C-17 lands successfully in Alert
Posted By JEROME LESSARD, QMI AGENCY
Posted 16 mins ago
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Maj. Jean Maisonneuve is not a movie star, but the 429 squadron pilot was the headliner of a world premiere earlier this month.
From April 15-17, the 20-year pilot performed a total of four successful C-17 Globemaster landings and takeoffs at Canadian Forces Station (CFS) Alert in Nunavut.
It marked the first time a C-17 had landed in Alert -- the most northerly, permanently inhabited location in the world. It is the first time a Globemaster landed on a SPRO, or semi-prepared runway, and the first time any C-17 -- with more than two million hours flown by various air forces -- has ever landed on a snow and ice-covered runway.
"This first C-17 mission in Alert was tremendously successful," said Maisonneuve, a member of CFB Trenton's Transport and Rescue Standardization and Evaluation Team. "The aircraft performed better than expected. It stopped with 1,500 to 2,000 feet of runway remaining on all four landings we performed, beating calculated landing distances by about 500 feet."
Maisonneuve said he and an eight-member air crew had to determine a braking coefficient to reduce risks and uncertainties before landing on the 5,500-foot-long nordic runway.
"For example, a Globemaster may be able to use a 6,000-foot runway when it's bare and dry, and even when it's bare and wet, but up in Alert, with a packed snow and ice covered runway, suddenly that same 6,000 runway may be way too short," said Maisonneuve.
The former C-130 Hercules pilot (1991-96) said he was not nervous, but excited and confident to perform the historical six-hour direct flight. Despite its impressive size and cargo capacity, Maisonneuve said the C-17 is a "very" capable and maneuverable aircraft.
"It was our first time landing a C-17 in Alert, but it wasn't my first experience landing an aircraft on that runway," said Maisonneuve, who has logged up to 3,000 hours on the C-17 since 2001.
"The US ambassador to Canada (David Jacobson), the Deputy Minister of Defence (Robert Fonberg) and the Commander of 1 Canadian Air Division (Maj. Gen. Yvan Blondin) were on board for this mission," said Maisonneuve.
The 8 Wing's Globemaster No. 701 conducted its first flight to the northern air force station without any cargo on board. Maisonneuve said CRFI tests were run based upon an empty aircraft, "which reduces the landing length significantly," said the pilot.
Landing the aircraft on a gravel and snow-packed runway was not the only challenge facing the 8 Wing air crew. Maisonneuve said ground operations were "a bit tricky, but the crew was able to maneuver the aircraft without backing."
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