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Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon May 01, 2017 2:13 pm
by 747classic
The first Fully Functional Production KC-46A, (second LRIP aircraft) made her first flight at April 29 2017.

See : http://painefield.blogspot.nl/2017/04/n ... s-air.html

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Thu May 04, 2017 9:09 am
by KarelXWB
A 6th test aircraft has joined the flight test program:

http://www.aviation.ca/2017050122124/ne ... st-program

Boeing [NYSE: BA] now has six aircraft in its KC-46 tanker test program, expanding its ability to complete ground and flight-test activities as it progresses
toward first deliveries to the U.S. Air Force.

The newest KC-46 aerial refueling aircraft, the second low-rate initial production plane, completed its first flight April 29. Its test activities will help ensure the KC-46 can safely operate through electromagnetic fields produced by radars, radio towers and other systems.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Thu May 04, 2017 11:53 am
by petera380
KarelXWB wrote:
A 6th test aircraft has joined the flight test program:

http://www.aviation.ca/2017050122124/ne ... st-program

Boeing [NYSE: BA] now has six aircraft in its KC-46 tanker test program, expanding its ability to complete ground and flight-test activities as it progresses
toward first deliveries to the U.S. Air Force.

The newest KC-46 aerial refueling aircraft, the second low-rate initial production plane, completed its first flight April 29. Its test activities will help ensure the KC-46 can safely operate through electromagnetic fields produced by radars, radio towers and other systems.


Anyone know which aircraft joined the test fleet?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Thu May 04, 2017 2:59 pm
by 747classic
petera380 wrote:
Anyone know which aircraft joined the test fleet?


L/N 1092 C/N 41983 B767-2C KC-46A N884BA (VH006) UNITED STATES AIR FORCE (second LRIP aircraft) joined the test fleet, as stated here :

747classic wrote:
The first Fully Functional Production KC-46A, (second LRIP aircraft) made her first flight at April 29 2017. See : http://painefield.blogspot.nl/2017/04/n ... s-air.html

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri May 05, 2017 1:54 pm
by par13del
If those are WARPS they look way out at the extreme ends of the wings, is there a capability or requirement to refuel 3 a/c at once - 2 Navy 1 Air Force?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sat May 06, 2017 5:05 pm
by LMP737
par13del wrote:
If those are WARPS they look way out at the extreme ends of the wings, is there a capability or requirement to refuel 3 a/c at once - 2 Navy 1 Air Force?


Requirement, probably not. Capability, maybe. What it comes down to is a separation issue in that regard.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sat May 06, 2017 5:08 pm
by LMP737
bikerthai wrote:

The note about Boeing and the supplier not realizing how much documentation needed for the WARP could probably be blamed on lost of experience internal to Boeing (or the right mix of experience people did not get on to the tanker Commercial operation - this mix is important as you need both commercial (FAA) and military (WARP) experience working closely to cover all aspect of the cert), lack of experience from the WARP designer and manufacturer with respect to the FAA cert process. (They probably never had to go through this type of cert before as all their previous cert was through a military modification process that only requires a military cert).

That is my hypothesis.

bt


Boeing in it's infinite wisdom closed their Wichita operation which had lots of tanker experience. That knowledge base was instead spread to teh four winds.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sat May 06, 2017 5:44 pm
by Stitch
LMP737 wrote:
Boeing in it's infinite wisdom closed their Wichita operation which had lots of tanker experience. That knowledge base was instead spread to teh four winds.


Yes, Boeing's original plan was to build them as green commercial airliners and send them to Wichita for conversion (as I believe was done with the KC-767 family), but (rightly, IMO) came to the conclusion that commercial 767-2C sales would probably be zero so by doing the military-related work on the FAL itself would cut down on conversion time and cost. The learning curve has been rough, but over time, it should be the better choice as doing it on the FAL will be easier than tearing the plane apart again to fit everything in.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sat May 06, 2017 10:44 pm
by kc135topboom
So is there 6 KC-46/B-767-2C aircraft now flying with the test flight program?

Does anyone know what the USAF tail number will be for the first KC-46A delivered to the Air Force will be, and when that will happen?

Sorry, I have not been keeping up lately. There is life outside of airliners.net

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sun May 07, 2017 5:02 pm
by LMP737
kc135topboom wrote:
So is there 6 KC-46/B-767-2C aircraft now flying with the test flight program?

Does anyone know what the USAF tail number will be for the first KC-46A delivered to the Air Force will be, and when that will happen?

Sorry, I have not been keeping up lately. There is life outside of airliners.net


Six airplanes total now in the test program. Not all are flying at the present moment though. As for deliveries your guess is as good as mine.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri May 12, 2017 10:58 pm
by jarheadk5
par13del wrote:
If those are WARPS they look way out at the extreme ends of the wings, is there a capability or requirement to refuel 3 a/c at once - 2 Navy 1 Air Force?

Not gonna happen.

In the KC-10, simultaneous boom and WARP receivers are prohibited, due to inadequate receiver separation distance. Different airspeed requirements and emergency separation (breakaway) response times between boom AR and drogue AR are also a factor. Simultaneous centerline drogue and WARP receivers are also prohibited in the KC-10, also due to inadequate receiver separation distance.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sat May 13, 2017 12:31 pm
by KarelXWB
Boeing shares a peek inside the EMC:

Image

Image

https://twitter.com/jonostrower

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon May 15, 2017 8:39 am
by 747classic
KarelXWB wrote:
Boeing shares a peek inside the EMC


EMC lay-out explanation and details of shown aircraft at above pictures can be found here : http://painefield.blogspot.nl/2017/05/m ... c-46a.html

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Wed May 17, 2017 11:10 pm
by DanCatchpole
par13del wrote:
If those are WARPS they look way out at the extreme ends of the wings, is there a capability or requirement to refuel 3 a/c at once - 2 Navy 1 Air Force?


I asked when I toured the program earlier this month (along with Ostrower and others). The answer is maybe for foreign sales of the KC-46.

Three planes at once was not a USAF requirement, b/c there would not be enough wingtip clearance. However, I was told that if a foreign nation wants it, Boeing can provide that capability. I believe the KC-767s delivered to Italy can fuel three planes at once.

Here is the article I wrote: http://www.heraldnet.com/business/testi ... roduction/

- Dan Catchpole, Everett Herald

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon May 22, 2017 3:56 am
by deputydoright
Refueling 2 V-22 Osprey concurrently is a real game changer. I don't think there is large need to refuel 3 aircraft at the same time given the hazards involved.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon May 22, 2017 4:03 am
by deputydoright
What would one say if suddenly, all of the previous testing were invalidated due to the test aircraft not being representative of the production model? Would this be newsworthy?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon May 22, 2017 8:41 am
by WIederling
deputydoright wrote:
What would one say if suddenly, all of the previous testing were invalidated due to the test aircraft not being representative of the production model? Would this be newsworthy?


What kind of change do you have in mind?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon May 22, 2017 3:07 pm
by 7BOEING7
deputydoright wrote:
What would one say if suddenly, all of the previous testing were invalidated due to the test aircraft not being representative of the production model? Would this be newsworthy?


Are you talking about the FAA or Air Force testing? Are you talking about "all" of the testing or just a particular system?

As far as the FAA is concerned most of their testing (on any airplane) is accomplished prior to the airplane being "representative of a production model". When doing certification work their concern is that the specific system/area they are testing and that any related systems/areas are in final production configuration not the whole airplane.

Can't speak to the Air Force.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Tue May 23, 2017 5:08 pm
by LMP737
deputydoright wrote:
Refueling 2 V-22 Osprey concurrently is a real game changer. I don't think there is large need to refuel 3 aircraft at the same time given the hazards involved.


I think there would be a clearance issue with two V-22 refueling from the WARPS.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Thu May 25, 2017 9:28 pm
by AeroTyke
The tankers seem to be suffering from fuel temperature issues. I monitor the ground comms at BFI and tanker #1 has had issues for the past 3 days having to hold on the ramp and taxiways for up to 30 mins sometimes for the temp to drop to allow a take off. Today it escalated to the point where Fire Rescue was called to douse the wings with water in an attempt to bring the temperature down. Seemed to work, but by the time he'd taxied to the threshold for take off the temp had risen again. Sat there for 20 mins hoping it would drop but no luck so they've had to cancel the flight and return to the stall.

Anyone know why this is a problem on the tankers and seemingly not on other types? It's hardly blisteringly hot at Seattle today.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Thu May 25, 2017 10:10 pm
by 7BOEING7
AeroTyke wrote:
The tankers seem to be suffering from fuel temperature issues. I monitor the ground comms at BFI and tanker #1 has had issues for the past 3 days having to hold on the ramp and taxiways for up to 30 mins sometimes for the temp to drop to allow a take off. Today it escalated to the point where Fire Rescue was called to douse the wings with water in an attempt to bring the temperature down. Seemed to work, but by the time he'd taxied to the threshold for take off the temp had risen again. Sat there for 20 mins hoping it would drop but no luck so they've had to cancel the flight and return to the stall.

Anyone know why this is a problem on the tankers and seemingly not on other types? It's hardly blisteringly hot at Seattle today.


Might be doing "hot fuel" testing, so they're starting with already heated fuel.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Thu May 25, 2017 11:29 pm
by jarheadk5
LMP737 wrote:
deputydoright wrote:
Refueling 2 V-22 Osprey concurrently is a real game changer.


I think there would be a clearance issue with two V-22 refueling from the WARPS.

Clearance for the V-22 to HAR from the KC-10 happened after I had left the jet, so I'm not 100% certain... but every picture or video I've seen of KC-10 - V-22 operations has been from the centerline drogue.

V-22 "wingspan" is ~84ft at the outboard tips of the proprotors. For the sake of easy math, we'll call the distance from the AR probe to the proprotor tips 40ft.
KC-46 wingspan is ~158ft. The WARPs are inboard of the wingtips; my brief search for a measurement was unsuccessful. Again, for easy math, we'll call the distance between WARPs 140ft.
Using these simplified (and, admittedly, borderline fictional) numbers, simultaneous V-22s on the KC-46 WARPs gives 60ft lateral separation. I no longer remember what formula USAF uses to determine "safe" receiver separation distance during WARP/MPRS refueling, but I doubt it results in a distance less than one receiver "wingspan" being considered acceptable receiver separation.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sat May 27, 2017 10:57 am
by 747classic
More KC-46A pictures are emerging on Flickr by Jon Ostrower.

Everett Modification Center, May12 2017.
Image
Original uploaded by Jon Ostrower, see : http://www.flickr.com/photos/flightblog ... 951497021/


For more pictures, see : http://www.flickr.com/photos/flightblog ... 1951497021

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sun May 28, 2017 1:56 pm
by CFMitch56
jarheadk5 wrote:
LMP737 wrote:
deputydoright wrote:
Refueling 2 V-22 Osprey concurrently is a real game changer.


I think there would be a clearance issue with two V-22 refueling from the WARPS.

Clearance for the V-22 to HAR from the KC-10 happened after I had left the jet, so I'm not 100% certain... but every picture or video I've seen of KC-10 - V-22 operations has been from the centerline drogue.


Correct... the V-22 is only approved to refuel from the centerline drogue on the KC-10. Not sure if it's a spacing/clearance issue or just the CLD is more stable than the WARPs.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sun May 28, 2017 2:49 pm
by par13del
CFMitch56 wrote:

Correct... the V-22 is only approved to refuel from the centerline drogue on the KC-10. Not sure if it's a spacing/clearance issue or just the CLD is more stable than the WARPs.


I read somewhere that the big issue with doing probe / drogue on the KC10 was that once the a/c was fitted that was the only thing it could do as the boom was rendered inop, so in effect a speciality mission just for the Navy or Marines...based on military spending criteria, would it have been better to get the KC10 fitted with WARPS or was that not possible?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sun May 28, 2017 8:06 pm
by ZaphodHarkonnen
par13del wrote:
CFMitch56 wrote:

Correct... the V-22 is only approved to refuel from the centerline drogue on the KC-10. Not sure if it's a spacing/clearance issue or just the CLD is more stable than the WARPs.


I read somewhere that the big issue with doing probe / drogue on the KC10 was that once the a/c was fitted that was the only thing it could do as the boom was rendered inop, so in effect a speciality mission just for the Navy or Marines...based on military spending criteria, would it have been better to get the KC10 fitted with WARPS or was that not possible?


Pretty sure that's the KC-135. Which requires a boom to drogue adapter to be fitted on the ground. The KC-10 has the boom, and a reel forward of the boom hinge. So it can do both in the same flight.

EDIT:

Yep.



Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sun May 28, 2017 10:50 pm
by Ozair
ZaphodHarkonnen wrote:

Pretty sure that's the KC-135. Which requires a boom to drogue adapter to be fitted on the ground. The KC-10 has the boom, and a reel forward of the boom hinge. So it can do both in the same flight.

EDIT:

Yep.

Aircrew call the KC-135 probe attachment the "iron maiden" and hate refuelling from it compared to a standard WARP arrangement as there are a couple of quirks to the refuelling process that make it difficult and more dangerous.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon May 29, 2017 8:39 am
by KarelXWB
Short video of the KC-46A undergoing electromagnetic testing in the anechoic chamber at Edwards AFB:

https://twitter.com/BoeingDefense/statu ... 7946658818

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Jun 09, 2017 2:37 pm
by mjoelnir
https://www.flightglobal.com/news/artic ... ng-438072/

USAF expects delayed KC-46A delivery next spring

are these new delays?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Jun 09, 2017 3:16 pm
by Stitch
mjoelnir wrote:
https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/usaf-expects-delayed-kc-46a-delivery-next-spring-438072/

USAF expects delayed KC-46A delivery next spring

are these new delays?


Yes.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sat Jun 10, 2017 1:35 pm
by KarelXWB
The previous delay pushed initial delivery to February 2018, so Q2 2018 is definitely another delay.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2017 11:05 am
by KarelXWB
LN 1116 in storage at PAE:

Image
16-46016 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LKC) - C/N 41860 / LN 1116 by Woodys Aeroimages, on Flickr

Current aircraft in storage at runway 11/29:

16-46014 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LKC) - C/N 34105 / LN 1113

16-46015 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LKC) - C/N 34134 / LN 1114

16-46008 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LKC) VH008 - C/N 41856 / LN 1100

16-46007 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LK) (VH007) - C/N 41855 / LN 1098

16-46012 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LKC) - C/N 34107 / LN 1109

16-46013 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LKC) - C/N 34109 / LN 1111

16-46016 USAF Boeing KC-46A Pegasus (767-2LKC) - C/N 41860 / LN 1116


Image
KC-46A's Stored on RWY11/29 by Woodys Aeroimages, on Flickr

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2017 8:14 pm
by LMP737
Looks like the line up of teenager 787's they used to have parked out on that runway.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2017 11:58 pm
by jarheadk5
par13del wrote:
I read somewhere that the big issue with doing probe / drogue on the KC10 was that once the a/c was fitted that was the only thing it could do as the boom was rendered inop, so in effect a speciality mission just for the Navy or Marines...based on military spending criteria, would it have been better to get the KC10 fitted with WARPS or was that not possible?

Sorry for the late response...

As already noted, the KC-135 with the Boom Drogue Adaptor installed becomes a drogue-only tanker until the BDA is removed by the ground crew after landing. The KC-10 has a centerline drogue installed on every aircraft; nearly every mission I flew during my deployments to the sandbox had both boom and drogue receivers.

IIRC, about 1/3 of the KC-10 fleet is modified for WARPs; there are more WARP-capable -10s then there are sets of pods to install on them. The WARPs, unfortunately, are notoriously unreliable, and the customer who pushed the USAF into buying the mod (the US Navy) almost never uses them. The installed pods inflict a not-insignificant drag penalty in all phases of flight, and also inflict some significant takeoff restrictions WRT weather, winds, and runway length. In the 10 years I was a KC-10 boom operator, I only had one mission where the WARPs were a requirement - a movement of a Marine Harrier squadron from Cherry Point to Iwakuni, then another squadron from Iwakuni to Yuma. We had a pod fail on one of our overnight stops at Wake Island that couldn't be fixed. The other -10 on the mission had a pod fail on the very first leg of the mission. We had to get waivers from both the Air Force and the Marine Corps to continue the mission with the centerline drogues only.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Tue Jul 18, 2017 8:16 pm
by Stitch
Was down at the Museum of Flight this morning and caught a KC-46A going up for a flight. There were also four more birds at the Flight Test Center (along with the 787-10 and what I assume is the 737-9).

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Wed Jul 19, 2017 10:05 am
by KarelXWB

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Jul 28, 2017 4:54 pm
by LMP737
They're stacking up like cord wood. ;)

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2017 12:18 pm
by KarelXWB
A refueling boom has been installed on one of the customer aircraft.

Image
https://twitter.com/dominicgates/status ... 8737160193

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2017 3:12 pm
by Slug71
By the time this bird is certified and ready for delivery, a whole squadron should be ready to go. Maybe 2.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2017 4:59 pm
by LMP737
Slug71 wrote:
By the time this bird is certified and ready for delivery, a whole squadron should be ready to go. Maybe 2.


Probably not. They'll still have planes sitting on the runway waiting to be finished when that happens.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2017 10:24 am
by 747classic
The first KC-46A of the third LRIP batch of 15 aircraft is spotted at the Everett Flight line.

L/N 1129, KPAE, August 9th.
Image
Original uploaded by Chris Edwards, see : http://www.flickr.com/photos/woodysaero ... 305470862/

Aircraft data : L/N 1129 C/N 34121 B767-2LKC 17-46024 USAF KC-46A (VH024) LRIP 3, #1/15

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2017 3:08 pm
by Slug71
How many frames have been built now?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2017 3:55 pm
by 747classic
Slug71 wrote:
How many frames have been built now?



04x Engineering & Manufacturing Development (EMD) aircraft, all 4 have been used for testing
07x Batch 1 LRIP (Low Rate Initial Production) aircraft,first two have been used for testing
12x Batch 2 LRIP aircraft
01x Batch 3 LRIP aircraft


Total Assembled : 24,

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2017 4:18 pm
by Slug71
747classic wrote:
Slug71 wrote:
How many frames have been built now?



04x Engineering & Manufacturing Development (EMD) aircraft, all 4 have been used for testing
07x Batch 1 LRIP (Low Rate Initial Production) aircraft,first two have been used for testing
12x Batch 2 LRIP aircraft
01x Batch 3 LRIP aircraft


Total Assembled : 24,


Damn! Will the first 6 aircraft which have been used for testing go to the USAF once testing and certification is complete?

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2017 4:46 pm
by 747classic
Slug71 wrote:

Damn! Will the first 6 aircraft which have been used for testing go to the USAF once testing and certification is complete?


AFAIK all 6 test aircraft will be refurbished and will be delivered to the USAF.
The first four test aircraft (VH001-VH004) are "real" test wired aircraft and need far more modifications, before delivery to the USAF
VH005 and VH006 are later added to the test program to speed up the test flying to cater for further delays and are LRIP aircraft, locally adapted for specific testing.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2017 5:11 pm
by Slug71
Thanks.
Not sure how many aircraft each base has, but if 12 aircraft make up a squadron, at least 3 squadrons should have a fairly quick transition.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 6:43 pm
by KarelXWB
KC-46 may face further delays:

A trick that mutes a blaring horn when the autopilots on all Boeing models—except the 787—are manually disconnected could potentially cause an entry-into-service delay for the company’s KC-46 Pegasus tanker, a derivative of the 767-2C freighter.


http://aviationweek.com/defense/autopil ... uble-kc-46

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 8:17 pm
by Stitch
Considering the 767-2C is only going to be operated by a single customer (the USAF in the KC-46A configuration) during the exemption period, I would expect the FAA to grant this waiver as it should be easy enough to add this into the training regimen for the smallish pool of USAF pilots who will be flying the plane until the software roll-out is ready.

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 10:37 pm
by 7BOEING7
I don't think this will cause any delays, should be able to fix that rather quickly. Don't know were Boeing came up with their 99%, I did it for years along with most of the people I flew with IIRC..

Re: KC-46 Production, Testing And Delivery

Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 10:48 pm
by Stitch
7BOEING7 wrote:
I don't think this will cause any delays, should be able to fix that rather quickly. Don't know were Boeing came up with their 99%, I did it for years along with most of the people I flew with IIRC..


That's the key - if you know how to do it, there is a 100% success rate. If you do not know how to do it, then there is a 1% chance (per Boeing's studies) that you will be successful and this is Boeing's argument - the chances for an Air Force pilot not knowing the procedure accidentally triggering it is so low they should be granted the exception. And I imagine if you train them on the procedure so they don't do it, the chance should be 0%.