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Boeing KC-46 Pegasus

The Boeing KC-46 Pegasus is an American military aerial refueling and strategic military transport aircraft developed by Boeing from its 767 jet airliner. In February 2011, the tanker was selected by the United States Air Force (USAF) as the winner in the KC-X tanker competition to replace older Boeing KC-135 Stratotankers. The first aircraft was delivered to the Air Force in January 2019.[4] The Air Force intends to procure 179 Pegasus aircraft by 2027.

KC-46 Pegasus
A U.S. Air Force KC-46A with refueling boom lowered
Role Tanker/transport
National origin United States
Manufacturer Boeing Defense, Space & Security
First flight 25 September 2015
Introduction 2019
Status In service[1][2]
Primary users United States Air Force
Japan Air Self-Defense Force
Produced 2013–present
Number built 78 as of October 2023[3]
Developed from Boeing KC-767

Development Edit

Background Edit

In 2001, the U.S. Air Force began a procurement program to replace around 100 of its oldest KC-135E Stratotankers, and selected Boeing's KC-767. The Boeing tanker received the KC-767A designation from the United States Department of Defense in 2002 and appeared in the 2004 edition of DoD model designation report.[5] The USAF decided to lease 100 KC-767 tankers from Boeing.[6]

U.S. Senator John McCain and others criticized the draft leasing agreement as being wasteful and problematic. In response to protests, the USAF struck a compromise in November 2003, whereby it would purchase 80 KC-767s and lease 20 more.[7][8] In December 2003, the Pentagon announced a freeze on the program over an investigation into alleged corruption that led to the jailing of one of its former procurement executives who applied to work for Boeing.[9] The KC-767A contract was canceled by the DoD in January 2006.[10]

USAF KC-X program Edit

In 2006, the USAF released a request for proposal (RFP) for a new tanker program, KC-X, to be selected by 2007. Boeing announced it may enter a higher capability tanker based on the Boeing 777, named the KC-777 Strategic Tanker. Airbus partnered with Northrop Grumman to offer the Airbus A330 MRTT, the tanker version of the A330, which was marketed to the USAF under the designation KC-30.[11] In January 2007, the USAF issued the KC-X Aerial Refueling Aircraft RFP, calling for 179 tankers, four system development and demonstration and 175 production, in a contract worth an estimated US$40 billion (~$51.1 billion in 2021).[12] Northrop and EADS expressed dissatisfaction at how the RFP was structured and threatened to withdraw, leaving only Boeing in the running.[13]

 
An Italian Air Force KC-767 on the apron at McConnell AFB/Boeing Factory in Wichita, Kansas, in 2010

In February 2007, Boeing announced it was offering the KC-767 Advanced Tanker for the KC-X,[14] stating that the KC-767 was a better fit than the KC-777 for the requirements.[15] In April 2007, Boeing submitted its KC-767 tanker proposal to USAF.[16] The KC-767 offered for this KC-X round was based on the in-development 767-200LRF (Long Range Freighter), rather than the -200ER on which Italian and Japanese KC-767 aircraft are based,[17] differing by combining the -200ER fuselage, -300F wing, gear, cargo door and floor, -400ER digital flightdeck and flaps, uprated engines, and "sixth-generation" fly-by-wire fuel delivery boom.[18]

Boeing submitted its final proposal in January 2008.[19] In February 2008, the DoD chose the KC-30 over the KC-767, the USAF subsequently designated it KC-45A.[20] Boeing submitted a protest to the United States Government Accountability Office in March 2008 and waged a public relations campaign in support of their protest.[21] In June, after USAF admissions on bidding process flaws, the GAO upheld Boeing's protest and recommended the contract be rebid.[21] In July 2008, Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced that the USAF would reopen bidding,[22] and put the contract into an "expedited recompetition" with Defense Undersecretary John Young in charge of the selection process, not the USAF.[23] A draft of the revised RFP was provided to contractors in August 2008 for comments.[24] However, in September 2008, the DoD canceled the KC-X solicitation.[25]

In September 2009, the USAF began a new round of bids with a clearer set of criteria, including reducing the number of requirements from 800 to 373 in an attempt to simplify the process and allow a more objective decision to be made.[26] In March 2010, Boeing announced it would bid the KC-767 for the new KC-X round.[27] EADS stated in April 2010 it would submit a bid without Northrop Grumman as a U.S. partner.[28][29] Boeing submitted its KC-767 "NewGen Tanker" bid, based on the 767-200 with an improved version of the KC-10's refueling boom, and cockpit displays from the 787, in July 2010.[30][31][32] Boeing submitted a revised bid in February 2011.[33]

In addition to the KC-X, observers speculate that a modified KC-46 will be used as the basis of the KC-Y tanker program, the second step of the USAF's three-step tanker renewal plan, as replacing it with something entirely new is likely too big a risk.[34] In September 2016, Air Mobility Command stated that the follow-on KC-Y acquisition program to replace the remaining KC-135s had been abandoned in favor of further KC-46s with upgrades.[35]

Selection and early development Edit

In February 2011, the USAF announced the selection of Boeing's KC-767 bid, which was designated KC-46A.[36][37] Boeing was awarded a development contract, which called for the delivery of 18 initial operational KC-46s by 2017. The USAF sought a total of 179 new tankers.[38] In June 2011, development costs were reportedly projected to overrun by about $300 million (~$362 million in 2021). Boeing would be responsible for this amount, which exceeds the contract cost cap of $4.9 billion.[39][40] In July 2011, revised projections indicated a reduced cost overrun.[41] In 2013, the USAF added additional crews and flight hours to their future plans in response to a review that showed that the best of current plans did not take full advantage of the KC-46's cargo and aeromedical evacuation advantages over the KC-135.[42]

In August 2013, Boeing and the USAF completed a critical design review (CDR) for the KC-46. With the CDR complete, the design was set and production and testing could proceed. Wing assembly for the first aircraft began in June 2013. Flight testing of the 767-2C airframe, which would be reconfigured into the KC-46, was scheduled to begin in mid-2014. The first fully-equipped KC-46 was projected to fly in early 2015. The contract called for Boeing to build four test aircraft and deliver 18 combat-ready tankers by August 2017. The USAF intended to buy 179 KC-46s, with all delivered by 2028.[43][44]

In December 2013, Boeing joined the wings and fuselage for the first 767-2C to be adapted into a KC-46A.[45] The first of four 767-2C provision freighters were to complete assembly by the end of January 2014. Once assembled, it would go through ground vibration and instrumentation testing and have body fuel tanks added. The first test flight would occur during summer 2014 and include measuring its rate of climb and descent. The Engineering Manufacturing and Design (EMD) model was to be integrated with the needed systems and technologies to become a military-standard KC-46A by January 2015. Seven low-rate production KC-46s were to be delivered in 2015, 12 in 2016, and 15 delivered annually from 2017 to 2027.[46] The last of four test aircraft began assembly in January 2014.[47]

In April 2014, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that the KC-46 program was projected to underrun its projected cost estimate of $51.7 billion by $300 million. The program acquisition unit cost per jet will be $287 million, $1.8 million less than estimated. The GAO noted that delays in training air crew and maintainers could cause testing to slip 6–12 months, but stated that the program had not missed any major milestones and that the development of about 15.8 million lines of software code was progressing as planned.[48] In May 2014, the USAF estimated the development program's cost, including the first four aircraft, could rise from $4.4–4.9 billion to $5.85 billion.[49]

In July 2014, Boeing recorded a $272 million pre-tax charge to cover the tanker's wiring redesign.[50][51] The wiring issue arose when it was found that 5-10% of the wiring bundles did not have sufficient separation distance or were not properly shielded to meet a USAF requirement for double or triple-redundant wiring for some mission systems. In September 2014, it was confirmed that the wiring redesign would delay the first 767-2C flight from June 2014 to November 2014.[52][53] In March 2015, the program cost to develop and procure 179 tankers was projected to total US$43.16 billion (~$48.8 billion in 2021).[54]

Flight tests and delays Edit

 
A KC-46A refuels an A-10 Thunderbolt II.

The 767-2C's first flight took place on 28 December 2014. It flew from Paine Field and landed at Boeing Field.[55][56] In March 2015, a refueling test with a C-17 transport was stopped because of a higher-than-expected boom axial load while delivering fuel. The problem was caused by the turbulent "bow wave effect" generated by two large aircraft flying in line.[57][58][59] In January 2016, the KC-46 successfully refueled an F-16 for the first time during a 5 hour 36 minute sortie. Test refueling of several other military aircraft followed, including a C-17, F/A-18, A-10, and AV-8B.[60] In February 2016, a KC-46 refueled an F/A-18, using its probe-and-drogue system for the first time.[61]

In July 2015, Boeing announced a further $835 million (~$944 million in 2021) pretax charge for the faulty integrated fuel system's redesign and retrofit.[62] Wiring and fuel system flaws could delay contracts worth $3 billion for up to eight months. Following schedule revisions agreed by the USAF and Boeing, the first flight of a fully equipped KC-46 was delayed to as late as September 2015.[63] The Bank of America/Merrill Lynch noted in July 2015 "We fail to understand how Boeing could take a $1.26 billion (~$1.42 billion in 2021) pre-tax charge (since it won the contract over Airbus) on the Boeing KC-46A program since the program is based on the 767 airframe that has been in production for over 30 years."[64]

In March 2016, the Defense Contract Management Agency reportedly had low confidence in the August 2017 deadline, predicting the first 18 tankers' delivery to run about seven months late based on past performance and current risks, such as production delays, a new joint USAF-Boeing schedule review, and flight test uncertainties. The Pentagon's test office was to start combat testing in April 2017.[65]

An April 2016 GAO report projected an additional four months beyond the August 2017 target to deliver 18 KC-46s, and that operational testing will not begin until May 2017 and will not be completed until two months after delivery of the first 18 aircraft, risking late discoveries of problems. The GAO noted that Boeing had not obtained Federal Aviation Administration's approval for two key aerial refueling systems—the centerline drogue system and the wing aerial refueling pods, which were built without following FAA processes—Boeing projected readiness for FAA certification by July 2017, over three years late.[66] The 18 KC-46s were to include the four EMD aircraft raised to operational standards, plus the first 14 low-rate production tankers. Instead, 16 of the 18 were off the production line. Boeing was liable for all late design fixes on tankers delivered before testing ended.[67]

In April 2016, the fourth test aircraft, 767-2C EMD-3, first flew. EMD-3 focused on environmental control systems, including temperature and smoke penetration testing.[68] Two days later, Boeing took another pre-tax charge of $243 million for cost overruns, bringing the total amount paid for tanker cost overruns to $1.5 billion. Boeing president and chief executive Dennis Muilenburg stated that 80% of the test points required for a positive Milestone C decision had been completed.[69] Flight testing helped determine whether a refueling fault could be resolved by either software or hardware changes, which Boeing worked on in parallel.[70]

In May 2016, a further delay of at least six months due to technical and supply chain issues was reported, potentially requiring program re-structuring and cuts. At the time, only 20% of the flight tests were completed.[71] In June 2016, USAF spokesman Maj. Rob Leese confirmed that, while the contract with Boeing lacked predefined delay penalties, not delivering the 18 certified KC-46s by August 2017 is a contract schedule breach, and that the USAF would receive considerations from Boeing in the schedule re-baseline after the RRA delay.[72][73] In July 2016, US Defense Acquisitions Chief Frank Kendall confirmed that the tanker program office was studying the delay's cost to the USAF, and that it was entitled to consideration for losses from operating the KC-135 for longer than planned.[74]

On 8 June 2016, Boeing's defense unit CEO, Leanne Caret, reported that a modified boom would be flown shortly.[75] On 10 July 2016, Caret reported positive results from early flight tests with the revised boom.[74] On 21 July 2016, Boeing took a further $393 million charge on the program, bringing the total value of penalties to almost $1.9 billion. The charge reflected higher costs associated with the schedule and technical challenges, such as the boom axial load issue, delays in the certification process and concurrency between testing and initial production.[76] The initial 18 KC-46s were equipped with the boom and centerline drogue, but not the wing-mounted wing-aerial refueling pods (WARP) needed for full contractual Required Assets Available, they were delivered separately later.[77]

On 5 July 2016, USAF spokesman Daryl Mayer stated that, despite the testing delays, Milestone C approval was expected in the following month, and that Boeing would add a fifth EMD aircraft to accelerate testing. EMD-1 and EMD-3 primarily conducted flight tests towards FAA airworthiness certificates, while EMD-2 and EMD-4 focused on USAF aerial refueling and mission system testing.[78] An F-16 was successfully refueled on 8 July, and a C-17 on 12 July 2016. Once the hardware fix is verified, a KC-46 with the updated boom underwent regression testing on the F-16, followed by refueling demonstrations with the C-17 and A-10 for the final test for Milestone C approval.[79][80] On 15 July 2016, the KC-46 successfully refueled an A-10, offloading 1,500 pounds of fuel at 15,000 feet. At the time, more than 900 flight test hours have been completed by the five EMD aircraft.[81] On 12 August 2016, the program received Milestone C approval, indicating production readiness. The issuing of contracts for two lots covering 19 aircraft was expected within 30 days.[82]

 
A KC-46A connects with an F-35A Lightning II over California, Jan. 2019.

In January 2018, Air Mobility Command stated that tests for final FAA certification were roughly 94 percent complete.[83] Boeing announced its FAA certification in September 2018, with military certification outstanding. Aircraft refueled during testing include the F-16, F/A-18, AV-8B, C-17, A-10, KC-10, KC-135 and the KC-46 itself.[84] In January 2019, a KC-46 from the 418th Flight Test Squadron at Edwards AFB made connection with an F-35A, the occasion being the first time that the KC-46 connected with a fifth-generation jet fighter.[85] Completion of refueling certification of the F-35 by the KC-46 was announced by the 412th Test Wing in June 2019.[86]

In March 2020, the USAF announced that chronic leaks in the fuel system had been upgraded to a Category I deficiency. The USAF identified the issue in June 2019, but had not originally believed it to be serious. Crews became aware of the issue when they discovered fuel between the primary and secondary fuel protection barriers. There was no known root cause at the time of the announcement.[87] By January 2021, Boeing's losses on the program were estimated at $5 billion (~$5 billion in 2021).[88] At the time, it was expected that the KC-46 would not be combat ready until at least late 2023.[89]

Design Edit

 
Seats fitted in the interior of a KC-46A

The KC-46 Pegasus is a variant of the Boeing 767 and is a widebody, low-wing cantilever monoplane with a conventional empennage featuring a single fin and rudder. It has a retractable tricycle landing gear and a hydraulic flight control system. The Pegasus is powered by two Pratt & Whitney PW4062 engines, one mounted under each wing. It has been described as combining "the 767-200ER's fuselage, with the 767-300F's wing, gear, cargo door and floor, with the 767-400ER digital flightdeck and flaps".[90] The KC-46 uses a similar Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) to that implicated in two 737 MAX crashes; in March 2019, the USAF began reviewing KC-46 training due to this feature. Unlike the 737, the KC-46's MCAS takes input from dual redundant angle of attack sensors and disengages with stick input by the pilot.[91]

The flightdeck has room for a crew of four with a forward crew compartment with seats for 15 crew members and in the rear fuselage either palletized passenger seating for 58, or 18 pallets in cargo configuration. The rear compartment can also be used in an aero-medical configuration for 54 patients (24 on litters).[92] Quick ingress from the ground is available via a ladder that can be pulled down near the front landing gear.[93] The KC-46A can carry 212,299 lb (96,297 kg) of fuel,[94] 10 percent more than the KC-135, and 65,000 lb (29,000 kg) of cargo. Survivability is improved with infrared countermeasures and the aircraft has limited electronic warfare capabilities.[46] It uses manual flight controls, allowing unrestricted maneuverability to avoid threats anywhere in the flight envelope.[95]

 
Aerial Refueling Operator Station

At the rear of the KC-46 is a fly-by-wire refueling boom supplemented by wing air refueling pods at each wingtip and a centerline drogue system under the rear fuselage so it can handle both types of refueling in one mission.[92] The boom includes a hydraulic relief valve system, similar to those on the KC-10 and KC-767 tankers, to relieve axial pressure in the event of excessive loads building up on the boom.[75] In order to address the stiff boom issue, which keeps a KC-46 from refueling lightweight, thrust-limited receivers like the A-10, Boeing is replacing the current actuator with one using a pressure-flow PQ valve in the 2023 time frame.[96]

Rather than using a single boom operator seated or prone at the tail looking out a window, the Aerial Refueling Operator Station (AROS) seats two operators at the front of the tanker. AROS includes three main displays for each operator to display images from multiple multi-spectral cameras distributed around the aircraft. The central 2D/3D display provides a rear-facing view for boom refueling operations. Boom operators can execute their mission in total darkness with both aircraft blacked out.[97] The hybrid 2D-3D system requires stereoscopic glasses to be fully effective.[97]

The Remote Vision System (RVS) that feeds video to the AROS has been problematic, motion viewed in the RVS versus which can create a depth compression and curvature effect.[97] Blackouts and washouts on the displays during refueling, caused by shadows or direct sunlight are a problem that will be fixed by the RVS 2.0 upgrade along with depth perception issues via the use of new cameras and a full-color high-definition screen. Experienced boom operators of older tankers still prefer the KC-46, even with its current drawbacks.[98]

Operational history Edit

United States Edit

 
The first delivered KC-46A (15-46009) lands at McConnell AFB in January 2019.

In April 2014, the USAF announced that the KC-46 will be based at McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita, Kansas, with an optimistic expectation of receiving the first of 36 tankers in 2016.[99][100] McConnell AFB was chosen because it had low construction costs and it is in a location with a high demand for air refueling, having KC-135s based there. In addition to McConnell AFB serving as the home base, up to 10 operating bases will be used by the KC-46. Crews will be trained at Altus Air Force Base, Oklahoma, which was also chosen for its limited construction needs and for its existing experience with training programs for the C-17 Globemaster and the KC-135.[101]

In October 2015, the USAF announced that Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina, was chosen as the preferred alternative for the first Reserve-led KC-46A main operating base, with an anticipated arrival of the KC-46As at Seymour Johnson in fiscal year 2019. Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma; Westover Air Reserve Base, Massachusetts; and Grissom Air Reserve Base, Indiana, were named as the reasonable alternatives. The October 2015 announcement also stated that the USAF intended to initiate an Environmental Impact Analysis Process (EIAP), which the USAF would use to make its final basing decisions.[102]

On 10 January 2019, the USAF took delivery of the first KC-46, well past the original 2016 delivery date, albeit with two issues outstanding and funds withheld.[103] The two outstanding issues were inadequate boom pressure when refueling the A-10 Warthog and glare induced distortion under certain conditions in the remote vision system (RVS). The USAF acknowledged that they failed to give Boeing adequate specifications for the A-10.[104] At milestone C, Boeing gave the USAF a boom design that used the international standard of 1400 lbs of thrust resistance, which they accepted, but the A-10 is only able to generate 650 lbs.[105]

On 25 January 2019, the 22d Air Refueling Wing at McConnell AFB received its first two KC-46As (15-46009 and 17-46031).[106] In February 2019, the 97th Air Mobility Wing at Altus AFB received its first KC-46.[107]

 
A KC-46 preparing to refuel the Navy Blue Angels over South Dakota, July 2020

In April 2019, it was confirmed that the USAF halted all deliveries on 23 March and until further notification, as loose material and debris were found in planes already delivered.[108]

In August 2019, the 157th Air Refueling Wing at Pease Air National Guard Base received its first KC-46A.[109]

In September 2019, the USAF restricted the KC-46 from carrying cargo and passengers due to an issue with the floor cargo locks unlocking mid-flight.[110] A fix was approved by the USAF in November 2019 and were retrofitted upon delivered aircraft.[111] By 20 December 2019, four KC-46As had received new cargo locks and the USAF had closed the Category 1 deficiency and cleared retrofitted aircraft for cargo and passenger operations.[112]

In June 2020, the 916th Air Refueling Wing at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base received its first KC-46A.[113] By January 2021, Boeing had delivered 42 KC-46As to the USAF and was on contract for 94 tankers.[114]

In early 2021, the USAF cleared the KC-46 for limited operational use. The type can conduct U.S.-based refueling only, requiring other tankers for deployments to combat areas. At the time, the KC-46 could refuel the B-52, F-15, F-16, and F/A-18, but it was not approved to service the A-10, F-22, F-35, B-1, or B-2. It is expected to be fully combat-ready by 2023.[115][116][117]

During September 2022, the USAF approved the KC-46 for general operational use, closing out a 15-month evaluation period.[118]

Export bids Edit

Japan Edit

 
A KC-46 taking off from Yokota Air Base in Japan in October 2018

The Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) operates four of the earlier Boeing KC-767 tankers that were delivered from 2008 to 2010.[119] In October 2015, Japan selected the KC-46, with a contract for three tankers expected in 2016.[120] The decision allows for common operations and training with the USAF. Japan was reportedly attracted to its capability to refuel MV-22 Osprey tiltrotors, which the JASDF is to receive. Airbus declined to bid its A330 MRTT as they viewed Japan's request for proposals as intended for the KC-46.[121][122]

 
A Japanese KC-46 in 2023

The three tankers are to be fielded around 2020 at a cost of more than ¥20.8 billion, about US$173 million (~$180 million in 2021) per aircraft.[123][124] An order for a third and fourth KC-46 was placed in October 2020.[125] Japan ordered two additional KC-46s in December 2022, bringing Japan's order total to six.[126] In February 2021, the JASDF conducted its first KC-46 flight.[127] Training of Japanese KC-46 pilots began in June 2021 and Japan received its first KC-46 in November 2021.[128]

India Edit

In January 2018, the Indian Air Force re-launched its air-to-air refueling procurement program, and sent out a request for information for six refueling aircraft to Airbus, Boeing, and Ilyushin, to which Boeing could respond with an offer for the KC-46 Pegasus.[129] Airbus and Boeing responded to the request for information, while Ilyushin was disqualified as the official requirement is for an aircraft with two turbofan engines.[130]

In April 2022, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) announced that it had entered into an MoU with Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) to convert passenger aircraft into multi-mission tanker transport (MMTT) aircraft in India.[131]

Indonesia Edit

In January 2018, Indonesian Air Force officials were reported as saying they were studying both the Airbus A330 MRTT and KC-46 tankers for a future modernization program, expected to take place after the current Airbus A400M Atlas program completes. The Indonesian Air Force is said to compare the tankers on compatibility with the force's current aircraft, life-cycle costs, interoperability with current and future assets, and potential funding and technology transfer options with state-owned aircraft manufacturer Indonesian Aerospace.[132]

Israel Edit

In March 2020, the State Department approved the Foreign Military Sale to Israel of eight KC-46s and related equipment for a cost of $2.4 billion (~$2.5 billion in 2021).[133] In September 2022, Boeing announced Israel has purchased four KC-46s for delivery in 2025.[134] The contract includes provisions to enable Israel to potentialy purchase a further four KC-46s.[135]

Italy Edit

In November 2022, it was reported that Italy is negotiating the purchase of six KC-46s, to be designated KC-767B by Italy, after deciding to forgo modernization work on the current fleet of four KC-767As. The purchase could include logistics support for the KC-46A fleet for a period of five years. The total cost of the contract could be approximately €1.12 billion. Italy's four KC-767As would be sold to Boeing.[136][137]

Failed bids Edit

Canada Edit

In February 2017, Boeing stated it would bid the KC-46A for the Royal Canadian Air Force's Strategic Tanker Transport Capability competition, which is to replace Canada's fleet of CC-150 Polaris tankers. The contract is valued at C$1.5+ billion.[138] In April 2021, Airbus Defence and Space and their submission of the A330 MRTT was deemed to be the only qualified bidder to replace the CC-150.[139]

Korea Edit

In June 2014, Boeing submitted the KC-46 for the Republic of Korea Air Force's requirement for four aerial tankers. The KC-46 competed with the Airbus A330 MRTT.[140] South Korea selected the Airbus A330 MRTT in June 2015.[141]

Poland Edit

Boeing pitched the KC-46 to the Polish Air Force for its tanker requirement.[142] In December 2014, Airbus was awarded a contract for four A330 MRTTs from a consortium of Poland, the Netherlands, and Norway.[143][144]

United Arab Emirates Edit

In May 2019, according to Boeing, the United Arab Emirates made a formal request to procure three KC-46As.[145][146] In November 2021 the United Arab Emirates ordered two more Airbus A330 MRTTs for a total of five.[147]

Operators Edit

  Israel
  Japan
  United States

Specifications Edit

Data from USAF KC-46A,[94] Boeing KC-767,[171] Boeing 767-200ER[172]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 3 (2 pilots, 1 boom operator) basic crew; 15 permanent seats for additional/optional air crew members, including aeromedical evacuation crew members
  • Capacity: seating for up to 114 people, 18 463L pallets, or 58 patients (24 litters, 34 ambulatory) and 65,000 lb (29,500 kg) payload
  • Length: 165 ft 6 in (50.5 m)
  • Wingspan: 157 ft 8 in (48.1 m)
  • Height: 52 ft 1 in (15.9 m)
  • Empty weight: 181,610 lb (82,377 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 415,000 lb (188,240 kg)
  • Fuel Capacity: 212,299 lb (96,297 kg)
    Fuel Capacity (vol): 31,220 US gal (118,200 L)
    Maximum Transfer Fuel Load: 207,672 lb (94,198 kg)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Pratt & Whitney PW4062 turbofan, 62,000[171] lbf (280 kN) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 570 mph (914 km/h, 500 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 530 mph (851 km/h, 460 kn)
  • Range: 7,350 mi (11,830 km, 6,385 nmi) ; global with in flight refueling[171]
  • Service ceiling: 40,100 ft (12,200 m)

See also Edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • Official website  
  • "KC-46A approved for production". Secretary of the Air Force for Public Affairs. 12 August 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2016.

boeing, pegasus, american, military, aerial, refueling, strategic, military, transport, aircraft, developed, boeing, from, airliner, february, 2011, tanker, selected, united, states, force, usaf, winner, tanker, competition, replace, older, boeing, stratotanke. The Boeing KC 46 Pegasus is an American military aerial refueling and strategic military transport aircraft developed by Boeing from its 767 jet airliner In February 2011 the tanker was selected by the United States Air Force USAF as the winner in the KC X tanker competition to replace older Boeing KC 135 Stratotankers The first aircraft was delivered to the Air Force in January 2019 4 The Air Force intends to procure 179 Pegasus aircraft by 2027 KC 46 PegasusA U S Air Force KC 46A with refueling boom loweredRole Tanker transportNational origin United StatesManufacturer Boeing Defense Space amp SecurityFirst flight 25 September 2015Introduction 2019Status In service 1 2 Primary users United States Air ForceJapan Air Self Defense ForceProduced 2013 presentNumber built 78 as of October 2023 3 Developed from Boeing KC 767 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 USAF KC X program 1 3 Selection and early development 1 4 Flight tests and delays 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 United States 3 2 Export bids 3 2 1 Japan 3 2 2 India 3 2 3 Indonesia 3 2 4 Israel 3 2 5 Italy 3 3 Failed bids 3 3 1 Canada 3 3 2 Korea 3 3 3 Poland 3 3 4 United Arab Emirates 4 Operators 5 Specifications 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDevelopment EditBackground Edit Main article Boeing KC 767 In 2001 the U S Air Force began a procurement program to replace around 100 of its oldest KC 135E Stratotankers and selected Boeing s KC 767 The Boeing tanker received the KC 767A designation from the United States Department of Defense in 2002 and appeared in the 2004 edition of DoD model designation report 5 The USAF decided to lease 100 KC 767 tankers from Boeing 6 U S Senator John McCain and others criticized the draft leasing agreement as being wasteful and problematic In response to protests the USAF struck a compromise in November 2003 whereby it would purchase 80 KC 767s and lease 20 more 7 8 In December 2003 the Pentagon announced a freeze on the program over an investigation into alleged corruption that led to the jailing of one of its former procurement executives who applied to work for Boeing 9 The KC 767A contract was canceled by the DoD in January 2006 10 USAF KC X program Edit Main article KC X In 2006 the USAF released a request for proposal RFP for a new tanker program KC X to be selected by 2007 Boeing announced it may enter a higher capability tanker based on the Boeing 777 named the KC 777 Strategic Tanker Airbus partnered with Northrop Grumman to offer the Airbus A330 MRTT the tanker version of the A330 which was marketed to the USAF under the designation KC 30 11 In January 2007 the USAF issued the KC X Aerial Refueling Aircraft RFP calling for 179 tankers four system development and demonstration and 175 production in a contract worth an estimated US 40 billion 51 1 billion in 2021 12 Northrop and EADS expressed dissatisfaction at how the RFP was structured and threatened to withdraw leaving only Boeing in the running 13 nbsp An Italian Air Force KC 767 on the apron at McConnell AFB Boeing Factory in Wichita Kansas in 2010In February 2007 Boeing announced it was offering the KC 767 Advanced Tanker for the KC X 14 stating that the KC 767 was a better fit than the KC 777 for the requirements 15 In April 2007 Boeing submitted its KC 767 tanker proposal to USAF 16 The KC 767 offered for this KC X round was based on the in development 767 200LRF Long Range Freighter rather than the 200ER on which Italian and Japanese KC 767 aircraft are based 17 differing by combining the 200ER fuselage 300F wing gear cargo door and floor 400ER digital flightdeck and flaps uprated engines and sixth generation fly by wire fuel delivery boom 18 Boeing submitted its final proposal in January 2008 19 In February 2008 the DoD chose the KC 30 over the KC 767 the USAF subsequently designated it KC 45A 20 Boeing submitted a protest to the United States Government Accountability Office in March 2008 and waged a public relations campaign in support of their protest 21 In June after USAF admissions on bidding process flaws the GAO upheld Boeing s protest and recommended the contract be rebid 21 In July 2008 Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced that the USAF would reopen bidding 22 and put the contract into an expedited recompetition with Defense Undersecretary John Young in charge of the selection process not the USAF 23 A draft of the revised RFP was provided to contractors in August 2008 for comments 24 However in September 2008 the DoD canceled the KC X solicitation 25 In September 2009 the USAF began a new round of bids with a clearer set of criteria including reducing the number of requirements from 800 to 373 in an attempt to simplify the process and allow a more objective decision to be made 26 In March 2010 Boeing announced it would bid the KC 767 for the new KC X round 27 EADS stated in April 2010 it would submit a bid without Northrop Grumman as a U S partner 28 29 Boeing submitted its KC 767 NewGen Tanker bid based on the 767 200 with an improved version of the KC 10 s refueling boom and cockpit displays from the 787 in July 2010 30 31 32 Boeing submitted a revised bid in February 2011 33 In addition to the KC X observers speculate that a modified KC 46 will be used as the basis of the KC Y tanker program the second step of the USAF s three step tanker renewal plan as replacing it with something entirely new is likely too big a risk 34 In September 2016 Air Mobility Command stated that the follow on KC Y acquisition program to replace the remaining KC 135s had been abandoned in favor of further KC 46s with upgrades 35 Selection and early development Edit In February 2011 the USAF announced the selection of Boeing s KC 767 bid which was designated KC 46A 36 37 Boeing was awarded a development contract which called for the delivery of 18 initial operational KC 46s by 2017 The USAF sought a total of 179 new tankers 38 In June 2011 development costs were reportedly projected to overrun by about 300 million 362 million in 2021 Boeing would be responsible for this amount which exceeds the contract cost cap of 4 9 billion 39 40 In July 2011 revised projections indicated a reduced cost overrun 41 In 2013 the USAF added additional crews and flight hours to their future plans in response to a review that showed that the best of current plans did not take full advantage of the KC 46 s cargo and aeromedical evacuation advantages over the KC 135 42 In August 2013 Boeing and the USAF completed a critical design review CDR for the KC 46 With the CDR complete the design was set and production and testing could proceed Wing assembly for the first aircraft began in June 2013 Flight testing of the 767 2C airframe which would be reconfigured into the KC 46 was scheduled to begin in mid 2014 The first fully equipped KC 46 was projected to fly in early 2015 The contract called for Boeing to build four test aircraft and deliver 18 combat ready tankers by August 2017 The USAF intended to buy 179 KC 46s with all delivered by 2028 43 44 In December 2013 Boeing joined the wings and fuselage for the first 767 2C to be adapted into a KC 46A 45 The first of four 767 2C provision freighters were to complete assembly by the end of January 2014 Once assembled it would go through ground vibration and instrumentation testing and have body fuel tanks added The first test flight would occur during summer 2014 and include measuring its rate of climb and descent The Engineering Manufacturing and Design EMD model was to be integrated with the needed systems and technologies to become a military standard KC 46A by January 2015 Seven low rate production KC 46s were to be delivered in 2015 12 in 2016 and 15 delivered annually from 2017 to 2027 46 The last of four test aircraft began assembly in January 2014 47 In April 2014 the Government Accountability Office GAO found that the KC 46 program was projected to underrun its projected cost estimate of 51 7 billion by 300 million The program acquisition unit cost per jet will be 287 million 1 8 million less than estimated The GAO noted that delays in training air crew and maintainers could cause testing to slip 6 12 months but stated that the program had not missed any major milestones and that the development of about 15 8 million lines of software code was progressing as planned 48 In May 2014 the USAF estimated the development program s cost including the first four aircraft could rise from 4 4 4 9 billion to 5 85 billion 49 In July 2014 Boeing recorded a 272 million pre tax charge to cover the tanker s wiring redesign 50 51 The wiring issue arose when it was found that 5 10 of the wiring bundles did not have sufficient separation distance or were not properly shielded to meet a USAF requirement for double or triple redundant wiring for some mission systems In September 2014 it was confirmed that the wiring redesign would delay the first 767 2C flight from June 2014 to November 2014 52 53 In March 2015 the program cost to develop and procure 179 tankers was projected to total US 43 16 billion 48 8 billion in 2021 54 Flight tests and delays Edit nbsp A KC 46A refuels an A 10 Thunderbolt II The 767 2C s first flight took place on 28 December 2014 It flew from Paine Field and landed at Boeing Field 55 56 In March 2015 a refueling test with a C 17 transport was stopped because of a higher than expected boom axial load while delivering fuel The problem was caused by the turbulent bow wave effect generated by two large aircraft flying in line 57 58 59 In January 2016 the KC 46 successfully refueled an F 16 for the first time during a 5 hour 36 minute sortie Test refueling of several other military aircraft followed including a C 17 F A 18 A 10 and AV 8B 60 In February 2016 a KC 46 refueled an F A 18 using its probe and drogue system for the first time 61 In July 2015 Boeing announced a further 835 million 944 million in 2021 pretax charge for the faulty integrated fuel system s redesign and retrofit 62 Wiring and fuel system flaws could delay contracts worth 3 billion for up to eight months Following schedule revisions agreed by the USAF and Boeing the first flight of a fully equipped KC 46 was delayed to as late as September 2015 63 The Bank of America Merrill Lynch noted in July 2015 We fail to understand how Boeing could take a 1 26 billion 1 42 billion in 2021 pre tax charge since it won the contract over Airbus on the Boeing KC 46A program since the program is based on the 767 airframe that has been in production for over 30 years 64 In March 2016 the Defense Contract Management Agency reportedly had low confidence in the August 2017 deadline predicting the first 18 tankers delivery to run about seven months late based on past performance and current risks such as production delays a new joint USAF Boeing schedule review and flight test uncertainties The Pentagon s test office was to start combat testing in April 2017 65 An April 2016 GAO report projected an additional four months beyond the August 2017 target to deliver 18 KC 46s and that operational testing will not begin until May 2017 and will not be completed until two months after delivery of the first 18 aircraft risking late discoveries of problems The GAO noted that Boeing had not obtained Federal Aviation Administration s approval for two key aerial refueling systems the centerline drogue system and the wing aerial refueling pods which were built without following FAA processes Boeing projected readiness for FAA certification by July 2017 over three years late 66 The 18 KC 46s were to include the four EMD aircraft raised to operational standards plus the first 14 low rate production tankers Instead 16 of the 18 were off the production line Boeing was liable for all late design fixes on tankers delivered before testing ended 67 In April 2016 the fourth test aircraft 767 2C EMD 3 first flew EMD 3 focused on environmental control systems including temperature and smoke penetration testing 68 Two days later Boeing took another pre tax charge of 243 million for cost overruns bringing the total amount paid for tanker cost overruns to 1 5 billion Boeing president and chief executive Dennis Muilenburg stated that 80 of the test points required for a positive Milestone C decision had been completed 69 Flight testing helped determine whether a refueling fault could be resolved by either software or hardware changes which Boeing worked on in parallel 70 In May 2016 a further delay of at least six months due to technical and supply chain issues was reported potentially requiring program re structuring and cuts At the time only 20 of the flight tests were completed 71 In June 2016 USAF spokesman Maj Rob Leese confirmed that while the contract with Boeing lacked predefined delay penalties not delivering the 18 certified KC 46s by August 2017 is a contract schedule breach and that the USAF would receive considerations from Boeing in the schedule re baseline after the RRA delay 72 73 In July 2016 US Defense Acquisitions Chief Frank Kendall confirmed that the tanker program office was studying the delay s cost to the USAF and that it was entitled to consideration for losses from operating the KC 135 for longer than planned 74 On 8 June 2016 Boeing s defense unit CEO Leanne Caret reported that a modified boom would be flown shortly 75 On 10 July 2016 Caret reported positive results from early flight tests with the revised boom 74 On 21 July 2016 Boeing took a further 393 million charge on the program bringing the total value of penalties to almost 1 9 billion The charge reflected higher costs associated with the schedule and technical challenges such as the boom axial load issue delays in the certification process and concurrency between testing and initial production 76 The initial 18 KC 46s were equipped with the boom and centerline drogue but not the wing mounted wing aerial refueling pods WARP needed for full contractual Required Assets Available they were delivered separately later 77 On 5 July 2016 USAF spokesman Daryl Mayer stated that despite the testing delays Milestone C approval was expected in the following month and that Boeing would add a fifth EMD aircraft to accelerate testing EMD 1 and EMD 3 primarily conducted flight tests towards FAA airworthiness certificates while EMD 2 and EMD 4 focused on USAF aerial refueling and mission system testing 78 An F 16 was successfully refueled on 8 July and a C 17 on 12 July 2016 Once the hardware fix is verified a KC 46 with the updated boom underwent regression testing on the F 16 followed by refueling demonstrations with the C 17 and A 10 for the final test for Milestone C approval 79 80 On 15 July 2016 the KC 46 successfully refueled an A 10 offloading 1 500 pounds of fuel at 15 000 feet At the time more than 900 flight test hours have been completed by the five EMD aircraft 81 On 12 August 2016 the program received Milestone C approval indicating production readiness The issuing of contracts for two lots covering 19 aircraft was expected within 30 days 82 nbsp A KC 46A connects with an F 35A Lightning II over California Jan 2019 In January 2018 Air Mobility Command stated that tests for final FAA certification were roughly 94 percent complete 83 Boeing announced its FAA certification in September 2018 with military certification outstanding Aircraft refueled during testing include the F 16 F A 18 AV 8B C 17 A 10 KC 10 KC 135 and the KC 46 itself 84 In January 2019 a KC 46 from the 418th Flight Test Squadron at Edwards AFB made connection with an F 35A the occasion being the first time that the KC 46 connected with a fifth generation jet fighter 85 Completion of refueling certification of the F 35 by the KC 46 was announced by the 412th Test Wing in June 2019 86 In March 2020 the USAF announced that chronic leaks in the fuel system had been upgraded to a Category I deficiency The USAF identified the issue in June 2019 but had not originally believed it to be serious Crews became aware of the issue when they discovered fuel between the primary and secondary fuel protection barriers There was no known root cause at the time of the announcement 87 By January 2021 Boeing s losses on the program were estimated at 5 billion 5 billion in 2021 88 At the time it was expected that the KC 46 would not be combat ready until at least late 2023 89 Design Edit nbsp Seats fitted in the interior of a KC 46AThe KC 46 Pegasus is a variant of the Boeing 767 and is a widebody low wing cantilever monoplane with a conventional empennage featuring a single fin and rudder It has a retractable tricycle landing gear and a hydraulic flight control system The Pegasus is powered by two Pratt amp Whitney PW4062 engines one mounted under each wing It has been described as combining the 767 200ER s fuselage with the 767 300F s wing gear cargo door and floor with the 767 400ER digital flightdeck and flaps 90 The KC 46 uses a similar Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System MCAS to that implicated in two 737 MAX crashes in March 2019 the USAF began reviewing KC 46 training due to this feature Unlike the 737 the KC 46 s MCAS takes input from dual redundant angle of attack sensors and disengages with stick input by the pilot 91 The flightdeck has room for a crew of four with a forward crew compartment with seats for 15 crew members and in the rear fuselage either palletized passenger seating for 58 or 18 pallets in cargo configuration The rear compartment can also be used in an aero medical configuration for 54 patients 24 on litters 92 Quick ingress from the ground is available via a ladder that can be pulled down near the front landing gear 93 The KC 46A can carry 212 299 lb 96 297 kg of fuel 94 10 percent more than the KC 135 and 65 000 lb 29 000 kg of cargo Survivability is improved with infrared countermeasures and the aircraft has limited electronic warfare capabilities 46 It uses manual flight controls allowing unrestricted maneuverability to avoid threats anywhere in the flight envelope 95 nbsp Aerial Refueling Operator StationAt the rear of the KC 46 is a fly by wire refueling boom supplemented by wing air refueling pods at each wingtip and a centerline drogue system under the rear fuselage so it can handle both types of refueling in one mission 92 The boom includes a hydraulic relief valve system similar to those on the KC 10 and KC 767 tankers to relieve axial pressure in the event of excessive loads building up on the boom 75 In order to address the stiff boom issue which keeps a KC 46 from refueling lightweight thrust limited receivers like the A 10 Boeing is replacing the current actuator with one using a pressure flow PQ valve in the 2023 time frame 96 Rather than using a single boom operator seated or prone at the tail looking out a window the Aerial Refueling Operator Station AROS seats two operators at the front of the tanker AROS includes three main displays for each operator to display images from multiple multi spectral cameras distributed around the aircraft The central 2D 3D display provides a rear facing view for boom refueling operations Boom operators can execute their mission in total darkness with both aircraft blacked out 97 The hybrid 2D 3D system requires stereoscopic glasses to be fully effective 97 The Remote Vision System RVS that feeds video to the AROS has been problematic motion viewed in the RVS versus which can create a depth compression and curvature effect 97 Blackouts and washouts on the displays during refueling caused by shadows or direct sunlight are a problem that will be fixed by the RVS 2 0 upgrade along with depth perception issues via the use of new cameras and a full color high definition screen Experienced boom operators of older tankers still prefer the KC 46 even with its current drawbacks 98 Operational history EditUnited States Edit nbsp The first delivered KC 46A 15 46009 lands at McConnell AFB in January 2019 In April 2014 the USAF announced that the KC 46 will be based at McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita Kansas with an optimistic expectation of receiving the first of 36 tankers in 2016 99 100 McConnell AFB was chosen because it had low construction costs and it is in a location with a high demand for air refueling having KC 135s based there In addition to McConnell AFB serving as the home base up to 10 operating bases will be used by the KC 46 Crews will be trained at Altus Air Force Base Oklahoma which was also chosen for its limited construction needs and for its existing experience with training programs for the C 17 Globemaster and the KC 135 101 In October 2015 the USAF announced that Seymour Johnson Air Force Base North Carolina was chosen as the preferred alternative for the first Reserve led KC 46A main operating base with an anticipated arrival of the KC 46As at Seymour Johnson in fiscal year 2019 Tinker Air Force Base Oklahoma Westover Air Reserve Base Massachusetts and Grissom Air Reserve Base Indiana were named as the reasonable alternatives The October 2015 announcement also stated that the USAF intended to initiate an Environmental Impact Analysis Process EIAP which the USAF would use to make its final basing decisions 102 On 10 January 2019 the USAF took delivery of the first KC 46 well past the original 2016 delivery date albeit with two issues outstanding and funds withheld 103 The two outstanding issues were inadequate boom pressure when refueling the A 10 Warthog and glare induced distortion under certain conditions in the remote vision system RVS The USAF acknowledged that they failed to give Boeing adequate specifications for the A 10 104 At milestone C Boeing gave the USAF a boom design that used the international standard of 1400 lbs of thrust resistance which they accepted but the A 10 is only able to generate 650 lbs 105 On 25 January 2019 the 22d Air Refueling Wing at McConnell AFB received its first two KC 46As 15 46009 and 17 46031 106 In February 2019 the 97th Air Mobility Wing at Altus AFB received its first KC 46 107 nbsp A KC 46 preparing to refuel the Navy Blue Angels over South Dakota July 2020In April 2019 it was confirmed that the USAF halted all deliveries on 23 March and until further notification as loose material and debris were found in planes already delivered 108 In August 2019 the 157th Air Refueling Wing at Pease Air National Guard Base received its first KC 46A 109 In September 2019 the USAF restricted the KC 46 from carrying cargo and passengers due to an issue with the floor cargo locks unlocking mid flight 110 A fix was approved by the USAF in November 2019 and were retrofitted upon delivered aircraft 111 By 20 December 2019 four KC 46As had received new cargo locks and the USAF had closed the Category 1 deficiency and cleared retrofitted aircraft for cargo and passenger operations 112 In June 2020 the 916th Air Refueling Wing at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base received its first KC 46A 113 By January 2021 Boeing had delivered 42 KC 46As to the USAF and was on contract for 94 tankers 114 In early 2021 the USAF cleared the KC 46 for limited operational use The type can conduct U S based refueling only requiring other tankers for deployments to combat areas At the time the KC 46 could refuel the B 52 F 15 F 16 and F A 18 but it was not approved to service the A 10 F 22 F 35 B 1 or B 2 It is expected to be fully combat ready by 2023 115 116 117 During September 2022 the USAF approved the KC 46 for general operational use closing out a 15 month evaluation period 118 Export bids Edit Japan Edit nbsp A KC 46 taking off from Yokota Air Base in Japan in October 2018The Japan Air Self Defense Force JASDF operates four of the earlier Boeing KC 767 tankers that were delivered from 2008 to 2010 119 In October 2015 Japan selected the KC 46 with a contract for three tankers expected in 2016 120 The decision allows for common operations and training with the USAF Japan was reportedly attracted to its capability to refuel MV 22 Osprey tiltrotors which the JASDF is to receive Airbus declined to bid its A330 MRTT as they viewed Japan s request for proposals as intended for the KC 46 121 122 nbsp A Japanese KC 46 in 2023The three tankers are to be fielded around 2020 at a cost of more than 20 8 billion about US 173 million 180 million in 2021 per aircraft 123 124 An order for a third and fourth KC 46 was placed in October 2020 125 Japan ordered two additional KC 46s in December 2022 bringing Japan s order total to six 126 In February 2021 the JASDF conducted its first KC 46 flight 127 Training of Japanese KC 46 pilots began in June 2021 and Japan received its first KC 46 in November 2021 128 India Edit In January 2018 the Indian Air Force re launched its air to air refueling procurement program and sent out a request for information for six refueling aircraft to Airbus Boeing and Ilyushin to which Boeing could respond with an offer for the KC 46 Pegasus 129 Airbus and Boeing responded to the request for information while Ilyushin was disqualified as the official requirement is for an aircraft with two turbofan engines 130 In April 2022 Hindustan Aeronautics Limited HAL announced that it had entered into an MoU with Israel Aerospace Industries IAI to convert passenger aircraft into multi mission tanker transport MMTT aircraft in India 131 Indonesia Edit In January 2018 Indonesian Air Force officials were reported as saying they were studying both the Airbus A330 MRTT and KC 46 tankers for a future modernization program expected to take place after the current Airbus A400M Atlas program completes The Indonesian Air Force is said to compare the tankers on compatibility with the force s current aircraft life cycle costs interoperability with current and future assets and potential funding and technology transfer options with state owned aircraft manufacturer Indonesian Aerospace 132 Israel Edit In March 2020 the State Department approved the Foreign Military Sale to Israel of eight KC 46s and related equipment for a cost of 2 4 billion 2 5 billion in 2021 133 In September 2022 Boeing announced Israel has purchased four KC 46s for delivery in 2025 134 The contract includes provisions to enable Israel to potentialy purchase a further four KC 46s 135 Italy Edit In November 2022 it was reported that Italy is negotiating the purchase of six KC 46s to be designated KC 767B by Italy after deciding to forgo modernization work on the current fleet of four KC 767As The purchase could include logistics support for the KC 46A fleet for a period of five years The total cost of the contract could be approximately 1 12 billion Italy s four KC 767As would be sold to Boeing 136 137 Failed bids Edit Canada Edit In February 2017 Boeing stated it would bid the KC 46A for the Royal Canadian Air Force s Strategic Tanker Transport Capability competition which is to replace Canada s fleet of CC 150 Polaris tankers The contract is valued at C 1 5 billion 138 In April 2021 Airbus Defence and Space and their submission of the A330 MRTT was deemed to be the only qualified bidder to replace the CC 150 139 Korea Edit In June 2014 Boeing submitted the KC 46 for the Republic of Korea Air Force s requirement for four aerial tankers The KC 46 competed with the Airbus A330 MRTT 140 South Korea selected the Airbus A330 MRTT in June 2015 141 Poland Edit Boeing pitched the KC 46 to the Polish Air Force for its tanker requirement 142 In December 2014 Airbus was awarded a contract for four A330 MRTTs from a consortium of Poland the Netherlands and Norway 143 144 United Arab Emirates Edit In May 2019 according to Boeing the United Arab Emirates made a formal request to procure three KC 46As 145 146 In November 2021 the United Arab Emirates ordered two more Airbus A330 MRTTs for a total of five 147 Operators Edit nbsp IsraelIsraeli Air Force 4 aircraft on order 148 out of 8 planned 149 nbsp JapanJapan Air Self Defense Force 2 of 4 aircraft on order delivered as of 24 February 2022 150 151 125 nbsp United StatesUnited States Air Force 72 aircraft delivered 152 153 154 Air Force Material Command 412th Test Wing AFMC Edwards AFB California 2 on loan from McConnell AFB 85 418th Flight Test Squadron Air Education and Training Command 97th Air Mobility Wing AETC Altus AFB Oklahoma aircrew training full complement of 8 delivered as of 6 October 2021 155 156 157 56th Air Refueling Squadron 22d Air Refueling Wing AMC McConnell AFB Kansas 23 of 36 delivered as of 20 May 2022 106 158 159 344th Air Refueling Squadron 60th Air Mobility Wing AMC Travis AFB California 2 of 24 have been delivered as of August 25th 2023 160 6th Air Refueling Squadron 9th Air Refueling Squadron 305th Air Mobility Wing AMC Joint Base McGuire Dix Lakehurst 14 of 24 delivered as of 18 August 2023 161 162 163 164 514th Air Mobility Wing AFRC McGuire AFB NJ citation needed 78th Air Refueling Squadron 2d Air Refueling Squadron 32d Air Refueling Squadron Air Force Reserve Command 916th Air Refueling Wing AFRC Seymour Johnson AFB North Carolina Full complement of 12 delivered as of December 16th 2022 165 166 167 168 Air Mobility Command 6th Air Mobility Wing AMC 911th Air Refueling Squadron Seymour Johnson AFB North Carolina Active Duty Associate to the 916 ARW citation 77th Air Refueling Squadron Air National Guard 157th Air Refueling Wing ANG Pease ANGB New Hampshire full complement of 12 delivered as of 5 February 2021 169 170 133d Air Refueling SquadronSpecifications EditData from USAF KC 46A 94 Boeing KC 767 171 Boeing 767 200ER 172 General characteristicsCrew 3 2 pilots 1 boom operator basic crew 15 permanent seats for additional optional air crew members including aeromedical evacuation crew members Capacity seating for up to 114 people 18 463L pallets or 58 patients 24 litters 34 ambulatory and 65 000 lb 29 500 kg payload Length 165 ft 6 in 50 5 m Wingspan 157 ft 8 in 48 1 m Height 52 ft 1 in 15 9 m Empty weight 181 610 lb 82 377 kg Max takeoff weight 415 000 lb 188 240 kg Fuel Capacity 212 299 lb 96 297 kg Fuel Capacity vol 31 220 US gal 118 200 L Maximum Transfer Fuel Load 207 672 lb 94 198 kg Powerplant 2 Pratt amp Whitney PW4062 turbofan 62 000 171 lbf 280 kN thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 570 mph 914 km h 500 kn Cruise speed 530 mph 851 km h 460 kn Range 7 350 mi 11 830 km 6 385 nmi global with in flight refueling 171 Service ceiling 40 100 ft 12 200 m See also Edit nbsp Aviation portalRelated development Boeing 767 Boeing E 767 Boeing KC 767 Northrop Grumman E 10 MC2AAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Airbus A310 MRTT Airbus A330 MRTT Boeing KC 135 Stratotanker EADS Northrop Grumman KC 45 McDonnell Douglas KC 10 ExtenderRelated lists List of United States military aerial refueling aircraftReferences Edit KC 46A cleared for worldwide deployments following first combat refuel 20 September 2022 Air Mobility Command approves KC 46A Pegasus for worldwide deployments following first combat refuel 22 September 2022 Orders amp Deliveries Boeing Retrieved 12 October 2023 U S Air Force 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tankers in 2020 receives contract for a dozen more Flight Global 13 January 2021 Weisgerber Marcus 1 February 2021 Air Force Hunts for Ways to Use Not Quite Ready Tankers Defence One Rogoway Tyler 24 April 2015 Broken Booms Why Is It So Hard To Develop amp Procure A New USAF Tanker Foxtrot Alpha Jalopnik Retrieved 23 January 2020 USAF Reviewing Training After MAX 8 Crashes KC 46 Uses Similar MCAS airforcemag com March 2019 Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 a b KC 46 Pegasus Boeing Archived from the original on 6 January 2019 Retrieved 6 January 2019 McMenemy Jeff 15 September 2019 A look inside the KC 46A Fosters com Archived from the original on 16 September 2019 Retrieved 16 September 2019 There s also a compartment on the belly of the plane which can be opened so crew can pull down a ladder climb up and quickly board the plane If you need to get inside faster you can climb up this ladder step on a platform climb up another ladder and end up in the floor of the plane Zubricki said a b KC 46A Tanker Factsheet Archived 19 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine U S Air Force February 2016 Boeing to Offer NewGen Tanker to US Air Force Archived 11 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine finchannel com 5 March 2010 Hadley Greg 4 Jan 2022 Boeing Works to Solve KC 46 Deficiencies One by One airandspaceforces com a b c This Is What The Boom Operator s Station On The New KC 46 Tanker Actually Looks Like We finally are getting a good look at the KC 46 s most controversial feature The Drive 2 April 2019 Retrieved 11 September 2022 KC 46 Boom Operators Learn to Live With RVS Pending 2 0 Upgrade Air Force Magazine 9 August 2022 Retrieved 11 September 2022 USAF McConnell to house next generation tankers Archived 24 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine KWCH 22 April 2014 McConnell gets final OK for refueling tankers prepares to spend 219 million for construction Archived 24 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Wichita Eagle 22 April 2014 Altus selected for KC 46A training Archived 24 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Militarytimes com 23 April 2014 Secretary of the Air Force Public Affairs 29 October 2015 Seymour Johnson chosen for first Reserve led KC 46A basing Air Force Reserve Command Archived from the original on 26 January 2016 The Air Force finally takes ownership of its first Boeing tanker with serious misgivings The Seattle Times 10 January 2019 Archived from the original on 11 January 2019 Thompson Loren 11 January 2019 Five Reasons The Air Force Has Begun Taking Delivery Of Boeing s KC 46A Pegasus Tanker Forbes Archived from the original on 11 January 2019 Insinna Valerie 10 January 2019 Boeing delivers first KC 46 but fixes to technical problems still years away Defense News a b Slanchik Michaela R 25 January 2019 McConnell AFB welcomes first KC 46A Pegasus McConnell Air Force Base Archived from the original on 4 February 2019 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Scarle Kenny 8 February 2019 Pegasus Wings its Way to 97 AMW 97 AMW Public Affairs Archived from the original on 9 February 2019 Retrieved 9 February 2019 Pawlyk Oriana Air Force Again Halts KC 46 Tanker Deliveries Military com Archived from the original on 2 April 2019 Retrieved 2 April 2019 McMenemy Jeff 8 August 2019 First KC 46A tanker arrives at Pease seacoastonline com Retrieved 8 August 2019 US Air Force restricts KC 46 from carrying cargo and passengers 11 September 2019 Cargo lock fix for KC 46 tanker approved by U S Air Force UPI Retrieved 13 November 2019 Insinna Valerie 20 December 2019 The KC 46 is back to carrying cargo and passengers Defense News 916th Air Refueling Wing Welcomes KC 46A Pegasus Dobbins Air Reserve Base 12 June 2020 Retrieved 14 June 2020 Reim Garrett Boeing wins 2 1bn for 15 more KC 46A tankers points to battle communications role Flight Global 22 January 2021 Despite growing pains KC 46 tanker will begin limited operations Defense News 25 February 2021 Air Mobility Command to Start Integrating KC 46 Into Limited Operations Air Force Magazine 24 February 2021 Air Force clears KC 46A for limited non combat refueling United Press International 25 February 2021 Air Mobility Command Public Affairs 19 September 2022 KC 46A cleared for worldwide deployments following first combat refuel Air Mobility Command United States Air Force Retrieved 21 September 2022 Boeing Delivers 4th KC 767 Tanker to Japan Ministry of Defense Press release Boeing 12 January 2010 新たな空中給油 輸送機の機種決定について Decision on the model of new aerial refueling and transport aircraft Ministry of Defense Japan in Japanese 23 October 2015 Archived from the original on 22 March 2017 Drew James 23 October 2015 Japan chooses Boeing KC 46 halting Airbus tanker winning streak Flightglobal Washington DC Archived from the original on 25 October 2015 Yeo Mike 4 September 2019 Japan seeks improved aerial refueling military transport capabilities in KC 46 funding request Defense News Melbourne Australia Drew James 23 October 2015 Japan chooses Boeing KC 46 halting Airbus tanker winning streak Flightglobal Washington DC Archived from the original on 25 October 2015 Yeo Mike 4 September 2019 Japan seeks improved aerial refueling military transport capabilities in KC 46 funding request Defense News Melbourne Australia a b Japan orders two more KC 46A tanker planes UPI Retrieved 30 October 2020 Insight Global Defense 30 November 2022 Japan Orders Two More Boeing KC 46A Tankers Global Defense Insight Retrieved 4 December 2022 First Japan Air Self Defense Force Boeing KC 46 tanker takes flight Air Recognition 10 February 2021 Program Profile Boeing KC 46 Aviation Week Retrieved 7 October 2022 Raghuvanshi Vivek 26 January 2018 Third time s the charm India again attempts to buy midair refuelers Defense News New Delhi Archived from the original on 27 January 2018 Retrieved 27 January 2018 Joshi Saurabh 15 February 2018 Boeing KC 46 Airbus A330 MRTT in IAF tanker contest StratPost New Delhi Archived from the original on 17 February 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2018 Shukla Ajai 7 April 2022 HAL Israel Aerospace tie up to turn civil aircraft into mid air refuellers Business Standard India Rahmat Ridzwan 18 January 2018 Indonesia puts KC 46A Pegasus Airbus A330 in frame for aerial tanker requirement IHS Jane s 360 Singapore Archived from the original on 19 January 2018 Retrieved 19 January 2018 Israel KC 46A Aerial Refueling Aircraft The Official Home of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency dsca mil Retrieved 4 March 2020 Williams Dan 1 September 2022 Eye on Iran Israel to buy four Boeing air force tankers for 927 million Reuters Retrieved 1 September 2022 Frantzman Seth 1 September 2022 Israel Boeing agree to 927M deal for four KC 46A tankers Defense News Retrieved 6 August 2023 Dubois Gaston 3 November 2022 Italy is negotiating the purchase of six Boeing KC 46A tankers Aviacionline com in Spanish Retrieved 1 January 2023 Cenciotti David 3 November 2022 Italy Will Buy Six KC 46 Tankers To Replace Its KC 767As The Aviationist Retrieved 1 January 2023 Boeing to bid KC 46 on future RCAF tanker program Skies Mag Archived from the original on 3 February 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2017 Pugliese David 1 April 2021 Airbus deemed only qualified supplier for new RCAF refueling and VIP aircraft Ottawa Citizen Retrieved 9 April 2021 Hoyle Craig 30 June 2014 Boeing offers KC 46 for South Korea tanker requirement London Flightglobal Archived from the original on 13 July 2014 Retrieved 30 June 2014 South Korea Selects Airbus for 1 33B Tanker Contract Defense News 30 June 2015 Archived from the original on 8 July 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2015 Perry Dominic 3 September 2014 Boeing eyes Poland as first KC 46A export buyer Warsaw Flightglobal Archived from the original on 4 September 2014 Retrieved 3 September 2014 Airbus leaps ahead of Boeing in race for airborne tanker exports Puget Sound Business Journal 24 December 2014 Archived from the original on 26 December 2014 Retrieved 24 December 2014 European Partners Opt for Airbus Military Tanker The Wall Street Journal 19 December 2014 Archived from the original on 20 December 2014 Retrieved 19 December 2014 Yeo Mike 31 May 2019 UAE issues formal request to buy KC 46A tanker says Boeing Defense News Singapore Archived from the original on 31 May 2019 Retrieved 31 May 2019 McGinley Shane UAE submits request to buy three Boeing tanker aircraft ArabianBusiness com Retrieved 6 September 2019 United Arab Emirates orders two additional Airbus A330 MRTT airbus com 14 November 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2023 Gross Judah Ari Ministers sign off on pricey purchase of F 35s refuelers and bombs www timesofisrael com Retrieved 16 February 2021 In first US to sell new aerial re fuelling planes to Israel 19 June 2019 Bixby Tom TomBixby4 15 March 2022 Japan s second kc46 Pegasus was delivered on February 24th but it hasn t made any news site so there it is t co SADmT70ETZ Tweet Archived from the original on 16 March 2022 Retrieved 27 March 2022 via Twitter Trick or Treat Japan accepts its first KC 46 tanker Breaking Defense 1 November 2021 Retrieved 17 November 2021 Boeing Defense BoeingDefense 9 November 2021 Twin tanker takeoffs The first two KC46 for jointbasemdl have departed Boeing Field These are the 49th and 50th KC 46 deliveries to the usairforce t co UYMr15tEEj Tweet Archived from the original on 9 November 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 via Twitter Boeing Defense BoeingDefense 20 May 2022 Two more KC46 tankers are in the air Today s deliveries to JointBaseMDL and 22ARW mark 59 KC 46 aircraft in service for the USAirForce Airmen are enabling global reach and rapid mobility and we re proud to support them t co jckIIgf30c Tweet Retrieved 14 December 2022 via Twitter https twitter com BoeingDefense status 1695171728215769088 X formerly Twitter Retrieved 19 September 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help Altus Air Force Base 97AMW 8 October 2021 Welcome home to our final KC 46 BoeingDefense AETCommand AETCcommandteam t co sA88ugkI2H Tweet Archived from the original on 8 October 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 via Twitter Everstine Brian 20 May 2019 Boeing Delivers Three More KC 46s USAF Fleet Now at 11 Air Force Magazine Archived from the original on 21 May 2019 Retrieved 21 May 2019 Boeing Negotiating Potential KC 46 Communications Upgrade Aviation Today 18 September 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2020 McConnell Welcomes KC 46 21 to the Fleet McConnell Air Force Base 13 January 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2020 https twitter com BoeingDefense status 1583543510732603407 X formerly Twitter Retrieved 19 September 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help https twitter com BoeingDefense status 1695171728215769088 X formerly Twitter Retrieved 19 September 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help Bixby Tom TomBixby4 18 March 2022 Delivery flight kc46 Pegasus for Mcguire dix lakenhurts their 6th of the future 24 that will be Station there t co InhCVORGJE Tweet Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 via Twitter KC 46 Arrivals Herald End of KC 10 Era at McGuire Even as Capacity Questions Persist Air Force Magazine 14 November 2021 Retrieved 17 November 2021 Bixby Tom TomBixby4 17 June 2022 Kc46 Pegasus on a delivery flight for the USA air force Their 61st tanker and Mcguire dix lakenhurts 8th of 24 delivered t co 5og86UC8XU Tweet Archived from the original on 17 June 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 via Twitter https twitter com BoeingDefense status 1692609264081105032 X formerly Twitter Retrieved 19 September 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help Boeing Defense BoeingDefense 3 June 2022 The 60th KC46 is now in the USAirForce fleet This tanker is on the way to Seymour Johnson AFB home of the 916ARW t co wwlIJhbyvH Tweet Archived from the original on 6 June 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 via Twitter Bixby Tom TomBixby4 18 March 2022 Delivery flight kc46 Pegasus for Seymour Johnson afb their 10th of 12 they will receive t co 9RJhZ52l1G Tweet Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 via Twitter Boeing Defense BoeingDefense 17 December 2021 Two more KC46 tankers are bound for SJAFB These are the 8th and 9th Pegasus aircraft for Seymour Johnson t co O3KBKGlYVU Tweet Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 via Twitter https twitter com BoeingDefense status 1603858452605968384 X formerly Twitter Retrieved 19 September 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help Boeing Defense BoeingDefense 11 December 2020 Friday is a great day for a double KC46 fly away 157ARW here we come t co fbJjwTcWDN Tweet Archived from the original on 11 December 2020 Retrieved 21 December 2021 via Twitter Lenahan Ian 5 February 2021 Final KC 46A tanker delivered to 157th Air Refueling Wing at Pease Foster s Daily Democrat Dover New Hampshire a b c KC 767 Advanced Tanker product card archive copy KC 767 International Tanker backgrounder Archived 12 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Boeing 767 200ER specifications Archived 16 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine Boeing External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boeing KC 46 Pegasus Official website nbsp Boeing com Feature story on KC 46A contract award KC 46A approved for production Secretary of the Air Force for Public Affairs 12 August 2016 Retrieved 19 August 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boeing KC 46 Pegasus amp oldid 1180756684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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