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US military sees virtue in 50-year-old aircraft

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The United States military, the world’s most technologically advanced force, paradoxically fields some of the oldest weapons platforms on the planet. At least five aircraft still in US military service are already more than 50 years old. And they are set to serve for 3-4 decades more.

The Indian Air Force has already bought one of these venerable platforms, the C-130 Hercules, in its newest avatar, the C-130J Super Hercules. The IAF is on course to buy another: the CH-47 Chinook helicopter. Trial evaluation has been conducted and a final decision is awaited.

The other half-century-old US aircraft (which are not on India’s shopping list) are: the B-52 Stratofortress bomber that took to the air in 1952; the KC-135 Stratotanker mid-air refueller that first flew in 1956; and the T-38 Talon, the world’s first supersonic trainer jet that has been flying since 1959. The US Air Force still trains pilots on the Talon.

The IAF’s other big American buy, the C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft, is more than twenty years old. The AH-64 Apache attack helicopter, which the IAF has trial evaluated and is making a final decision on is more than 35 years old. So too is the F/A-18 Hornet, which the IAF evaluated in the $17 billion medium fighter competition before rejecting it.

US defence experts have questioned the rationale for spending a fortune, as the Pentagon has, on cutting-edge platforms like the F-22 Raptor and the F-35 Lightening II, both next-generation fighters that cost hundreds of billions of dollars to develop? Or, by extending this logic, for India to spend tens of billions on newly designed fighters like the Rafale, rather than implement the IAF’s suggestion to buy upgraded versions of the proven Mirage-2000 fighter.

Expensive, custom-designed platforms are a waste, avers Admiral Jonathan Greenert, America’s new chief of naval operations (CNO). In a controversial article just published in “Proceedings”, the journal of the United States Naval Institute, the influential CNO has argued for a “paradigm shift” that emphasises “payloads over platforms”.

Greenert’s argument is: fancy platforms (like the F-35 fighter, though he does not name it) whose superiority is based on design attributes like “stealth”, get technologically overtaken by an adversary’s evolving electronics capability. But sturdy, flexible payload carriers (like an aircraft carrier, or like the B-52 and the C-130) get outdated far more slowly since they are “inherently reconfigurable, with sensor and weapon systems that can evolve over time for the expected mission.”

Greenert argues that, “the weapons, sensors, unmanned systems, and electronic-warfare systems that a platform deploys will increasingly become more important than the platform itself.” That justifies the logic of a fifty-year-old platform, with continuously improving electronics, and “stand-off weapons” that can be fired at the enemy from far away without endangering the platform itself.

Some of America’s half-century-old legacy aircraft, which will serve 80-90-year service lives, are:


B-52 Stratofortress

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The giant, eight-engine B-52 Stratofortress (aficionados call it the BUFF, or Big Ugly Fat Fu**er) was designed in the early Cold War to strike the Soviet Union with thermonuclear weapons. B-52 deterrence patrols remained permanently airborne near the Soviet Union’s borders, ready to nuke designated targets. When the US entered Vietnam in the 1960s, B-52s were modified to carry 27 tonnes of conventional bombs, achieving notoriety for their “carpet-bombing” of communist areas.

Today, the US Global Strike Command still fields 85 B-52H bombers. This carries 31.5 tonnes of bombs, mines and cruise missiles to targets 14,000 kilometres away. In Operation Desert Storm against Iraq in 1991, 40% of the high explosive used was dropped by B-52s. In the post-9/11 Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns, B-52s have led the bombing, fitted with banks of computers that aim with deadly accuracy.

CH-47 Chinook

Chinook+underslinging+155mm+ultralight.jpg



16th August will be the 50th anniversary of the first Chinook delivered to the USAF. The heavy-lifting helicopter was quickly deployed to Vietnam, where it became a battlefield icon, carrying up to 55 troops into combat and lifting artillery guns to perilous mountain positions.

Like the B-52, Chinooks periodically return to their factory in Philadelphia for replacing mechanical and electronic components in a phased modernisation. New capabilities are added, such as the “pinnacle manoeuvre”, in which avionics permit the pilot to lower the Chinook’s rear onto a pinnacle, or the roof of a house, even as the front overhangs the drop. This allows it to pick up or deposit soldiers or stores in areas inaccessible even to smaller helicopters.

The Chinook will remain in service till 2050, by when it would be 90 years old.


C-130 Hercules


IAF+C-130J+taking+off+on+first+flight.jpg


The C-130 four-engine turboprop, which entered service in the 1950s, has had the longest continuous production run of any aircraft in history. In service with more than 60 countries, the Hercules has accumulated more than 20 million flight hours.

The aircraft has steadily evolved with additional range, updated avionics and night vision capability. The Hercules has been used for transport and special forces tasks, as well as for weather reconnaissance, flying into the eye of hurricanes, and for aerial spraying to suppress mosquito-borne diseases. The latest version, the C-130J Super Hercules, which the IAF has procured, takes off and lands in a shorter distance, climbs faster, flies further and operates in pitch darkness. It will remain in service for another 30 years.

KC-135 Stratotanker


KC-135+refuels+F-15.jpg



This mid-air refuelling aircraft was developed along with the Boeing 707 and was designed to refuel Cold War bombers that carried nuclear weapons. It has, however, been the primary US refueller in all operations since then. While the US has started the process of building a new refuelling aircraft, many of the KC-135 fleet would remain in service till 2040.


T-38 Talon

T-38+Talon.jpg



Built by Northrop, the T-38 was the world’s first supersonic trainer aircraft. It continues to train USAF pilots, with an estimated 50,000 pilots having already honed their skills on the T-38. The US has begun the process of identifying a new trainer, but the T-38 looks set to continue in that role for some more years to come.


Broadsword: US military sees virtue in 50-year-old aircraft
 
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The Herc will outlast the rest in the above list. May be it is just me, but I have never met a Herc pilot or loadmaster who hate this aircraft. It is a design that just happened to be 'just right' and cannot be improved upon. Not perfect, but for the imperfect world we are living in, the -130 is just right for it.

On a side note, the best illustrator for aviation is Hank Caruso...

Color Mini-Prints

He captured the essence of each aircraft like no one else can and drawn them in equally hilarious and thoughtful fashion.
 
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Because they made it in their home they can use them as long as they want cause no shortage of supply of spares and they can build a new aircraft whenever they want and thats why their plan remained like new and in perfect running Condition hower for us it is difficilt for us to maintain old aircraft because of lack in the spares parts i.e Martin B-57 Canberra is Retired in Pakistan but (2 still used by NASA.
First flight 20 July 1953
Introduction 1954
800pxmartinb57ausaf5214.jpg
 
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