Boeing (McDonnell Douglas) C-17 Globemaster III

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Boeing McDonnell Douglas C 17 Globemaster III

The Boeing (formerly McDonnell Douglas) C-17 “Globemaster III” is the newest U. S. Air Force cargo airplane. It is 174 feet long and has a 170-foot span. It is a fly-by-wire aircraft that can carry payloads of 172,000 pounds at 41,000 feet and an airspeed of 575 mph. There are three crewmembers: pilot, copilot, and loadmaster. The cost-effective flight crew is made possible through the use of an advanced digital avionics system using four cathode-ray tube displays, two full capability head-up displays, and advanced cargo systems.

The C-17 can take off and land on runways as short as 3,000 feet (914 meters) and as narrow as 90 feet (27.4 meters). Even on such narrow runways, the C-17 can turn around using a three-point star turn and its backing capability.

During normal testing, C-17s set 22 world records, including payload to altitude time-to-climb, as well as the short takeoff and landing mark in which the C-17 took off in ess than 1,400 feet, carried a payload of 44,000 pounds to altitude, and landed in less than 1,400 feet.

In 1998, eight C-17s completed the longest airdrop mission in history, flying more than 8,000 miles from the United States to Central Asia, dropping troops and equipment after more than 19 hours in the air.

The C-17 dates back to the initial award for a “CX” airlifter to McDonnell Douglas in August 1981, with the company basing its projected new plane on its YV-15 demonstrator. McDonnell promised a low-risk design based on proven technology.

It wasn’t long before turbulence struck. The requirement to land on short airstrips and to back up on a runway while also serving as a strategic airlifter carrying M-1 battle tanks and other equipment over vast distances complicated development. Flight control and wing design issues emerged.

Before long, Congress and the Pentagon threatened to cancel the program outright. Military and industry leaders were fired. Boeing, which would eventually buy McDonnell Douglas, offered an alternative: a militarized 747-400F, called the C-33.

Lockheed Martin offered an updated version C-5 variant.

Gen. Jacqueline D. Van Ovost, now commander of Air Mobility Command, was a test pilot working on the C-17 demonstration in those early days. She became chief of the C-17 Acquisition Branch and C-17 Program Element Monitor. The program was “being battered around as a waste of money,” she recalled recently. Deficiencies were rampant.

In 1994, USAF and McDonnell Douglas struck a deal to fix the problems. USAF spent more and altered requirements. “Everybody put their nose to the grindstone,” Van Ovost recalled in an interview with Air Force Magazine. “We were kind of given an ultimatum, and we produced. We saw real gains met, so we leveraged everything we could, and we turned that airplane around.”

The USAF team focused on concurrently conducting initial operational test and evaluation and developmental test and engineering, with the aim of fixing problems quickly.

Flight-tests focused on aerial refueling, dirt operations, low-altitude operations, and combat-style airdrops, the major challenges. The unique capacity and rugged nature of the C-17 meant it soon became the backbone of mobility operations supporting operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and all around the globe. Those challenging capabilities demanded in the 1980s and ’90s were right in tune with actual demands in the 2000s.

“To turn around and watch us use it in combat was very, very satisfying for me,” Van Ovost said. Today, she sees parallels with the challenges and struggles she endured with C-17 and today’s poster child for troubled mobility aircraft, the KC-46. “When I got on the program, the C-17 was being battered around as a waste of money on the Hill. That was a time when we only had 40 airplanes on contract. And I stayed with that program for five or six years and in that period, we turned it from, you know, the joke, to we signed our first multiyear [contract] for the 120 airplanes because of the turnaround. … Frankly, it had more “Category One”-or the worst kind of deficiencies-than this airplane does.”

The last USAF C-17 was delivered in 2013; two years later, the fleet logged its 3 millionth hour, and Boeing, having long before acquired McDonnell Douglas, delivered its last C-17 and closed the Long Beach, Calif., production line.

“The C-17 is a robust, solid platform that can get in and out of airstrips with significant cargo better than any airlifter out there,” Ekstrom said. “We are seeing that the aircraft can fly longer than its initial design-but not without updates and modernization.

NEAR-TERM UPGRADES

All 275 C-17s, both USAF and international, completed the Block 21 upgrade in 2020. The update included the required Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast Out transponder system, required by both the Federal Aviation Administration and European authorities for aircraft in controlled airspace. Additional upgrades included an Identification/Friend or Foe capability, plus other communication and navigation software.

USAF teams worked to complete the update at five U. S. locations and deployed to five others internationally to complete the upgrades on schedule, said Jim Ross, primary Block 21 retrofit manager in the C-17 Program Office, according to a release. The entire process took about two years.

As C-17s rotate into depot maintenance, the C-17’s legacy Head-Up Display system will be replaced, with the new system providing increased field of view, contrast ratio, and resolution, Air Mobility Command reports.

Beginning in 2023, legacy ARC-210 third-generation radios will be replaced with new sixth-generation radios including the Integrated Waveform, Mobile User Objective System voice, and second-generation anti-jam tactical UHF Radio for NATO (SATURN), which will replace the HAVE QUICK II system for all military services in October 2024. The new frequency-hopping radios are resistant to electronic counter measures, according to AMC.

Data link satellite systems also are being replaced as the Inmarsat I-3 communication satellites are reaching the end of their lives; AMC will do those upgrades at the same time to reduce cost and downtime.

“AMC will continue to research and prioritize modernization of our workhorse C-17 fleet as new requirements emerge,” said AMC spokesman Capt. Christopher J. Herbert.

But AMC is also revolutionizing the C-17’s ability to fight. An Air Force Advanced Battle Management System (ABMS) on-ramp demonstration in 2020 proved the C-17 can deploy weapons when a C-17 dropped a Joint-Air-to-Surface Standoff Missiles using a roll-on pallet.

“Why wouldn’t we change the calculus by doing different things, moving away from the antiquated view that AMC just brings stuff when they’re called?” Van Ovost said. C-17s can “be a maneuver force inside the threat ring,” she added. “Instead of dropping them on a ramp somewhere at some island, we’re just dropping them in the sky,” Van Ovost said. “And after they drop out of the sky, someone else lights them off and takes them to the target.”

AMC is planning in future demonstrations to launch attritable systems, like the Gremlin developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. The small, unmanned aircraft could be useful in both offensive and defensive counter-air operations.

And with the C-17’s wing-mounted hardpoints, Van Ovost said, it is “not a stretch to think that we could put one or two missiles on there for self defense.”

In another 2020 ABMS demonstration, a C-17 helped a Marine Corps High Mobility Artillery Rocket System with targeting. The C-17 flew to its destination, the HIMARS was rolled off and fired, then was rolled back on so the C-17 could take off again in a “shoot-and-scoot” maneuver.

MAINTENANCE ON THE FLY

To keep the fleet healthy, AMC is applying conditions-based maintenance practices used for the C-5 and C-130 fleets to better predict parts failures with an eye toward increasing Globemaster readiness. ­e command has explored rotating airframes from high operations tempo units to lower op-tempo units to keep wear and tear even across the fleet, and likewise rotate units from high-moisture and high-salinity environments to more arid climates, in a bid to minimize structural corrosion.

“We’re optimistic on analysis, but this requires continuing study for what we would have to do to that airplane,” Van Ovost said. “So I’d say that we are cautiously optimistic about the life span of the airplane.”

AIRLIFT DEMAND ­

The 2018 “Air Force We Need” called for 386 operational squadrons, including three more C-17 squadrons-or the equivalent-by 2030. But the option to buy or build more C-17s has long since passed. ­e cost to reconstitute the C-17 production line would be prohibitive.

But adding more is not be necessary, a 2018 Mobility Capabilities and Requirements study argued. It concluded existing strategic airlift is adequate to meet future needs. ­e Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, in a congressionally mandated report released in 2019, recommended maintaining the C-17 fleet and ensuring readiness levels remain high as the best way forward.

A new Mobility Capabilities and Requirements Study could be released this year. ­

The C-17 fleet is about 20 years old on average, making it among the newest and healthiest airlifters in the USAF inventory. ­The mission capable rate was 82.23 in 2018 , according to USAF figures.

Boeing C-17 Globemaster III in Australian service

By MSW
Forschungsmitarbeiter Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about Charles ‘Moth’ Eaton’s career, in collaboration with the flier’s son, Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John Burton’s Fortnight of Infamy. Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined with custom website design work. He enjoys working and supporting his local C3 Church. “Curate and Compile“
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