$400k F-35 New Generation Super Smart Helmet

$400,000 F-35’s New Generation Super Smart Helmet s much more than a helmet, the helmet is a workspace
Any pilot will tell you that you can’t look through the airframe to see what’s beneath you, behind you, or even sometimes beside you. It probably doesn’t even take a pilot to tell you that much. However, those days are over.

The F-35 Lightning II, the most technologically advanced fighter aircraft of all time, brings unheard-of capabilities into every facet of the plane.

Its software system alone contains over 8 million lines of code, equivalent to about 150,000 pages of text. The software controls the latest advancements in weapons systems, sensor fusion, electronic attack, radar functionality, communications, navigation, and last but most certainly not least – the F-35 Helmet Mounted Display.

Gone are the days of maneuvering the aircraft in order to see the target. Now, the F-35 helmet takes video streams from all around the helicopter, and fuses them into one coherent display inside the helmet to give the pilot 360-degree situational awareness. The pilot can look down and see a video of what’s below them, beneath the cockpit.

$400,000 F-35's New Generation Super Smart Helmet 2

F-35 Helmet Features

The Distributed Aperture System (DAS) in the F-35 streams real-time images into the helmet from six infrared cameras distributed around the aircraft, allowing pilots to “see through” the cockpit or airframe. Additionally, the helmet provides pilots with night vision through the use of an integrated camera. In order to complete their mission, all the information the pilot needs – airspeed, heading, altitude, targeting information, and warnings –projects onto the helmet’s visor. A traditional Heads-up Display displayed this information prior to integrating the data into the visor. This approach increases responsiveness and noticeably reduces the pilot’s workload.

The interface is also quite a bit different because the cockpit has two touch screens that allow the pilot to plot a course, identify checkpoints and targets, and adjust communications. This allows the pilot to see the entire world at a glance and be able to select the data the pilot feels is pertinent to the mission. It’s a more unified approach than any previous generation of fighter aircraft and the helmet plays a central role in it. Currently, the F-35 software is in its second of six phases, or “blocks”, updating throughout the course of the F-35’s lifecycle.

$400,000 F-35's New Generation Super Smart Helmet 1
Below the cockpit on the F-35 airframe, a faceted, 200-pound window of sapphire crystal houses a suite of sensors that feeds data to a computer, which then displays it on the helmet’s visor. (USAF/Senior Airman Christopher Callaway)

Related Link: $400,000 F-35 Helmet – Pilot can See Through Plane

F-35 Helmet Updates

Lockheed Martin gives the outline of the block updates here:

  • Block 1A/1B – Block 1 comprises 78 percent of the more than 8.3 million source lines of code required for the F-35’s full warfighting capability. Update Block 1A was the ready-for-training configuration while Block 1B provided initial multi-level security.
  • Block 2A – Block 2A is currently released to the F-35 fleet. It provides enhanced training including functionality for off-board fusion, initial data links, electronic attack and mission debrief. With Block 2A, nearly 86 percent of the required code for full warfighting capability is flying.
  • Block 2B – Block 2B provides initial warfighting capabilities, including but not limited to expanded data links, multi-ship fusion and initial live weapons. The U.S. Marines declared IOC in July 2015 with Block 2B. With Block 2B, more than 87 percent of the required code for full warfighting capability is flying.
  • Block 3i – Block 3i provides the same tactical capabilities as Block 2B. The principal difference between 2B and 3i is the implementation of new hardware, specifically the updated Integrated Core Processor. The Air Force declared IOC with Block 3i in August 2016. With Block 3i, 89 percent of code required for full warfighting capability is flying.
  • Block 3F – Block 3F provides 100 percent of the software required for full warfighting capability, including but not limited to data link imagery, full weapons and embedded training.

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