Looks like we will soon find out the name of the F-35, I'm so giddy, I've fallen in love with the plane all over again. When I get back to Texas, I'm gonna have to take a trip to Dallas to see the facility
F-35 Link

F-35 Link
Is it Phoenix? Maybe a Lynx?
Ideas for the F-35s name are ample, but for now it's top secret
By DAVE MONTGOMERY
STAR-TELEGRAM WASHINGTON BUREAU
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STAR-TELEGRAM/RODGER MALLISON
Many military aircraft are named after creatures of the air, but not always birds. The F/A-18 fighter jet, shown here, is called the Hornet.
WASHINGTON -- Will it be a soaring bird of prey, a galloping beast or a force of nature, like generations of previous warplanes bearing names such as Eagle, Mustang or Lightning?
Or will it convey the noble tenets of democracy with a name like Liberty or Freedom? Or even human emotion, such as Fury?
Five years after the Pentagon embarked on the joint strike fighter program, the Lockheed Martin F-35 is just weeks away from getting a name, and the final recommendations are as closely guarded as plans for an Air Force bombing strike.
über gayOne authoritative recommendation comes from Lt. Col. Art "Turbo" Tomassetti, a Marine pilot who flew the X-35, the prototype for the future F-35, during competitive tests in 2001.
After the flights, Tomassetti said last week, he and a half-dozen pilots and engineers gathered "over a couple of pints" to mull over a name.
"We went through a whole list," he recalled. "It had to be something that all the services could relate to." The consensus, he said, was Fury, with adaptations for each of the services -- Sky Fury for the Air Force, Sea Fury for the Navy and Storm Fury for the Marines because, he said, "the Marines storm the beaches."