by Daryl Mayer
88th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
4/9/2013 - WRIGHT-PATTERSON AFB, Ohio (AFNS) -- The
top acquisition priority in the Air Force - acquiring a new aerial
refueling capability - is proceeding "on track," Maj. Gen. John
Thompson, the program executive officer for Tankers, said.
Two years and several key milestones after the contract was awarded, a
great deal of progress has been made. The preliminary design review
completed last year ensured the basic design would meet the key
performance parameters required by the Air Force. Now, the program is
steaming toward the completion of the critical design review later this
year setting the stage to build and fly the first KC-46A Tanker in 2015.
Initial concerns that sequestration could force a contract renegotiation
appear to be allayed based on increased flexibility afforded by the
recent continuing resolution.
"There is no final assessment yet, but it appears positive," Thompson said.
The Air Force contracted with Boeing in February 2011 to acquire 179
KC-46 tankers to begin recapitalizing the KC-135 Stratotanker fleet. The
initial delivery target is for 18 tankers by 2017. Production will then
ramp up to deliver all 179 tankers by 2028.
"When the final KC-46s are delivered in 2028, they will replace KC-135s
that are on the order of 80 years old," Thompson said, emphasizing the
criticality of meeting program milestones.
The KC-46 contract has been widely cited as a model for future programs.
Characterized as "fair to both parties" by Thompson, financial risk for
the Air Force is limited to $4.9 billion for the development program,
which includes the initial four aircraft.
The general is quick to add that Boeing has the contract, which is
"worth about $32 billion in then-year dollars, goes from about two years
ago out into the 2020s and is something that they will be able to
leverage into a very important weapon system for the U.S. Air Force for
decades to come. Absolutely, it is a win-win."
The KC-46 is a commercial derivative based on the Boeing 767-200, said
Col. Shaun Morris, the KC-46 System program manager. When a new 767-2C
is completed in the Boeing factory in Everett, Wash., it will be flown
to Boeing facility in Puget Sound to complete the military modification
that turns it into a KC-46.
The aircraft brings a wide range of new capabilities to the warfighter.
It is 15 to 20 percent larger than the KC-135 and can carry 58
passengers, 54 aeromedical patients and 18 cargo pallets -- all
substantially more than the legacy aircraft. Performance is also
improved with the ability to perform boom and drogue refueling
operations on the same sortie, though not simultaneously, using the 1200
gallon-per-minute fly-by-wire centerline boom or the 400
gallon-per-minute centerline drogue system. In addition, the KC-46 can
be equipped with two 400 gallon-per-minute wing air refueling pods which
can be used to refuel two aircraft simultaneously.
The new tanker will be fully capable of day and night operations and
also be a receiver itself meaning it can be refueled in flight, which
will improve loiter time -- all important characteristics offering
increased flexibility for mission planners.
Inside the digital glass cockpit, pilots will find complete flight and
weather data on 15-inch displays. Immediately behind at the boom
operator station, 24-inch displays will offer a three-dimensional view
just below multiple monitors that show a panoramic 185-degree field of
view. Pilots will also be able to bring up refueling operations on
cockpit displays.
On the near horizon, the program office is looking to award a contract
for the Aircrew Training System, which includes a KC-46 simulator. In
2014, the program office, in concert with Air Mobility Command
officials, will begin serious initial requirements work on the second
phase, known as KC-Y, of the three-phase program to replace more of the
aging tanker fleet.
Tuesday, April 09, 2013
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