HMS Queen Elizabeth sailed from her home port of Portsmouth on Friday to conduct flight trials with UK F-35 Lightning jets in home waters.
Above:
HMS Queen Elizabeth sails for Lightning jet trials in UK waters.
Courtesy Royal Navy / Photo Barry Swainsbury
UK Lightning Force jets conducted their first maritime flights during operational tests with the aircraft carrier just a few months ago.
The 65,000-tonne warship has previously only carried out trials with the jets while training in the Atlantic during 2018 and 2019.
HMS Queen Elizabeth’s Commanding Officer, Captain Angus Essenhigh, said: “It is a real honour for me to be taking HMS Queen Elizabeth to sea for the first time as her new Commanding Officer.
"This period at sea will build on the successes of the Westlant 19 deployment, providing a fantastic opportunity for the ship to further its generation towards carrier strike and will train and qualify UK F-35 pilots in UK waters for the very first time.”
The joint Royal Navy and Royal Air Force Lightning Force Training squadron, 207 Squadron, will conduct the trials, flying aircraft to and from the decks, day and night from their base at RAF Marham. Six pilots, both navy and air force, will carry out their aircraft carrier qualification in that time.
The trials will give the pilots practise in landing on the 4.5-acre deck in a range of conditions, as well as testing the ship’s crew and systems in operating with the jets that the ship, and her sister, HMS Prince of Wales, were specifically built to fly.
Lieutenant Commander Richard Turrell, Flight Deck Officer on HMS Queen Elizabeth, added: “This is a fantastic opportunity to further integrate and qualify United Kingdom F-35 pilots, ground crews and aircraft on board HMS Queen Elizabeth in UK waters.
"My team are excited to get to sea and continue the development of our ship to air wing partnership throughout 2020 and beyond to deploying with full carrier strike capability in 2021.”