The post Damaged B-2 Spirit Back In The Sky After Four Year Repair Effort appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. A U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit, “Spirit of Georgia,” aircraft parks by a hangar at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, Nov. 6th, 2025. The “Spirit of Georgia,” was damaged in an aircraft incident in September of 2021 and has recently returned to the fleet. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Robert E. Hicks) U.S. Air Force Today’s military aircraft aren’t cheap; a point noted in that the United States Air Force spent approximately $23.7 million over four years to repair and return to service a Northrop B-2 Spirit bomber damaged in a landing mishap on September 14, 2021. The aircraft, nicknamed “Spirit of Georgia,” suffered a hydraulic failure that led to a landing-gear collapse, with the wing scraping along the runway at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, damaging the aircraft’s composite structure. It also took significant effort to return the aircraft, which involved a multi-phase “repair journey.” It paid off, and on November 6, 2025, the Spirit of Georgia was back in the sky! Such an investment was undertaken because the United States Air Force operates fewer than 20 of the flying-wing long-range strategic stealth bombers. The B-2 will remain operational for at least another decade until its replacement, the more advanced Northrop Grumman B-21 Raider, enters service. Just 19 B-2s In The Fleet Currently, the B-2s are also the “newest bombers” in the Air Force’s fleet, with the program running from 1988 to 2000. The 21st and final B-2 Spirit was completed in 2000. However, due to two other mishaps, just 19 remain. The “Spirit of Kansas” crashed at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, in 2008 and was a total write-off for the Air Force. Given the estimated $1.4 billion cost of the aircraft, it is considered the most expensive aircraft crash in history. Three years ago, on… The post Damaged B-2 Spirit Back In The Sky After Four Year Repair Effort appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. A U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit, “Spirit of Georgia,” aircraft parks by a hangar at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, Nov. 6th, 2025. The “Spirit of Georgia,” was damaged in an aircraft incident in September of 2021 and has recently returned to the fleet. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Robert E. Hicks) U.S. Air Force Today’s military aircraft aren’t cheap; a point noted in that the United States Air Force spent approximately $23.7 million over four years to repair and return to service a Northrop B-2 Spirit bomber damaged in a landing mishap on September 14, 2021. The aircraft, nicknamed “Spirit of Georgia,” suffered a hydraulic failure that led to a landing-gear collapse, with the wing scraping along the runway at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, damaging the aircraft’s composite structure. It also took significant effort to return the aircraft, which involved a multi-phase “repair journey.” It paid off, and on November 6, 2025, the Spirit of Georgia was back in the sky! Such an investment was undertaken because the United States Air Force operates fewer than 20 of the flying-wing long-range strategic stealth bombers. The B-2 will remain operational for at least another decade until its replacement, the more advanced Northrop Grumman B-21 Raider, enters service. Just 19 B-2s In The Fleet Currently, the B-2s are also the “newest bombers” in the Air Force’s fleet, with the program running from 1988 to 2000. The 21st and final B-2 Spirit was completed in 2000. However, due to two other mishaps, just 19 remain. The “Spirit of Kansas” crashed at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, in 2008 and was a total write-off for the Air Force. Given the estimated $1.4 billion cost of the aircraft, it is considered the most expensive aircraft crash in history. Three years ago, on…

Damaged B-2 Spirit Back In The Sky After Four Year Repair Effort

2025/12/10 04:57

A U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit, “Spirit of Georgia,” aircraft parks by a hangar at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, Nov. 6th, 2025. The “Spirit of Georgia,” was damaged in an aircraft incident in September of 2021 and has recently returned to the fleet. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Robert E. Hicks)

U.S. Air Force

Today’s military aircraft aren’t cheap; a point noted in that the United States Air Force spent approximately $23.7 million over four years to repair and return to service a Northrop B-2 Spirit bomber damaged in a landing mishap on September 14, 2021.

The aircraft, nicknamed “Spirit of Georgia,” suffered a hydraulic failure that led to a landing-gear collapse, with the wing scraping along the runway at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, damaging the aircraft’s composite structure.

It also took significant effort to return the aircraft, which involved a multi-phase “repair journey.”

It paid off, and on November 6, 2025, the Spirit of Georgia was back in the sky!

Such an investment was undertaken because the United States Air Force operates fewer than 20 of the flying-wing long-range strategic stealth bombers. The B-2 will remain operational for at least another decade until its replacement, the more advanced Northrop Grumman B-21 Raider, enters service.

Just 19 B-2s In The Fleet

Currently, the B-2s are also the “newest bombers” in the Air Force’s fleet, with the program running from 1988 to 2000. The 21st and final B-2 Spirit was completed in 2000.

However, due to two other mishaps, just 19 remain.

The “Spirit of Kansas” crashed at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, in 2008 and was a total write-off for the Air Force. Given the estimated $1.4 billion cost of the aircraft, it is considered the most expensive aircraft crash in history.

Three years ago, on December 10, 2022, the “Spirit of Hawaii” suffered a landing mishap during a routine support flight. The aircraft subsequently caught fire after its landing gear collapsed, destroying the airframe and grounding the B-2 fleet for months. It also resulted in the closure of Whiteman AFB’s only runway.

Although the retirement of the B-2 is likely just a decade away, the capabilities of the Spirit were apparent in June’s Operation Midnight Hammer, where the bombers flew for 36 hours round trip to strike Iran’s nuclear program. That mission also served as a reminder that the U.S. Air Force may need every bomber it has in wartime.

It Took Team Spirit

Returning the Spirit of Georgia to service was no small task. It also began nearly as soon as the bomber came to a halt following its 2021 mishap. Repair efforts were underway even before the aircraft was moved to a hangar.

“The immediate response by the 509th Maintenance and B-2 System Program Office Engineering team was critical,” explained Col. Jason Shirley, senior materiel leader at the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center’s B-2 System Program Office, in a statement.

“They quickly recovered the aircraft, using airbags to lift it enough to manually lock the main gear and tow it into the hangar,” added Shirley. “Damage assessments and Non-Destructive Inspections followed, revealing damage primarily concentrated around the left main landing gear bay and lower wing area.”

AFLCM led the overall effort to repair the aircraft, a long and complex journey that included four key phases. However, even before that point, there was an issue of where the work would be completed.

The entire B-2 Spirit fleet is based at Whiteman AFB. Still, the repairs needed to be handled at Northrop Grumman’s facility at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California, where the stealth aircraft first rolled off the assembly line. With a wingspan of 172 feet, the Spirit of Georgia couldn’t be transported to California except by making the flight across the country.

That required temporary repairs to the wings in Missouri, which were completed in just over a year. That allowed the damaged B-2 to make a ferry flight to Palmdale, but it also impacted its stealth capabilities, a key attribute of the Spirit.

“Air Force Global Strike provided critical response and concurrence on temporary repairs to facilitate the initial ferry flight and programmed and approved an unfunded request for in-depth scarf repairs during depot maintenance,” said Cindy Conner, deputy branch chief for Air Vehicle and Systems Management Branch in the B-2 System Program Office.

Once back at Northrop Grumman’s Plant 42, more significant repairs began in earnest, including:

One challenge is that the B-2 hasn’t been produced in more than two decades at the time of the accident, and while there are spares, components like wing panels aren’t being made any longer. To save time and costs, the repair efforts included using an existing eight-by-four-foot composite skin section from a test aircraft as a donor part. That was used to restore the lower wing skin that carries wing loads, airstream, and internal fuel tank pressures. Further repairs included the replacement of a left-hand wingtip and the outboard wing major mate skin panel, as well as the landing gear hinges. The structural work was completed on May 12, 2025.

Composite Challenges

The repairs to Spirit of Georgia faced other challenges, including controlling the heat distribution to the composite materials.

“The distribution of localized heat to the areas needing cure, while maintaining localized control as repair areas were in enclosed, confined spaces and directly adjacent to critical joints and structure was a huge challenge,” said Matt Powers, structure engineer with the B-2 System Program Office. “This was overcome by utilizing advanced custom-built heating equipment, performing thermal surveys, and adjusting insulation and cooling air throughout the final cure.”

The team further employed a new resin system that could cure outside an oven. It was the first time the resin, which had previously been used on extensive composite repairs outside an autoclave, was used on the B-2. It saved months of work and lowered repair costs. It further utilized techniques and processes from other Northrop Grumman programs.

The combination of new materials, equipment, and processes should also help improve the sustainment and modernization of the B-2 Spirit fleet and enable faster, more cost-effective repairs of all aircraft composite structures. According to the Air Force, this will further reduce downtime and extend the lifespan of the fleet.

The result speaks for itself: another Spirit is back in the sky.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/petersuciu/2025/12/09/damaged-b-2-spirit-back-in-the-sky-after-four-year-repair-effort/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Pepeto vs Blockdag Vs Layer Brett Vs Remittix and Little Pepe

Pepeto vs Blockdag Vs Layer Brett Vs Remittix and Little Pepe

The post Pepeto vs Blockdag Vs Layer Brett Vs Remittix and Little Pepe appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Crypto News 18 September 2025 | 05:39 Hunting the best crypto investment in 2025? Presales can flip a portfolio fast and sometimes change a life overnight when you choose well, which is why we start with receipts instead of slogans and cut straight to what’s live, audited, and usable today, not vague aspirations likely to drift as cycles turn and narratives fade for months. In this head-to-head we put Pepeto (PEPETO) up against Blockdag, Layer Brett, Remittix, and Little Pepe using simple yardsticks, team intent and delivery, on-chain proofs, tokenomics clarity, DEX and bridge readiness, PayFi rails, staking, and listing prep, so you can act on facts, not hype, and decide confidently before the next leg higher catches you watching from the sidelines. Pepeto’s Utility Play: Zero-Fee DEX, Bridge, And StrongPotential Pepeto treats the meme coin playbook like a platform brief, not a joke. The team ships fast, polishes details, and shows up weekly, aiming for staying power rather than a momentary pop. A hard-capped design anchors PepetoSwap, a zero-fee exchange where every trade routes through PEPETO for built-in usage instead of buzz. Already 850+ projects have applied to list, fertile ground for volume if listings follow. A built-in cross-chain bridge adds smart routing to unify liquidity, cut extra hops, and reduce slippage, turning activity into steady token demand because every swap touches PEPETO. Pepeto is audited by independent experts Solidproof and Coinsult, a trust marker reflected in more than $6,7 Million already raised in presale. Early momentum is visible. The presale puts early buyers at the front of the line with staking and stage-based price increases, and that line is getting long. Utility plus purpose, culture plus tools, the combo that tends to run farther than hype alone. Translation for you: Pepeto is graduating from noise to usage. If…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 10:41
OCC Confirms Banks Can Facilitate No-Risk Crypto Transactions

OCC Confirms Banks Can Facilitate No-Risk Crypto Transactions

The post OCC Confirms Banks Can Facilitate No-Risk Crypto Transactions appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. U.S. national banks have been passed by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to enable their customers perform instant crypto trades with no risk. This decision has cleared a significant obstacle in the way of banks that desire to be part of the expanding digital assets market. Banks Receive Clarity on Crypto Trading Authority  Interpretive Letter 1188 states that a bank can be an intermediary in crypto transactions without having digital assets in its possession. The OCC clarified that one client may sell a crypto asset to one bank and that bank will sell the asset to the other client at the same time. Since the two trades take place virtually at the same time the bank does not have an exposure to the market. The license provides banks with a regulated structure to provide crypto trading services. This is in line with preceding actions like enabling banks to hold major crypto assets. Another explanation that OCC provides is that the role of the bank is not to trade digital assets. Instead, the only responsibility of the bank is linking the sellers and the buyers. OCC Reinforces Bank’s Crypto Oversight The regulator mentioned that such transactions carry a limited amount of settlement risk. The decision is an update of a previous guidance that permitted crypto custody and some stablecoin transactions. The latest clarification strengthens the same allowances but indicates continued regulation of responsible crypto services in the banking space. With this, the banks are now enabled to provide customers with a secure means of accessing digital assets in compliance with federal regulations. The OCC stressed that institutions need to continue having robust risk controls, such as cybersecurity controls and compliance programs. Hence, all their operations can be safe and in line with current rules. How Institutions Might…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/10 07:46