Lockheed Martin CATBird
CATBird | |
---|---|
Lockheed CATBird taxiing at the Mojave Spaceport during engine tests | |
Role | Airliner |
Manufacturer | Boeing Commercial Airplanes |
First flight | 23 January 2007 |
Status | Systems test aircraft |
Developed from | Boeing 737 |
The Lockheed Martin CATBird is a highly modified Boeing 737-330 designed as an avionics flight testbed aircraft. The name is an adaptive acronym, from Cooperative Avionics Test Bed; coincidentally, CATBIRD is Lockheed's ICAO-designated company callsign. The aircraft was modified in order to provide an economic means of developing and flight testing the avionics suite for the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II.[1] CATBird has a distinctive appearance, with an F-35's nose and a pair of small canards located just aft of the forward entrance doors. Inside, the aircraft is equipped with racks to hold all of F-35's avionics, as well as an F-35 cockpit.[2]
The aircraft was modified under contract by BAE Systems Inc. at their facility at the Mojave Spaceport. Work began in December, 2003, and the aircraft began post-modification taxi tests in November, 2006. First flight took place on January 23, 2007 at Mojave. After the initial flight test program conducted at Mojave, on March 2, 2007, the aircraft was ferried to Lockheed's Fort Worth facility for Phase 2 of the modification program, which will install the flight test stations and actual avionics and sensor systems to be tested.[3]
In 2014 CATBird software test station was upgraded by Northrop Grumman with Tech Refresh 2 hardware which gives the CATBird capability to test F-35 Block 3 Software.
See also
Related development
References
- ^ Delehant, Edward J. (15 May 2005). "Safety & design considerations for the cooperative avionics test bed (CATBird) aircraft". SAE transactions. 114 (1): 938–945. Retrieved 2006-11-20.
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(help) - ^ "Flying Test-Bed Power Switched On" (PDF). F-35 JSF Flight Plan. Retrieved 2006-11-20.
- ^ "CATBird transitions to Lockheed for final systems installation", Aerotech News and Review, 2007-03-09