Bert
Sr. Member
- Reaction score
- 4
- Points
- 230
FoverF
The comparative features of the C-130J and A400M are similar in regards to medium lift. My point in the
other posts were there are deployments and taskings that do not require the size of the IL-76 or C-17 or
there are soft FOD littered airfields these jet engined aircraft cannot land on. The C-27/G-235 types do not
have the capacity for larger cargo like vehicles or mixed cargo. Each type; light, medium and heavy, has its
own niche and purposes. The CF has used the Herc as a main carrier and its been successful partially due to
the fact it meets the needs of many remote and internal operations. Acquiring strategic lift allows for faster,
controlled, larger deployments with decent airfields and light lift for SAR, surveillance, multi-purpose support.
Medium lift falls into maintaining operations that require more robust cargo and vehicle lift where larger aircraft
cannot go or cannot be slated to go. These are only a few examples, but search for Boxtop, Op Hurricane,
Eureka, and CFS Alert and note references to airfields, scope and supply. I doubt strategic lift and light lift
(unless many aircraft are involved) are suitable for the job in these cases. There are other examples. In this regards,
phasing out medium lift is more cumbersome as not having or contracting out stategic lift especially at current tasking
levels. Any improvement to air-lift is a good thing however.
As far as adding to the Polaris fleet, its out of my lane. In theory, one can look across the aircraft in the CF and
see definite excellent quality acquisitions and compare it to mixed contractor and maintenance solutions. Domestically,
i don't know if A310 acquisition would be beneficial as civilian carriers are often convenient. Good question.
The comparative features of the C-130J and A400M are similar in regards to medium lift. My point in the
other posts were there are deployments and taskings that do not require the size of the IL-76 or C-17 or
there are soft FOD littered airfields these jet engined aircraft cannot land on. The C-27/G-235 types do not
have the capacity for larger cargo like vehicles or mixed cargo. Each type; light, medium and heavy, has its
own niche and purposes. The CF has used the Herc as a main carrier and its been successful partially due to
the fact it meets the needs of many remote and internal operations. Acquiring strategic lift allows for faster,
controlled, larger deployments with decent airfields and light lift for SAR, surveillance, multi-purpose support.
Medium lift falls into maintaining operations that require more robust cargo and vehicle lift where larger aircraft
cannot go or cannot be slated to go. These are only a few examples, but search for Boxtop, Op Hurricane,
Eureka, and CFS Alert and note references to airfields, scope and supply. I doubt strategic lift and light lift
(unless many aircraft are involved) are suitable for the job in these cases. There are other examples. In this regards,
phasing out medium lift is more cumbersome as not having or contracting out stategic lift especially at current tasking
levels. Any improvement to air-lift is a good thing however.
As far as adding to the Polaris fleet, its out of my lane. In theory, one can look across the aircraft in the CF and
see definite excellent quality acquisitions and compare it to mixed contractor and maintenance solutions. Domestically,
i don't know if A310 acquisition would be beneficial as civilian carriers are often convenient. Good question.