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Lockheed C-130 Hercules

The Lockheed C-130 Hercules is an American four-engine turboprop military transport aircraft designed and built by Lockheed (now Lockheed Martin). Capable of using unprepared runways for takeoffs and landings, the C-130 was originally designed as a troop, medevac, and cargo transport aircraft. The versatile airframe has found uses in other roles, including as a gunship (AC-130), for airborne assault, search and rescue, scientific research support, weather reconnaissance, aerial refueling, maritime patrol, and aerial firefighting. It is now the main tactical airlifter for many military forces worldwide. More than 40 variants of the Hercules, including civilian versions marketed as the Lockheed L-100, operate in more than 60 nations.

C-130 Hercules
A USAF C-130E
Role Military transport aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer
First flight 23 August 1954; 68 years ago (1954-08-23)
Introduction December 1956[1]
Status In service
Primary users United States Air Force
Produced 1954–present
Number built Over 2,500 as of 2015[2]
Variants

The C-130 entered service with the U.S. in 1956, followed by Australia and many other nations. During its years of service, the Hercules has participated in numerous military, civilian and humanitarian aid operations. In 2007, the C-130 became the fifth aircraft[N 1] to mark 50 years of continuous service with its original primary customer, which for the C-130 is the United States Air Force. The C-130 Hercules is the longest continuously produced military aircraft at more than 60 years, with the updated Lockheed Martin C-130J Super Hercules currently being produced.[3]

Design and development

Background and requirements

The Korean War showed that World War II-era piston-engine transports—Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcars, Douglas C-47 Skytrains and Curtiss C-46 Commandos—were no longer adequate. On 2 February 1951, the United States Air Force issued a General Operating Requirement (GOR) for a new transport to Boeing, Douglas, Fairchild, Lockheed, Martin, Chase Aircraft, North American, Northrop, and Airlifts Inc.

The new transport would have a capacity of 92 passengers, 72 combat troops or 64 paratroopers in a cargo compartment that was approximately 41 ft (12 m) long, 9 ft (2.7 m) high, and 10 ft (3.0 m) wide. Unlike transports derived from passenger airliners, it was to be designed specifically as a combat transport with loading from a hinged loading ramp at the rear of the fuselage. A notable advance for large aircraft was the introduction of a turboprop powerplant, the Allison T56 which was developed for the C-130. It gave the aircraft greater range than a turbojet engine as it used less fuel.[4][5] Turboprop engines also produced much more power for their weight than piston engines. However, the turboprop configuration chosen for the T56, with the propeller connected to the compressor, had the potential to cause structural failure of the aircraft if an engine failed. Safety devices had to be incorporated to reduce the excessive drag from a windmilling propeller.[6][7]

Design phase

The Hercules resembled a larger four-engine version of the Fairchild C-123 Provider with a similar wing and cargo ramp layout. The C-123 had evolved from the Chase XCG-20 Avitruc, which was first designed and flown as a cargo glider in 1947.[citation needed] The Boeing C-97 Stratofreighter had rear ramps, which made it possible to drive vehicles onto the airplane (also possible with the forward ramp on a C-124). The ramp on the Hercules was also used to airdrop cargo, which included a Low-altitude parachute-extraction system for Sheridan tanks and even dropping large improvised "daisy cutter" bombs. The new Lockheed cargo plane had a range of 1,100 nmi (1,270 mi; 2,040 km) and it could operate from short and unprepared strips.

Fairchild, North American, Martin, and Northrop declined to participate. The remaining five companies tendered a total of ten designs: Lockheed two, Boeing one, Chase three, Douglas three, and Airlifts Inc. one. The contest was a close affair between the lighter of the two Lockheed (preliminary project designation L-206) proposals and a four-turboprop Douglas design.

The Lockheed design team was led by Willis Hawkins, starting with a 130-page proposal for the Lockheed L-206.[8] Hall Hibbard, Lockheed vice president and chief engineer, saw the proposal and directed it to Kelly Johnson, who did not care for the low-speed, unarmed aircraft, and remarked, "If you sign that letter, you will destroy the Lockheed Company."[8] Both Hibbard and Johnson signed the proposal and the company won the contract for the now-designated Model 82 on 2 July 1951.[9]

 
A C-130 Hercules flight deck. Aircraft displayed at the Norwegian Armed Forces Aircraft Collection

The first flight of the YC-130 prototype was made on 23 August 1954 from the Lockheed plant in Burbank, California. The aircraft, serial number 53-3397, was the second prototype, but the first of the two to fly. The YC-130 was piloted by Stanley Beltz and Roy Wimmer on its 61-minute flight to Edwards Air Force Base; Jack Real and Dick Stanton served as flight engineers. Kelly Johnson flew chase in a Lockheed P2V Neptune.[10]

After the two prototypes were completed, production began in Marietta, Georgia, where over 2,300 C-130s have been built through 2009.[11]

The initial production model, the C-130A, was powered by Allison T56-A-9 turboprops with three-blade propellers and originally equipped with the blunt nose of the prototypes. Deliveries began in December 1956, continuing until the introduction of the C-130B model in 1959. Some A-models were equipped with skis and re-designated C-130D. As the C-130A became operational with Tactical Air Command (TAC), the C-130's lack of range became apparent and additional fuel capacity was added with wing pylon-mounted tanks outboard of the engines; this added 6,000 lb (2,720 kg) of fuel capacity for a total capacity of 40,000 lb (18,140 kg).[12]

Improved versions

 
A Michigan Air National Guard C-130E dispatches its flares during a low-level training mission
 
Two C-130 Hercules in South Korea, 1984
 
A C-130 conducts a night flight mission over Yokota Air Base

The C-130B model was developed to complement the A-models that had previously been delivered, and incorporated new features, particularly increased fuel capacity in the form of auxiliary tanks built into the center wing section and an AC electrical system. Four-bladed Hamilton Standard propellers replaced the Aero Products' three-blade propellers that distinguished the earlier A-models. The C-130B had ailerons operated by hydraulic pressure that was increased from 2,050 psi (14.1 MPa) to 3,000 psi (21 MPa), as well as uprated engines and four-blade propellers that were standard until the J-model.

The B model was originally intended to have "blown controls", a system that blows high-pressure air over the control surfaces to improve their effectiveness during slow flight. It was tested on an NC-130B prototype aircraft with a pair of T-56 turbines providing high-pressure air through a duct system to the control surfaces and flaps during landing. This greatly reduced landing speed to just 63 knots and cut landing distance in half. The system never entered service because it did not improve takeoff performance by the same margin, making the landing performance pointless if the aircraft could not also take off from where it had landed.[13]

An electronic reconnaissance variant of the C-130B was designated C-130B-II. A total of 13 aircraft were converted. The C-130B-II was distinguished by its false external wing fuel tanks, which were disguised signals intelligence (SIGINT) receiver antennas. These pods were slightly larger than the standard wing tanks found on other C-130Bs. Most aircraft featured a swept blade antenna on the upper fuselage, as well as extra wire antennas between the vertical fin and upper fuselage not found on other C-130s. Radio call numbers on the tail of these aircraft were regularly changed to confuse observers and disguise their true mission.

The extended-range C-130E model entered service in 1962 after it was developed as an interim long-range transport for the Military Air Transport Service. Essentially a B-model, the new designation was the result of the installation of 1,360 US gal (5,150 L) Sargent Fletcher external fuel tanks under each wing's midsection and more powerful Allison T56-A-7A turboprops. The hydraulic boost pressure to the ailerons was reduced back to 2,050 psi (14.1 MPa) as a consequence of the external tanks' weight in the middle of the wingspan. The E model also featured structural improvements, avionics upgrades, and a higher gross weight. Australia took delivery of 12 C130E Hercules during 1966–67 to supplement the 12 C-130A models already in service with the RAAF. Sweden and Spain fly the TP-84T version of the C-130E fitted for aerial refueling capability.

The KC-130 tankers, originally C-130F procured for the US Marine Corps (USMC) in 1958 (under the designation GV-1) are equipped with a removable 3,600 US gal (13,626 L) stainless steel fuel tank carried inside the cargo compartment. The two wing-mounted hose and drogue aerial refueling pods each transfer up to 300 US gal per minute (1,136 L per minute) to two aircraft simultaneously, allowing for rapid cycle times of multiple-receiver aircraft formations, (a typical tanker formation of four aircraft in less than 30 minutes). The US Navy's C-130G has increased structural strength allowing higher gross weight operation.

Further developments

 

The C-130H model has updated Allison T56-A-15 turboprops, a redesigned outer wing, updated avionics, and other minor improvements. Later H models had a new, fatigue-life-improved, center wing that was retrofitted to many earlier H-models. For structural reasons, some models are required to land with reduced amounts of fuel when carrying heavy cargo, reducing usable range.[14]

The H model remains in widespread use with the United States Air Force (USAF) and many foreign air forces. Initial deliveries began in 1964 (to the RNZAF), remaining in production until 1996. An improved C-130H was introduced in 1974, with Australia purchasing 12 of the type in 1978 to replace the original 12 C-130A models, which had first entered Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) service in 1958. The U.S. Coast Guard employs the HC-130H for long-range search and rescue, drug interdiction, illegal migrant patrols, homeland security, and logistics.

C-130H models produced from 1992 to 1996 were designated as C-130H3 by the USAF. The "3" denoting the third variation in design for the H series. Improvements included ring laser gyros for the INUs, GPS receivers, a partial glass cockpit (ADI and HSI instruments), a more capable APN-241 color radar, night vision device compatible instrument lighting, and an integrated radar and missile warning system. The electrical system upgrade included Generator Control Units (GCU) and Bus Switching units (BSU) to provide stable power to the more sensitive upgraded components.[15]

 
A Royal Air Force C-130K (C.3)

The equivalent model for export to the UK is the C-130K, known by the Royal Air Force (RAF) as the Hercules C.1. The C-130H-30 (Hercules C.3 in RAF service) is a stretched version of the original Hercules, achieved by inserting a 100 in (2.54 m) plug aft of the cockpit and an 80 in (2.03 m) plug at the rear of the fuselage. A single C-130K was purchased by the Met Office for use by its Meteorological Research Flight, where it was classified as the Hercules W.2. This aircraft was heavily modified, with its most prominent feature being the long red and white striped atmospheric probe on the nose and the move of the weather radar into a pod above the forward fuselage. This aircraft, named Snoopy, was withdrawn in 2001 and was then modified by Marshall of Cambridge Aerospace as a flight testbed for the A400M turbine engine, the TP400. The C-130K is used by the RAF Falcons for parachute drops. Three C-130Ks (Hercules C Mk.1P) were upgraded and sold to the Austrian Air Force in 2002.[16]

Enhanced models

 
A USAF HC-130P refuels a HH-60G Pavehawk helicopter

The MC-130E Combat Talon was developed for the USAF during the Vietnam War to support special operations missions in Southeast Asia, and led to both the MC-130H Combat Talon II as well as a family of other special missions aircraft. 37 of the earliest models currently operating with the Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) are scheduled to be replaced by new-production MC-130J versions. The EC-130 Commando Solo is another special missions variant within AFSOC, albeit operated solely by an AFSOC-gained wing in the Pennsylvania Air National Guard, and is a psychological operations/information operations (PSYOP/IO) platform equipped as an aerial radio station and television stations able to transmit messaging over commercial frequencies. Other versions of the EC-130, most notably the EC-130H Compass Call, are also special variants, but are assigned to the Air Combat Command (ACC). The AC-130 gunship was first developed during the Vietnam War to provide close air support and other ground-attack duties.

The HC-130 is a family of long-range search and rescue variants used by the USAF and the U.S. Coast Guard. Equipped for the deep deployment of Pararescuemen (PJs), survival equipment, and (in the case of USAF versions) aerial refueling of combat rescue helicopters, HC-130s are usually the on-scene command aircraft for combat SAR missions (USAF only) and non-combat SAR (USAF and USCG). Early USAF versions were also equipped with the Fulton surface-to-air recovery system, designed to pull a person off the ground using a wire strung from a helium balloon. The John Wayne movie The Green Berets features its use. The Fulton system was later removed when aerial refueling of helicopters proved safer and more versatile. The movie The Perfect Storm depicts a real-life SAR mission involving aerial refueling of a New York Air National Guard HH-60G by a New York Air National Guard HC-130P.

The C-130R and C-130T are U.S. Navy and USMC models, both equipped with underwing external fuel tanks. The USN C-130T is similar but has additional avionics improvements. In both models, aircraft are equipped with Allison T56-A-16 engines. The USMC versions are designated KC-130R or KC-130T when equipped with underwing refueling pods and pylons and are fully night vision system compatible.

The RC-130 is a reconnaissance version. A single example is used by the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force, the aircraft having originally been sold to the former Imperial Iranian Air Force.

The Lockheed L-100 (L-382) is a civilian variant, equivalent to a C-130E model without military equipment. The L-100 also has two stretched versions.

Next generation

In the 1970s, Lockheed proposed a C-130 variant with turbofan engines rather than turboprops, but the U.S. Air Force preferred the takeoff performance of the existing aircraft. In the 1980s, the C-130 was intended to be replaced by the Advanced Medium STOL Transport project. The project was canceled and the C-130 has remained in production.

Building on lessons learned, Lockheed Martin modified a commercial variant of the C-130 into a High Technology Test Bed (HTTB). This test aircraft set numerous short takeoff and landing performance records and significantly expanded the database for future derivatives of the C-130.[17] Modifications made to the HTTB included extended chord ailerons, a long chord rudder, fast-acting double-slotted trailing edge flaps, a high-camber wing leading edge extension, a larger dorsal fin and dorsal fins, the addition of three spoiler panels to each wing upper surface, a long-stroke main and nose landing gear system, and changes to the flight controls and a change from direct mechanical linkages assisted by hydraulic boost, to fully powered controls, in which the mechanical linkages from the flight station controls operated only the hydraulic control valves of the appropriate boost unit.[18]

The HTTB first flew on 19 June 1984, with civil registration of N130X. After demonstrating many new technologies, some of which were applied to the C-130J, the HTTB was lost in a fatal accident on 3 February 1993, at Dobbins Air Reserve Base, in Marietta, Georgia.[19] The crash was attributed to disengagement of the rudder fly-by-wire flight control system, resulting in a total loss of rudder control capability while conducting ground minimum control speed tests (Vmcg). The disengagement was a result of the inadequate design of the rudder's integrated actuator package by its manufacturer; the operator's insufficient system safety review failed to consider the consequences of the inadequate design to all operating regimes. A factor that contributed to the accident was the flight crew's lack of engineering flight test training.[20]

In the 1990s, the improved C-130J Super Hercules was developed by Lockheed (later Lockheed Martin). This model is the newest version and the only model in production. Externally similar to the classic Hercules in general appearance, the J model has new turboprop engines, six-bladed propellers, digital avionics, and other new systems.[21]

Upgrades and changes

In 2000, Boeing was awarded a US$1.4 billion contract to develop an Avionics Modernization Program kit for the C-130. The program was beset with delays and cost overruns until project restructuring in 2007.[22] In September 2009, it was reported that the planned Avionics Modernization Program (AMP) upgrade to the older C-130s would be dropped to provide more funds for the F-35, CV-22 and airborne tanker replacement programs.[23] However, in June 2010, Department of Defense approved funding for the initial production of the AMP upgrade kits.[24][25] Under the terms of this agreement, the USAF has cleared Boeing to begin low-rate initial production (LRIP) for the C-130 AMP. A total of 198 aircraft are expected to feature the AMP upgrade. The current cost per aircraft is US$14 million, although Boeing expects that this price will drop to US$7 million for the 69th aircraft.[22]

In the 2000s, Lockheed Martin and the U.S. Air Force began outfitting and retrofitting C-130s with the eight-blade UTC Aerospace Systems NP2000 propellers.[26] An engine enhancement program saving fuel and providing lower temperatures in the T56 engine has been approved, and the US Air Force expects to save $2 billion and extend the fleet life.[27]

In 2021, the Air Force Research Laboratory demonstrated the Rapid Dragon system which transforms the C-130 into a lethal strike platform capable of launching 12 JASSM-ER with 500kg warheads from a standoff distance of 925 km (575 mi). Future anticipated improvements support includes support for JDAM-ER, mine laying, drone dispersal as well as improved standoff range when 1,900 km (1,200 mi) JASSM-XR become available in 2024.[28][29]

Replacement

In October 2010, the Air Force released a capability request for information (CRFI) for the development of a new airlifter to replace the C-130. The new aircraft was to carry a 190% greater payload and assume the mission of mounted vertical maneuver (MVM). The greater payload and mission would enable it to carry medium-weight armored vehicles and unload them at locations without long runways. Various options were under consideration, including new or upgraded fixed-wing designs, rotorcraft, tiltrotors, or even an airship. The C-130 fleet of around 450 planes would be replaced by only 250 aircraft.[30] The Air Force had attempted to replace the C-130 in the 1970s through the Advanced Medium STOL Transport project, which resulted in the C-17 Globemaster III that instead replaced the C-141 Starlifter.[31]

The Air Force Research Laboratory funded Lockheed Martin and Boeing demonstrators for the Speed Agile concept, which had the goal of making a STOL aircraft that could take off and land at speeds as low as 70 kn (130 km/h; 81 mph) on airfields less than 2,000 ft (610 m) long and cruise at Mach 0.8-plus. Boeing's design used upper-surface blowing from embedded engines on the inboard wing and blown flaps for circulation control on the outboard wing. Lockheed's design also used blown flaps outboard, but inboard used patented reversing ejector nozzles.[32]

Boeing's design completed over 2,000 hours of wind tunnel tests in late 2009. It was a 5 percent-scale model of a narrow body design with a 55,000 lb (25,000 kg) payload. When the AFRL increased the payload requirement to 65,000 lb (29,000 kg), they tested a 5 percent-scale model of a widebody design with a 303,000 lb (137,000 kg) take-off gross weight and an "A400M-size" 158 in (4.0 m) wide cargo box. It would be powered by four IAE V2533 turbofans.[33]

In August 2011, the AFRL released pictures of the Lockheed Speed Agile concept demonstrator. A 23% scale model went through wind tunnel tests to demonstrate its hybrid powered lift, which combined a low drag airframe with simple mechanical assembly to reduce weight and improve aerodynamics. The model had four engines, including two Williams FJ44 turbofans.[31][34] On 26 March 2013, Boeing was granted a patent for its swept-wing powered lift aircraft.[35]

In January 2014, Air Mobility Command, Air Force Materiel Command and the Air Force Research Lab were in the early stages of defining requirements for the C-X next generation airlifter program[36] to replace both the C-130 and C-17. The aircraft would be produced from the early 2030s to the 2040s.[37]

Operational history

Military

 
A USMC KC-130F Hercules performing takeoffs and landings aboard the aircraft carrier Forrestal in 1963. The aircraft is now displayed at the National Museum of Naval Aviation.

The first production batch of C-130A aircraft were delivered beginning in 1956 to the 463d Troop Carrier Wing at Ardmore AFB, Oklahoma and the 314th Troop Carrier Wing at Sewart AFB, Tennessee. Six additional squadrons were assigned to the 322d Air Division in Europe and the 315th Air Division in the Far East. Additional aircraft were modified for electronics intelligence work and assigned to Rhein-Main Air Base, Germany while modified RC-130As were assigned to the Military Air Transport Service (MATS) photo-mapping division. The C-130A entered service with the U.S. Air Force in December 1956.[38]

In 1958, a U.S. reconnaissance C-130A-II of the 7406th Support Squadron was shot down over Armenia by four Soviet MiG-17s along the Turkish-Armenian border during a routine mission.[39]

Australia became the first non-American force to operate the C-130A Hercules with 12 examples being delivered from late 1958. The Royal Canadian Air Force became another early user with the delivery of four B-models (Canadian designation C-130 Mk I) in October / November 1960.[40]

In 1963, a Hercules achieved and still holds the record for the largest and heaviest aircraft to land on an aircraft carrier.[41] During October and November that year, a USMC KC-130F (BuNo 149798), loaned to the U.S. Naval Air Test Center, made 29 touch-and-go landings, 21 unarrested full-stop landings and 21 unassisted take-offs on Forrestal at a number of different weights. The pilot, Lieutenant (later Rear Admiral) James H. Flatley III, USN, was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his role in this test series. The tests were highly successful, but the aircraft was not deployed this way.[citation needed] Flatley denied that C-130 was tested for carrier onboard delivery (COD) operations, or for delivering nuclear weapons. He said that the intention was to support the Lockheed U-2, also being tested on carriers.[42] The Hercules used in the test, most recently in service with Marine Aerial Refueler Squadron 352 (VMGR-352) until 2005, is now part of the collection of the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola, Florida.[citation needed]

In 1964, C-130 crews from the 6315th Operations Group at Naha Air Base, Okinawa commenced forward air control (FAC; "Flare") missions over the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos supporting USAF strike aircraft. In April 1965 the mission was expanded to North Vietnam where C-130 crews led formations of Martin B-57 Canberra bombers on night reconnaissance/strike missions against communist supply routes leading to South Vietnam. In early 1966 Project Blind Bat/Lamplighter was established at Ubon Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand. After the move to Ubon, the mission became a four-engine FAC mission with the C-130 crew searching for targets and then calling in strike aircraft. Another little-known C-130 mission flown by Naha-based crews was Operation Commando Scarf, which involved the delivery of chemicals onto sections of the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos that were designed to produce mud and landslides in hopes of making the truck routes impassable.[citation needed]

In November 1964, on the other side of the globe, C-130Es from the 464th Troop Carrier Wing but loaned to 322d Air Division in France, took part in Operation Dragon Rouge, one of the most dramatic missions in history in the former Belgian Congo. After communist Simba rebels took white residents of the city of Stanleyville hostage, the U.S. and Belgium developed a joint rescue mission that used the C-130s to drop, air-land, and air-lift a force of Belgian paratroopers to rescue the hostages. Two missions were flown, one over Stanleyville and another over Paulis during Thanksgiving weeks.[43] The headline-making mission resulted in the first award of the prestigious MacKay Trophy to C-130 crews.[citation needed]

In the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, the No. 6 Transport Squadron of the Pakistan Air Force modified its C-130Bs for use as bombers to carry up to 20,000 lb (9,072 kg) of bombs on pallets. These improvised bombers were used to hit Indian targets such as bridges, heavy artillery positions, tank formations, and troop concentrations, though weren't that successful finally. [44][45][46]

 
C-130 Hercules were used in the Battle of Kham Duc in 1968, when the North Vietnamese Army forced U.S.-led forces to abandon the Kham Duc Special Forces Camp.

In October 1968, a C-130Bs from the 463rd Tactical Airlift Wing dropped a pair of M-121 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) bombs that had been developed for the massive Convair B-36 Peacemaker bomber but had never been used. The U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force resurrected the huge weapons as a means of clearing landing zones for helicopters and in early 1969 the 463rd commenced Commando Vault missions. Although the stated purpose of COMMANDO VAULT was to clear LZs, they were also used on enemy base camps and other targets.[citation needed]

During the late 1960s, the U.S. was eager to get information on Chinese nuclear capabilities. After the failure of the Black Cat Squadron to plant operating sensor pods near the Lop Nur Nuclear Weapons Test Base using a U-2, the CIA developed a plan, named Heavy Tea, to deploy two battery-powered sensor pallets near the base. To deploy the pallets, a Black Bat Squadron crew was trained in the U.S. to fly the C-130 Hercules. The crew of 12, led by Col Sun Pei Zhen, took off from Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base in an unmarked U.S. Air Force C-130E on 17 May 1969. Flying for six and a half hours at low altitude in the dark, they arrived over the target and the sensor pallets were dropped by parachute near Anxi in Gansu province. After another six and a half hours of low-altitude flight, they arrived back at Takhli. The sensors worked and uploaded data to a U.S. intelligence satellite for six months before their batteries failed. The Chinese conducted two nuclear tests, on 22 September 1969 and 29 September 1969, during the operating life of the sensor pallets. Another mission to the area was planned as Operation Golden Whip, but it was called off in 1970.[47] It is most likely that the aircraft used on this mission was either C-130E serial number 64-0506 or 64-0507 (cn 382-3990 and 382–3991). These two aircraft were delivered to Air America in 1964.[48] After being returned to the U.S. Air Force sometime between 1966 and 1970, they were assigned the serial numbers of C-130s that had been destroyed in accidents. 64-0506 is now flying as 62–1843, a C-130E that crashed in Vietnam on 20 December 1965, and 64-0507 is now flying as 63–7785, a C-130E that had crashed in Vietnam on 17 June 1966.[49]

The A-model continued in service through the Vietnam War, where the aircraft assigned to the four squadrons at Naha AB, Okinawa, and one at Tachikawa Air Base, Japan performed yeoman's service, including operating highly classified special operations missions such as the BLIND BAT FAC/Flare mission and FACT SHEET leaflet mission over Laos and North Vietnam. The A-model was also provided to the Republic of Vietnam Air Force as part of the Vietnamization program at the end of the war, and equipped three squadrons based at Tan Son Nhut Air Base. The last operator in the world is the Honduran Air Force, which is still flying one of five A model Hercules (FAH 558, c/n 3042) as of October 2009.[50] As the Vietnam War wound down, the 463rd Troop Carrier/Tactical Airlift Wing B-models and A-models of the 374th Tactical Airlift Wing were transferred back to the United States where most were assigned to Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard units.

 
U.S. Marines disembarking from C-130 transports at Da Nang Air Base on 8 March 1965.

Another prominent role for the B model was with the United States Marine Corps, where Hercules initially designated as GV-1s replaced C-119s. After Air Force C-130Ds proved the type's usefulness in Antarctica, the U.S. Navy purchased several B-models equipped with skis that were designated as LC-130s. C-130B-II electronic reconnaissance aircraft were operated under the SUN VALLEY program name primarily from Yokota Air Base, Japan. All reverted to standard C-130B cargo aircraft after their replacement in the reconnaissance role by other aircraft.[citation needed]

The C-130 was also used in the 1976 Entebbe raid in which Israeli commando forces performed a surprise operation to rescue 103 passengers of an airliner hijacked by Palestinian and German terrorists at Entebbe Airport, Uganda. The rescue force—200 soldiers, jeeps, and a black Mercedes-Benz (intended to resemble Ugandan Dictator Idi Amin's vehicle of state)—was flown over 2,200 nmi (4,074 km; 2,532 mi) almost entirely at an altitude of less than 100 ft (30 m) from Israel to Entebbe by four Israeli Air Force (IAF) Hercules aircraft without mid-air refueling (on the way back, the aircraft refueled in Nairobi, Kenya).[citation needed]

During the Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas) of 1982, Argentine Air Force C-130s undertook dangerous re-supply night flights as blockade runners to the Argentine garrison on the Falkland Islands. They also performed daylight maritime survey flights. One was shot down by a Royal Navy Sea Harrier using AIM-9 Sidewinders and cannon. The crew of seven were killed. Argentina also operated two KC-130 tankers during the war, and these refueled both the Douglas A-4 Skyhawks and Navy Dassault-Breguet Super Étendards; some C-130s were modified to operate as bombers with bomb-racks under their wings.[51] The British also used RAF C-130s to support their logistical operations.[citation needed]

 
USMC C-130T Fat Albert performing a rocket-assisted takeoff (RATO)

During the Gulf War of 1991 (Operation Desert Storm), the C-130 Hercules was used operationally by the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, and U.S. Marine Corps, along with the air forces of Australia, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, and the UK. The MC-130 Combat Talon variant also made the first attacks using the largest conventional bombs in the world, the BLU-82 "Daisy Cutter" and GBU-43/B "Massive Ordnance Air Blast" (MOAB) bomb. Daisy Cutters were used to primarily clear landing zones and to eliminate mine fields. The weight and size of the weapons make it impossible or impractical to load them on conventional bombers. The GBU-43/B MOAB is a successor to the BLU-82 and can perform the same function, as well as perform strike functions against hardened targets in a low air threat environment.[citation needed]

 
C-130 Hercules performs a tactical landing on a dirt strip, North Carolina, U.S.

Since 1992, two successive C-130 aircraft named Fat Albert have served as the support aircraft for the U.S. Navy Blue Angels flight demonstration team. Fat Albert I was a TC-130G (151891) a former U.S. NAVY TACAMO aircraft serving with Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron Three (VQ-3) before being transferred to the BLUES,[52] while Fat Albert II is a C-130T (164763).[53] Although Fat Albert supports a Navy squadron, it is operated by the U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) and its crew consists solely of USMC personnel. At some air shows featuring the team, Fat Albert takes part, performing flyovers. Until 2009, it also demonstrated its rocket-assisted takeoff (RATO) capabilities; these ended due to dwindling supplies of rockets.[54]

The AC-130 also holds the record for the longest sustained flight by a C-130. From 22 to 24 October 1997, two AC-130U gunships flew 36 hours nonstop from Hurlburt Field, Florida to Taegu (Daegu), South Korea, being refueled seven times by KC-135 tanker aircraft. This record flight beat the previous record longest flight by over 10 hours and the two gunships took on 410,000 lb (190,000 kg) of fuel. The gunship has been used in every major U.S. combat operation since Vietnam, except for Operation El Dorado Canyon, the 1986 attack on Libya.[55]

During the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and the ongoing support of the International Security Assistance Force (Operation Enduring Freedom), the C-130 Hercules has been used operationally by Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Romania, South Korea, Spain, the UK, and the United States.[citation needed]

During the 2003 invasion of Iraq (Operation Iraqi Freedom), the C-130 Hercules was used operationally by Australia, the UK, and the United States. After the initial invasion, C-130 operators as part of the Multinational force in Iraq used their C-130s to support their forces in Iraq.[citation needed]

Since 2004, the Pakistan Air Force has employed C-130s in the War in North-West Pakistan. Some variants had forward looking infrared (FLIR Systems Star Safire III EO/IR) sensor balls, to enable close tracking of militants.[56]

In 2017, France and Germany announced that they are to build up a joint air transport squadron at Evreux Air Base, France, comprising ten C-130J aircraft. Six of these will be operated by Germany. Initial operational capability is expected for 2021 while full operational capability is scheduled for 2024.[57]

Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill

 
A U.S. Air Force C-130 Hercules aircraft from the 910th Airlift Wing, Youngstown-Warren Air Reserve Station, Ohio, drops oil-dispersing chemicals into the Gulf of Mexico, 9 May 2010.

For almost two decades, the USAF 910th Airlift Wing's 757th Airlift Squadron and the U.S. Coast Guard have participated in oil spill cleanup exercises to ensure the U.S. military has a capable response in the event of a national emergency. The 757th Airlift Squadron operates the DOD's only fixed-wing Aerial Spray System which was certified by the EPA to disperse pesticides on DOD property to spread oil dispersants onto the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf Coast in 2010.[58]

During the 5-week mission, the aircrews flew 92 sorties and sprayed approximately 30,000 acres with nearly 149,000 gallons of oil dispersant to break up the oil. The Deepwater Horizon mission was the first time the US used the oil dispersing capability of the 910th Airlift Wing—its only large area, fixed-wing aerial spray program—in an actual spill of national significance.[59] The Air Force Reserve Command announced the 910th Airlift Wing has been selected as a recipient of the Air Force Outstanding Unit Award for its outstanding achievement from 28 April 2010 through 4 June 2010.[60]

Hurricane Harvey (2017)

 
U.S. military relief crews load supplies aboard a C-130 Hercules from the Illinois Air National Guard's 182nd Airlift Wing based in Peoria. The C-130 and crew have been assisting with Hurricane Harvey relief efforts since 31 Aug.

C-130s temporarily based at Kelly Field conducted mosquito control aerial spray applications over areas of eastern Texas devastated by Hurricane Harvey. This special mission treated more than 2.3 million acres at the direction of Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) to assist in recovery efforts by helping contain the significant increase in pest insects caused by large amounts of standing, stagnant water. The 910th Airlift Wing operates the Department of Defense's only aerial spray capability to control pest insect populations, eliminate undesired and invasive vegetation, and disperse oil spills in large bodies of water.[61]

The aerial spray flight also is now able to operate during the night with NVGs, which increases the flight's best case spray capacity from approximately 60 thousand acres per day to approximately 190 thousand acres per day. Spray missions are normally conducted at dusk and nighttime hours when pest insects are most active, the U.S. Air Force Reserve reports.[62]

Aerial firefighting

 
A C-130E fitted with a MAFFS-1 dropping fire retardant.

In the early 1970s, Congress created the Modular Airborne FireFighting System (MAFFS) which is a joint operation between the U.S. Forest Service who supply the systems and the Department of Defense who supply the C-130 aircraft. The roll-on/roll-off systems allow existing aircraft to be temporarily converted into a 3,000-gallon airtanker for fighting wildfires when demand exceeds the supply of privately contracted and publicly available airtankers.[63]

In the late 1980s, 22 retired USAF C-130As were removed from storage and transferred to the U.S. Forest Service, which then transferred them to six private companies to be converted into airtankers. One of these C-130s crashed in June 2002 while operating the Retardant Aerial Delivery System (RADS) near Walker, CA. The crash was attributed to wing separation caused by fatigue stress cracking and contributed to the grounding of the entire large aircraft fleet.[64] After an extensive review, US Forest Service and The Bureau of Land Management declined to renew the leases on nine C-130A over concerns about the age of the aircraft, which had been in service since the 1950s, and their ability to handle the forces generated by aerial firefighting.[citation needed]

More recently, an updated Retardant Aerial Delivery System known as RADS XL was developed by Coulson Aviation USA. That system consists of a C-130H/Q retrofitted with an in-floor discharge system, combined with a removable 3,500- or 4,000-gallon water tank. The combined system is FAA certified.[65]

On 22 January 2020, Coulson's Tanker 134, an EC-130Q registered N134CG, crashed during aerial firefighting operations in New South Wales, Australia, killing all three crew members. The aircraft had taken off out of RAAF Base Richmond and was supporting firefighting operations during Australia's 2019–20 fire season.[66]

Variants

 
C-130A of the VNAF
 
 
A U.S. JC-130 aircraft retrieving a reconnaissance satellite film capsule under parachute.
 
RAAF C-130J-30 at Point Cook, 2006
 
Brazilian Air Force C-130 (L-382)

Significant military variants of the C-130 include:

C-130A
Initial production model with four Allison T56-A-11/9 turboprop engines. 219 were ordered and deliveries to the USAF began in Dec. 1956.
C-130B
Variant with four Allison T56-A-7 engines. 134 were ordered and entered USAF service in May 1959.
C-130E
Same engines as the Bravo variant but with two 1,290 gal. external fuel tanks, and an increased maximum takeoff weight capability. Introduced in Aug. 1962 with 389 were ordered.
C-130F/G
Variants procured by the U.S. Navy for USMC refueling missions, and other support/transport operations.
C-130H
Identical to the Echo variant but with more powerful Allison T56-A-15 turboprop engines. Introduced in Jun. 1974 with 308 ordered.
C-130K
Designation for RAF Hercules C1/W2/C3 aircraft (C-130Js in RAF service are the Hercules C.4 and Hercules C.5)
C-130T
Improved variants procured by the U.S. Navy for USMC refueling, and other support/transport operations.
C-130A-II Dreamboat
Early version Electronic Intelligence/Signals Intelligence (ELINT/SIGINT) aircraft[67]
C-130J Super Hercules
Tactical airlifter, with new engines, avionics, and updated systems
C-130B BLC
A one-off conversion of C-130B 58–0712, modified with a double Allison YT56 gas generator pod under each outer wing, to provide bleed air for all the control surfaces and flaps.[68]
AC-130A/E/H/J/U/W
Gunship variants
C-130D/D-6
Ski-equipped version for snow and ice operations United States Air Force / Air National Guard
CC-130E/H/J Hercules
Designation for Canadian Armed Forces / Royal Canadian Air Force Hercules aircraft. U.S. Air Force used the CC-130J designation to differentiate the standard C-130J variant from the "stretched" C-130J (company designation C-130J-30). CC-130H(T) is the Canadian tanker variant of the KC-130H.[citation needed]
C-130M
Designation used by the Brazilian Air Force for locally modified / up-graded C-130H aircraft[69]
DC-130A/E/H
USAF and USN Drone control
EC-130
EC-130E/J Commando Solo – USAF / Air National Guard psychological operations version
EC-130E Airborne Battlefield Command and Control Center (ABCCC) – USAF procedural air-to-ground attack control, also provided NRT threat updates
EC-130E Rivet Rider – Airborne psychological warfare aircraft
EC-130H Compass Call – Electronic warfare and electronic attack.[70]
EC-130V – Airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) variant used by USCG for counter-narcotics missions[71]
GC-130
Permanently grounded instructional airframes
HC-130
HC-130B/E/H – Early model combat search and rescue
HC-130P/N Combat King – USAF aerial refueling tanker and combat search and rescue
HC-130J Combat King II – Next generation combat search and rescue tanker
HC-130H/J – USCG long-range surveillance and search and rescue,
JC-130
Temporary conversion for flight test operations; used to recover drones and spy satellite film capsules.
KC-130F/R/T/J
United States Marine Corps aerial refueling tanker and tactical airlifter
LC-130F/H/R
USAF / Air National Guard – Ski-equipped version for Arctic and Antarctic support operations; LC-130F and R previously operated by USN
MC-130
MC-130E/H Combat Talon I/II – Special operations infiltration/extraction variant
MC-130W Combat Spear/Dragon Spear – Special operations tanker/gunship[72]
MC-130P Combat Shadow – Special operations tanker – all operational aircraft converted to HC-130P standard
MC-130J Commando II (formerly Combat Shadow II) – Special operations tanker Air Force Special Operations Command[73]
YMC-130H – Modified aircraft under Operation Credible Sport for second Iran hostage crisis rescue attempt
NC-130
Permanent conversion for flight test operations
PC-130/C-130-MP
Maritime patrol
RC-130A/S
Surveillance aircraft for reconnaissance
SC-130J Sea Herc
Proposed maritime patrol version of the C-130J, designed for coastal surveillance and anti-submarine warfare.[74][75]
TC-130
Aircrew training
VC-130H
VIP transport
WC-130A/B/E/H/J
Weather reconnaissance ("Hurricane Hunter") version for USAF / Air Force Reserve Command's 53d Weather Reconnaissance Squadron in support of the National Weather Service's National Hurricane Center

Operators

 
Military operators of C-130 Hercules aircraft;
  Current operators
  Former operators
 
 

Former operators

Accidents

The C-130 Hercules has had a low accident rate in general. The Royal Air Force recorded an accident rate of about one aircraft loss per 250,000 flying hours over the last 40 years, placing it behind Vickers VC10s and Lockheed TriStars with no flying losses.[77] USAF C-130A/B/E-models had an overall attrition rate of 5% as of 1989 as compared to 1–2% for commercial airliners in the U.S., according to the NTSB, 10% for B-52 bombers, and 20% for fighters (F-4, F-111), trainers (T-37, T-38), and helicopters (H-3).[78]

Aircraft on display

Argentina

Australia

  • C-130A RAAF A97-214 used by 36 Squadron from early 1959, withdrawn from use late 1978; now at RAAF Museum, RAAF Base Williams, Point Cook.[80]
  • C-130E RAAF A97-160 used by 37 Squadron from August 1966, withdrawn from use November 2000; to RAAF Museum, 14 November 2000, cocooned as of September 2005.[81]

Belgium

  • C-130H Belgian Airforce tailnumber CH13 in service from 2009 until May 2021 is on display at the Beauvechain Air Base at the First Wing Historical Center.[82]

Canada

Colombia

  • C-130B FAC 1010 (serial number 3521) moved on 14 January 2016 to the Colombian Aerospace Museum in Tocancipá, Cundinamarca, for static display.[86]
  • C-130B FAC1011 (serial number 3585, ex 59–1535) preserved at the Colombian Air and Space Museum within CATAM AFB, Bogotá.[87]

Indonesia

  • C-130B Indonesian Air Force A-1301 preserved at Sulaeman Airstrip, Bandung. Also occasionally used for Paskhas Training. The airplane is relocated to Air Force Museum in Yogyakarta in 2017.[88]

Norway

  • C-130H Royal Norwegian Air Force 953 was retired on 10 June 2007 and moved to the Air Force museum at Oslo Gardermoen in May 2008.[89]

Saudi Arabia

  • C-130H RSAF 460 was operated by 4 Squadron Royal Saudi Air Force from December 1974 until January 1987. It was damaged in a fire at Jeddah in December 1989. Restored for ground training by August 1993. At Royal Saudi Air Force Museum, November 2002, restored for ground display by using a tail from another C-130H.[90]

United Kingdom

United States

  • GC-130A, AF Ser. No. 55-037 used by the 773 TCS, 483 TCW, 315 AD, 374 TCW, 815 TAS, 35 TAS, 109 TAS, belly-landed at Duluth, Minnesota, April 1973, repaired; 167 TAS, 180 TAS, to Chanute Technical Training Center as GC-130A, May 1984; now displayed at Museum of Missouri Military History, Missouri National Guard Ike Skelton Training Center, Jefferson City, Missouri. Previously displayed at Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum, (former) Chanute AFB, Rantoul, Illinois until museum closed.[92][93]
  • C-130A, AF Ser. No. 56-0518 used by the 314 TCW, 315 AD, 41 ATS, 328 TAS; to Republic of Vietnam Air Force 435 Transport Squadron, November 1972; holds the C-130 record for taking off with the most personnel on board, during the evacuation of SVN, 29 April 1975, with 452. Returned to USAF, 185 TAS, 105 TAS; Flown to Little Rock AFB on 28 June 1989. It was converted to a static display at the LRAFB Visitor Center, Arkansas by Sept. 1989.[94]
  • C-130A, AF Ser. No. 57-0453 was operated from 1958 to 1991, last duty with 155th TAS, 164th TAG, Tennessee Air National Guard, Memphis International Airport/ANGB, Tennessee, 1976–1991, named "Nite Train to Memphis"; to AMARC in December 1991, then sent to Texas for modification into a replica of C-130A-II Dreamboat aircraft, AF Ser. No. 56-0528, shot down by Soviet fighters in Soviet airspace near Yerevan, Armenia on 2 September 1958, while on ELINT mission with loss of all crew, displayed in National Vigilance Park, National Security Agency grounds, Fort George Meade, Maryland.[95]
  • C-130B, AF Ser. No. 59-0528 was operated by 145th Airlift Wing, North Carolina Air National Guard; placed on static display at Charlotte Air National Guard Base, North Carolina in 2010.[96]
  • C-130D, AF Ser. No. 57-0490 used by the 61st TCS, 17th TCS, 139th TAS with skis, July 1975 – April 1983; to MASDC, 1984–1985, GC-130D ground trainer, Chanute AFB, Illinois, 1986–1990; When Chanute AFB closed in September 1993, it moved to the Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum (former Chanute AFB, Rantoul, Illinois. In July 1994, it moved to the Empire State Air Museum, Schenectady County Airport, New York, until placed on the gate at Stratton Air National Guard Base in October 1994.[97]
  • NC-130B, AF Ser. No. 57-0526 was the second B model manufactured, initially delivered as JC-130B; assigned to 6515th Organizational Maintenance Squadron for flight testing at Edwards AFB, California on 29 November 1960; turned over to 6593rd Test Squadron's Operating Location No. 1 at Edwards AFB and spent next seven years supporting Corona Program; "J" status and prefix removed from aircraft in October 1967; transferred to 6593rd Test Squadron at Hickam AFB, Hawaii and modified for mid-air retrieval of satellites; acquired by 6514th Test Squadron at Hill AFB, Utah in Jan. 1987 and used as electronic testbed and cargo transport; aircraft retired January 1994 with 11,000+ flight hours and moved to Hill Aerospace Museum at Hill AFB by January 1994.[98]
  • C-130E, AF Ser. No. 62-1787, on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, was flown to the museum on 18 August 2011. One of the greatest feats of heroism during the Vietnam War involved the C-130E, call sign "Spare 617".[N 2] The C-130E attempted to airdrop ammunition to surround South Vietnamese forces at An Loc, Vietnam. Approaching the drop zone, Spare 617 received heavy enemy ground fire that damaged two engines, ruptured a bleed air duct in the cargo compartment, and set the ammunition on fire. Flight engineer TSgt Sanders was killed, and navigator 1st Lt Lenz and co-pilot 1st Lt Hering were both wounded. Despite receiving severe burns from hot air escaping from the damaged air bleed duct, loadmaster TSgt Shaub extinguished a fire in the cargo compartment, and successfully jettisoned the cargo pallets, which exploded in mid-air. Despite losing a third engine on the final approach, pilot Capt Caldwell landed Spare 617 safely. For their actions, Caldwell and Shaub received the Air Force Cross, the U.S. Air Force's second highest award for valor. TSgt Shaub also received the William H. Pitsenbarger Award for Heroism from the Air Force Sergeants Association.[99]
  • KC-130F, USN/USMC BuNo 149798 used in tests in October–November 1963 by the U.S. Navy for unarrested landings and unassisted take-offs from the carrier USS Forrestal (CV-59), it remains the record holder for largest aircraft to operate from a carrier flight deck, and carried the name "Look Ma, No Hook" during the tests. Retired to the National Museum of Naval Aviation, NAS Pensacola, Florida in May 2003.[100]
  • C-130G, USN/USMC BuNo 151891; modified to EC-130G, 1966, then testbed for EC-130Q TACAMO in 1981, then changed to TC-130G and used by Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron Three (VQ-3) for flight proficiency (bounce bird). In early 1991 it was transferred to AMMARG Davis-Monthan AFB Tucson, AZ. In May 1991 it was assigned as the U.S. Navy's Blue Angels USMC support aircraft, serving as "Fat Albert Airlines" from 1991 to 2002. Retired to the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola, Florida in November 2002 where it remains on outside static display reflecting the BLUES colors.[52]
  • C-130E, AF Ser. No. 64-0525 was on display at the 82nd Airborne Division War Memorial Museum at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The aircraft was the last assigned to the 43rd AW at Pope AFB, North Carolina before retirement from the USAF.[101]
  • C-130E-LM, AF Ser. No. 64-0533 – Taken in December 1964 by 314th Troop Carrier Wing, Sewart AFB, TN. Last assigned to 37th Airlift Squadron, Rhein-Main AB, Germany. Transferred to Elmendorf AFB for display, May 2004. Marked as 53-2453[102]
  • C-130E, AF Ser. No. 69-6579 operated by the 61st TAS, 314th TAW, 50th AS, 61st AS; at Dyess AFB as maintenance trainer as GC-130E, March 1998; to Dyess AFB Linear Air Park, January 2004.[103]
  • MC-130E Combat Talon I, AF Ser. No. 64-0567, unofficially known as "Wild Thing". It transported captured Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega in 1989 during Operation Just Cause and participated in Operation Eagle Claw, the unsuccessful attempt to rescue U.S. hostages from Iran in 1980. Wild Thing was also the first fixed-wing aircraft to employ night-vision goggles. On display at Hurlburt Field, in Florida.[104]
  • C-130E, AF Ser. No. 69-6580 operated by the 61st TAS, 314th TAW, 317th TAW, 314th TAW, 317th TAW, 40th AS, 41st AS, 43rd AW, retired after center wing cracks were detected in April 2002; to the Air Mobility Command Museum, Dover AFB, Delaware on 2 February 2004.[103]
  • C-130E, AF Ser. No. 70-1269 was used by the 43rd AW and is on display at the Pope Air Park, Pope AFB, North Carolina as of 2006.[105]
  • C-130H, AF Ser. No. 74-1686 used by the 463rd TAW; one of three C-130H airframes modified to YMC-130H for an aborted rescue attempt of Iranian hostages, Operation Credible Sport, with rocket packages blistered onto fuselage in 1980, but these were removed after the mission was canceled. Subsequent duty with the 4950th Test Wing, then donated to the Museum of Aviation at Robins AFB, Georgia, in March 1988.[106]
  • C-130H, AF Ser. No. 88-4401 operated by the Ohio 179th Airlift Wing has been retired and is on display at the MAPS Air Museum in Canton, Ohio[107]

Specifications (C-130H)

 
 
C-130H Hercules flight deck
 
A Hercules deploying flares, sometimes referred to as Angel Flares due to the characteristic pattern.
 
Cargo compartment of a Swedish Air Force C-130

Data from USAF C-130 Hercules fact sheet,[108] International Directory of Military Aircraft,[109] Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft,[110] and Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft.[111]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 5 (2 pilots, CSO/navigator, flight engineer and loadmaster)
  • Capacity: 42,000 lb (19,000 kg) payload
    • C-130E/H/J cargo hold: length, 40 ft (12.19 m); width, 119 in (3.02 m); height, 9 ft (2.74 m). Rear ramp: length, 123 in (3.12 m); width, 119 in (3.02 m)
    • C-130J-30 cargo hold: length, 55 ft (16.76 m); width, 119 in (3.02 m); height, 9 ft (2.74 m). Rear ramp: length, 123 inches (3.12 m); width, 119 in (3.02 m)
    • 92 passengers or
    • 64 airborne troops or
    • 74 litter patients with 5 medical crew or
    • 6 pallets or
    • 2–3 Humvees or
    • 2 M113 armored personnel carriers
    • 1 CAESAR self-propelled howitzer
  • Length: 97 ft 9 in (29.79 m)
  • Wingspan: 132 ft 7 in (40.41 m)
  • Height: 38 ft 3 in (11.66 m)
  • Wing area: 1,745 sq ft (162.1 m2)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 64A318; tip: NACA 64A412[112]
  • Empty weight: 75,800 lb (34,382 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 155,000 lb (70,307 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Allison T56-A-15 turboprop engines, 4,590 shp (3,420 kW) each
  • Propellers: 4-bladed Hamilton Standard 54H60 constant-speed fully feathering reversible propellers, 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m) diameter [113]

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 320 kn (370 mph, 590 km/h) at 20,000 ft (6,100 m)
  • Cruise speed: 292 kn (336 mph, 541 km/h)
  • Range: 2,050 nmi (2,360 mi, 3,800 km)
  • Ferry range: 3,995 nmi (4,597 mi, 7,399 km)
  • Service ceiling: 33,000 ft (10,000 m) empty[114]
23,000 ft (7,000 m) with 42,000 lb (19,000 kg) payload
  • Rate of climb: 1,830 ft/min (9.3 m/s)
  • Takeoff distance: 3,586 ft (1,093 m) at 155,000 lb (70,307 kg) max gross weight;[111]
1,400 ft (427 m) at 80,000 lb (36,287 kg) gross weight[115]

Avionics

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ After the English Electric Canberra, B-52 Stratofortress, Tupolev Tu-95, and KC-135 Stratotanker.
  2. ^ The aircrew of "Spare 617" were: Capt. William Caldwell, pilot; Lt. John Hering, co-pilot; Lt. Richard A. Lenz, navigator; Tech. Sgt. Jon Sanders, flight engineer, loadmasters Tech. Sgt. Charlie Shaub and A1C Dave McAleece

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Bibliography

  • Borman, Martin W. Lockheed C-130 Hercules. Marlborough, UK: Crowood Press, 1999. ISBN 978-1-86126-205-9.
  • Diehl, Alan E., PhD, Former Senior USAF Safety Scientist. Silent Knights: Blowing the Whistle on Military Accidents and Their Cover-ups. Dulles, Virginia: Brassey's Inc., 2002. ISBN 1-57488-544-8.
  • Donald, David, ed. "Lockheed C-130 Hercules". The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997. ISBN 0-7607-0592-5.
  • Eden, Paul. "Lockheed C-130 Hercules". Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft. London: Amber Books, 2004. ISBN 1-904687-84-9.
  • Frawley, Gerard. The International Directory of Military Aircraft, 2002/03. Fyshwick, ACT, Australia: Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd, 2002. ISBN 1-875671-55-2.
  • Olausson, Lars. Lockheed Hercules Production List 1954–2011. Såtenäs, Sweden: Self-published, 27th Edition March 2009. No ISBN.
  • Olausson, Lars (March 2010). Lockheed Hercules Production List 1954–2012 (28th ed.). Såtenäs, Sweden: Self-published.
  • "Pentagon Over the Islands: The Thirty-Year History of Indonesian Military Aviation". Air Enthusiast Quarterly (2): 154–162. n.d. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Reed, Chris. Lockheed C-130 Hercules and Its Variants. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Publishing, 1999. ISBN 978-0-7643-0722-5.
  • (May 2014 ed.), United States Air Force, 2003, archived from the original on 14 September 2014

  This article incorporates public domain material from Fact Sheet: Lockheed C-130E Hercules. United States Air Force.[permanent dead link]

External links

  • Lockheed Martin official C-130 page
  • U.S. Air Force C-130 fact sheet
  • and
  • C-130hercules.net
  • C-130 page on amcmuseum.org
  • "Herculean Transport" a 1954 Flight article
  • C-130 takes off and lands on a Carrier USS Forrestal on YouTube
  • Newsreel footage from 1955 of blunt nose Hercules prototype (1955) from British Pathé (Record No:63598) at YouTube
  • The short film STAFF FILM REPORT 66-12A (1966) is available for free download at the Internet Archive.

lockheed, hercules, hercules, aircraft, redirects, here, other, aircraft, called, hercules, hercules, disambiguation, vehicles, american, four, engine, turboprop, military, transport, aircraft, designed, built, lockheed, lockheed, martin, capable, using, unpre. Hercules aircraft redirects here For other aircraft called Hercules see Hercules disambiguation Vehicles The Lockheed C 130 Hercules is an American four engine turboprop military transport aircraft designed and built by Lockheed now Lockheed Martin Capable of using unprepared runways for takeoffs and landings the C 130 was originally designed as a troop medevac and cargo transport aircraft The versatile airframe has found uses in other roles including as a gunship AC 130 for airborne assault search and rescue scientific research support weather reconnaissance aerial refueling maritime patrol and aerial firefighting It is now the main tactical airlifter for many military forces worldwide More than 40 variants of the Hercules including civilian versions marketed as the Lockheed L 100 operate in more than 60 nations C 130 HerculesA USAF C 130ERole Military transport aircraftNational origin United StatesManufacturer Lockheed CorporationLockheed MartinFirst flight 23 August 1954 68 years ago 1954 08 23 Introduction December 1956 1 Status In servicePrimary users United States Air ForceRoyal Canadian Air ForceUnited States Coast GuardRoyal Air ForceProduced 1954 presentNumber built Over 2 500 as of 2015 2 Variants Lockheed AC 130Lockheed DC 130Lockheed EC 130Lockheed EC 130H Compass CallLockheed HC 130Lockheed Martin KC 130Lockheed LC 130Lockheed MC 130Lockheed RC 130Lockheed WC 130Lockheed L 100 HerculesLockheed Martin C 130J Super HerculesThe C 130 entered service with the U S in 1956 followed by Australia and many other nations During its years of service the Hercules has participated in numerous military civilian and humanitarian aid operations In 2007 the C 130 became the fifth aircraft N 1 to mark 50 years of continuous service with its original primary customer which for the C 130 is the United States Air Force The C 130 Hercules is the longest continuously produced military aircraft at more than 60 years with the updated Lockheed Martin C 130J Super Hercules currently being produced 3 Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Background and requirements 1 2 Design phase 1 3 Improved versions 1 4 Further developments 1 5 Enhanced models 1 6 Next generation 1 7 Upgrades and changes 1 8 Replacement 2 Operational history 2 1 Military 2 2 Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill 2 3 Hurricane Harvey 2017 2 4 Aerial firefighting 3 Variants 4 Operators 5 Accidents 6 Aircraft on display 6 1 Argentina 6 2 Australia 6 3 Belgium 6 4 Canada 6 5 Colombia 6 6 Indonesia 6 7 Norway 6 8 Saudi Arabia 6 9 United Kingdom 6 10 United States 7 Specifications C 130H 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Bibliography 10 External linksDesign and development EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Background and requirements Edit The Korean War showed that World War II era piston engine transports Fairchild C 119 Flying Boxcars Douglas C 47 Skytrains and Curtiss C 46 Commandos were no longer adequate On 2 February 1951 the United States Air Force issued a General Operating Requirement GOR for a new transport to Boeing Douglas Fairchild Lockheed Martin Chase Aircraft North American Northrop and Airlifts Inc The new transport would have a capacity of 92 passengers 72 combat troops or 64 paratroopers in a cargo compartment that was approximately 41 ft 12 m long 9 ft 2 7 m high and 10 ft 3 0 m wide Unlike transports derived from passenger airliners it was to be designed specifically as a combat transport with loading from a hinged loading ramp at the rear of the fuselage A notable advance for large aircraft was the introduction of a turboprop powerplant the Allison T56 which was developed for the C 130 It gave the aircraft greater range than a turbojet engine as it used less fuel 4 5 Turboprop engines also produced much more power for their weight than piston engines However the turboprop configuration chosen for the T56 with the propeller connected to the compressor had the potential to cause structural failure of the aircraft if an engine failed Safety devices had to be incorporated to reduce the excessive drag from a windmilling propeller 6 7 Design phase Edit The Hercules resembled a larger four engine version of the Fairchild C 123 Provider with a similar wing and cargo ramp layout The C 123 had evolved from the Chase XCG 20 Avitruc which was first designed and flown as a cargo glider in 1947 citation needed The Boeing C 97 Stratofreighter had rear ramps which made it possible to drive vehicles onto the airplane also possible with the forward ramp on a C 124 The ramp on the Hercules was also used to airdrop cargo which included a Low altitude parachute extraction system for Sheridan tanks and even dropping large improvised daisy cutter bombs The new Lockheed cargo plane had a range of 1 100 nmi 1 270 mi 2 040 km and it could operate from short and unprepared strips Fairchild North American Martin and Northrop declined to participate The remaining five companies tendered a total of ten designs Lockheed two Boeing one Chase three Douglas three and Airlifts Inc one The contest was a close affair between the lighter of the two Lockheed preliminary project designation L 206 proposals and a four turboprop Douglas design The Lockheed design team was led by Willis Hawkins starting with a 130 page proposal for the Lockheed L 206 8 Hall Hibbard Lockheed vice president and chief engineer saw the proposal and directed it to Kelly Johnson who did not care for the low speed unarmed aircraft and remarked If you sign that letter you will destroy the Lockheed Company 8 Both Hibbard and Johnson signed the proposal and the company won the contract for the now designated Model 82 on 2 July 1951 9 A C 130 Hercules flight deck Aircraft displayed at the Norwegian Armed Forces Aircraft Collection The first flight of the YC 130 prototype was made on 23 August 1954 from the Lockheed plant in Burbank California The aircraft serial number 53 3397 was the second prototype but the first of the two to fly The YC 130 was piloted by Stanley Beltz and Roy Wimmer on its 61 minute flight to Edwards Air Force Base Jack Real and Dick Stanton served as flight engineers Kelly Johnson flew chase in a Lockheed P2V Neptune 10 After the two prototypes were completed production began in Marietta Georgia where over 2 300 C 130s have been built through 2009 11 The initial production model the C 130A was powered by Allison T56 A 9 turboprops with three blade propellers and originally equipped with the blunt nose of the prototypes Deliveries began in December 1956 continuing until the introduction of the C 130B model in 1959 Some A models were equipped with skis and re designated C 130D As the C 130A became operational with Tactical Air Command TAC the C 130 s lack of range became apparent and additional fuel capacity was added with wing pylon mounted tanks outboard of the engines this added 6 000 lb 2 720 kg of fuel capacity for a total capacity of 40 000 lb 18 140 kg 12 Improved versions Edit A Michigan Air National Guard C 130E dispatches its flares during a low level training mission Two C 130 Hercules in South Korea 1984 A C 130 conducts a night flight mission over Yokota Air Base The C 130B model was developed to complement the A models that had previously been delivered and incorporated new features particularly increased fuel capacity in the form of auxiliary tanks built into the center wing section and an AC electrical system Four bladed Hamilton Standard propellers replaced the Aero Products three blade propellers that distinguished the earlier A models The C 130B had ailerons operated by hydraulic pressure that was increased from 2 050 psi 14 1 MPa to 3 000 psi 21 MPa as well as uprated engines and four blade propellers that were standard until the J model The B model was originally intended to have blown controls a system that blows high pressure air over the control surfaces to improve their effectiveness during slow flight It was tested on an NC 130B prototype aircraft with a pair of T 56 turbines providing high pressure air through a duct system to the control surfaces and flaps during landing This greatly reduced landing speed to just 63 knots and cut landing distance in half The system never entered service because it did not improve takeoff performance by the same margin making the landing performance pointless if the aircraft could not also take off from where it had landed 13 An electronic reconnaissance variant of the C 130B was designated C 130B II A total of 13 aircraft were converted The C 130B II was distinguished by its false external wing fuel tanks which were disguised signals intelligence SIGINT receiver antennas These pods were slightly larger than the standard wing tanks found on other C 130Bs Most aircraft featured a swept blade antenna on the upper fuselage as well as extra wire antennas between the vertical fin and upper fuselage not found on other C 130s Radio call numbers on the tail of these aircraft were regularly changed to confuse observers and disguise their true mission The extended range C 130E model entered service in 1962 after it was developed as an interim long range transport for the Military Air Transport Service Essentially a B model the new designation was the result of the installation of 1 360 US gal 5 150 L Sargent Fletcher external fuel tanks under each wing s midsection and more powerful Allison T56 A 7A turboprops The hydraulic boost pressure to the ailerons was reduced back to 2 050 psi 14 1 MPa as a consequence of the external tanks weight in the middle of the wingspan The E model also featured structural improvements avionics upgrades and a higher gross weight Australia took delivery of 12 C130E Hercules during 1966 67 to supplement the 12 C 130A models already in service with the RAAF Sweden and Spain fly the TP 84T version of the C 130E fitted for aerial refueling capability The KC 130 tankers originally C 130F procured for the US Marine Corps USMC in 1958 under the designation GV 1 are equipped with a removable 3 600 US gal 13 626 L stainless steel fuel tank carried inside the cargo compartment The two wing mounted hose and drogue aerial refueling pods each transfer up to 300 US gal per minute 1 136 L per minute to two aircraft simultaneously allowing for rapid cycle times of multiple receiver aircraft formations a typical tanker formation of four aircraft in less than 30 minutes The US Navy s C 130G has increased structural strength allowing higher gross weight operation Further developments Edit A Royal Australian Air Force C 130H 2007 The C 130H model has updated Allison T56 A 15 turboprops a redesigned outer wing updated avionics and other minor improvements Later H models had a new fatigue life improved center wing that was retrofitted to many earlier H models For structural reasons some models are required to land with reduced amounts of fuel when carrying heavy cargo reducing usable range 14 The H model remains in widespread use with the United States Air Force USAF and many foreign air forces Initial deliveries began in 1964 to the RNZAF remaining in production until 1996 An improved C 130H was introduced in 1974 with Australia purchasing 12 of the type in 1978 to replace the original 12 C 130A models which had first entered Royal Australian Air Force RAAF service in 1958 The U S Coast Guard employs the HC 130H for long range search and rescue drug interdiction illegal migrant patrols homeland security and logistics A United States Coast Guard HC 130H C 130H models produced from 1992 to 1996 were designated as C 130H3 by the USAF The 3 denoting the third variation in design for the H series Improvements included ring laser gyros for the INUs GPS receivers a partial glass cockpit ADI and HSI instruments a more capable APN 241 color radar night vision device compatible instrument lighting and an integrated radar and missile warning system The electrical system upgrade included Generator Control Units GCU and Bus Switching units BSU to provide stable power to the more sensitive upgraded components 15 A Royal Air Force C 130K C 3 The equivalent model for export to the UK is the C 130K known by the Royal Air Force RAF as the Hercules C 1 The C 130H 30 Hercules C 3 in RAF service is a stretched version of the original Hercules achieved by inserting a 100 in 2 54 m plug aft of the cockpit and an 80 in 2 03 m plug at the rear of the fuselage A single C 130K was purchased by the Met Office for use by its Meteorological Research Flight where it was classified as the Hercules W 2 This aircraft was heavily modified with its most prominent feature being the long red and white striped atmospheric probe on the nose and the move of the weather radar into a pod above the forward fuselage This aircraft named Snoopy was withdrawn in 2001 and was then modified by Marshall of Cambridge Aerospace as a flight testbed for the A400M turbine engine the TP400 The C 130K is used by the RAF Falcons for parachute drops Three C 130Ks Hercules C Mk 1P were upgraded and sold to the Austrian Air Force in 2002 16 Enhanced models Edit A USAF HC 130P refuels a HH 60G Pavehawk helicopter The MC 130E Combat Talon was developed for the USAF during the Vietnam War to support special operations missions in Southeast Asia and led to both the MC 130H Combat Talon II as well as a family of other special missions aircraft 37 of the earliest models currently operating with the Air Force Special Operations Command AFSOC are scheduled to be replaced by new production MC 130J versions The EC 130 Commando Solo is another special missions variant within AFSOC albeit operated solely by an AFSOC gained wing in the Pennsylvania Air National Guard and is a psychological operations information operations PSYOP IO platform equipped as an aerial radio station and television stations able to transmit messaging over commercial frequencies Other versions of the EC 130 most notably the EC 130H Compass Call are also special variants but are assigned to the Air Combat Command ACC The AC 130 gunship was first developed during the Vietnam War to provide close air support and other ground attack duties The HC 130 is a family of long range search and rescue variants used by the USAF and the U S Coast Guard Equipped for the deep deployment of Pararescuemen PJs survival equipment and in the case of USAF versions aerial refueling of combat rescue helicopters HC 130s are usually the on scene command aircraft for combat SAR missions USAF only and non combat SAR USAF and USCG Early USAF versions were also equipped with the Fulton surface to air recovery system designed to pull a person off the ground using a wire strung from a helium balloon The John Wayne movie The Green Berets features its use The Fulton system was later removed when aerial refueling of helicopters proved safer and more versatile The movie The Perfect Storm depicts a real life SAR mission involving aerial refueling of a New York Air National Guard HH 60G by a New York Air National Guard HC 130P The C 130R and C 130T are U S Navy and USMC models both equipped with underwing external fuel tanks The USN C 130T is similar but has additional avionics improvements In both models aircraft are equipped with Allison T56 A 16 engines The USMC versions are designated KC 130R or KC 130T when equipped with underwing refueling pods and pylons and are fully night vision system compatible The RC 130 is a reconnaissance version A single example is used by the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force the aircraft having originally been sold to the former Imperial Iranian Air Force The Lockheed L 100 L 382 is a civilian variant equivalent to a C 130E model without military equipment The L 100 also has two stretched versions Next generation Edit Main article Lockheed Martin C 130J Super Hercules In the 1970s Lockheed proposed a C 130 variant with turbofan engines rather than turboprops but the U S Air Force preferred the takeoff performance of the existing aircraft In the 1980s the C 130 was intended to be replaced by the Advanced Medium STOL Transport project The project was canceled and the C 130 has remained in production Building on lessons learned Lockheed Martin modified a commercial variant of the C 130 into a High Technology Test Bed HTTB This test aircraft set numerous short takeoff and landing performance records and significantly expanded the database for future derivatives of the C 130 17 Modifications made to the HTTB included extended chord ailerons a long chord rudder fast acting double slotted trailing edge flaps a high camber wing leading edge extension a larger dorsal fin and dorsal fins the addition of three spoiler panels to each wing upper surface a long stroke main and nose landing gear system and changes to the flight controls and a change from direct mechanical linkages assisted by hydraulic boost to fully powered controls in which the mechanical linkages from the flight station controls operated only the hydraulic control valves of the appropriate boost unit 18 The HTTB first flew on 19 June 1984 with civil registration of N130X After demonstrating many new technologies some of which were applied to the C 130J the HTTB was lost in a fatal accident on 3 February 1993 at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Marietta Georgia 19 The crash was attributed to disengagement of the rudder fly by wire flight control system resulting in a total loss of rudder control capability while conducting ground minimum control speed tests Vmcg The disengagement was a result of the inadequate design of the rudder s integrated actuator package by its manufacturer the operator s insufficient system safety review failed to consider the consequences of the inadequate design to all operating regimes A factor that contributed to the accident was the flight crew s lack of engineering flight test training 20 In the 1990s the improved C 130J Super Hercules was developed by Lockheed later Lockheed Martin This model is the newest version and the only model in production Externally similar to the classic Hercules in general appearance the J model has new turboprop engines six bladed propellers digital avionics and other new systems 21 Upgrades and changes Edit In 2000 Boeing was awarded a US 1 4 billion contract to develop an Avionics Modernization Program kit for the C 130 The program was beset with delays and cost overruns until project restructuring in 2007 22 In September 2009 it was reported that the planned Avionics Modernization Program AMP upgrade to the older C 130s would be dropped to provide more funds for the F 35 CV 22 and airborne tanker replacement programs 23 However in June 2010 Department of Defense approved funding for the initial production of the AMP upgrade kits 24 25 Under the terms of this agreement the USAF has cleared Boeing to begin low rate initial production LRIP for the C 130 AMP A total of 198 aircraft are expected to feature the AMP upgrade The current cost per aircraft is US 14 million although Boeing expects that this price will drop to US 7 million for the 69th aircraft 22 In the 2000s Lockheed Martin and the U S Air Force began outfitting and retrofitting C 130s with the eight blade UTC Aerospace Systems NP2000 propellers 26 An engine enhancement program saving fuel and providing lower temperatures in the T56 engine has been approved and the US Air Force expects to save 2 billion and extend the fleet life 27 In 2021 the Air Force Research Laboratory demonstrated the Rapid Dragon system which transforms the C 130 into a lethal strike platform capable of launching 12 JASSM ER with 500kg warheads from a standoff distance of 925 km 575 mi Future anticipated improvements support includes support for JDAM ER mine laying drone dispersal as well as improved standoff range when 1 900 km 1 200 mi JASSM XR become available in 2024 28 29 Replacement Edit In October 2010 the Air Force released a capability request for information CRFI for the development of a new airlifter to replace the C 130 The new aircraft was to carry a 190 greater payload and assume the mission of mounted vertical maneuver MVM The greater payload and mission would enable it to carry medium weight armored vehicles and unload them at locations without long runways Various options were under consideration including new or upgraded fixed wing designs rotorcraft tiltrotors or even an airship The C 130 fleet of around 450 planes would be replaced by only 250 aircraft 30 The Air Force had attempted to replace the C 130 in the 1970s through the Advanced Medium STOL Transport project which resulted in the C 17 Globemaster III that instead replaced the C 141 Starlifter 31 The Air Force Research Laboratory funded Lockheed Martin and Boeing demonstrators for the Speed Agile concept which had the goal of making a STOL aircraft that could take off and land at speeds as low as 70 kn 130 km h 81 mph on airfields less than 2 000 ft 610 m long and cruise at Mach 0 8 plus Boeing s design used upper surface blowing from embedded engines on the inboard wing and blown flaps for circulation control on the outboard wing Lockheed s design also used blown flaps outboard but inboard used patented reversing ejector nozzles 32 Boeing s design completed over 2 000 hours of wind tunnel tests in late 2009 It was a 5 percent scale model of a narrow body design with a 55 000 lb 25 000 kg payload When the AFRL increased the payload requirement to 65 000 lb 29 000 kg they tested a 5 percent scale model of a widebody design with a 303 000 lb 137 000 kg take off gross weight and an A400M size 158 in 4 0 m wide cargo box It would be powered by four IAE V2533 turbofans 33 In August 2011 the AFRL released pictures of the Lockheed Speed Agile concept demonstrator A 23 scale model went through wind tunnel tests to demonstrate its hybrid powered lift which combined a low drag airframe with simple mechanical assembly to reduce weight and improve aerodynamics The model had four engines including two Williams FJ44 turbofans 31 34 On 26 March 2013 Boeing was granted a patent for its swept wing powered lift aircraft 35 In January 2014 Air Mobility Command Air Force Materiel Command and the Air Force Research Lab were in the early stages of defining requirements for the C X next generation airlifter program 36 to replace both the C 130 and C 17 The aircraft would be produced from the early 2030s to the 2040s 37 Operational history EditMilitary Edit A USMC KC 130F Hercules performing takeoffs and landings aboard the aircraft carrier Forrestal in 1963 The aircraft is now displayed at the National Museum of Naval Aviation The first production batch of C 130A aircraft were delivered beginning in 1956 to the 463d Troop Carrier Wing at Ardmore AFB Oklahoma and the 314th Troop Carrier Wing at Sewart AFB Tennessee Six additional squadrons were assigned to the 322d Air Division in Europe and the 315th Air Division in the Far East Additional aircraft were modified for electronics intelligence work and assigned to Rhein Main Air Base Germany while modified RC 130As were assigned to the Military Air Transport Service MATS photo mapping division The C 130A entered service with the U S Air Force in December 1956 38 In 1958 a U S reconnaissance C 130A II of the 7406th Support Squadron was shot down over Armenia by four Soviet MiG 17s along the Turkish Armenian border during a routine mission 39 Australia became the first non American force to operate the C 130A Hercules with 12 examples being delivered from late 1958 The Royal Canadian Air Force became another early user with the delivery of four B models Canadian designation C 130 Mk I in October November 1960 40 In 1963 a Hercules achieved and still holds the record for the largest and heaviest aircraft to land on an aircraft carrier 41 During October and November that year a USMC KC 130F BuNo 149798 loaned to the U S Naval Air Test Center made 29 touch and go landings 21 unarrested full stop landings and 21 unassisted take offs on Forrestal at a number of different weights The pilot Lieutenant later Rear Admiral James H Flatley III USN was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his role in this test series The tests were highly successful but the aircraft was not deployed this way citation needed Flatley denied that C 130 was tested for carrier onboard delivery COD operations or for delivering nuclear weapons He said that the intention was to support the Lockheed U 2 also being tested on carriers 42 The Hercules used in the test most recently in service with Marine Aerial Refueler Squadron 352 VMGR 352 until 2005 is now part of the collection of the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola Florida citation needed In 1964 C 130 crews from the 6315th Operations Group at Naha Air Base Okinawa commenced forward air control FAC Flare missions over the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos supporting USAF strike aircraft In April 1965 the mission was expanded to North Vietnam where C 130 crews led formations of Martin B 57 Canberra bombers on night reconnaissance strike missions against communist supply routes leading to South Vietnam In early 1966 Project Blind Bat Lamplighter was established at Ubon Royal Thai Air Force Base Thailand After the move to Ubon the mission became a four engine FAC mission with the C 130 crew searching for targets and then calling in strike aircraft Another little known C 130 mission flown by Naha based crews was Operation Commando Scarf which involved the delivery of chemicals onto sections of the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos that were designed to produce mud and landslides in hopes of making the truck routes impassable citation needed In November 1964 on the other side of the globe C 130Es from the 464th Troop Carrier Wing but loaned to 322d Air Division in France took part in Operation Dragon Rouge one of the most dramatic missions in history in the former Belgian Congo After communist Simba rebels took white residents of the city of Stanleyville hostage the U S and Belgium developed a joint rescue mission that used the C 130s to drop air land and air lift a force of Belgian paratroopers to rescue the hostages Two missions were flown one over Stanleyville and another over Paulis during Thanksgiving weeks 43 The headline making mission resulted in the first award of the prestigious MacKay Trophy to C 130 crews citation needed In the Indo Pakistani War of 1965 the No 6 Transport Squadron of the Pakistan Air Force modified its C 130Bs for use as bombers to carry up to 20 000 lb 9 072 kg of bombs on pallets These improvised bombers were used to hit Indian targets such as bridges heavy artillery positions tank formations and troop concentrations though weren t that successful finally 44 45 46 C 130 Hercules were used in the Battle of Kham Duc in 1968 when the North Vietnamese Army forced U S led forces to abandon the Kham Duc Special Forces Camp In October 1968 a C 130Bs from the 463rd Tactical Airlift Wing dropped a pair of M 121 10 000 lb 4 500 kg bombs that had been developed for the massive Convair B 36 Peacemaker bomber but had never been used The U S Army and U S Air Force resurrected the huge weapons as a means of clearing landing zones for helicopters and in early 1969 the 463rd commenced Commando Vault missions Although the stated purpose of COMMANDO VAULT was to clear LZs they were also used on enemy base camps and other targets citation needed During the late 1960s the U S was eager to get information on Chinese nuclear capabilities After the failure of the Black Cat Squadron to plant operating sensor pods near the Lop Nur Nuclear Weapons Test Base using a U 2 the CIA developed a plan named Heavy Tea to deploy two battery powered sensor pallets near the base To deploy the pallets a Black Bat Squadron crew was trained in the U S to fly the C 130 Hercules The crew of 12 led by Col Sun Pei Zhen took off from Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base in an unmarked U S Air Force C 130E on 17 May 1969 Flying for six and a half hours at low altitude in the dark they arrived over the target and the sensor pallets were dropped by parachute near Anxi in Gansu province After another six and a half hours of low altitude flight they arrived back at Takhli The sensors worked and uploaded data to a U S intelligence satellite for six months before their batteries failed The Chinese conducted two nuclear tests on 22 September 1969 and 29 September 1969 during the operating life of the sensor pallets Another mission to the area was planned as Operation Golden Whip but it was called off in 1970 47 It is most likely that the aircraft used on this mission was either C 130E serial number 64 0506 or 64 0507 cn 382 3990 and 382 3991 These two aircraft were delivered to Air America in 1964 48 After being returned to the U S Air Force sometime between 1966 and 1970 they were assigned the serial numbers of C 130s that had been destroyed in accidents 64 0506 is now flying as 62 1843 a C 130E that crashed in Vietnam on 20 December 1965 and 64 0507 is now flying as 63 7785 a C 130E that had crashed in Vietnam on 17 June 1966 49 The A model continued in service through the Vietnam War where the aircraft assigned to the four squadrons at Naha AB Okinawa and one at Tachikawa Air Base Japan performed yeoman s service including operating highly classified special operations missions such as the BLIND BAT FAC Flare mission and FACT SHEET leaflet mission over Laos and North Vietnam The A model was also provided to the Republic of Vietnam Air Force as part of the Vietnamization program at the end of the war and equipped three squadrons based at Tan Son Nhut Air Base The last operator in the world is the Honduran Air Force which is still flying one of five A model Hercules FAH 558 c n 3042 as of October 2009 50 As the Vietnam War wound down the 463rd Troop Carrier Tactical Airlift Wing B models and A models of the 374th Tactical Airlift Wing were transferred back to the United States where most were assigned to Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard units U S Marines disembarking from C 130 transports at Da Nang Air Base on 8 March 1965 Another prominent role for the B model was with the United States Marine Corps where Hercules initially designated as GV 1s replaced C 119s After Air Force C 130Ds proved the type s usefulness in Antarctica the U S Navy purchased several B models equipped with skis that were designated as LC 130s C 130B II electronic reconnaissance aircraft were operated under the SUN VALLEY program name primarily from Yokota Air Base Japan All reverted to standard C 130B cargo aircraft after their replacement in the reconnaissance role by other aircraft citation needed The C 130 was also used in the 1976 Entebbe raid in which Israeli commando forces performed a surprise operation to rescue 103 passengers of an airliner hijacked by Palestinian and German terrorists at Entebbe Airport Uganda The rescue force 200 soldiers jeeps and a black Mercedes Benz intended to resemble Ugandan Dictator Idi Amin s vehicle of state was flown over 2 200 nmi 4 074 km 2 532 mi almost entirely at an altitude of less than 100 ft 30 m from Israel to Entebbe by four Israeli Air Force IAF Hercules aircraft without mid air refueling on the way back the aircraft refueled in Nairobi Kenya citation needed During the Falklands War Spanish Guerra de las Malvinas of 1982 Argentine Air Force C 130s undertook dangerous re supply night flights as blockade runners to the Argentine garrison on the Falkland Islands They also performed daylight maritime survey flights One was shot down by a Royal Navy Sea Harrier using AIM 9 Sidewinders and cannon The crew of seven were killed Argentina also operated two KC 130 tankers during the war and these refueled both the Douglas A 4 Skyhawks and Navy Dassault Breguet Super Etendards some C 130s were modified to operate as bombers with bomb racks under their wings 51 The British also used RAF C 130s to support their logistical operations citation needed USMC C 130T Fat Albert performing a rocket assisted takeoff RATO During the Gulf War of 1991 Operation Desert Storm the C 130 Hercules was used operationally by the U S Air Force U S Navy and U S Marine Corps along with the air forces of Australia New Zealand Saudi Arabia South Korea and the UK The MC 130 Combat Talon variant also made the first attacks using the largest conventional bombs in the world the BLU 82 Daisy Cutter and GBU 43 B Massive Ordnance Air Blast MOAB bomb Daisy Cutters were used to primarily clear landing zones and to eliminate mine fields The weight and size of the weapons make it impossible or impractical to load them on conventional bombers The GBU 43 B MOAB is a successor to the BLU 82 and can perform the same function as well as perform strike functions against hardened targets in a low air threat environment citation needed C 130 Hercules performs a tactical landing on a dirt strip North Carolina U S Since 1992 two successive C 130 aircraft named Fat Albert have served as the support aircraft for the U S Navy Blue Angels flight demonstration team Fat Albert I was a TC 130G 151891 a former U S NAVY TACAMO aircraft serving with Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron Three VQ 3 before being transferred to the BLUES 52 while Fat Albert II is a C 130T 164763 53 Although Fat Albert supports a Navy squadron it is operated by the U S Marine Corps USMC and its crew consists solely of USMC personnel At some air shows featuring the team Fat Albert takes part performing flyovers Until 2009 it also demonstrated its rocket assisted takeoff RATO capabilities these ended due to dwindling supplies of rockets 54 The AC 130 also holds the record for the longest sustained flight by a C 130 From 22 to 24 October 1997 two AC 130U gunships flew 36 hours nonstop from Hurlburt Field Florida to Taegu Daegu South Korea being refueled seven times by KC 135 tanker aircraft This record flight beat the previous record longest flight by over 10 hours and the two gunships took on 410 000 lb 190 000 kg of fuel The gunship has been used in every major U S combat operation since Vietnam except for Operation El Dorado Canyon the 1986 attack on Libya 55 During the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and the ongoing support of the International Security Assistance Force Operation Enduring Freedom the C 130 Hercules has been used operationally by Australia Belgium Canada Denmark France Italy the Netherlands New Zealand Norway Portugal Romania South Korea Spain the UK and the United States citation needed During the 2003 invasion of Iraq Operation Iraqi Freedom the C 130 Hercules was used operationally by Australia the UK and the United States After the initial invasion C 130 operators as part of the Multinational force in Iraq used their C 130s to support their forces in Iraq citation needed Since 2004 the Pakistan Air Force has employed C 130s in the War in North West Pakistan Some variants had forward looking infrared FLIR Systems Star Safire III EO IR sensor balls to enable close tracking of militants 56 In 2017 France and Germany announced that they are to build up a joint air transport squadron at Evreux Air Base France comprising ten C 130J aircraft Six of these will be operated by Germany Initial operational capability is expected for 2021 while full operational capability is scheduled for 2024 57 Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Edit A U S Air Force C 130 Hercules aircraft from the 910th Airlift Wing Youngstown Warren Air Reserve Station Ohio drops oil dispersing chemicals into the Gulf of Mexico 9 May 2010 For almost two decades the USAF 910th Airlift Wing s 757th Airlift Squadron and the U S Coast Guard have participated in oil spill cleanup exercises to ensure the U S military has a capable response in the event of a national emergency The 757th Airlift Squadron operates the DOD s only fixed wing Aerial Spray System which was certified by the EPA to disperse pesticides on DOD property to spread oil dispersants onto the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf Coast in 2010 58 During the 5 week mission the aircrews flew 92 sorties and sprayed approximately 30 000 acres with nearly 149 000 gallons of oil dispersant to break up the oil The Deepwater Horizon mission was the first time the US used the oil dispersing capability of the 910th Airlift Wing its only large area fixed wing aerial spray program in an actual spill of national significance 59 The Air Force Reserve Command announced the 910th Airlift Wing has been selected as a recipient of the Air Force Outstanding Unit Award for its outstanding achievement from 28 April 2010 through 4 June 2010 60 Hurricane Harvey 2017 Edit U S military relief crews load supplies aboard a C 130 Hercules from the Illinois Air National Guard s 182nd Airlift Wing based in Peoria The C 130 and crew have been assisting with Hurricane Harvey relief efforts since 31 Aug C 130s temporarily based at Kelly Field conducted mosquito control aerial spray applications over areas of eastern Texas devastated by Hurricane Harvey This special mission treated more than 2 3 million acres at the direction of Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA and the Texas Department of State Health Services DSHS to assist in recovery efforts by helping contain the significant increase in pest insects caused by large amounts of standing stagnant water The 910th Airlift Wing operates the Department of Defense s only aerial spray capability to control pest insect populations eliminate undesired and invasive vegetation and disperse oil spills in large bodies of water 61 The aerial spray flight also is now able to operate during the night with NVGs which increases the flight s best case spray capacity from approximately 60 thousand acres per day to approximately 190 thousand acres per day Spray missions are normally conducted at dusk and nighttime hours when pest insects are most active the U S Air Force Reserve reports 62 Aerial firefighting Edit A C 130E fitted with a MAFFS 1 dropping fire retardant In the early 1970s Congress created the Modular Airborne FireFighting System MAFFS which is a joint operation between the U S Forest Service who supply the systems and the Department of Defense who supply the C 130 aircraft The roll on roll off systems allow existing aircraft to be temporarily converted into a 3 000 gallon airtanker for fighting wildfires when demand exceeds the supply of privately contracted and publicly available airtankers 63 In the late 1980s 22 retired USAF C 130As were removed from storage and transferred to the U S Forest Service which then transferred them to six private companies to be converted into airtankers One of these C 130s crashed in June 2002 while operating the Retardant Aerial Delivery System RADS near Walker CA The crash was attributed to wing separation caused by fatigue stress cracking and contributed to the grounding of the entire large aircraft fleet 64 After an extensive review US Forest Service and The Bureau of Land Management declined to renew the leases on nine C 130A over concerns about the age of the aircraft which had been in service since the 1950s and their ability to handle the forces generated by aerial firefighting citation needed More recently an updated Retardant Aerial Delivery System known as RADS XL was developed by Coulson Aviation USA That system consists of a C 130H Q retrofitted with an in floor discharge system combined with a removable 3 500 or 4 000 gallon water tank The combined system is FAA certified 65 On 22 January 2020 Coulson s Tanker 134 an EC 130Q registered N134CG crashed during aerial firefighting operations in New South Wales Australia killing all three crew members The aircraft had taken off out of RAAF Base Richmond and was supporting firefighting operations during Australia s 2019 20 fire season 66 Variants EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message C 130A of the VNAF Bangladesh Air Force C 130B C 130E of the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force A Mexican Air Force C 130K A U S JC 130 aircraft retrieving a reconnaissance satellite film capsule under parachute RAAF C 130J 30 at Point Cook 2006 Brazilian Air Force C 130 L 382 For civilian versions see Lockheed L 100 Hercules Significant military variants of the C 130 include C 130A Initial production model with four Allison T56 A 11 9 turboprop engines 219 were ordered and deliveries to the USAF began in Dec 1956 C 130B Variant with four Allison T56 A 7 engines 134 were ordered and entered USAF service in May 1959 C 130E Same engines as the Bravo variant but with two 1 290 gal external fuel tanks and an increased maximum takeoff weight capability Introduced in Aug 1962 with 389 were ordered C 130F G Variants procured by the U S Navy for USMC refueling missions and other support transport operations C 130H Identical to the Echo variant but with more powerful Allison T56 A 15 turboprop engines Introduced in Jun 1974 with 308 ordered C 130K Designation for RAF Hercules C1 W2 C3 aircraft C 130Js in RAF service are the Hercules C 4 and Hercules C 5 C 130T Improved variants procured by the U S Navy for USMC refueling and other support transport operations C 130A II Dreamboat Early version Electronic Intelligence Signals Intelligence ELINT SIGINT aircraft 67 C 130J Super Hercules Tactical airlifter with new engines avionics and updated systems C 130B BLC A one off conversion of C 130B 58 0712 modified with a double Allison YT56 gas generator pod under each outer wing to provide bleed air for all the control surfaces and flaps 68 AC 130A E H J U W Gunship variants C 130D D 6 Ski equipped version for snow and ice operations United States Air Force Air National Guard CC 130E H J Hercules Designation for Canadian Armed Forces Royal Canadian Air Force Hercules aircraft U S Air Force used the CC 130J designation to differentiate the standard C 130J variant from the stretched C 130J company designation C 130J 30 CC 130H T is the Canadian tanker variant of the KC 130H citation needed C 130M Designation used by the Brazilian Air Force for locally modified up graded C 130H aircraft 69 DC 130A E H USAF and USN Drone control EC 130 EC 130E J Commando Solo USAF Air National Guard psychological operations version EC 130E Airborne Battlefield Command and Control Center ABCCC USAF procedural air to ground attack control also provided NRT threat updates EC 130E Rivet Rider Airborne psychological warfare aircraft EC 130H Compass Call Electronic warfare and electronic attack 70 EC 130V Airborne early warning and control AEW amp C variant used by USCG for counter narcotics missions 71 GC 130 Permanently grounded instructional airframes HC 130 HC 130B E H Early model combat search and rescue HC 130P N Combat King USAF aerial refueling tanker and combat search and rescue HC 130J Combat King II Next generation combat search and rescue tanker HC 130H J USCG long range surveillance and search and rescue USAFR Aerial Spray amp Airlift JC 130 Temporary conversion for flight test operations used to recover drones and spy satellite film capsules KC 130F R T J United States Marine Corps aerial refueling tanker and tactical airlifter LC 130F H R USAF Air National Guard Ski equipped version for Arctic and Antarctic support operations LC 130F and R previously operated by USN MC 130 MC 130E H Combat Talon I II Special operations infiltration extraction variant MC 130W Combat Spear Dragon Spear Special operations tanker gunship 72 MC 130P Combat Shadow Special operations tanker all operational aircraft converted to HC 130P standard MC 130J Commando II formerly Combat Shadow II Special operations tanker Air Force Special Operations Command 73 YMC 130H Modified aircraft under Operation Credible Sport for second Iran hostage crisis rescue attempt NC 130 Permanent conversion for flight test operations PC 130 C 130 MP Maritime patrol RC 130A S Surveillance aircraft for reconnaissance SC 130J Sea Herc Proposed maritime patrol version of the C 130J designed for coastal surveillance and anti submarine warfare 74 75 TC 130 Aircrew training VC 130H VIP transport WC 130A B E H J Weather reconnaissance Hurricane Hunter version for USAF Air Force Reserve Command s 53d Weather Reconnaissance Squadron in support of the National Weather Service s National Hurricane CenterOperators Edit Military operators of C 130 Hercules aircraft Current operators Former operators A Republic of China Air Force C 130H 2011 Royal Saudi Air Force C 130H A Royal New Zealand Air Force C 130H 2019 United States Navy C 130T Main article List of C 130 Hercules operators Afghanistan Algeria Argentina Australia Austria Bangladesh Bolivia Botswana Brazil Cameroon Canada Chad Chile Taiwan Colombia Denmark Ecuador Egypt Ethiopia France Gabon Germany 76 Greece Honduras India Indonesia Iran Iraq Israel Italy Japan Jordan Kuwait Liberia Libya Malaysia Mexico Morocco Netherlands New Zealand Niger Nigeria Norway Oman Pakistan Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Romania Saudi Arabia Singapore South Africa South Korea Sri Lanka Sudan Sweden Thailand Tunisia Turkey United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States Uruguay Venezuela Yemen ZambiaFormer operators Angola Belgium North Yemen South Vietnam SpainAccidents EditMain article List of accidents and incidents involving the Lockheed C 130 Hercules The C 130 Hercules has had a low accident rate in general The Royal Air Force recorded an accident rate of about one aircraft loss per 250 000 flying hours over the last 40 years placing it behind Vickers VC10s and Lockheed TriStars with no flying losses 77 USAF C 130A B E models had an overall attrition rate of 5 as of 1989 as compared to 1 2 for commercial airliners in the U S according to the NTSB 10 for B 52 bombers and 20 for fighters F 4 F 111 trainers T 37 T 38 and helicopters H 3 78 Aircraft on display EditArgentina Edit C 130B FAA TC 60 ex USAF 61 0964 received in February 1992 now at Museo Nacional de Aeronautica since September 2011 79 Australia Edit C 130A RAAF A97 214 used by 36 Squadron from early 1959 withdrawn from use late 1978 now at RAAF Museum RAAF Base Williams Point Cook 80 C 130E RAAF A97 160 used by 37 Squadron from August 1966 withdrawn from use November 2000 to RAAF Museum 14 November 2000 cocooned as of September 2005 81 Belgium Edit C 130H Belgian Airforce tailnumber CH13 in service from 2009 until May 2021 is on display at the Beauvechain Air Base at the First Wing Historical Center 82 Canada Edit CC 130E RCAF 10313 later 130313 is on display at the National Air Force Museum of Canada CFB Trenton 83 CC 130E RCAF 10307 later 130307 is on display in the Reserve Hangar at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum Ottawa Ontario 84 CC 130E RCAF 130328 is on display at the Greenwood Aviation Museum CFB Greenwood 85 Colombia Edit C 130B FAC 1010 serial number 3521 moved on 14 January 2016 to the Colombian Aerospace Museum in Tocancipa Cundinamarca for static display 86 C 130B FAC1011 serial number 3585 ex 59 1535 preserved at the Colombian Air and Space Museum within CATAM AFB Bogota 87 Indonesia Edit C 130B Indonesian Air Force A 1301 preserved at Sulaeman Airstrip Bandung Also occasionally used for Paskhas Training The airplane is relocated to Air Force Museum in Yogyakarta in 2017 88 Norway Edit C 130H Royal Norwegian Air Force 953 was retired on 10 June 2007 and moved to the Air Force museum at Oslo Gardermoen in May 2008 89 Saudi Arabia Edit C 130 at the Royal Saudi Air Force Museum C 130H RSAF 460 was operated by 4 Squadron Royal Saudi Air Force from December 1974 until January 1987 It was damaged in a fire at Jeddah in December 1989 Restored for ground training by August 1993 At Royal Saudi Air Force Museum November 2002 restored for ground display by using a tail from another C 130H 90 United Kingdom Edit Hercules C3 XV202 that served with the Royal Air Force from 1967 to 2011 is on display at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford 91 United States Edit GC 130A AF Ser No 55 037 used by the 773 TCS 483 TCW 315 AD 374 TCW 815 TAS 35 TAS 109 TAS belly landed at Duluth Minnesota April 1973 repaired 167 TAS 180 TAS to Chanute Technical Training Center as GC 130A May 1984 now displayed at Museum of Missouri Military History Missouri National Guard Ike Skelton Training Center Jefferson City Missouri Previously displayed at Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum former Chanute AFB Rantoul Illinois until museum closed 92 93 C 130A AF Ser No 56 0518 used by the 314 TCW 315 AD 41 ATS 328 TAS to Republic of Vietnam Air Force 435 Transport Squadron November 1972 holds the C 130 record for taking off with the most personnel on board during the evacuation of SVN 29 April 1975 with 452 Returned to USAF 185 TAS 105 TAS Flown to Little Rock AFB on 28 June 1989 It was converted to a static display at the LRAFB Visitor Center Arkansas by Sept 1989 94 C 130A AF Ser No 57 0453 was operated from 1958 to 1991 last duty with 155th TAS 164th TAG Tennessee Air National Guard Memphis International Airport ANGB Tennessee 1976 1991 named Nite Train to Memphis to AMARC in December 1991 then sent to Texas for modification into a replica of C 130A II Dreamboat aircraft AF Ser No 56 0528 shot down by Soviet fighters in Soviet airspace near Yerevan Armenia on 2 September 1958 while on ELINT mission with loss of all crew displayed in National Vigilance Park National Security Agency grounds Fort George Meade Maryland 95 C 130B AF Ser No 59 0528 was operated by 145th Airlift Wing North Carolina Air National Guard placed on static display at Charlotte Air National Guard Base North Carolina in 2010 96 C 130D AF Ser No 57 0490 used by the 61st TCS 17th TCS 139th TAS with skis July 1975 April 1983 to MASDC 1984 1985 GC 130D ground trainer Chanute AFB Illinois 1986 1990 When Chanute AFB closed in September 1993 it moved to the Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum former Chanute AFB Rantoul Illinois In July 1994 it moved to the Empire State Air Museum Schenectady County Airport New York until placed on the gate at Stratton Air National Guard Base in October 1994 97 NC 130B AF Ser No 57 0526 was the second B model manufactured initially delivered as JC 130B assigned to 6515th Organizational Maintenance Squadron for flight testing at Edwards AFB California on 29 November 1960 turned over to 6593rd Test Squadron s Operating Location No 1 at Edwards AFB and spent next seven years supporting Corona Program J status and prefix removed from aircraft in October 1967 transferred to 6593rd Test Squadron at Hickam AFB Hawaii and modified for mid air retrieval of satellites acquired by 6514th Test Squadron at Hill AFB Utah in Jan 1987 and used as electronic testbed and cargo transport aircraft retired January 1994 with 11 000 flight hours and moved to Hill Aerospace Museum at Hill AFB by January 1994 98 C 130E AF Ser No 62 1787 on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force Wright Patterson AFB Ohio was flown to the museum on 18 August 2011 One of the greatest feats of heroism during the Vietnam War involved the C 130E call sign Spare 617 N 2 The C 130E attempted to airdrop ammunition to surround South Vietnamese forces at An Loc Vietnam Approaching the drop zone Spare 617 received heavy enemy ground fire that damaged two engines ruptured a bleed air duct in the cargo compartment and set the ammunition on fire Flight engineer TSgt Sanders was killed and navigator 1st Lt Lenz and co pilot 1st Lt Hering were both wounded Despite receiving severe burns from hot air escaping from the damaged air bleed duct loadmaster TSgt Shaub extinguished a fire in the cargo compartment and successfully jettisoned the cargo pallets which exploded in mid air Despite losing a third engine on the final approach pilot Capt Caldwell landed Spare 617 safely For their actions Caldwell and Shaub received the Air Force Cross the U S Air Force s second highest award for valor TSgt Shaub also received the William H Pitsenbarger Award for Heroism from the Air Force Sergeants Association 99 KC 130F USN USMC BuNo 149798 used in tests in October November 1963 by the U S Navy for unarrested landings and unassisted take offs from the carrier USS Forrestal CV 59 it remains the record holder for largest aircraft to operate from a carrier flight deck and carried the name Look Ma No Hook during the tests Retired to the National Museum of Naval Aviation NAS Pensacola Florida in May 2003 100 C 130G USN USMC BuNo 151891 modified to EC 130G 1966 then testbed for EC 130Q TACAMO in 1981 then changed to TC 130G and used by Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron Three VQ 3 for flight proficiency bounce bird In early 1991 it was transferred to AMMARG Davis Monthan AFB Tucson AZ In May 1991 it was assigned as the U S Navy s Blue Angels USMC support aircraft serving as Fat Albert Airlines from 1991 to 2002 Retired to the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola Florida in November 2002 where it remains on outside static display reflecting the BLUES colors 52 C 130E AF Ser No 64 0525 was on display at the 82nd Airborne Division War Memorial Museum at Fort Bragg North Carolina The aircraft was the last assigned to the 43rd AW at Pope AFB North Carolina before retirement from the USAF 101 C 130E LM AF Ser No 64 0533 Taken in December 1964 by 314th Troop Carrier Wing Sewart AFB TN Last assigned to 37th Airlift Squadron Rhein Main AB Germany Transferred to Elmendorf AFB for display May 2004 Marked as 53 2453 102 C 130E AF Ser No 69 6579 operated by the 61st TAS 314th TAW 50th AS 61st AS at Dyess AFB as maintenance trainer as GC 130E March 1998 to Dyess AFB Linear Air Park January 2004 103 MC 130E Combat Talon I AF Ser No 64 0567 unofficially known as Wild Thing It transported captured Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega in 1989 during Operation Just Cause and participated in Operation Eagle Claw the unsuccessful attempt to rescue U S hostages from Iran in 1980 Wild Thing was also the first fixed wing aircraft to employ night vision goggles On display at Hurlburt Field in Florida 104 C 130E AF Ser No 69 6580 operated by the 61st TAS 314th TAW 317th TAW 314th TAW 317th TAW 40th AS 41st AS 43rd AW retired after center wing cracks were detected in April 2002 to the Air Mobility Command Museum Dover AFB Delaware on 2 February 2004 103 C 130E AF Ser No 70 1269 was used by the 43rd AW and is on display at the Pope Air Park Pope AFB North Carolina as of 2006 105 C 130H AF Ser No 74 1686 used by the 463rd TAW one of three C 130H airframes modified to YMC 130H for an aborted rescue attempt of Iranian hostages Operation Credible Sport with rocket packages blistered onto fuselage in 1980 but these were removed after the mission was canceled Subsequent duty with the 4950th Test Wing then donated to the Museum of Aviation at Robins AFB Georgia in March 1988 106 C 130H AF Ser No 88 4401 operated by the Ohio 179th Airlift Wing has been retired and is on display at the MAPS Air Museum in Canton Ohio 107 Specifications C 130H Edit C 130H Hercules flight deck A Hercules deploying flares sometimes referred to as Angel Flares due to the characteristic pattern Cargo compartment of a Swedish Air Force C 130 Data from USAF C 130 Hercules fact sheet 108 International Directory of Military Aircraft 109 Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft 110 and Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft 111 General characteristicsCrew 5 2 pilots CSO navigator flight engineer and loadmaster Capacity 42 000 lb 19 000 kg payload C 130E H J cargo hold length 40 ft 12 19 m width 119 in 3 02 m height 9 ft 2 74 m Rear ramp length 123 in 3 12 m width 119 in 3 02 m C 130J 30 cargo hold length 55 ft 16 76 m width 119 in 3 02 m height 9 ft 2 74 m Rear ramp length 123 inches 3 12 m width 119 in 3 02 m 92 passengers or 64 airborne troops or 74 litter patients with 5 medical crew or 6 pallets or 2 3 Humvees or 2 M113 armored personnel carriers 1 CAESAR self propelled howitzer Length 97 ft 9 in 29 79 m Wingspan 132 ft 7 in 40 41 m Height 38 ft 3 in 11 66 m Wing area 1 745 sq ft 162 1 m2 Airfoil root NACA 64A318 tip NACA 64A412 112 Empty weight 75 800 lb 34 382 kg Max takeoff weight 155 000 lb 70 307 kg Powerplant 4 Allison T56 A 15 turboprop engines 4 590 shp 3 420 kW each Propellers 4 bladed Hamilton Standard 54H60 constant speed fully feathering reversible propellers 13 ft 6 in 4 11 m diameter 113 Performance Maximum speed 320 kn 370 mph 590 km h at 20 000 ft 6 100 m Cruise speed 292 kn 336 mph 541 km h Range 2 050 nmi 2 360 mi 3 800 km Ferry range 3 995 nmi 4 597 mi 7 399 km Service ceiling 33 000 ft 10 000 m empty 114 23 000 ft 7 000 m with 42 000 lb 19 000 kg payload dd dd dd Rate of climb 1 830 ft min 9 3 m s Takeoff distance 3 586 ft 1 093 m at 155 000 lb 70 307 kg max gross weight 111 1 400 ft 427 m at 80 000 lb 36 287 kg gross weight 115 dd dd dd Avionics Westinghouse Electronic Systems AN APN 241 weather and navigational radar 116 See also Edit Aviation portalRelated development Lockheed AC 130 Lockheed DC 130 Lockheed EC 130 Lockheed EC 130H Compass Call Lockheed HC 130 Lockheed L 100 Hercules Lockheed LC 130 Lockheed Martin C 130J Super Hercules Lockheed Martin KC 130 Lockheed MC 130 Lockheed RC 130 Lockheed WC 130Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Antonov An 12 Armstrong Whitworth AW 660 Argosy Blackburn Beverley Shaanxi Y 8 Kawasaki C 1 Short Belfast Transall C 160Related lists List of accidents and incidents involving the Lockheed C 130 Hercules List of non carrier aircraft flown from aircraft carriers List of United States military aerial refueling aircraftReferences EditNotes Edit After the English Electric Canberra B 52 Stratofortress Tupolev Tu 95 and KC 135 Stratotanker The aircrew of Spare 617 were Capt William Caldwell pilot Lt John Hering co pilot Lt Richard A Lenz navigator Tech Sgt Jon Sanders flight engineer loadmasters Tech Sgt Charlie Shaub and A1C Dave McAleece Citations Edit Hercules History lockeedmartin com Lockheed Martin 30 April 2018 Archived from the original on 6 April 2019 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Family Ties Three Generations Contribute to Hercules Legacy Archived from the original on 9 July 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2015 Stokes Stephannie 29 December 2015 C 130 aircraft designed in the 1950s still delivers Marketplace Archived from the original on 2 January 2016 Retrieved 2 January 2016 Today in History April 21 1964 Military version of the C 130 finally takes flight Super Sabre Society Retrieved 3 November 2022 Rogallo Vernon L Yaggy Paul F McCloud John L 9 September 1954 An Investigation in the Ames 40 by 80 Foot Wind Tunnel of a YT 56A Turboprop Engine Incorporating a Decoupler and a Controlled Feathering Device Nasa gov Today in History April 21 1964 Military version of the C 130 finally takes flight Super Sabre Society Retrieved 3 November 2022 Rogallo Vernon L Yaggy Paul F McCloud John L 9 September 1954 An Investigation in the Ames 40 by 80 Foot Wind Tunnel of a YT 56A Turboprop Engine Incorporating a Decoupler and a Controlled Feathering Device Nasa gov a b Rhodes Jeff Third Quarter 2004 Willis Hawkins and the genesis of the Hercules Code One Magazine Vol 19 no 3 pp 16 21 Boyne Walter J Beyond the Horizons The Lockheed Story New York St Martin s Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 312 19237 2 Dabney Joseph E A Mating of the Jeep the Truck and the Airplane lockheedmartin com 2004 Excerpted fromHERK Hero of the SkiesinLockheed Martin Service News Lockheed Martin Air Mobility Support Volume 29 Issue 2 p 3 Olausson 2009 p 129 C 130 Broad Area Review Fas org Memoirs of an aeronautical engineer flight testing at Ames Research Center Seth B Anderson United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration History Office Ames Research Center P 29 Cassidy J C 130 Transportability of Army Vehicles p 3 Defense Technical Information Center 2001 Petrescu Relly Victoria Petrescu Florian Ion 2013 Lockheed Martin Germany Books on Demand GmBH Norderstedt p 11 ISBN 978 3 8482 6053 9 C 130K in the Austrian Air Force Archived 5 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine doppeladler com Retrieved 2 October 2010 NASA and Lockheed Martin Partners In C 130 Technology Archived 14 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 May 2013 The High Technology Test Bed Archived 23 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Lockheed Service News Vol 12 No 3 September 1985 Retrieved 21 May 2013 Norton Bill 2002 STOL Progenitors The Technology Path to a Large STOL Aircraft and the C 17A Reston Virginia American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics ISBN 1 56347 538 3 ASN Aircraft Accident Archived 27 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 May 2013 United States House Committee on Appropriations 1994 C 130 aircraft Department of Defense appropriations for 1995 part 3 Report pp 489 491 hdl 2027 uc1 31210014044646 ISBN 0 16 045949 4 OCLC 1097431953 a b Trimble Stephen Boeing outlines C 130H and KC 10 cockpit upgrades Archived 28 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Flightglobal Retrieved 2 October 2010 Capaccio Tony Air Force Would Cancel Boeing C 130 Upgrade 15 Other Programs Bloomberg 2 September 2009 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Wall Robert Pentagon Approves C 130 AMP Production Archived 21 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Week 25 June 2010 Boeing C 130 Avionics Modernization Program to Enter Production Archived 7 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Boeing 24 June 2010 AF MIL Archived from the original on 18 August 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2016 NOAA Hurricane Hunters First To Get T56 Series 3 5 Engine Enhancement Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Aero News 14 November 2013 Retrieved 1 December 2013 Rapid Dragon s first live fire test of a Palletized Weapon System 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2019 AN APN 241 Color Weather Navigation Radar with Prediction Windshear Detection Electronic systems sector Northrop Grumman Archived from the original on 21 March 2008 Retrieved 29 May 2019 Bibliography Edit Borman Martin W Lockheed C 130 Hercules Marlborough UK Crowood Press 1999 ISBN 978 1 86126 205 9 Diehl Alan E PhD Former Senior USAF Safety Scientist Silent Knights Blowing the Whistle on Military Accidents and Their Cover ups Dulles Virginia Brassey s Inc 2002 ISBN 1 57488 544 8 Donald David ed Lockheed C 130 Hercules The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft New York Barnes amp Noble Books 1997 ISBN 0 7607 0592 5 Eden Paul Lockheed C 130 Hercules Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft London Amber Books 2004 ISBN 1 904687 84 9 Frawley Gerard The International Directory of Military Aircraft 2002 03 Fyshwick ACT Australia Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd 2002 ISBN 1 875671 55 2 Olausson Lars Lockheed Hercules Production List 1954 2011 Satenas Sweden Self published 27th Edition March 2009 No ISBN Olausson Lars March 2010 Lockheed Hercules Production List 1954 2012 28th ed Satenas Sweden Self published Pentagon Over the Islands The Thirty Year History of Indonesian Military Aviation Air Enthusiast Quarterly 2 154 162 n d ISSN 0143 5450 Reed Chris Lockheed C 130 Hercules and Its Variants Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing 1999 ISBN 978 0 7643 0722 5 C 130 Hercules May 2014 ed United States Air Force 2003 archived from the original on 14 September 2014 This article incorporates public domain material from Fact Sheet Lockheed C 130E Hercules United States Air Force permanent dead link External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to C 130 Hercules Lockheed Martin official C 130 page U S Air Force C 130 fact sheet C 130 U S Navy fact file and C 130 history page on Navy mil C 130hercules net C 130 page on amcmuseum org Herculean Transport a 1954 Flight article C 130 takes off and lands on a Carrier USS Forrestal on YouTube Newsreel footage from 1955 of blunt nose Hercules prototype 1955 from British Pathe Record No 63598 at YouTube The short film STAFF FILM REPORT 66 12A 1966 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lockheed C 130 Hercules amp oldid 1133512297, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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