fbpx
Wikipedia

McDonnell Douglas KC-10 Extender

The McDonnell Douglas KC-10 Extender is an American tanker and cargo aircraft aircraft operated by the United States Air Force (USAF). A military version of the three-engine DC-10 airliner, the KC-10 was developed from the Advanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program.[N 1] It incorporates military-specific equipment for its primary roles of aerial refueling and transport. It was developed to supplement the KC-135 Stratotanker following experiences in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. The KC-10 was the second McDonnell Douglas transport aircraft to be selected by the Air Force following the C-9. A total of 60 KC-10s were produced for the USAF. The Royal Netherlands Air Force operated two similar tankers designated KDC-10 that were converted from DC-10s.

KC-10 Extender
A United States Air Force KC-10 Extender refueling an F-16 Fighting Falcon
Role Tanker/transport
National origin United States
Manufacturer McDonnell Douglas
First flight 12 July 1980; 43 years ago (1980-07-12)
Introduction 1 March 1981; 42 years ago (1981-03-01)
Retired 2021 (RNLAF)
Status In service
Primary users United States Air Force
Omega Aerial Refueling Services
Royal Netherlands Air Force (historical)
Produced KC-10: 1979–1987
Number built KC-10: 60; KDC-10: 2
Developed from McDonnell Douglas DC-10

The KC-10 plays a key role in the mobilization of US military assets, taking part in overseas operations far from home. These aircraft performed airlift and aerial refueling during the 1986 bombing of Libya (Operation Eldorado Canyon), the 1990–91 Gulf War with Iraq (Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm), the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia (Operation Allied Force), War in Afghanistan (Operation Enduring Freedom), and Iraq War (Operations Iraqi Freedom and New Dawn).

Design and development Edit

Advanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program Edit

 
An early KC-10 Extender aircraft refuels a C-5 Galaxy in 1980. Both aircraft are wearing liveries typical of that era.

During the Vietnam War, doubts began to form regarding the Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker fleet's ability to meet the needs of the United States' global commitments. The aerial refueling fleet was deployed to Southeast Asia to support tactical aircraft and strategic bombers, while maintaining the U.S.-based support of the nuclear-bomber fleet. Consequently, the Air Force sought an aerial tanker with greater capabilities than the KC-135. In 1972, two DC-10s were flown in trials at Edwards Air Force Base, simulating air refuelings to check for possible wake issues. Boeing performed similar tests with a 747.[1]

During the 1973 Yom Kippur War, the Air Force commenced Operation Nickel Grass to supply Israel with weapons and supplies. The operation demonstrated the necessity for adequate air-refueling capabilities; denied landing rights in Europe, C-5 Galaxy transports were forced to carry a fraction of their maximum payload on direct flights from the continental United States to Israel.[2][3] To address this shortfall in mobility, in 1975, under the Advanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program, four aircraft were evaluated—the Lockheed C-5, the Boeing 747, the McDonnell Douglas DC-10, and the Lockheed L-1011.[4] The only serious contenders were Boeing and McDonnell Douglas. On 19 December 1977, McDonnell Douglas's DC-10 was chosen. The primary reason of this choice was the KC-10's ability to operate from shorter runways.[3] Initially, a batch of 12 aircraft was ordered, but this was later increased to 60.[3]

KC-10 Extender Edit

The KC-10 Extender first flew on 12 July 1980, but it was not until October the same year that the first aerial refuel sortie was performed.[5][6] The design for the KC-10 involved modifications from the DC-10-30CF design. Unnecessary airline features were replaced by an improved cargo-handling system and military avionics.[7] Meanwhile, the KC-10 retains 88% commonality with its commercial counterparts, giving it greater access to the worldwide commercial support system.[3] Other changes from the DC-10-30CF include the removal of most windows and lower cargo doors.[8] Early aircraft featured a distinctive light gray, white and blue paint scheme, but a gray-green camouflage scheme was used on later tankers. The paint scheme was switched to a medium gray color by the late 1990s.[9]

 
The KC-10's refueling boom operator is seated rather than prone
 
The KC-10's mixed refueling system of hose-and-drogue and flying-boom allows it to refuel the aircraft of the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps and allied forces.[5]

The most notable changes were the addition of the McDonnell Douglas Advanced Aerial Refueling Boom and additional fuel tanks located in the baggage compartments below the main deck. The extra tanks increase the KC-10's fuel capacity to 356,000 lb (161,478 kg), nearly doubling the KC-135's capacity.[5] The KC-10 has both a centerline refueling boom—unique in that it sports a control surface system at its aft end that differs from the V-tail design used on previous tankers—and a drogue-and-hose system on the starboard side of the rear fuselage. The KC-10 boom operator is seated in the rear of the aircraft with a wide window for monitoring refueling rather than prone as in the KC-135. The operator controls refueling operations through a digital fly-by wire system.[9][10] The refueling boom can deliver fuel to a receiver at the maximum rate of 1,100 gallons (4,180 liters) per minute, while the centerline drogue system has a maximum fuel ofload rate of 470 gallons (1,786 liters) per minute.[11]

Unlike the KC-135, the KC-10's hose-and-drogue system allows refueling of Navy, Marine Corps, and most allied aircraft, all in one mission.[5] The final twenty KC-10s produced included wing-mounted pods for added refueling locations.[1] The KC-10 can also carry a complement of 75 personnel with 146,000 lb (66,225 kg) of cargo, or 170,000 lb (77,110 kg) in an all-cargo configuration.[5] With that, it can transport those weights for an unrefueled range of 4,400 miles (7,040 kms).[12] The KC-10 has a side cargo door for loading and unloading cargo. Handling equipment is required to raise and lower loads to the cargo opening. It can carry cargo and serve as a tanker on overseas missions.[13]

Further developments Edit

 
A USAF KC-10 Extender after being refueled by another KC-10

A need for new transport aircraft for the Royal Netherlands Air Force (Koninklijke Luchtmacht) was first identified in 1984.[14] The 1991 Gulf War highlighted the deficiencies in mobility of European forces.[15] In 1991 four categories of transport requirements were established. Category A required a large cargo aircraft with a range of at least 4,500 km and the capability to refuel F-16s. In 1992, two DC-10-30CFs were acquired from Martinair in a buy/leaseback contract. When one of the two aircraft was lost in the Martinair Flight 495 crash, a third aircraft was bought from Martinair.[14]

The conversion was handled via the United States foreign military sales program, which in turn contracted McDonnell Douglas. Costs for the conversion were initially estimated at $89.5 million (FY 1994). The aircraft were to be equipped with both a boom and a probe and drogue system. However, because McDonnell Douglas did not have any experience with the requested Remote Aerial Refueling Operator (RARO) system, and because the third aircraft differed from the original two, the program could not be completed at budget. By omitting the probe and drogue system and a fixed partition wall between the cargo and passenger, the cost could be limited at $96 million. To make up for the cost increase McDonnell Douglas hired Dutch companies to do part of the work. The conversion of the aircraft was performed by KLM and was done from October 1994 to September 1995 for the first aircraft and from February to December 1995 for the second. This was much longer than planned, mostly because McDonnell Douglas delivered the parts late. This would have again increased the cost, but in the contract for the AH-64 Apaches which the Royal Netherlands Air Force also bought from McDonnell Douglas, the price was agreed to be kept at $96 million.[14]

To modernize the KC-10, the USAF has awarded a contract to Boeing in 2010 to upgrade the fleet of 59 aircraft with new Communication, navigation and surveillance and air traffic management (CNS/ATM) system. This was to allow the aircraft to fly in civil airspace as new ICAO and FAA standards took effect in 2015.[16] Rockwell Collins was also awarded a contract in 2011 for avionics and systems integration for the cockpit modernization program.[17][18]

Variants Edit

  • KC-10A: Initial military tanker version based on the DC-10-30CF.
  • KDC-10: Conversion of DC-10-30CF aircraft to tanker/transport configuration. While a FMS program run through McDonnell Douglas, conversion of two aircraft was carried out by KLM. Omega Aerial Refueling Services operates KDC-10-40.[citation needed]
  • KC-10B: After McDonnell Douglas did the KDC-10 conversion for the Royal Netherlands Air Force in 1992, they proposed a tanker/transport version of the MD-11CF which had the in-house designation KMD-11. MDC offered either conversion of second hand aircraft (KMD-11) or new build aircraft (KC-10B), the proposed KMD-11 offered 35,000 lbs more cargo capacity and 8,400 lbs more transferable fuel than the KC-10A. It was offered to the RNAF and Royal Saudi Air Force (RSAF) in the 1990s and the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) in the early 2000s.[19]

Operational history Edit

United States Edit

The first KC-10 was delivered to the Air Force's Strategic Air Command (SAC) in March 1981 at Barksdale AFB. In 1982 a newly renamed 22d Air Refueling Wing (formerly the 22d Bombardment Wing) was re-equipped with KC-10A Extenders and became the second Air Force unit to operate the new tankers.[citation needed] The 60th and final KC-10 was delivered on 29 November 1988.[20] The KC-10s served with SAC until 1992, when they were reassigned to the newly established Air Mobility Command. In the aerial refueling role, the KC-10s have been operated largely in the strategic refueling of large number of tactical aircraft on ferry flights and the refueling of other strategic transport aircraft. Conversely, the KC-135 fleet has operated largely in the in-theater tactical role. There are 59 KC-10 Extenders in service with the USAF as of 2010.[13][16] The USAF's KC-10s are stationed primarily at Travis AFB, California, and McGuire AFB, now part of Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, in New Jersey.

 
A US Navy F-14D and two F/A-18Cs prepare to refuel from a KC-10 in 2005 over the Persian Gulf.

When faced with refusals of basing and overflight rights from continental European countries during Operation El Dorado Canyon, the U.S. was forced to use the UK-based F-111s in the 1986 air-strikes against Libya. The KC-10s and KC-135s allowed 29 F-111s, along with other Air Force and Navy aircraft, to reach their targets.[21] The KC-10 again played a key role during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in 1991; KC-10s facilitated the deployment of tactical, strategic, and transport aircraft to Saudi Arabia. In the early stages of Operation Desert Shield, aerial refueling was key to the rapid airlift of materiel and forces. In addition to refueling airlift aircraft, the KC-10, along with the smaller KC-135, moved thousands of tons of cargo and thousands of troops in support of the massive buildup. The KC-10 and the KC-135 conducted about 51,700 separate refueling operations and delivered 125 million gallons (475 million liters) of fuel without missing a single scheduled rendezvous.[13]

 
A KC-10 Extender of Travis AFB approaching a second KC-10 for refuelling over the Pacific Ocean, 2017

Since then, the KC-10 had participated in other smaller conflicts. In March 1999, NATO launched Operation Allied Force against the government of Yugoslavia. The mobility portion of the operation began in February and was heavily dependent on tankers. By early May 1999, some 150 KC-10s and KC-135s deployed to Europe where they refueled bombers, fighters and support aircraft engaged in the conflict. The KC-10 flew 409 missions throughout the entire Allied Force campaign and continued support operations in Kosovo.[13] Since 11 September 2001, KC-10s had also flown more than 350 missions guarding U.S. skies as a part of Operation Noble Eagle. During Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom, KC-10s have flown more than 1,390 missions delivering critical air refueling support to numerous joint and Coalition receiver aircraft.[13] As of 2004, KC-10s were expected to serve until 2043.[22]

The Air Force considered retiring its fleet of KC-10 tankers in response to sequestration budget cuts as part of the service's FY 2015 budget. A "vertical chop" to divest all KC-10s was suggested because there are fewer KC-10s than KC-135s, having three different tanker models in service (after the introduction of the KC-46) would be costly, and a "horizontal cut" across the refueling fleets would achieve small efficiencies.[23] Some believed retiring the KC-10 would not benefit the Air Force, given that it is equipped with both boom and hose-and-drogue refueling systems and the fleet's relatively young age.[24] At first, officials claimed that the initial focus on retiring the KC-10 in September 2013 was a "trial balloon" to call attention to Air Force operating cost issues; as of early 2013, the KC-10 had a per hour flying cost of $21,170 and a mission capable rate of 87 percent.[25] A FY 2015 budget plan did not include cuts to the KC-10.[26] On 13 July 2020, the first US KC-10 to be retired, tail number 86-0036, was transferred to the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) at Davis Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona.[27] On 1 July 2021, the 2d ARS was the first KC-10 squadron to start conversion to the KC-46. [28] In August of 2021, the KC-10 took part in the largest non-combatant evacuation in support of Operation Allies refuge and contributing to the safe evacuation of more than 124,000 Afghan refugees.[29]

In January 2023 the USAF announced that all KC-10s will be retired by 30 September 2024.[30]

Netherlands Edit

 
The second Royal Netherlands Air Force KDC-10 with landing gear down

The two Dutch KDC-10s were used for both refueling and transport.[31] They were stationed on Eindhoven Airport as part of the 334th Transport Squadron. Of the 5,500 hours flown in the first 3 years of use, the aircraft were used in their tanker role for 50% of the time. Besides being used by the air force and NATO allies, the KDC-10s were also used to support peacekeeping and humanitarian aid operations. Of the first three years, 32% of the flight hours were used for peacekeeping and humanitarian aid.[14]

In this function, the aircraft was deployed to Kosovo to evacuate refugees, to the Caribbean and Central America to provide humanitarian aid after the hurricanes Luis, Georges and Mitch and to various countries in Africa and Asia to provide development aid. In 1998, the aircraft were also used to evacuate Dutch citizens from Indonesia during the Fall of Suharto. Dutch KDC-10s operated out of Manas AFB in support of allied forces during Operation Enduring Freedom and in support of Allied Air Force over Iraq and Syria.

A third DC-10, registered T-255 was acquired and served for three years before being withdrawn from service in April 2014 due to Dutch defense cuts and flown to Newquay Airport for scrapping.[32] The KDC-10s in Dutch service were replaced with the Airbus A330 MRTT.[33] The first aircraft, registered T-264/'Prins Bernhard' and due for a major service, was withdrawn from use on 1 November 2019, prior to being transferred to its new owner, Omega Aerial Refueling Services on 4 November 2019.[34] The last KDC-10, registered T-235/'Jan Scheffer' remained in Dutch service until it was retired on 7 October 2021.[35] The aircraft subsequently left The Netherlands bound for service with Omega in the U.S. on 25 October 2021.[36][33]

Civilian operators Edit

 
Omega's KDC-10 tanker in March 2009

Commercial refueling companies Omega Aerial Refueling Services and Global Airtanker Service operate two KDC-10 tankers (N974VV and N852V, respectively) for lease.[37][38] They were converted from DC-10-40s and provide probe and drogue refueling capabilities from wing pods similar to the KC-10.[39]

In June and July 2011, Omega Air's KDC-10 supported 3 of Royal Australian Air Force's F/A-18 Hornets, en route to Red Flag – Alaska.[40]

In 2019, Omega agreed to purchase the Netherlands' two KDC-10s, with one being received in November 2019,[34] and the second delivered in October 2021.[36][33]

Operators Edit

 
A KC-10 (right foreground) and C-17 (left background) at Avalon Airport, Australia, for the 2005 Australian International Airshow
 
A KC-10 from Travis AFB taking off from RAF Mildenhall
  United States
  Netherlands

Incidents Edit

On 17 September 1987, KC-10A serial number 82-0190 was undergoing maintenance on the ground at Barksdale AFB, Louisiana, and suffered an explosion and subsequent fire. The KC-10 was significantly damaged and written off. One member of the ground crew died in the fire.[51]

Specifications (KC-10A) Edit

Data from USAF Fact sheet,[13] Steffen[52]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 4 (Aircraft Commander, copilot, flight engineer, and boom operator)
  • Capacity: 170,000 lb of cargo, 25 pallets and 16 passengers, or 17 pallets and 75 passengers[52]
  • Length: 181 ft 7 in (55.35 m)
  • Wingspan: 165 ft 4.5 in (50.406 m)
  • Height: 58 ft 1 in (17.70 m)
  • Wing area: 3,958 sq ft (367.7 m2)
  • Airfoil: root: DSMA-496/-521/-522; tip: DSMA-519/-520[53]
  • Empty weight: 241,027 lb (109,328 kg)
  • Gross weight: 590,000 lb (267,619 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 590,000 lb (267,619 kg)
  • Fuel capacity: 365,000 lb (165,561 kg)
  • Powerplant: 3 × General Electric F103 (GE CF6-50C2) turbofan engines, 52,500 lbf (234 kN) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 538 mph (866 km/h, 468 kn)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 0.89
  • Range: 4,400 mi (7,100 km, 3,800 nmi) with a maximum passenger capacity; 3,800 nmi (7,038 km; 4,373 mi) with maximum cargo capacity.
  • Ferry range: 11,500 mi (18,500 km, 10,000 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 42,000 ft (13,000 m)
  • Rate of climb: 6,870 ft/min (34.9 m/s)

See also Edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References Edit

Notes
  1. ^ The Handley Page Jetstream had been initially ordered as the C-10, but was soon canceled. This allowed the tanker version of the DC-10 to be designated KC-10A.
Citations
  1. ^ a b Waddington 2000, pp. 116–120.
  2. ^ Endres 1998, p. 65.
  3. ^ a b c d Steffan 1998, p. 103.
  4. ^ Frawley 2002, p. 119.
  5. ^ a b c d e Steffan 1998, p. 104.
  6. ^ "KC-10A Extender: Background". Globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
  7. ^ Eden 2004, p 286.
  8. ^ "KC-10A Extender: Characteristics". Globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
  9. ^ a b Steffen 1998, pp. 103–107.
  10. ^ Eden 2004, p 287.
  11. ^ https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/104520/kc-10-extender/
  12. ^ https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/104520/kc-10-extender/
  13. ^ a b c d e f g "Factsheets: KC-10 Extender". US Air Force. May 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  14. ^ a b c d "Evaluatie project KDC-10". Ministerie van Defensie (in Dutch). 1 July 1999. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  15. ^ Steffen 1997, p. 107.
  16. ^ a b Trimble, Stephen (24 June 2010). "Boeing outlines C-130H and KC-10 cockpit upgrades". Flightglobal.com. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  17. ^ "Boeing Wins CNS-ATM Upgrade Contract for USAF's KC-10 Tankers". Defenseindustrydaily.com. 21 August 2014. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 September 2011. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  19. ^ "Too Big for Its Own Good: Why a MD-11 Based Tanker Was Never Built". 8 January 2016.
  20. ^ Steffen 1998, pp. 104, 107.
  21. ^ "Operation El Dorado Canyon". Globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
  22. ^ Veronico and Dunn 2004, p. 58.
  23. ^ Air Force May Scrap KC-10 Tanker Fleet – DoDBuzz.com, 17 September 2013
  24. ^ WEISGERBER, MARCUS; MEHTA, AARON (15 September 2013). "USAF Weighs Scrapping KC-10, A-10 Fleets". www.defensenews.com. Gannett Government Media Corporation. Archived from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2013.
  25. ^ Air Force May Scrap Entire A-10 Fleet – Defensemedianetwork.com, 17 October 2013
  26. ^ How Hagel spending plan will transform US military – Flightglobal.com, 26 February 2014
  27. ^ "First KC-10 heads to Boneyard as Pegasus comes into the fleet". 16 July 2020.
  28. ^ https://www.airandspaceforces.com/mcguire-squadron-says-goodbye-to-kc-10-prepares-for-kc-46/
  29. ^ https://www.travis.af.mil/News/Article/3131472/operation-allies-refuge-one-year-later/
  30. ^ Rossi Pedroza-Bertrand (30 January 2023). "End of the 10". 349th Air Mobility Wing Public Affairs. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
  31. ^ Steffen 1997, pp. 106–107.
  32. ^ "Dutch air force scraps DC-10 transport". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
  33. ^ a b c "RNLAF's final KDC-10 tanker leaves the Netherlands". key.aero. 25 October 2021. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  34. ^ a b "Private aerial refueller Omega buys KDC 10 tankers with booms". flightglobal.com. 25 November 2019. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  35. ^ "Farewell flight and final goodbye to the KDC-10 of the Royal Netherlands Air Force". aviacion.com. 5 October 2021. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  36. ^ a b van der Mark 2019, p. 7
  37. ^ . Omega Air Refueling. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
  38. ^ . Global Airtanker Service. Archived from the original on 4 July 2008. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  39. ^ . Global Air Tanker Services. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  40. ^ "RAAF Hornets Participate in Red Flag Alaska" Air Forces Monthly (Key Publishing), Issue 282, September 2011, pp. 37. ISSN 0955-7091. Retrieved: 30 September 2011.
  41. ^ "First KC-10 Extender Tanker Jet Heads to the Boneyard for Retirement (Updated)". 13 July 2020.
  42. ^ "2nd Bomb Wing".
  43. ^ "22nd Bomb Wing - SAC - March AFB - B52".
  44. ^ "Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst" (PDF).
  45. ^ "916th Air Refueling Wing" (PDF). Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  46. ^ "349th Air Mobility Wing History Facts".
  47. ^ "514th Air Mobility Wing".
  48. ^ "380Th Air Expeditionary Wing".
  49. ^ "MMF Background Paper" (PDF). Airbus Group, retrieved from an Archive.today capture made on 17 Jul 2017 22:36:58 UTC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 July 2017. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  50. ^ "Dutch air force scraps DC-10 transport". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  51. ^ "McDonnell Douglas KC-10A 82-0190." Aviation Safety Network Database. Retrieved: 19 September 2010.
  52. ^ a b Steffen 1998, p. 107.
  53. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
Bibliography
  • Eden, Paul, ed. (2004). The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft. London: Amber Books. ISBN 978-1-904687-84-9.
  • Endres, Gunter (1998). McDonnell Douglas DC-10, Volume 10. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zenith Imprint. ISBN 978-0-7603-0617-8.
  • Frawley, Gerard (2002). The International Directory of Military Aircraft, 2002–2003. Fyshwick, Australia: Aerospace Publications. ISBN 978-1-875671-55-7.
  • Steffen, Arthur A. C. (1998). McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and KC-10 Extender. Hinckley, Leicester, UK: Midland Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85780-051-7.
  • van der Mark, Kees (December 2019). "First Dutch KDC-10 retired from service". Air International. Vol. 97, no. 6. p. 7. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Veronico, Nick; Dunn, Jim (2004). 21st Century U.S. Air Power. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zenith Imprint. ISBN 978-0-7603-2014-3.
  • Waddington, Terry (2000). McDonnell Douglas DC-10. Miami, Florida: World Transport Press. ISBN 978-1-892437-04-4.

External links Edit

  • KC-10 fact sheet on TheAviationZone.com
  • KDC-10 in the Dutch Air Force
  • McDonnell Douglas promotional video of the KC-10 Extender on YouTube

mcdonnell, douglas, extender, american, tanker, cargo, aircraft, aircraft, operated, united, states, force, usaf, military, version, three, engine, airliner, developed, from, advanced, tanker, cargo, aircraft, program, incorporates, military, specific, equipme. The McDonnell Douglas KC 10 Extender is an American tanker and cargo aircraft aircraft operated by the United States Air Force USAF A military version of the three engine DC 10 airliner the KC 10 was developed from the Advanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program N 1 It incorporates military specific equipment for its primary roles of aerial refueling and transport It was developed to supplement the KC 135 Stratotanker following experiences in Southeast Asia and the Middle East The KC 10 was the second McDonnell Douglas transport aircraft to be selected by the Air Force following the C 9 A total of 60 KC 10s were produced for the USAF The Royal Netherlands Air Force operated two similar tankers designated KDC 10 that were converted from DC 10s KC 10 ExtenderA United States Air Force KC 10 Extender refueling an F 16 Fighting FalconRole Tanker transportNational origin United StatesManufacturer McDonnell DouglasFirst flight 12 July 1980 43 years ago 1980 07 12 Introduction 1 March 1981 42 years ago 1981 03 01 Retired 2021 RNLAF Status In servicePrimary users United States Air ForceOmega Aerial Refueling Services Royal Netherlands Air Force historical Produced KC 10 1979 1987Number built KC 10 60 KDC 10 2Developed from McDonnell Douglas DC 10The KC 10 plays a key role in the mobilization of US military assets taking part in overseas operations far from home These aircraft performed airlift and aerial refueling during the 1986 bombing of Libya Operation Eldorado Canyon the 1990 91 Gulf War with Iraq Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia Operation Allied Force War in Afghanistan Operation Enduring Freedom and Iraq War Operations Iraqi Freedom and New Dawn Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Advanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program 1 2 KC 10 Extender 1 3 Further developments 1 4 Variants 2 Operational history 2 1 United States 2 2 Netherlands 2 3 Civilian operators 3 Operators 4 Incidents 5 Specifications KC 10A 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDesign and development EditAdvanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program Edit An early KC 10 Extender aircraft refuels a C 5 Galaxy in 1980 Both aircraft are wearing liveries typical of that era During the Vietnam War doubts began to form regarding the Boeing KC 135 Stratotanker fleet s ability to meet the needs of the United States global commitments The aerial refueling fleet was deployed to Southeast Asia to support tactical aircraft and strategic bombers while maintaining the U S based support of the nuclear bomber fleet Consequently the Air Force sought an aerial tanker with greater capabilities than the KC 135 In 1972 two DC 10s were flown in trials at Edwards Air Force Base simulating air refuelings to check for possible wake issues Boeing performed similar tests with a 747 1 During the 1973 Yom Kippur War the Air Force commenced Operation Nickel Grass to supply Israel with weapons and supplies The operation demonstrated the necessity for adequate air refueling capabilities denied landing rights in Europe C 5 Galaxy transports were forced to carry a fraction of their maximum payload on direct flights from the continental United States to Israel 2 3 To address this shortfall in mobility in 1975 under the Advanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program four aircraft were evaluated the Lockheed C 5 the Boeing 747 the McDonnell Douglas DC 10 and the Lockheed L 1011 4 The only serious contenders were Boeing and McDonnell Douglas On 19 December 1977 McDonnell Douglas s DC 10 was chosen The primary reason of this choice was the KC 10 s ability to operate from shorter runways 3 Initially a batch of 12 aircraft was ordered but this was later increased to 60 3 KC 10 Extender Edit The KC 10 Extender first flew on 12 July 1980 but it was not until October the same year that the first aerial refuel sortie was performed 5 6 The design for the KC 10 involved modifications from the DC 10 30CF design Unnecessary airline features were replaced by an improved cargo handling system and military avionics 7 Meanwhile the KC 10 retains 88 commonality with its commercial counterparts giving it greater access to the worldwide commercial support system 3 Other changes from the DC 10 30CF include the removal of most windows and lower cargo doors 8 Early aircraft featured a distinctive light gray white and blue paint scheme but a gray green camouflage scheme was used on later tankers The paint scheme was switched to a medium gray color by the late 1990s 9 The KC 10 s refueling boom operator is seated rather than prone The KC 10 s mixed refueling system of hose and drogue and flying boom allows it to refuel the aircraft of the U S Air Force U S Navy U S Marine Corps and allied forces 5 The most notable changes were the addition of the McDonnell Douglas Advanced Aerial Refueling Boom and additional fuel tanks located in the baggage compartments below the main deck The extra tanks increase the KC 10 s fuel capacity to 356 000 lb 161 478 kg nearly doubling the KC 135 s capacity 5 The KC 10 has both a centerline refueling boom unique in that it sports a control surface system at its aft end that differs from the V tail design used on previous tankers and a drogue and hose system on the starboard side of the rear fuselage The KC 10 boom operator is seated in the rear of the aircraft with a wide window for monitoring refueling rather than prone as in the KC 135 The operator controls refueling operations through a digital fly by wire system 9 10 The refueling boom can deliver fuel to a receiver at the maximum rate of 1 100 gallons 4 180 liters per minute while the centerline drogue system has a maximum fuel ofload rate of 470 gallons 1 786 liters per minute 11 Unlike the KC 135 the KC 10 s hose and drogue system allows refueling of Navy Marine Corps and most allied aircraft all in one mission 5 The final twenty KC 10s produced included wing mounted pods for added refueling locations 1 The KC 10 can also carry a complement of 75 personnel with 146 000 lb 66 225 kg of cargo or 170 000 lb 77 110 kg in an all cargo configuration 5 With that it can transport those weights for an unrefueled range of 4 400 miles 7 040 kms 12 The KC 10 has a side cargo door for loading and unloading cargo Handling equipment is required to raise and lower loads to the cargo opening It can carry cargo and serve as a tanker on overseas missions 13 Further developments Edit A USAF KC 10 Extender after being refueled by another KC 10A need for new transport aircraft for the Royal Netherlands Air Force Koninklijke Luchtmacht was first identified in 1984 14 The 1991 Gulf War highlighted the deficiencies in mobility of European forces 15 In 1991 four categories of transport requirements were established Category A required a large cargo aircraft with a range of at least 4 500 km and the capability to refuel F 16s In 1992 two DC 10 30CFs were acquired from Martinair in a buy leaseback contract When one of the two aircraft was lost in the Martinair Flight 495 crash a third aircraft was bought from Martinair 14 The conversion was handled via the United States foreign military sales program which in turn contracted McDonnell Douglas Costs for the conversion were initially estimated at 89 5 million FY 1994 The aircraft were to be equipped with both a boom and a probe and drogue system However because McDonnell Douglas did not have any experience with the requested Remote Aerial Refueling Operator RARO system and because the third aircraft differed from the original two the program could not be completed at budget By omitting the probe and drogue system and a fixed partition wall between the cargo and passenger the cost could be limited at 96 million To make up for the cost increase McDonnell Douglas hired Dutch companies to do part of the work The conversion of the aircraft was performed by KLM and was done from October 1994 to September 1995 for the first aircraft and from February to December 1995 for the second This was much longer than planned mostly because McDonnell Douglas delivered the parts late This would have again increased the cost but in the contract for the AH 64 Apaches which the Royal Netherlands Air Force also bought from McDonnell Douglas the price was agreed to be kept at 96 million 14 To modernize the KC 10 the USAF has awarded a contract to Boeing in 2010 to upgrade the fleet of 59 aircraft with new Communication navigation and surveillance and air traffic management CNS ATM system This was to allow the aircraft to fly in civil airspace as new ICAO and FAA standards took effect in 2015 16 Rockwell Collins was also awarded a contract in 2011 for avionics and systems integration for the cockpit modernization program 17 18 Variants Edit KC 10A Initial military tanker version based on the DC 10 30CF KDC 10 Conversion of DC 10 30CF aircraft to tanker transport configuration While a FMS program run through McDonnell Douglas conversion of two aircraft was carried out by KLM Omega Aerial Refueling Services operates KDC 10 40 citation needed KC 10B After McDonnell Douglas did the KDC 10 conversion for the Royal Netherlands Air Force in 1992 they proposed a tanker transport version of the MD 11CF which had the in house designation KMD 11 MDC offered either conversion of second hand aircraft KMD 11 or new build aircraft KC 10B the proposed KMD 11 offered 35 000 lbs more cargo capacity and 8 400 lbs more transferable fuel than the KC 10A It was offered to the RNAF and Royal Saudi Air Force RSAF in the 1990s and the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF in the early 2000s 19 Operational history EditUnited States Edit The first KC 10 was delivered to the Air Force s Strategic Air Command SAC in March 1981 at Barksdale AFB In 1982 a newly renamed 22d Air Refueling Wing formerly the 22d Bombardment Wing was re equipped with KC 10A Extenders and became the second Air Force unit to operate the new tankers citation needed The 60th and final KC 10 was delivered on 29 November 1988 20 The KC 10s served with SAC until 1992 when they were reassigned to the newly established Air Mobility Command In the aerial refueling role the KC 10s have been operated largely in the strategic refueling of large number of tactical aircraft on ferry flights and the refueling of other strategic transport aircraft Conversely the KC 135 fleet has operated largely in the in theater tactical role There are 59 KC 10 Extenders in service with the USAF as of 2010 13 16 The USAF s KC 10s are stationed primarily at Travis AFB California and McGuire AFB now part of Joint Base McGuire Dix Lakehurst in New Jersey A US Navy F 14D and two F A 18Cs prepare to refuel from a KC 10 in 2005 over the Persian Gulf When faced with refusals of basing and overflight rights from continental European countries during Operation El Dorado Canyon the U S was forced to use the UK based F 111s in the 1986 air strikes against Libya The KC 10s and KC 135s allowed 29 F 111s along with other Air Force and Navy aircraft to reach their targets 21 The KC 10 again played a key role during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in 1991 KC 10s facilitated the deployment of tactical strategic and transport aircraft to Saudi Arabia In the early stages of Operation Desert Shield aerial refueling was key to the rapid airlift of materiel and forces In addition to refueling airlift aircraft the KC 10 along with the smaller KC 135 moved thousands of tons of cargo and thousands of troops in support of the massive buildup The KC 10 and the KC 135 conducted about 51 700 separate refueling operations and delivered 125 million gallons 475 million liters of fuel without missing a single scheduled rendezvous 13 A KC 10 Extender of Travis AFB approaching a second KC 10 for refuelling over the Pacific Ocean 2017Since then the KC 10 had participated in other smaller conflicts In March 1999 NATO launched Operation Allied Force against the government of Yugoslavia The mobility portion of the operation began in February and was heavily dependent on tankers By early May 1999 some 150 KC 10s and KC 135s deployed to Europe where they refueled bombers fighters and support aircraft engaged in the conflict The KC 10 flew 409 missions throughout the entire Allied Force campaign and continued support operations in Kosovo 13 Since 11 September 2001 KC 10s had also flown more than 350 missions guarding U S skies as a part of Operation Noble Eagle During Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom KC 10s have flown more than 1 390 missions delivering critical air refueling support to numerous joint and Coalition receiver aircraft 13 As of 2004 KC 10s were expected to serve until 2043 22 The Air Force considered retiring its fleet of KC 10 tankers in response to sequestration budget cuts as part of the service s FY 2015 budget A vertical chop to divest all KC 10s was suggested because there are fewer KC 10s than KC 135s having three different tanker models in service after the introduction of the KC 46 would be costly and a horizontal cut across the refueling fleets would achieve small efficiencies 23 Some believed retiring the KC 10 would not benefit the Air Force given that it is equipped with both boom and hose and drogue refueling systems and the fleet s relatively young age 24 At first officials claimed that the initial focus on retiring the KC 10 in September 2013 was a trial balloon to call attention to Air Force operating cost issues as of early 2013 the KC 10 had a per hour flying cost of 21 170 and a mission capable rate of 87 percent 25 A FY 2015 budget plan did not include cuts to the KC 10 26 On 13 July 2020 the first US KC 10 to be retired tail number 86 0036 was transferred to the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group AMARG at Davis Monthan Air Force Base Arizona 27 On 1 July 2021 the 2d ARS was the first KC 10 squadron to start conversion to the KC 46 28 In August of 2021 the KC 10 took part in the largest non combatant evacuation in support of Operation Allies refuge and contributing to the safe evacuation of more than 124 000 Afghan refugees 29 In January 2023 the USAF announced that all KC 10s will be retired by 30 September 2024 30 Netherlands Edit The second Royal Netherlands Air Force KDC 10 with landing gear downThe two Dutch KDC 10s were used for both refueling and transport 31 They were stationed on Eindhoven Airport as part of the 334th Transport Squadron Of the 5 500 hours flown in the first 3 years of use the aircraft were used in their tanker role for 50 of the time Besides being used by the air force and NATO allies the KDC 10s were also used to support peacekeeping and humanitarian aid operations Of the first three years 32 of the flight hours were used for peacekeeping and humanitarian aid 14 In this function the aircraft was deployed to Kosovo to evacuate refugees to the Caribbean and Central America to provide humanitarian aid after the hurricanes Luis Georges and Mitch and to various countries in Africa and Asia to provide development aid In 1998 the aircraft were also used to evacuate Dutch citizens from Indonesia during the Fall of Suharto Dutch KDC 10s operated out of Manas AFB in support of allied forces during Operation Enduring Freedom and in support of Allied Air Force over Iraq and Syria A third DC 10 registered T 255 was acquired and served for three years before being withdrawn from service in April 2014 due to Dutch defense cuts and flown to Newquay Airport for scrapping 32 The KDC 10s in Dutch service were replaced with the Airbus A330 MRTT 33 The first aircraft registered T 264 Prins Bernhard and due for a major service was withdrawn from use on 1 November 2019 prior to being transferred to its new owner Omega Aerial Refueling Services on 4 November 2019 34 The last KDC 10 registered T 235 Jan Scheffer remained in Dutch service until it was retired on 7 October 2021 35 The aircraft subsequently left The Netherlands bound for service with Omega in the U S on 25 October 2021 36 33 Civilian operators Edit Omega s KDC 10 tanker in March 2009Commercial refueling companies Omega Aerial Refueling Services and Global Airtanker Service operate two KDC 10 tankers N974VV and N852V respectively for lease 37 38 They were converted from DC 10 40s and provide probe and drogue refueling capabilities from wing pods similar to the KC 10 39 In June and July 2011 Omega Air s KDC 10 supported 3 of Royal Australian Air Force s F A 18 Hornets en route to Red Flag Alaska 40 In 2019 Omega agreed to purchase the Netherlands two KDC 10s with one being received in November 2019 34 and the second delivered in October 2021 36 33 Operators Edit A KC 10 right foreground and C 17 left background at Avalon Airport Australia for the 2005 Australian International Airshow A KC 10 from Travis AFB taking off from RAF Mildenhall United StatesUnited States Air Force 58 KC 10 aircraft in use as of July 2020 13 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 Strategic Air Command 2nd Bomb Wing Barksdale AFB Louisiana 1981 1992 2d Air Refueling Squadron 1989 1992 32d Air Refueling Squadron 1981 1992 4th Wing Seymour Johnson AFB North Carolina 1991 1992 344th Air Refueling Squadron 911th Air Refueling Squadron 22d Air Refueling Wing March AFB California 1982 1992 6th Air Refueling Squadron 1989 1992 9th Air Refueling Squadron 1982 1992 68th Air Refueling Group Wing Seymour Johnson AFB 1982 1991 344th Air Refueling Squadron 1986 1991 911th Air Refueling Squadron 1982 1991 802d Air Refueling Wing Lajes Air Base Azores 1990 1991 802d Air Refueling Squadron 1709th Air Refueling Wing King Abdul Aziz Air Base Saudi Arabia 1990 1991 1710th Air Refueling Squadron Air Mobility Command 22d Air Refueling Wing March AFB 1992 1994 6th Air Refueling Squadron 9th Air Refueling Squadron 458th Operations Group Barksdale AFB 1992 1994 2d Air Refueling Squadron 32d Air Refueling Squadron 4th Operations Group Seymour Johnson AFB 1992 1995 344th Air Refueling Squadron 1992 1994 711th Air Refueling Squadron 1994 1994 744th Air Refueling Squadron 1994 1995 911th Air Refueling Squadron 1992 1994 60th Air Mobility Wing Travis AFB California 1994 present 6th Air Refueling Squadron 1995 present 9th Air Refueling Squadron 1994 present 305th Air Mobility Wing McGuire AFB New Jersey 1994 2023 2d Air Refueling Squadron 1994 2021 32d Air Refueling Squadron 380th Air Expeditionary Wing Al Dhafra Air Base United Arab Emirates 2002 present 908th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron 722d Air Refueling Wing March AFB 1994 1996 6th Air Refueling Squadron 1994 1996 9th Air Refueling Squadron 1994 Air Force Reserve Command 98th Air Refueling Group Associate Barksdale AFB 1987 1994 78th Air Refueling Squadron 452d Air Refueling Wing Associate March AFB 1981 1995 78th Air Refueling Squadron 1981 1987 79th Air Refueling Squadron 1982 1995 349th Air Mobility Wing Associate Travis AFB 1994 present 70th Air Refueling Squadron 1994 present 79th Air Refueling Squadron 1995 present 514th Air Mobility Wing Associate McGuire AFB 1994 present 76th Air Refueling Squadron 1994 2022 78th Air Refueling Squadron 916th Air Refueling Group Associate Seymour Johnson 1985 1994 77th Air Refueling Squadron NetherlandsRoyal Netherlands Air Force operated two KDC 10s which upon retirement were sold to Omega Aerial Refueling Services The Dutch tankers were replaced by Airbus A330 MRTTs owned by NATO as part of the Multinational Multi Role Tanker Transport Fleet MMF 49 A DC 10 transport registered T 255 served for three years before being withdrawn from service in April 2014 due to Dutch defence cuts 50 334 Squadron Eindhoven AirportIncidents EditOn 17 September 1987 KC 10A serial number 82 0190 was undergoing maintenance on the ground at Barksdale AFB Louisiana and suffered an explosion and subsequent fire The KC 10 was significantly damaged and written off One member of the ground crew died in the fire 51 Specifications KC 10A EditData from USAF Fact sheet 13 Steffen 52 General characteristicsCrew 4 Aircraft Commander copilot flight engineer and boom operator Capacity 170 000 lb of cargo 25 pallets and 16 passengers or 17 pallets and 75 passengers 52 Length 181 ft 7 in 55 35 m Wingspan 165 ft 4 5 in 50 406 m Height 58 ft 1 in 17 70 m Wing area 3 958 sq ft 367 7 m2 Airfoil root DSMA 496 521 522 tip DSMA 519 520 53 Empty weight 241 027 lb 109 328 kg Gross weight 590 000 lb 267 619 kg Max takeoff weight 590 000 lb 267 619 kg Fuel capacity 365 000 lb 165 561 kg Powerplant 3 General Electric F103 GE CF6 50C2 turbofan engines 52 500 lbf 234 kN thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 538 mph 866 km h 468 kn Maximum speed Mach 0 89 Range 4 400 mi 7 100 km 3 800 nmi with a maximum passenger capacity 3 800 nmi 7 038 km 4 373 mi with maximum cargo capacity Ferry range 11 500 mi 18 500 km 10 000 nmi Service ceiling 42 000 ft 13 000 m Rate of climb 6 870 ft min 34 9 m s See also Edit Aviation portalRelated development McDonnell Douglas DC 10Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Lockheed TriStar RAF Related lists List of active United States military aircraft List of United States military aerial refueling aircraftReferences EditNotes The Handley Page Jetstream had been initially ordered as the C 10 but was soon canceled This allowed the tanker version of the DC 10 to be designated KC 10A Citations a b Waddington 2000 pp 116 120 Endres 1998 p 65 a b c d Steffan 1998 p 103 Frawley 2002 p 119 a b c d e Steffan 1998 p 104 KC 10A Extender Background Globalsecurity org Retrieved 27 August 2011 Eden 2004 p 286 KC 10A Extender Characteristics Globalsecurity org Retrieved 27 August 2011 a b Steffen 1998 pp 103 107 Eden 2004 p 287 https www af mil About Us Fact Sheets Display Article 104520 kc 10 extender https www af mil About Us Fact Sheets Display Article 104520 kc 10 extender a b c d e f g Factsheets KC 10 Extender US Air Force May 2014 Retrieved 30 November 2013 a b c d Evaluatie project KDC 10 Ministerie van Defensie in Dutch 1 July 1999 Retrieved 5 January 2014 Steffen 1997 p 107 a b Trimble Stephen 24 June 2010 Boeing outlines C 130H and KC 10 cockpit upgrades Flightglobal com Retrieved 19 September 2010 Boeing Wins CNS ATM Upgrade Contract for USAF s KC 10 Tankers Defenseindustrydaily com 21 August 2014 Retrieved 16 March 2017 Rockwell Collins awarded contract for KC 10 CNS ATM cockpit upgrade program Archived from the original on 9 September 2011 Retrieved 16 January 2019 Too Big for Its Own Good Why a MD 11 Based Tanker Was Never Built 8 January 2016 Steffen 1998 pp 104 107 Operation El Dorado Canyon Globalsecurity org Retrieved 27 August 2011 Veronico and Dunn 2004 p 58 Air Force May Scrap KC 10 Tanker Fleet DoDBuzz com 17 September 2013 WEISGERBER MARCUS MEHTA AARON 15 September 2013 USAF Weighs Scrapping KC 10 A 10 Fleets www defensenews com Gannett Government Media Corporation Archived from the original on 30 October 2013 Retrieved 30 October 2013 Air Force May Scrap Entire A 10 Fleet Defensemedianetwork com 17 October 2013 How Hagel spending plan will transform US military Flightglobal com 26 February 2014 First KC 10 heads to Boneyard as Pegasus comes into the fleet 16 July 2020 https www airandspaceforces com mcguire squadron says goodbye to kc 10 prepares for kc 46 https www travis af mil News Article 3131472 operation allies refuge one year later Rossi Pedroza Bertrand 30 January 2023 End of the 10 349th Air Mobility Wing Public Affairs Retrieved 13 April 2023 Steffen 1997 pp 106 107 Dutch air force scraps DC 10 transport flightglobal com Retrieved 23 June 2019 a b c RNLAF s final KDC 10 tanker leaves the Netherlands key aero 25 October 2021 Retrieved 21 November 2021 a b Private aerial refueller Omega buys KDC 10 tankers with booms flightglobal com 25 November 2019 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Farewell flight and final goodbye to the KDC 10 of the Royal Netherlands Air Force aviacion com 5 October 2021 Retrieved 21 November 2021 a b van der Mark 2019 p 7 Frequently Asked Questions Omega Air Refueling Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2011 KDC 10 Air Refueling Tanker Aircraft Global Airtanker Service Archived from the original on 4 July 2008 Retrieved 19 September 2010 KDC 10 Primary Options Global Air Tanker Services Archived from the original on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 25 February 2008 RAAF Hornets Participate in Red Flag Alaska Air Forces Monthly Key Publishing Issue 282 September 2011 pp 37 ISSN 0955 7091 Retrieved 30 September 2011 First KC 10 Extender Tanker Jet Heads to the Boneyard for Retirement Updated 13 July 2020 2nd Bomb Wing 22nd Bomb Wing SAC March AFB B52 Joint Base McGuire Dix Lakehurst PDF 916th Air Refueling Wing PDF Retrieved 30 June 2022 349th Air Mobility Wing History Facts 514th Air Mobility Wing 380Th Air Expeditionary Wing MMF Background Paper PDF Airbus Group retrieved from an Archive today capture made on 17 Jul 2017 22 36 58 UTC Archived from the original PDF on 17 July 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2021 Dutch air force scraps DC 10 transport flightglobal com Retrieved 22 November 2021 McDonnell Douglas KC 10A 82 0190 Aviation Safety Network Database Retrieved 19 September 2010 a b Steffen 1998 p 107 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 BibliographyEden Paul ed 2004 The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft London Amber Books ISBN 978 1 904687 84 9 Endres Gunter 1998 McDonnell Douglas DC 10 Volume 10 Grand Rapids Michigan Zenith Imprint ISBN 978 0 7603 0617 8 Frawley Gerard 2002 The International Directory of Military Aircraft 2002 2003 Fyshwick Australia Aerospace Publications ISBN 978 1 875671 55 7 Steffen Arthur A C 1998 McDonnell Douglas DC 10 and KC 10 Extender Hinckley Leicester UK Midland Publishing ISBN 978 1 85780 051 7 van der Mark Kees December 2019 First Dutch KDC 10 retired from service Air International Vol 97 no 6 p 7 ISSN 0306 5634 Veronico Nick Dunn Jim 2004 21st Century U S Air Power Grand Rapids Michigan Zenith Imprint ISBN 978 0 7603 2014 3 Waddington Terry 2000 McDonnell Douglas DC 10 Miami Florida World Transport Press ISBN 978 1 892437 04 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to McDonnell Douglas KC 10 Extender KC 10 page on Boeing com USAF KC 10 fact sheet KC 10 fact sheet on TheAviationZone com KDC 10 in the Dutch Air Force KC 10 CLS Competition McDonnell Douglas promotional video of the KC 10 Extender on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McDonnell Douglas KC 10 Extender amp oldid 1170606895, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.