By Daryl Mayer, 88th Air Base Wing Public Affairs /
Published September 25, 2015
WRIGHT-PATTERSON AFB, Ohio (AFNS) -- A KC-46A Pegasus tanker
(EMD-2) made history with its first flight Sept. 25 from Paine Field in
Everett, Washington, landing a few hours later at Boeing Field in Seattle.
"The KC-46A will provide critical refueling capacity
and enhanced capabilities to the warfighter," said Secretary of the Air
Force Deborah Lee James. "This flight represents progress and brings us a
step closer to fielding this much needed aircraft."
The EMD-2 completed its maiden flight as a KC-46A tanker,
which will now begin flight testing in support of the next program milestone.
“Today is just the first flight of many for this aircraft as
we deliver these next generation tankers,” said Brig. Gen. Duke Z. Richardson,
program executive officer for tankers at the Air Force Life Cycle Management
Center. “Like the KC-135 (Stratotanker) and KC-10 (Extender) before it, this
aircraft will be called upon for generations to come to deliver capability,
whether support equipment, supplies, medical aide, or personnel. However, its
primary mission will always be to fuel the fight. The team at Boeing has done a
remarkable job creating an entirely new aircraft that will soon become the
backbone of our ability to project power anywhere in the world.”
The Air Force contracted with Boeing in February 2011 to
acquire 179 KC-46A refueling tankers to begin recapitalizing the aging tanker
fleet. This flight is an important step toward meeting the required assets
available date -- a milestone requiring 18 KC-46A aircraft and all necessary
support equipment to be on the ramp, ready to support warfighter needs by
August 2017.
“Today’s flight is the call to duty for this new aircraft,”
said Col. Christopher Coombs, KC-46 system program manager. “EMD-2 will be
conducting the heavy lifting of testing in demonstrating the capabilities of
this aircraft and leading the program down the path toward its Milestone C
decision.”
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