THE HELMET USED WITH THE F-35.
The Terminator-style helmets that allow fighter pilots to see through their
planes.
Only the neck and shoulders prove there is a human being in there somewhere.
This is how the next generation of Royal Air Force fighter pilots will look.
And with piercing green eyes staring out from behind the visor, it's no
surprise that the helmet has been compared to Arnold Schwarzenegger's killer
robot in The Terminator.
Pilots flying the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter will have an astonishing array of
technology encasing their heads - enabling them to see right through their own
aircraft fuselage to the ground below.


A series of cameras on the outside of the stealth warplane feed high-resolution
images into the helmet, including infra-red images at night, which are then
projected on to the inside of the pilot's visor.
Special sensors inside the cockpit track the movement of the helmet, so that
when the pilot turns his head his view of the skies or ground outside changes
accordingly.
When he looks down, he sees not his own feet on the cockpit floor but the
ground below, slipping past at hundreds of miles per hour.
On-board computers also feed in essential flight and combat data on to the
display, as well as superimposing target symbols to locate enemy and friendly
aircraft or ground targets, even if they are too far away to see with the naked
eye.
The supersonic Joint Strike Fighter is due to replace the Harrier jump jet, and
is being developed jointly with America .
Britain is due to buy 150 aircraft at around 10 billion, or 66 million each.

Cutting-edge: Cameras are attached to the outside of F-35 Joint Strike Fighters
to give pilots all-round vision .
Prototypes were used in flight by U.S pilots earlier this year and are now
being assessed by engineers at Boscombe Down in Wiltshire.
A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: 'The computerised symbology will be
displayed directly on to the pilot's visors, providing the pilot with cues for
flying, navigating and fighting the aircraft.
'It even will superimpose infra-red imagery on to the visor to allow the pilot
to look through the cockpit floor at night and see the world below - like
something out of Terminator'
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