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| EXCERPT FROM GENERAL OPERATIONAL REQUIREMENT FOR CARGO AIRCRAFT The aircraft must be able to: 1. carry ninety-two infantrymen or sixty-four paratroopers on a mission with a combat radius of 1,100 nautical miles, or, alternatively, a thirty-thousand pound cargo over 960 miles. 2. operate from short unprepared airstrips of clay, sand or humus soil. 3. slow down to 125 knots for paradrops and even slower for assault landings. 4. have both a rear ramp operable in flight for heavy-equipment and side doors for paratroop drops. 5. handle bulky and heavy equipment including bulldozers, artillery pieces and trucks and 6. fly with one engine out. |
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| DESIGNING THE FIRST C-130-FROM AN INTERVIEW WITH WILLIS HAWKINS-50 YEARS LATER Willis Hawkins wrote me that "We had a small group of four to six engineers to conceive new airplanes, and I was its head. …Our ultimate C-130 concept was very close to what you see today: a loading and "dumping" system that fits standard (not special) ground equipment; power plants that were new but simple and would grow. A high wing to keep the propellers and power plants out of the weeds; a fuselage shape constant for its full useful length; a landing gear narrow enough to use roads for runways; and a total airplane with a high but economical cruse speed which didn't mind low and safe speeds when required." A simple but elegant concept that has worked for half-a-century, and may well work for half-a-century more. By Walter J. Boyne. Used with permission of Air Force Magazine. |

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| A LONG TAKEOFF RUN AT TAN SON NHUT On April 29, 1975, when the fall of Saigon was imminent. Tan Son Nhut Air Base was taking heavy fire, and its ramps and taxiways were littered with the burning carcasses of what had been the South Vietnamese Air Force. A VNAF officer, Tim Nguyen, saw a single Lockheed C-130A taxing out with people still streaming to climb on board the cargo ramp. He joined them, forcing his way on board. At the end of the runway, the cargo door finally closed. The pilot, Major Phuong, pushed the power forward and the overweight Hercules slowly ran down the 9,000 foot runway, finally staggering off the ground at the end of the 1,000 foot overrun. The C-130 stayed in ground effect until it gained enough speed to begin a shallow climb. The airplane was at least 20,200 pounds overweight, as it carried no fewer than 452 people, including thirty-three crowded into the flight deck. After a meandering flight of three and one-half hours, Phuong landed at U Tapao Royal Thai Air Base. When Nguyen got out, he looked at the C-130 and vowed that he would someday work for the company that built the airplane that saved his life. Today he does just that, at Lockheed Martin in Marietta, Georgia, where he is a specialist in defensive systems. The aircraft that carried him and 451 others to safety may now be found as the gate guardian at Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas. |
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| C-130 MAKE THE RAID ON ENTEBBE On June 27, 1976, four terrorists forced an Air France Airbus 300 to divert from its scheduled Athens to Paris route and land at Entebbe, Uganda, the home of dictator Idi Amin. Joined there by more terrorists, the hijackers demanded that Israel free fifty-three convicted terrorists in exchange for the 105 Jewish and Israeli hostages that they held. They released the French air crew and non-Jewish passengers. Israel had always refused to negotiate with terrorists, but agreed to enter negotiations to gain time to prepare a military counter-stroke. That counterstroke involved flying for seven hours in three C-130s, landing on a potentially hostile airport, drive to the air line terminal and kill all the terrorists while protecting the hostages. The lead C-130 carried two jeeps and an exact copy of Amin's black Mercedes. The other two C-130s carried the rest of the 200 crack troops assigned to rescue the hostages and destroy the MiGs parked on the airport so that they could not pursue and attack the C-130s on their homeward flight. The C-130s landed at Entebbe at 23:01, local time, freeing the hostages in a swift attack that killed eight kidnappers. The force commander, Yoni Netanyahu, was killed by friendly fire, as were two hostages. Fifty-eight minutes after landing, the C-130s took off for a successful flight home. |

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| HICKAM AIR FORCE BASE, Hawaii -- An LC-130 taxis from its parking spot on Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii Oct. 17, 2007. Ski-equipped LC-130 aircraft, crews and support personnel from the New York Air National Guard’s 109th Airlift Wing are transiting Hickam and will begin deploying to McMurdo Station, Antarctica to support the 13 Air Force led Joint Task Force Support Forces Antarctica, Operation Deep Freeze. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Shane A. Cuomo) |
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| Hercules fleet grounded September 17, 2008 http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/hercul...1330837156.html THE Defence Force has grounded its entire fleet of Hercules aircraft - the so-called backbone of the Royal Australian Air Force - after an "unusual" fault prompted an emergency landing. A Defence spokeswoman said yesterday the fault was detected during a training flight near Richmond on Monday night and the RAAF's fleet of 24 planes had been grounded for all non-essential flights until the cause had been detected. None of the seven crew was injured in the landing. The C130 Hercules is the air force's main transport plane and has been in use for more than 50 years, including in Afghanistan and Iraq. It has been used in all continents and is regarded as highly safe and reliable. Defence said yesterday a plane had declared an emergency on Monday at 8.25pm after its crew detected a fault with the nosewheel. At 8.55pm the crew called a mayday but landed safely at the Richmond base 20 minutes later. A Defence spokeswoman said the nosewheel fault had not been experienced before, but as a precaution for crew safety the planes would do only operationally essential tasks. "Our priority will be to meet critical tasks supporting deployed ADF elements, assessed on a case-by-case basis," she said. Neil James, from the Australian Defence Association, said the Hercules was the air force's "medium-range tactical workhorse" but grounding them for non-essential flights would have minimal impact. Jonathan Pearlman |

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| Iraq Orders C-130Js 12-Aug-2009 18:43 EDT (...) The C-130 Hercules was an early player in Iraq’s rebuilt air force, which remains small and focused on transport and surveillance missions. Positive experiences with the IqAF 23rd Sqn.’s 3 refurbished C-130Es, which fly from Baghdad International Airport, led Iraq to make a formal sale request for new C-130J-30s in July 2008. The latest development completes Iraq’s 6-plane buy… Contracts and Key Events The stretched C-130J-30 is 15 feet longer than its C-130J counterpart, with most of the added fuselage length placed forward of the wing. C-130J-30s can carry 33% more pallets of equipment or supplies, 39% more combat troops, 31% more paratroopers, or 44% more aeromedical evacuation litters than previous unstretched Hercules versions like the IqAF’s C-130Es. The stretched C-130J-30 also shares the redesigned C-130J’s ability to use much more of its theoretical cargo capacity in hot or high altitude environments, a feature that will see a great deal of use in Iraq. The contracts are issued to Lockheed Martin of Marietta, GA, and managed by the 657th AESS at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH. Aug 11/09: A $140.3 million unfinalized firm-fixed-price contract modification for 2 more Iraqi C-130J-30s, completing the 6-aircraft request. The contract also includes engineering and integration tasks associated with Iraq’s distinctive C-130J configuration. At this time no funds have been obligated (FA8625-06-C-6456/P00098). April 30/09: A firm-fixed-price contract modification, for an amount not to exceed $292.8 million, to buy 4 C-130J-30 aircraft for the Iraqi government. At this time, $6.9 million has been obligated (FA8625-06-C-6456, P00080). The initial request was for 6 aircraft. Since the DSCA request went unchallenged, the exports are approved and Iraq’s government has the freedom to buy up to 2 more aircraft at a later date. July 25/08: The US Defense Security Cooperation Agency announces [PDF] Iraq’s official request for 6 stretched C-130J-30 aircraft, which will supplement the 3 refurbished C-130E’s that currently form Iraq’s medium transport fleet. The estimated cost is $1.5 billion, and the prime contractor will be Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company in Fort Worth, TX and Rolls-Royce Corporation in Indianapolis, IN. Going forward, up to 10 U.S. Government and 10 contractor representatives will participate in 2-week long annual technical and program management reviews. Lockheed Martin and Rolls Royce aren’t the only contractors for this request, however, which also includes defensive equipment from Alliant Techsystems and BAE Systems. The detailed request includes: •6 stretched C-130J-30 aircraft identical to the USAF baseline standard •28 Rolls Royce AE 2100D3 engines, (24 installed, 4 spare) •8 of ATK’s AN/AAR-47 Missile Warning Systems (6 installed, 2 spare) •8 of BAE’s AN/ALE-47 Countermeasures Dispensing Systems (6 installed, 2 spare) •A stock of spare and repair parts, configuration updates, integration studies, support equipment, publications and technical documentation, technical services, personnel training and training equipment, foreign liaison office support, U.S. Government and contractor engineering and logistics personnel services, construction, and other related elements of logistics support. |