From what I've read and understand about aircraft prototyping (think HAVE BLUE, predecessor to the F-117, the Northrop YF-17, predecessor to the F/A-18, the YF-23, etc.) the company making the aircraft is sometimes putting a lot of their own money down and trying to build the thing as cheaply and with the most common off the shelf parts as possible.
In the case of the HAVE BLUE, Ben Rich talks in his book "Skunk Works" about how they took the engines from a T-2C Buckeye, the landing gear from a Northrop F-5, the fly by wire flight control system from the General Dynamics F-16, the most generic minimalist avionics imaginable and built it all using left over tools from the C-5 program.
I know the F-35 is well beyond its initial prototyping phase and has many sources of funding, but the generic tail hook may be a remnant of that 'buy off-the-shelf and jerry rig it all together so we can get the contract' type attitude.
Having to design a custom tailhook certainly wouldn't be a show stopper, just something they were probably trying to avoid doing to cut costs.
Errr, tail hook on an F-117? I've never heard of there having been a navalized prototype version of the Nighthawk...Did this one get by me? Was the Navy at some point thinking of a carrier version?
It is a little known fact that Air Force land based fighters have tail hooks. The AF uses land based aircraft arresting systems. They don't stop like carrier arresting gear, it's takes about 1200 feet, depending on weight etc. It does however use a tail hook/steel cable combo. If one would try and land an F-16 on a carrier, it would simply rip the tail hook off the airframe. They are generally used during landing roll out or an aborted take off. I worked on these systems during my fours years of active duty.
The link is a quick over view of what some look like. The most common system is probably the BAK-12.
Most military and joint-use runways have two separate aircraft stopping systems: arresting gear, and aircraft barriers.
Arresting gear is designed to be engaged by tailhook-equipped aircraft and consists of a wire strung across the runway at various points and either supported by rubber "donuts" designed to keep the wire about 2 inches above the runway surface (that's the case with BAK-6/9/12 and13 or E-27/E-28 at USN/USMC bases), or recessed in a slot on the runway and raised by remote control as needed (BAK-14). When engaged by an aircraft, the wires run out and are connected at each end to a box on both sides of the runway that contains the stopping mechanism. The stopping mechanism consists of brake pads on a caliper that engage a rotor at a certain rate, stopping the aircraft; or a hydraulic "water squeezer" (on BAK-6) that engages a piston pushing against water inside a tube for "hydraulic" stopping ability. On the airport diagram, the arresting gear is depicted as a one-or two-way arrows near the approach, center, and/or departure ends of the runway. One-way arrows indicate single-direction arrestment, two-way arrows indicate bi-directional arrestment ability. To see on an actual runway where these systems are located, they're marked by painted yellow circles across the runway at the cable location, as well as a lighted sign abeam each side of the system which is a lighted yellow circle on a black background, in normal airport-signage presentation.
See here where it's depicted:
http://www.fltplan.com/AwDisplayAppChart.exe?a=1
Aircraft barriers are located at the departure ends of the runway and are designed to either "catch" the aircraft's wings, or it's main landing gear. Older systems, such as the MA-1A, consist of a approximately 6 inch high wire hooked to a 2-foot recessed net that lays flat on the runway. As the aircraft passes into the overrun, it's nosewheel runs over the 6-inch high wire causing the 2 foot high net to spring-up and engage the main landing gear of the aircraft, bringing it to a stop in the overrun. Newer barriers, such as the BAK-15, are raised by remote control from the tower and consist of a 23 foot high net supported by stanchions on each side of the runway, similiar to those emergency barriers aboard aircraft carriers, that catch the aircraft's wings as the aircraft passes through it, and stops the aircraft in the overrun. On the airport diagram, the barriers are depicted as a vvvv looking symbol at the end of the runway. On the previous diagram, see the departure ends of runways 16 and 25.
Some military aircraft, such as the F-4, F-117, B-52, and some foreign versions of the F-16, still utilize drag chutes that are deployed on landing in order to shorten landing roll in normal ops, and as an abort aid for takeoff emergencies.
Other airports: ABQ has BAK-12/14, while TUS has BAK-12, BAK-12/14, and MA-1A MODified
It seemed whenever we had a navy squadron tdy, they couldn't go more then a day without taking a cable. We probably averaged about one to two engagements a month otherwise. It was definitely a fun job. The weird thing was barrier maintenance was assigned to Elecetrical Power Priduction ( Generator Mechanics). So while our main job was Generators, some one decided to stick us with the barriers.
Thing with the Navy is that with the way they pressure their tires, etc, on most of their tactical jets, their preference is to take a land-based arrestment in certain instances such as wet runway with a crosswind component. Even at USN shore bases, land-based arrestments of the E-27/28 gear is normal, and they cycle planes through in matters of minutes. Whereas the USAF treats any arrestment as darn-near a major emergency, with time measured in hours sometimes in order to reset the system in battery.
Yes and no. We don't carrier pressurize tires at the field, unless you are just referring to boat/CQ field divert ops. Fact is that the Hornet (which most USN/USMC tacair f/w ops are based on) is terrible in standing water and/or crosswind. I've landed it at NATOPS crosswind limits (ok a couple knots less) in driving rain. No standing water yet, but wet runway. Very sporty, jet just simply doesn't want to track straight, and above 100 knots you get some weird RSRI (rudder surface to rolling interface, basically the nice software logic that lets us forget we have rudder pedals 99% of the time) interaction when you try to hold aileron into the wind......our crosswind landing procedure is to land in a full crab, or to kick out half of it on touchdown when it is really significant. With standing water, this is a sure recipe for disaster, as you have already biased the jet towards the grass. Hence mandatory traps with standing water over 1/4 inch. I saw it a couple times at Miramar during big winter storms, and it was very controlled and quick. It didn't take more than about a minute to have a ready deck between traps. I think this is mostly due to the system differences between the E28 gear we have at all USN/USMC fields, and the older style chain gear and such that the AF sometimes operates. That and we are intimately familiar with doing fly-in arrestments due to the nature of our business.
At KDLF they were always down, unless called for. In 2005 we moved from the old tower/rapcon to a brand new tower/rapcon/wx building, and the new tower had a touch screen for lights and barriers, which didn't operate exactly as planned the first go around... Can't really speak for all bases, my 8 out of 9 years in the AF I was a RADAR guy...