feature aired, Lockheed Martin tweeted about the impressive speeds and missions that no other planes but the F-22s were able to claim. But it also got a few pithy responses to the public relations campaign.
melt em all down and build an endless supply of F-16's and A-10's![]()
If the OBOGS is faulty then change it back to LOX. Making the emergency oxygen handle easier to find is just putting a bandaid on a much bigger problem. The Jeff Haney accident in Alaska is tragic and should have never happened. The coverup of the causes is downright criminal and done to so politicians and the aircraft mfr can save face. It would be nice to see all the pilots stand down. 200 pilots refusing to fly would make one hell of statement.
I agree, the way this was handled was completely criminal! The higher ups need to be held accountable for this.
People have to realize that there's also a massive USAF cultural issue with the Raptor. The USAF has had to expend so much political and financial capital on the Raptor that it is important that it "looks good" from the outside. Every time there is a problem (like the famous "international date line" incident), it gives F-22 critics another opportunity to take pot-shots at the airplane. Raptor is a critical aircraft for the USAF to maintain capability into the next few decades, so the USAF's helicopter-parenting of it is completely understandable. There's a lot of "saving face" going on, fair or not, with how the USAF treats Raptor.
That being said, once it starts compromising safety, it's time to step back and look at the bigger picture.
Without knowing any of the inside details -- and I honestly know nothing other than what I've read and seen on 60 minutes -- it's rather telling that the USAF's initial reaction to these two pilots was to take disciplinary action, ground them, and threaten FEBs. I cannot decide weather it was very gutsy or completely stupid for these two pilots to appear on TV in uniform, but either way it sounds like something that needed to be said.
People have to realize that there's also a massive USAF cultural issue with the Raptor. The USAF has had to expend so much political and financial capital on the Raptor that it is important that it "looks good" from the outside. Every time there is a problem (like the famous "international date line" incident), it gives F-22 critics another opportunity to take pot-shots at the airplane. Raptor is a critical aircraft for the USAF to maintain capability into the next few decades, so the USAF's helicopter-parenting of it is completely understandable. There's a lot of "saving face" going on, fair or not, with how the USAF treats Raptor.
That being said, once it starts compromising safety, it's time to step back and look at the bigger picture.
Without knowing any of the inside details -- and I honestly know nothing other than what I've read and seen on 60 minutes -- it's rather telling that the USAF's initial reaction to these two pilots was to take disciplinary action, ground them, and threaten FEBs. I cannot decide weather it was very gutsy or completely stupid for these two pilots to appear on TV in uniform, but either way it sounds like something that needed to be said.
Comments like these get thrown around in a lot of Raptor discussions -- it's unfortunately that people don't understand that designs like the Viper, Eagle, etc, are all ready 30+ years old and are out-gunned hopelessly against peer air-to-air and (especially) surface-to-air systems that are all ready deployed to numerous red and gray states globally.
No reasonable number of Eagles and Vipers can replace the capability of the Raptor, even if they were to be constructed with better avionics and weapons.
Raptor certainly has had it's share of problems, but IMHO it's well worth it because of what it can do. It is a generational leap over the capability of anything else in the world.
Secondly, can you expand more on the 'international date line' incident?
Comments like these get thrown around in a lot of Raptor discussions -- it's unfortunately that people don't understand that designs like the Viper, Eagle, etc, are all ready 30+ years old and are out-gunned hopelessly against peer air-to-air and (especially) surface-to-air systems that are all ready deployed to numerous red and gray states globally.
No reasonable number of Eagles and Vipers can replace the capability of the Raptor, even if they were to be constructed with better avionics and weapons.
Raptor certainly has had it's share of problems, but IMHO it's well worth it because of what it can do. It is a generational leap over the capability of anything else in the world.