The Antelope Valley Times

Your community. Your issues. Your news.

  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Local
    • Palmdale
    • Lancaster
    • Los Angeles County
    • Littlerock
    • Lake Los Angeles
    • Rosamond
    • Edwards AFB
    • Acton
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Health
  • Business
  • Opinion
    • Advertise
    • About
    • Contact Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    Show Search

Northrop’s Palmdale plant delivers 500th center fuselage for F-35 Lightning II

by The AV Times Staff • February 27, 2019

An F-35 technician performs a skin assembly process with work instructions projected on the structure as one of the innovative solutions for high rate military aircraft production. A core structure of the F-35 Lightning II aircraft, the center fuselage is produced on Northrop Grumman’s integrated assembly line at its Palmdale Aircraft Integration Center of Excellence. [Contributed]
PALMDALE – Northrop Grumman’s Palmdale Aircraft Integration Center of Excellence has completed the 500th center fuselage for the F-35 Lightning II – ahead of schedule, the company announced.

“We deliver an F-35 center fuselage every 36 hours and I am very proud to say we have made all our deliveries since the inception of the program,” said Frank Carus, vice president and F-35 program manager, Northrop Grumman. “Our dedicated team works closely with the customer and suppliers to improve quality and affordability in support of the warfighter.”

Designated AU-18, the 500th F-35 center fuselage is for a conventional takeoff and landing variant for the Royal Australian Air Force. Northrop Grumman began production on the AU-18 center fuselage in June 2018 and completed work on Feb. 21. Northrop Grumman has been producing center fuselages for all three F-35 variants since May 2004.

“We have set the standard for the production of military aircraft,” said Kevin Mickey, sector vice president and general manager, military aircraft systems, Northrop Grumman. “Our teams and suppliers are constantly finding better, more affordable ways to deliver a superior product on-time, at-cost and, as with this center fuselage, ahead of schedule. When you couple this level of commitment with advanced manufacturing technologies, it’s just a win-win situation for us, our customer and the warfighter.”

A core structure of the F-35 aircraft, the center fuselage is designed and produced on Northrop Grumman’s integrated assembly line, a state-of-the-art facility supported by technologies exclusive to or pioneered by Northrop Grumman bringing together robotics, autonomous systems, virtual 3D and predictive automation to the forefront of center fuselage production.

Lockheed Martin is the industry lead for the F-35 program and Northrop Grumman plays a key role in the development, modernization, sustainment and production of the F-35. In addition to producing the center fuselage and wing skins for the aircraft, the company develops, produces and maintains several sensor systems, avionics, mission systems and mission-planning software, pilot and maintainer training systems courseware, electronic warfare simulation test capability, and low-observable technologies.

To learn more about Northrop Grumman’s role on the F-35 Lightning II, click here.

[Information via news release from Northrop Grumman Corporation.]

–

Filed Under: Home, Palmdale

1 comment for "Northrop’s Palmdale plant delivers 500th center fuselage for F-35 Lightning II"

  1. Tom Smith says

    February 27, 2019 at 7:24 pm

    Awesome performance!

Recent Comments

  • Mike on SAG-AFTRA union moves to discipline Trump over Capitol riot: “It wasn’t SAG hanging nooses and parading the confederate flag in the nation’s Capitol. You folks get things so twisted.…” Jan 20, 22:39
  • Mike on SAG-AFTRA union moves to discipline Trump over Capitol riot: “What’s the “gravy train” Alby? Explain yourself. Are you talking about welfare or what? Anyone affiliated with BLM is on…” Jan 20, 22:35
  • Linda Lee Gorman on Woman killed in two-vehicle collision in Lancaster: “You put down on Ave i and 7th. St. East It’s “17th”.and Ave i” Jan 20, 22:30
  • Linda Lee Gorman on Woman killed in two-vehicle collision in Lancaster: “It was Ave i and 17th. St. East in Lancaster. Not 7th st. East” Jan 20, 22:26
  • Matt on Readers Speak Out!: “Arebu aware that Qanon in an attempt to stay alive cause they have passed their deadline are now also blaming…” Jan 20, 20:27

© 2021 · The Antelope Valley Times. All rights reserved. Terms of Use