This Is
America's Lethal AC-130 Gunship on Steroids
The historic, lethal and
combat-tested AC-130 gunship -- known for attacking ISIS and Taliban fighters
during close-air support high-risk combat missions -- is getting a massive
technological upgrade with newer weapons and avionics to increase the
effectiveness of the attack platform and extend its service life
into future decades.
“AC-130 gunship work involves upgrading
the plane with weapons, targeting systems and sensor packages,” Col. Robert
Toth, Chief of Tactical Aircraft, Special Operations and Combat Search and
Rescue Division, told Scout Warrior in an interview.
Early variants of the AC-130 gunship first entered combat in the late 1960s
during the Vietnam war. Later variants served in the Gulf War, War on Terror
and war in Afghanistan, among other missions.
The gunships, operated by both the Air
Force and Special Operations Command, are often used to support Special
Operations fighters on the ground engaged in combat.
The aircraft is known for its 105mm
side-firing cannons which enable it fire from a side-axis position during
close-in combat supporting ground troops. The AC-130 Gunship also has a 25mm
Gatling gun and a 40mm weapon, according to Air Force statements.
The Lockheed-Boeing built aircraft uses
four Allison T56-A-15 turboprop engines, each with 4,300 shaft horsepower; the
155,000-pound aircraft has a 132-foot wingspan and hits speeds of 300 miles per
hour. Its crew consists of a pilot, co-pilot, navigator, fire control officer,
electronic warfare officers, flight engineer, TV operator, infrared detection
operator, loadmaster and four aerial gunners.
The AC-130 “Spooky II” gunship is a
standard C-130 transport aircraft engineered for close-air support combat. Its
105mm gun, called a M102 Howitzer, fires 33-pound high explosive shells at a
firing rate of 10-round a minute, according to a report in Popular Mechanics.
The weapon has a range up to seven miles and is the largest gun ever operated
from a US Air Force aircraft, the report said.
The aircraft’s 25-millimeter Gatling Gun,
the GAU-12, is the same weapon now on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter; the weapon
fires both High-Explosive-Incendiary and Armor Piercing-Incendiary rounds
against enemy fighters, buildings and light vehicles, Popular Mechanics writes.
In a recent attack, AC-130 gunships and
A-10 Warthog close-air support aircraft together destroyed an ISIS fuel convoy
of more than 100 vehicles.
C-130 Fleet:
The AC-130 gunships make up a small
portion of a fleet of roughly 500 C-130 planes throughout the Air Force and
Special Operations Command, Toth explained.
The cargo planes are used to airdrop supplies,
equipment, weapons and troops in forward deployed locations.
As a propeller-driven aircraft, the C-130s
are able to fly and land in more rugged conditions and withstand harsh weather
such as obscurants. The propellers make the aircraft’s engines less susceptible
to debris flying in and causing operational problems for the engines.
“It
really allows you to do that tactical movement of equipment and personnel to
take the airplane to the last tactical mile. A lot of our transport strategic
airlifters are meant to go to a hard runway to a hard runway somewhere and then
they turn over the cargo to be moved to the forward areas to a C-130 or a
vehicle. The C-130 allows you to take that cargo and land on a smaller runway
or an unimproved airfield,” Toth added.
C-130s are used for domestic,
international and warzone transport including homeland security, disaster
relief and supply deliveries, among other things.
“There are probably missions that have yet
to be dreamed up for the C-130,” Toth said.
The fleet consists of 135 more modern
C-130J aircraft and 165 older C-130Hs which have been around since the 80s,
Toth explained.
Also, MC-130Js are specially modified
airlifters engineered to transport Army Green Berets, Navy SEALs and Army
Rangers.
“They are essentially a C-130J further
modified with defensive systems with radar countermeasures and infrared radar
and advanced sensors for specialized missions. They also can perform in-flight
refueling,” Toth explained.
C-130 Modernization:
The Air Force remains vigilant about its
C-130 fleet to ensure the airframes, wingboxes, avionics and communication
systems remain safe and operational. This is particularly true of the older
1980s-era C-130Hs, Toth added.
“The thing that causes the greatest
risk to the airplane is the life of the wing. We monitor the wing of the
aircraft and as the wings get past their service, life we bring the airplanes back
in and bring in new structures -- with the primary focus being the center
wingbox which is the area where the wings mount to the fuselage,” Toth said.
As for when a C-130 is in need of a
maintenance upgrade to preserve and maintain service life, the Air Force uses
an assessment metric referred to as “equivalent baseline hours.” The wing-boxes
are changed once the aircraft reaches a certain “severity factor” in its
operational service time. This is necessary because the wear and tear or impact
of missions upon and airplane can vary greatly depending upon a range of
factors such as the altitude at which a plane is flying, Toth said.
“Low-level flight may be three to four
times the severity factor of flying at a higher level,” he said.
Also,
by January of 2020 the entire fleet of C-130s will need to comply with an FAA
mandate and be equipped with systems that will relay aircraft position to a
greater fidelity back and forth between the airplane and the air traffic
management authorities, he added. This will allow them to sequence more
aircraft closer together and enhance an ability to move commerce. Kris Osborn
Avionics Modernization Program,
Increment 1 involves adding new 8.33 radios to the aircraft to improve
communication along with initiatives to upgrade cockpit voice recorders and
digital data recorders. C-130s will also receive new collision-avoidance
technology designed to prevent the planes from hitting terrain or colliding
with one another mid-air. Inc. 1 is currently ongoing and is slated to
complete by 2019.
AMP Inc. 2 involves a larger-scale effort to integrate digital avionics
throughout the airplane. Inc. 2 will require nine-months to one year of work
and be completed by 2028.
No comments:
Post a Comment