WASHINGTON — The House Armed Services Committee’s proposed version of the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act would throw a lifeline to a program aiming to develop a next-generation fighter jet engine.
The chairman’s mark of the laws, released Monday evening, would add $588.4 million for the Adaptive Engine Transition Program, to mature its technology and reduce risk.
The Pentagon in March released a proposed fiscal 2024 budget with no AETP funding, as a substitute moving forward with the Engine Core Upgrade, Pratt & Whitney’s proposal to upgrade the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter’s existing, Pratt-made F135 engines.
However the House NDAA backs continuing work on each engine programs in 2024; it also fully funds the Engine Core Upgrade.
AETP was the opposite option the Pentagon was considering to modernize the F-35’s propulsion systems, which is able to need more power, thrust and cooling because the fighter receives key upgrades later this decade. These adaptive engines, prototypes of which have been developed by each Pratt & Whitney and General Electric Aerospace, would add a 3rd stream of air to chill the engine, and would adapt to the most effective configuration for any given situation.
The Air Force was excited by putting the adaptive engine in its F-35As. However the adaptive engine’s lack of interoperability with the U.S. Marine Corps’ F-35Bs, which have a singular engine that permits it to vertically take off and land, meant the Navy and Marines were bored with AETP.
In a background briefing for reporters Monday, a senior congressional aide said lawmakers opted to revive AETP funding to maintain the technology moving forward because the Defense Department continues developing the sixth-generation Next Generation Air Dominance platform, expected to make use of adaptive technology in its engine.
GE calls its adaptive engine the XA100, and Pratt’s adaptive engine is the XA101. Pratt said the adaptive engine it’s developing is best fitted to NGAD than the F-35.
The committee’s draft of NDAA would also strike entirely the $150 million the Air Force requested to prototype its troubled Air-launched Rapid Response Weapon, or ARRW. And it will add one other $20 million to the service’s budget request to prototype the Hypersonic Attack Cruise Missile, or HACM, hypersonic program, which might bring its funding to greater than $401 million.
ARRW’s future is uncertain after a failed test in March prompted Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall to inform lawmakers this system had “struggled just a little bit in its testing program,” and that the service was more committed to HACM.
The committee’s tactical air and land forces panel also on Tuesday advanced without changes its section of the NDAA. That bill would grant the Air Force’s request to retire 42 more A-10 Warthogs, bringing its fleet of the attack aircraft all the way down to 218, in addition to 57 older F-15C and F-15D fighters.
Stephen Losey is the air warfare reporter for Defense News. He previously covered leadership and personnel issues at Air Force Times, and the Pentagon, special operations and air warfare at Military.com. He has traveled to the Middle East to cover U.S. Air Force operations.