Raytheon Advances JPALS Landing System for F-35B/Cs
The U.S. Navy and Marine Corps plan to reach early operational capability of the Joint Precision Approach and Landing System in 2018.
The U.S. Navy conducted tests of the JPALS system on an aircraft carrier in 2013 using two F/A-18C Hornets. (Photo: U.S. Navy)

Raytheon will finish integrating the Joint Precision Approach and Landing System (JPALS) on U.S. Navy and Marine Corps F-35 fighters under a recently awarded second phase of the long-running program. The contractor will also develop autoland capability for the F-35 and the Navy’s future MQ-25 Stingray carrier-based unmanned refueling aircraft.

On September 21, the Naval Air Systems Command (Navair) awarded Raytheon a $254.5 million contract to continue work on eight JPALS engineering development models (EDMs) and deliver two additional EDMs to support early operational capability requirements for the Marine Corps F-35B and Navy F-35C. The contract also calls for Raytheon to develop initial operational requirements for MQ-25 autoland.

JPALS is a differential GPS-based precision landing system that guides aircraft to carriers and amphibious assault ships in all weather conditions and in surface conditions to sea state 5 using an encrypted, jam-proof datalink. The system makes use of software and receiver hardware on the aircraft and an array of GPS sensors, mast-mounted antennas and processing/datalink equipment racks on the ship. The Navy plans to declare early operational capability on two amphibious assault ships in 2018 to support Marine Corps F-35Bs, Raytheon executives said. Initial operational capability is planned in 2020.

Navair awarded Raytheon a contract in July 2008 to develop the original eight EDMs, for what was then called Increment 1 of the program; a second increment was to develop a land-based capability for the Air Force. In late 2013, the Navy conducted a series of test landings to the deck of the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt using two F/A-18C Hornets fitted with “functionality representative” avionics kits. The Air Force eventually withdrew from the JPALS program, leading to a breach of Nunn-McCurdy Act cost threshholds in 2014 and delaying the effort, executives said.

The existing eight EDMs aredistributed among different locations, with two at a Raytheon laboratory in Fullerton, Calif., one at the Patuxent River, Md., Naval Air Station and the remainder on amphibious assault ships and CVN-class aircraft carriers.

All three F-35 models will have JPALS capability embedded in Block 3F software, the final software release under the F-35 system development and demonstration program. But Air Force F-35As are not covered under Raytheon’s contract. “This ties in with the Navy’s investment on the F-35,” said Robert Delorge, Raytheon vice president for transportation and support services.