F-35's engine troubles
It would seem fair to say that the most important component on an airplane is the engine. UAVs can fly without a cockpit. Lifting bodies can fly without wings. Without a method of propulsion, an aircraft is considered a glider. An underpowered aircraft finds itself few fans. Unreliable engines end up making the wrong kind of headlines. So, yeah... Engines are a big deal. Especially when it comes to $100 million jet fighters. When one reads news about the JSF, the fighter that will represent the vast majority of allied airpower for the next 30 to 40 years, headlines describing the F-35 engine as both "unreliable" and "costly" are bound to give one pause. A recent Pentagon Inspector General report slammed the JSF's Pratt & Whitney F135. The report accounted of 61 instances where the engine did not meet the Pentagon's regulatory standards during inspection. These issues were widespread, including project management, software, sup