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A stealth fighter gets hit by a surface-to-air missile deep inside enemy territory and still makes it home. That single moment in Operation Epic Fury forces a hard reset on everything we think we “know” about fifth-generation airpower and it puts the F-35 Lightning II under the brightest possible spotlight: real combat, real damage, real outcomes.
We walk through what Epic Fury reveals after more than 13,000 sorties, starting with the March 19, 2026 milestone when an Air Force F-35A takes the first known combat damage ever recorded on a fifth-generation stealth fighter. From redundant flight controls to the AN/AAQ-37 Distributed Aperture System and the split-second choices that keep a wounded pilot alive, we dig into what survivability actually looks like when stealth is no longer theoretical. Then we map the broader fight, including how each variant earns its keep: the F-35A as the deep-strike hammer, the Marine Corps F-35B enabling “Lightning carrier” operations and unpredictable basing, and the F-35C using massive internal fuel for long-range persistence and even early drone defense near the carrier force.
But the story is not just victories. We also confront the modernization bottlenecks that could decide the next war: the radar transition from AN/APG-81 to the gallium nitride AN/APG-85, production delays that leave some new jets without an organic radar, and the TR3 software stability problems that slow the path to Block 4. Along the way, we spotlight sensor fusion, helmet-based tactics, the Dude 44 combat search and rescue mission, and the maintainers battling heat, salt, UV, and dust to keep sortie rates alive. If you found this breakdown useful, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: did Epic Fury silence the critics, or are radar and software issues a ticking time bomb?
Support the show
To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support
If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:
PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com)
Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:
https://hangarflyingwithtog.com
You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here:
https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog
If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog
And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here:
https://twitter.com/pilotphotog
By PilotPhotog4.9
1212 ratings
Enjoyed this episode or the podcast in general? Send me a text message:
A stealth fighter gets hit by a surface-to-air missile deep inside enemy territory and still makes it home. That single moment in Operation Epic Fury forces a hard reset on everything we think we “know” about fifth-generation airpower and it puts the F-35 Lightning II under the brightest possible spotlight: real combat, real damage, real outcomes.
We walk through what Epic Fury reveals after more than 13,000 sorties, starting with the March 19, 2026 milestone when an Air Force F-35A takes the first known combat damage ever recorded on a fifth-generation stealth fighter. From redundant flight controls to the AN/AAQ-37 Distributed Aperture System and the split-second choices that keep a wounded pilot alive, we dig into what survivability actually looks like when stealth is no longer theoretical. Then we map the broader fight, including how each variant earns its keep: the F-35A as the deep-strike hammer, the Marine Corps F-35B enabling “Lightning carrier” operations and unpredictable basing, and the F-35C using massive internal fuel for long-range persistence and even early drone defense near the carrier force.
But the story is not just victories. We also confront the modernization bottlenecks that could decide the next war: the radar transition from AN/APG-81 to the gallium nitride AN/APG-85, production delays that leave some new jets without an organic radar, and the TR3 software stability problems that slow the path to Block 4. Along the way, we spotlight sensor fusion, helmet-based tactics, the Dude 44 combat search and rescue mission, and the maintainers battling heat, salt, UV, and dust to keep sortie rates alive. If you found this breakdown useful, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: did Epic Fury silence the critics, or are radar and software issues a ticking time bomb?
Support the show
To help support this podcast and become a PilotPhotog ProCast member: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1555784/support
If you enjoy this episode, subscribe to this podcast, you can find links to most podcast streaming services here:
PilotPhotog Podcast (buzzsprout.com)
Sign up for the free weekly newsletter Hangar Flyingwith Tog here:
https://hangarflyingwithtog.com
You can check out my YouTube channel for many videos on fighter planes here:
https://youtube.com/c/PilotPhotog
If you’d like to support this podcast via Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/PilotPhotog
And finally, you can follow me on Twitter here:
https://twitter.com/pilotphotog

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