GO!!! said:
Can anyone confirm if the four new C-17s are configured for static line parachuting - or have the capability?
I know the US ones are used for jumping....
In short ........ YES.
It will take us a while, both for the aircrew and also for the infrastructure, to adjust to the airdrop role. Right now the Division is not looking at beginning airdrop until late in 2008 or early 2009 [at the very ealriest] and that is only if things are going well with bedding down the aircraft, getting them settled in and coming to grips with the operation. Airdrop, right now, is not the C-17 priority (in its list of many priorities). If it has to airdrop will slide to the right as required until other objectives are consolidated first.
The aircraft is a very good airdropper. That being said it flies a slightly different profile than does the venerable C-130. It can do personnel static line out of the troops doors - 50 per side in a single pass (no ramp drops). CFLAWC will have to look at changing their training as well, since they will most likely need a C-17 mock-up as well as their current C-130 mockup for inflight drills (although they would be identical drills). The static lines will have to be changed - the C-17 requires a 20' instead of a 16' static line - the USA has changed theirs to a blue static line while retaining their unmodified chutes on the yellow static line for those who will be jumping from the C-130.
CDS drops remain the same, but we will face an infrastructure change when it comes to HE. The USAF (both C-130 and C-17) use the EFTC (Extraction Force Transfer Coupling) pallet for their HE ... not that archaic, 1960s, old school, spider web version of the rigging we currently do in the back of our CC-130s. Big change required for that one.
High altitude airdrops are also performed using the aircraft. I've dropped US SOF from 25,000' over Afghan so that they could go "do their thing" and we also did the high altitude HUMRO airdrops over Afghanistan in late 2001 and early 2002 from 25,000.
LAPES - the aircraft can do LAPES and is capable of it, but nobody does it anymore. Not the C-17 nor the C-130s, USAF or CF. Nobody. It has proven too expensive and too dangerous, so sorry, you won't get to see your cartwheeling LAPES'ed Leopard ... although that would hold some entertainment value! ;D
We won't be doing LAPES.
While people keep thinking of this aircraft as "strategic", the label is really a misnomer and is indicative of the fact that it will bring a whole new paradigm and capability to the CF - something we have never had before. Sure it will fly "strategic" missions that go transatlantic or transpacific to get men and equipment (and women, sorry about that) to where they need to go. That being said, it can also be flown tactically.
At very significant weights it can also be slowed down to approach and land at the same speeds as the C-130 onto forward operating locations and austere airfields. There have been many times where I have landed at 460,000 lbs AUW onto 3,500' (only 90' wide) marked only with 5 IR chem sticks strapped to sandbags to mark out the LZ. It can be totally blacked out for night NVG operations, it has a robust defensive system (MWS, LWS, CMDS and LAIRCM), it has fuel tank fire suppression systems, it has armour plating for the crew and it has multiple redundant systems so that is can survive direct hits from SA, AAA and also IR SAMs.
December 2003 saw the #2 engine of a C-17 hit by a MANPAD SAM out of Bahgdad. The #2 began to come apart, as turbine blades shed and damaged the #1 and also the fuselage and wing, leading edge slat etc ... but the aircraft was able to return to land at a fairly heavy weight on 2.5 engines. They replaced the engine, fixed the #1 engine and flew it out a few days later.
I've operated the aircraft from 2001 - 2004 on dirt strips (FOB Rhino) and also shattered slab concrete runways (Kandanhar, Bagram, Masar-i-Sharif) in Afghanistan, and all of the northern FOBs in Iraq. I also flew in the Bashur airdrop of the 173rd in OIF (#9 in a formation of 15). 1000 men dropped from 10 aircraft in formation, blacked out on NVGs and 5 aircraft in the lead dropping HE in formation. 1000 men in a single pass over the DZ - 100 per aircraft, 50 per side double door over a 60 sec "lime on" DZ marked only with an IR chem stick and a small radar beacon. It is a very capable "tactical" aircraft.
The aircraft also flies well at about 300' AGL flying at about 300-340 Kts ground speed ... once again it is best if blacked out on NVGs. The HUD and the flight path vector make low level flight very easy in this machine.
The plan is to use the aircraft in the same way .... strategic legs to get the equipment to where we need it followed by a tactical insertion and departure.
For those who do not think that this aircraft has a tactical capability ......... well, I suggest you ask someone who has flown it and operated it. I don't know "thing 1" about the LAV lll or the LEO 1, but I know about this aircraft and about tactical trash hauling.
This thing is not another Airbus.