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Lockheed P-3 Orion

The Lockheed P-3 Orion is a four-engined, turboprop anti-submarine and maritime surveillance aircraft developed for the United States Navy and introduced in the 1960s. Lockheed based it on the L-188 Electra commercial airliner;[4] it is easily distinguished from the Electra by its distinctive tail stinger or "MAD" boom, used for the magnetic anomaly detection (MAD) of submarines.

P-3 Orion
A P-3C of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
Role Maritime patrol aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer Lockheed
Lockheed Martin
Kawasaki Aerospace Company
First flight November 1959[1]
Introduction August 1962[1]
Status Active
Primary users United States Navy
Royal New Zealand Air Force
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
Royal Australian Air Force
Produced 1961–1990[2]
Number built Lockheed – 650,
Kawasaki – 107,
Total – 757[3]
Developed from Lockheed L-188 Electra
Variants Lockheed AP-3C Orion
Lockheed CP-140 Aurora
Lockheed EP-3
Lockheed WP-3D Orion
Developed into Lockheed P-7

Over the years, the P-3 has seen numerous design developments, most notably in its electronics packages. Numerous navies and air forces around the world continue to use the type primarily for maritime patrol, reconnaissance, anti-surface warfare and anti-submarine warfare.[1] A total of 757 P-3s have been built. In 2012, it joined the handful of military aircraft including the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress, Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker, Lockheed C-130 Hercules and the Lockheed U-2 that the United States military has been using for more than 50 years. In the twenty-first century, the turbofan-powered Boeing P-8 Poseidon began to supplement, and will eventually replace, the U.S. Navy's P-3s.

Development

Origins

In August 1957, the U.S. Navy called for proposals for replacement of the piston-engined Lockheed P2V Neptune (later redesignated P-2) and Martin P5M Marlin (later redesignated P-5) with a more advanced aircraft to conduct maritime patrol and antisubmarine warfare. Modifying an existing aircraft should save on cost and to allow rapid introduction into the fleet. Lockheed suggested a military version of its L-188 Electra, then still in development and yet to fly. In April 1958, Lockheed won the competition and was awarded an initial research-and-development contract in May.[4]

 
The first Orion prototype was a converted Lockheed Electra.

Lockheed modified the prototype YP3V-1/YP-3A, Bureau Number (BuNo) 148276 from the third Electra airframe c/n 1003.[5] The first flight of the aircraft's aerodynamic prototype, originally designated YP3V-1, took place on 19 August 1958. While based on the same design philosophy as the Electra, the aircraft differed structurally; it had 7 feet (2.1 m) less fuselage forward of the wings with an opening bomb bay, and a more pointed nose radome, a distinctive tail "stinger" for detection of submarines by MAD, wing hardpoints, and other internal, external, and airframe-production technique enhancements.[4]

The Orion has four Allison T56 turboprops, which give it a top speed of 411 knots (761 km/h; 473 mph) comparable to the fastest propeller fighters, or even to slow high-bypass turbofan jets such as the Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II or the Lockheed S-3 Viking. Similar patrol aircraft include the Soviet Ilyushin Il-38, the French Breguet Atlantique and the British jet-powered Hawker Siddeley Nimrod (based on the de Havilland Comet).

The first production version, designated P3V-1, was launched on 15 April 1961. Initial squadron deliveries to Patrol Squadron Eight (VP-8) and Patrol Squadron Forty-Four (VP-44) at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, began in August 1962. On 18 September 1962, the U.S. military transitioned to a unified designation system for all services, with the aircraft being renamed the P-3 Orion.[4] Paint schemes have changed from early 1960s, gloss seaplane gray and white to mid-1960s/1970s/1980s/early 1990s gloss white and gray, to mid-1990s flat-finish low-visibility gray with fewer and smaller markings. In the early 2000s, the paint scheme changed to its current overall gloss gray finish with the original full-sized color markings. However, large-sized BuNos on the vertical stabilizer and squadron designations on the fuselage remained largely omitted.[6]

Further developments

 
P-3s from Japan, Canada, Australia, Republic of Korea, and the United States at MCAS Kaneohe Bay during RIMPAC 2010

In 1963, the U.S. Navy's Bureau of Naval Weapons contracted Univac Defense Systems Division of Sperry Rand to engineer, build, and test a digital computer (a device then in its infancy) to interface with the many sensors and newly developing display units of the P-3 Orion. Project A-NEW was the engineering system, which after several early trials, produced the engineering prototype, the CP-823/U, Univac 1830, Serial A-1, A-NEW MOD3 Computing System. Univac delivered the CP-823/U to the Naval Air Development Center at Johnsville, Pennsylvania, in 1965; this directly led to the production computers later equipped on the P-3C.[7]

Three civilian Electras were lost in fatal accidents between February 1959 and March 1960. Following the third crash, the FAA restricted the maximum speed of Electras pending determination of the causes. After an extensive investigation, two of the crashes (those of September 1959 and March 1960) were identified as due to insufficiently strong engine mounts, unable to damp a whirling motion that could affect the outboard engines. When the oscillation was transmitted to the wings, a severe vertical vibration escalated, tearing off the wings.[8][9] The company implemented an costly modification program, labelled the Lockheed Electra Achievement Program, which strengthened the engine mounts and the wing structures supporting the mounts, and replaced some wing skins with thicker material. At its own expense, Lockheed modified all surviving Electras of the 145 built at that time, the process taking 20 days for each aircraft. These changes were incorporated into subsequent aircraft as they were built.[8]

The Electra's sales were limited as Lockheed's technical fix did not completely erase the aircraft's poor reputation in an era in which turboprop-powered aircraft were being replaced by faster jets.[10] In military roles that valued fuel efficiency more than speed, the Orion remained in service for over 50 years after its 1962 introduction. Although surpassed in production longevity by the Lockheed C-130 Hercules, 734 P-3s were produced through 1990.[2][11][12] Lockheed Martin opened a new P-3 wing production-line in 2008 as part of its Service Life Extension Program (ASLEP) for delivery in 2010. A complete ASLEP replaces the outer wings, center-wing lower section, and horizontal stabilizers with newly built parts.[13]

In the 1990s, the U.S. Navy attempted to procure a successor aircraft to the P-3, and selected the improved P-7 over a naval-specific variant of the twin turbofan-powered Boeing 757, but this program was subsequently cancelled. In a second program to select a replacement, the advanced Lockheed Martin Orion 21, another P-3-derived aircraft, lost out to the Boeing P-8 Poseidon, a Boeing 737 variant, which entered service in 2013.

Design

 
A USN P-3A of VP-49 in the original blue/white colors

The P-3 has an internal bomb bay under the front fuselage, which can house conventional Mark 50 torpedoes or Mark 46 torpedoes and/or special (nuclear) weapons. Additional underwing stations, or pylons, can carry other armament configurations, including the AGM-84 Harpoon, AGM-84E SLAM, AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER, AGM-65 Maverick, 127 millimetres (5.0 in) Zuni rockets, and various other sea mines, missiles, and gravity bombs. The aircraft also had the capability to carry the AGM-12 Bullpup guided missile until that weapon was withdrawn from U.S./NATO/Allied service.[14]

The P-3 is equipped with a MAD in the extended tail. This instrument is able to detect the magnetic anomaly of a submarine in the Earth's magnetic field. The limited range of this instrument requires the aircraft to be near the submarine at low altitude. Because of this, it is primarily used for pinpointing the location of a submarine immediately prior to a torpedo or depth bomb attack. Due to the sensitivity of the detector, electromagnetic noise can interfere with it, so the detector is placed in P-3's fiberglass tail stinger (MAD boom), far from other electronics and ferrous metals on the aircraft.[15]

Crew complement

 
Flight instruments and controls in the cockpit of the P-3C Orion (Update II) in Dutch service.
 
An underside view of a USN P-3C showing the MAD (rear boom) and external sonobuoy launch tubes (grid of black spots towards the rear)
 
A German Navy Rolls-Royce Allison T56-A-14 engine with Hamilton Standard 54H60-77 propeller

The crew complement varies depending on the role being flown, the variant being operated, and the country that is operating the type. In U.S. Navy service, the normal crew complement was 12 until it was reduced to its current complement of 11 in the early 2000s when the in-flight ordnanceman position was eliminated as a cost-savings measure and the ORD duties assumed by the in-flight technician.[1] Data for U.S. Navy P-3C only.

Officers:

  • three Naval Aviators
    • Patrol Plane Commander (PPC)
    • Patrol Plane 2nd Pilot (PP2P)
    • Patrol Plane 3rd Pilot (PP3P)
  • two Naval Flight Officers
    • Patrol Plane Tactical Coordinator (PPTC or TACCO)
    • Patrol Plane Navigator/Communicator (PPNC or NAVCOM)

NOTE: NAVCOM on P-3C only; USN P-3A and P-3B series had an NFO Navigator (TACNAV) and an enlisted Airborne Radio Operator (RO)

Enlisted aircrew:

  • two enlisted Aircrew Flight Engineers (FE1 and FE2)
  • three enlisted Sensor Operators
    • Radar/MAD/EWO (SS-3)
    • two Acoustic (SS-1 and SS-2)
  • one enlisted In-Flight Technician (IFT)
  • one enlisted Aviation Ordnanceman (ORD position no longer used on USN crews; duties assumed by IFT)

The senior of either the PPC or TACCO will be designated as the aircraft Mission Commander (MC).

Engine loiter shutdown

Once on station, one engine is often shut down (usually the No. 1 engine – the left outer engine) to conserve fuel and extend the time aloft and/or range when at low level. It is the primary candidate for loiter shutdown because it has no generator. Eliminating the exhaust from engine 1 also improves visibility from the aft observer station on the left side of the aircraft.

On occasion, both outboard engines can be shut down, weight, weather, and fuel permitting. Long, deep-water, coastal, or border-patrol missions can last over 10 hours and may include extra crew. The record time aloft for a P-3 is 21.5 hours, undertaken by the Royal New Zealand Air Force's No. 5 Squadron in 1972.

Operational history

United States

 
A P-3B of VP-6 near Hawaii
 
A US P-3C Orion of VP-8
 
Changing a tire on a P-3C
 
A P-3C on final approach at Kadena AB in 2019

Developed during the Cold War, the P-3's primary mission was to localize Soviet Navy ballistic missile and fast attack submarines detected by undersea surveillance systems and eliminate them in the event of full-scale war.[16][17] At its height, the U.S. Navy's P-3 community consisted of twenty-four active duty "Fleet" patrol squadrons home based at air stations in the states of Florida and Hawaii as well as bases which formerly had P-3 operations in Maryland, Maine, and California.

There were also thirteen Naval Reserve patrol squadrons identical to their active duty "Fleet" counterparts, said Reserve "Fleet" squadrons being based in Florida, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Michigan, Massachusetts (later relocated to Maine), Illinois, Tennessee, Louisiana, California and Washington. Two Fleet Replacement Squadrons (FRS), also called "RAG" squadrons (from the historic "Replacement Air Group" nomenclature) were located in California and Florida. The since-deactivated VP-31 in California provided P-3 training for the Pacific Fleet, while VP-30 in Florida performed the task for the Atlantic Fleet. These squadrons were also augmented by a test and evaluation squadron in Maryland, two additional test and evaluation units that were part of an air development center in Pennsylvania and a test center in California, an oceanographic development squadron in Maryland, and two active duty "special projects" units in Maine and Hawaii, the latter being slightly smaller than a typical squadron.

In fiscal year 1995, the U.S. Navy planned to reduce active-duty patrol squadrons from 16 to 13 - seven on the East Coast, six on the West.[18] The patrol squadrons planned to survive were VP-8, 10, 11, and 26 at NAS Brunswick, Maine, and VP-5, 16, and 45 at NAS Jacksonville, Florida. The Pacific squadrons that were to be retained were VP-1, 4, 9, and 47 at Barbers' Point, Hawaii, and 40 and VP-46 at NAS Whidbey Island, Washington. Thus Patrol Squadrons 17, 23, and 24 were to be disestablished, and the remaining units were to operate nine aircraft instead of eight, augmented by VP-30 and the nine-at-the-time USNR P-3 squadrons.

Reconnaissance missions in international waters led to occasions where Soviet fighters would "bump" a P-3, either operated by the U.S. Navy or other operators such as the Royal Norwegian Air Force. On 1 April 2001, a midair collision between a United States Navy EP-3E ARIES II signals surveillance aircraft and a People's Liberation Army Navy J-8II jet fighter-interceptor resulted in an international dispute between the U.S. and the People's Republic of China (PRC).[19]

More than 40 P-3 variants have demonstrated the type's rugged reliability, commonly flying 12-hour plus missions 200 ft (61 m) over water.[citation needed] Versions were developed for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for research and hurricane hunting/hurricane wall busting, for the U.S. Customs Service (now U.S. Customs and Border Protection) for drug interdiction and aerial surveillance mission with a rotodome adapted from the Grumman E-2 Hawkeye or an AN/APG-66 radar adapted from the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon, and for NASA for research and development.

The U.S. Navy remains the largest P-3 operator, currently distributed between a single fleet replacement (i.e., "training") patrol squadron in Florida (VP-30), 12 active duty patrol squadrons distributed between bases in Florida, Washington and Hawaii, two Navy Reserve patrol squadrons in Florida and Washington, one active duty special projects patrol squadron (VPU-2) in Hawaii, and two active duty test and evaluation squadrons. One additional active duty fleet reconnaissance squadron (VQ-1) operates the EP-3 Aries signals intelligence (SIGINT) variant at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Washington.

In January 2011, the U.S. Navy revealed that P-3s have been used to hunt down "third generation" narco-submarines.[20] This is significant because as recently as July 2009, fully submersible submarines have been used in smuggling operations.[21] As of November 2013, the US Navy began phasing out the P-3 in favor of the newer and more advanced Boeing P-8 Poseidon.

In May 2020, Patrol Squadron 40 completed the transition to the P-8, marking the retirement of the P-3C from U.S. Navy active duty service. The last of the active-duty P-3Cs, aircraft 162776, was also delivered to the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida. Two Navy Reserve squadrons Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 30 and One Active duty Squadron [ VQ-1 ] continue to fly the P-3C, with final phaseout of the aircraft expected in 2025.[22]

In Cuba

In October 1962, P-3As flew several blockade patrols in the vicinity of Cuba. Having only joined the operational Fleet earlier that year, this event marked the first employment of the P-3 in a real world "heightened threat" situation.[citation needed]

In Vietnam

Beginning in 1964, forward deployed P-3s began flying various missions under Operation Market Time from bases in the Philippines and Vietnam. The primary focus of these coastal patrols was to stem the supply of materials to the Viet Cong by sea, although several of these missions also became overland "feet dry" sorties. During one such mission, a small caliber artillery shell passed through a P-3 without rendering it mission incapable. The only confirmed combat loss of a P-3 also occurred during Operation Market Time.[23]

In April 1968, a U.S. Navy P-3B of VP-26 was downed by anti-aircraft fire in the Gulf of Thailand with the loss of the entire crew. Two months earlier in February 1968, another one of VP-26's P-3Bs was operating in the same vicinity when it crashed with the loss of the entire crew. Originally attributed to a low altitude mishap, later conjecture is that this aircraft may have also fallen victim to anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) fire from the same source as the April incident.[23]

In Iraq

On 2 August 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait and was poised to strike Saudi Arabia. Within 48 hours of the initial invasion, U.S. Navy P-3Cs were among the first American forces to arrive in the area. One was a modified platform with a prototype over-the-horizon targeting (OTH-T) system package known as "Outlaw Hunter"; it had been undergoing trials in the Pacific after being developed by Tiburon Systems, Inc. for NAVAIR's PMA-290 Program Office.[24] Within hours of the coalition air campaign's start, "Outlaw Hunter" detected a large number of Iraqi patrol boats and naval vessels attempting to move from Basra and Umm Qasr to Iranian waters. "Outlaw Hunter" vectored in strike elements which attacked the flotilla near Bubiyan Island, destroying 11 vessels and damaging scores more. During Desert Shield, a P-3 using infrared imaging detected a ship with Iraqi markings beneath freshly-painted bogus Egyptian markings trying to avoid detection.[24]

Several days before the 7 January 1991 commencement of Operation Desert Storm, a P-3C equipped with an APS-137 Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR) conducted coastal surveillance along Iraq and Kuwait to provide pre-strike reconnaissance on enemy military installations. A total of 55 of the 108 Iraqi vessels destroyed during the conflict were targeted by P-3Cs.[24]

The P-3's mission expanded in the late 1990s and early 2000s to include battlespace surveillance both at sea and over land. The long range and long loiter time of the P-3 proved to be an invaluable asset during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom, being able to instantaneously provide the gathered battlespace information to ground troops, particularly the U.S. Marines.[1]

In Afghanistan

Although the P-3 is a MPA, armament and sensor upgrades in the Anti-surface Warfare Improvement Program (AIP)[25] have made it suitable for sustained combat air support over land.[25] In what became known as the "Decade in the Desert", Navy P-3Cs patrolled combat zones in the Middle East and Southwest Asia.[26] From the start of the war in Afghanistan, U.S. Navy P-3s operated from Kandahar in that role.[27] Royal Australian Air Force AP-3Cs operated out of Minhad Air Base in the UAE from 2003 until their withdrawal in November 2012. Between 2008 and 2012, AP-3Cs conducted overland intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance tasks in support of coalition troops across Afghanistan.[28]

The United States Geological Survey used the Orion to survey parts of southern and eastern Afghanistan for lithium, copper, and other mineral deposits.[29]

In Libya

Several U.S. Navy P-3Cs, and two Canadian CP-140 Auroras, a variant of the Orion, participated in maritime surveillance missions over Libyan waters in the framework of enforcement of the 2011 no-fly zone over Libya.[30][31]

A U.S. Navy P-3C supporting Operation Odyssey Dawn engaged the Libyan coast guard vessel Vittoria on 28 March 2011 after the vessel and eight smaller craft fired on merchant ships in the port of Misrata, Libya. The Orion fired AGM-65 Maverick missiles on Vittoria, which was subsequently beached.[32]

Iran

 
A U.S. Navy F-14A Tomcat belonging to VF-213 escorts an Imperial Iranian Airforce P-3F Orion over the Indian Ocean – 1981

Lockheed produced the P-3F variant of the P-3 Orion for Iran. Six examples were delivered to the former Imperial Iranian Air Force (IIAF) in 1975 and 1976.

Following the Iranian Revolution in 1979, the Orions continued in service, after the IIAF was renamed the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force (IRIAF). They were used in the Tanker War phase of the Iran–Iraq War.[citation needed] A total of four P-3Fs remain in service.

Pakistan

 
A Pakistan Navy P-3C Orion in Quetta, in October 2010

Three P-3C Orions, delivered to the Pakistan Navy in 1996 and 1997 were operated extensively during the Kargil conflict. After the crash of one with the loss of an entire crew, the type was grounded; nonetheless, the aircraft were maintained in an armed state and airworthy condition throughout the escalation period of 2001 and 2002. During 2007, they were used by the navy to conduct signals intelligence, airborne and bombing operations in a Swat offensive and Operation Rah-e-Nijat. Precision and strategic bombing missions were carried out by the P-3Cs; intelligence management operations were also conducted against Taliban and al-Qaeda operatives.[33]

On 22 May 2011, two out of the four Pakistani P-3Cs were destroyed in an attack on PNS Mehran, a Pakistani Naval station in Karachi.[34] In June 2011, the U.S. agreed to replace the destroyed aircraft with two new ones.[35] In February 2012, the U.S. delivered two additional P-3Cs to the Pakistan Navy.[36]

On 18 November 2016, during tensions with India, the Pakistan Navy dispatched various ASW units, including P-3Cs, in response to reports of an Indian Navy submarine that was allegedly loitering in close proximity to the Southern territorial waters of Pakistan in the Arabian Sea. This submarine was swiftly intercepted by the Navy Orions and forced away from the territorial boundaries.[37]

In March 2019, a P-3C from the Pakistan Naval Air Arm intercepted an Indian submarine attempting to enter Pakistani waters at night.[38][39] In October 2021, Pakistani Orions again intercepted an Indian Kalvari class submarine and blocked it from entering Pakistani Waters at the Arabian Sea.[40][41][42]

In Somalia

 
A U.S. Navy P-3C Orion monitoring the hijacking of MV Maersk Alabama, 2009

The Spanish Air Force deployed P-3s to assist the international effort against piracy in Somalia. On 29 October 2008, a Spanish P-3 patrolling Somalia's coast reacted to a distress call from an oil tanker in the Gulf of Aden; it overflew the pirate vessels three times, dropping a smoke bomb on each pass, as they attempted to board the tanker. After the third pass, the pirates broke off their attack.[43] On 29 March 2009, the same P-3 pursued the assailants of the German navy tanker Spessart (A1442), resulting in the pirate's capture.[44]

In April 2011, the Portuguese Air Force also contributed to Operation Ocean Shield by sending a P-3C[45] which had early success when on its fifth mission detected a pirate whaler with two attack skiffs.[46] Since 2009, the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force has deployed P-3s to Djibouti for anti-piracy patrols,[47][48][49] from 2011 from its own base.[50] The German Navy has also periodically contributed a P-3 to address the piracy problem.[citation needed]

Civilian uses

 
Aero Union P-3A Orion taking off from Fox Field, Lancaster, California, to fight the North Fire

Several P-3s have been N-registered and are operated by civilian agencies. The US Customs and Border Protection has several P-3A and P-3B aircraft that are used for aircraft intercept and maritime patrol. NOAA operates two WP-3D variants specially modified for hurricane research. One P-3, N426NA, is used by National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) as an Earth science research platform, primarily for the NASA Science Mission Directorate's Airborne Science Program; it is based at Goddard Space Flight Center's Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia.

Aero Union, Inc. operated eight secondhand P-3As configured as air tankers, which were leased to the U.S. Forest Service, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and other agencies for firefighting use. Several of these aircraft were involved in the U.S. Forest Service airtanker scandal but have not been involved in any catastrophic aircraft mishaps. Aero Union has since gone bankrupt, and their P-3s have been put up for auction.[51]

Variants

 
A Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force Lockheed UP-3C Orion #9151

Over the years, numerous variants of the P-3 have been created. A few notable examples are:

. The flight deck now has 'glass' instrumentation and navigation computer automation. The Tactical Rail (Tacrail) has been completely refitted with modern sensors, communication and data management systems.

Operators

 
A map with P-3 operators in red, former operators in light red.
 
 
P-3C, 11 Sqn RAAF, in 1990
 
A Canadian CP-140 Aurora in June 2007
 
A P-3C of the German Navy
 
A Portuguese Air Force P-3C Orion Cup+ (s/n 14810)
 
NOAA WP-3D Hurricane Hunters
 
A U.S. Department of Homeland Security P-3AEW&C used to track drug couriers

Military operators

  Argentina
  Australia
  Brazil
  Chile
  • Chilean Navy – four P-3A; based at Base Aeronaval Torquemada, Concón. Three used as patrol aircraft, one used for personnel transport. Chile plans to extend their service lives past 2030 by changing the wings, modernizing the engines, and integrating the AGM-84 Harpoon anti-ship missile.[54]
  Canada
  Germany
  Greece
  • Hellenic Air Force – six P-3B operated jointly with the Hellenic Navy, 1 in operable condition as of 2019, 3 additional are undergoing maintenance as of 2016 which should return them to airworthy condition, the first of which was completed in May 2019.[58]
  Iran
  Japan
  New Zealand
  • Royal New Zealand Air Force – six P-3K2 (5 Sqn); based in RNZAF Base Auckland. Operated by 5 SQN. Five were originally delivered in 1966 as P-3Bs. Another was purchased from the RAAF in 1985. All six have been upgraded by L-3 Communications Canada and now designated as P-3K2,[63] with the first upgraded aircraft returned to New Zealand in April 2011.[64] The New Zealand Government announced[65] they are to be replaced in 2023 with the purchase of 4 Boeing P-8A Poseidons. An interim upgrade contract worth NZ$36M has been awarded to Boeing to upgrade the underwater intelligence, reconnaissance and surveillance capability of the P-3K2,[66] with a capability similar to that provided in the P-8.[67]
  Norway
  Pakistan
  • Pakistan Naval Air Arm – ~Four P-3C; based in Naval aviation base Faisal, Karachi. Upgraded P-3C MPA and P-3B AEW models (equipped with Hawkeye 2000 AEW system) ordered in 2006,[68] first upgraded P-3C delivered in early 2007. In June 2010, two more upgraded P-3Cs joined the Pakistan Navy with anti-ship and submarine warfare capabilities. A total of nine.[69] Two aircraft were destroyed in an attack by armed militants at the Mehran Naval Airbase.
  Portugal
  South Korea
  Taiwan
  • Republic of China Air Force (1966–1967) – Three P-3As (149669, 149673, 149678) obtained by the CIA from the U.S. Navy under Project STSPIN in May 1963, as replacement aircraft for CIA's own covert operation fleet of RB-69A/P2V-7U versions. Converted by Aerosystems Division of LTV to be used as both ELINT and COMINT platform, the three P-3As were known as "black" P-3As under Project Axial. Officially transferred to the CIA on June/July 1964, the first of three "black" P-3As arrived in Taiwan and officially transferred to ROCAF's secret Black Bat Squadron on 22 June 1966. Armed with four Sidewinder short range AAM missiles for self-defense, the three "black" P-3A flew peripheral missions along China's coast to collect SIGINT and air samples. When the project was terminated in January 1967, all three "black" P-3As were flown to NAS Alameda, CA, for long-term storage. In September 1967, Lockheed at Burbank, converted two of the three aircraft (149669 and 149678) into the only two EP-3B examples in existence, while the third aircraft (149673) was converted by Lockheed in 1969–1970 to serve as a development aircraft for various electronic programs. The two EP-3Bs known as "Bat Rack", owing to their service with Taiwan's "Black Bat" Squadron, were issued to U.S. Navy's VQ-1 Squadron in 1969 and deployed to Da Nang, Vietnam. Later, the two EP-3Bs were converted to EP-3E ARIES, along with seven EP-3As. The two EP-3Es retired in the 1980s, when replaced by 12 EP-3E ARIES II versions.[74]
  • Republic of China Navy – The Republic of China Navy obtained 12 P-3Cs under the U.S. government's Foreign Military Sales program in 2007 which were then modernized for an additional 15,000 flight hours.[75] 12 P-3Cs (ordered, with deliveries starting in 2012), with three spare airframes that may be converting to EP-3E standard; based in the south part of the island and offshore.[76] In May 2014 Lockheed Martin were awarded a contract to upgrade and overhaul all 12 P-3Cs by August 2015.[77]
  United States

Former military operators

  Netherlands
  Spain
  Thailand
  • Royal Thai Navy – two P-3Ts, one VP-3T, one UP-3T ; based at RTNAB U-Tapao (102 Sqn). Withdrawn from active service in 2014.

Civilian operators

United States

Former civilian operators

United States

Notable events, accidents, and incidents

  • 30 January 1963: A P-3A, BuNo 149762, was lost at sea in the Atlantic Ocean, 14 crew killed.[89]
  • 4 July 1966: A P-3A, BuNo 152172, construction number 185-5142, assigned to VP-19, Radio call sign Papa Echo Zero Five (PE-05), crashed 7 miles (11 km) northeast Battle Creek, MI. It was on the return leg of a cross country training flight from NAS New York-Floyd Bennett Field, New York to NAS Moffett Field, California via NAS Glenview, Illinois; all four crew lost.[90]
  • 6 February 1968: A P-3B, Registration 153440, construction number 185-5237, assigned to VP-26, crashed during an Operation Market Time combat patrol off Phu Quoc Island, Vietnam. All 12 crew were lost as MIA. Initially attributed to mechanical failure, it was later suggested that it may have been shot down.[91]
  • 1 April 1968: A P-3B, Registration 153445, construction number 185-5241, assigned to VP-26, was shot down by surface anti-aircraft fire during an Operation Market Time combat patrol off Phu Quoc Island, Vietnam. The AAA fire set an engine on fire, and during a subsequent landing attempt, the wing separated and the aircraft crashed, with the loss of all 12 crew.[92]
  • 11 April 1968: An RAAF P-3B, Registration A9-296, construction number 185-5406, crashed on runway 32L at NAS Moffett Field, California after departing the manufacturer's facility during pre-delivery acceptance trials. The left main mount (undercarriage) collapsed upon landing and the aircraft ground-looped. All crew survived without serious injury, but the aircraft was completely destroyed by the resulting fire.[93]
  • 6 March 1969: USN P-3A BuNo 152765 tail coded RP-07 of VP-31 crashed at NAS Lemoore, California, at the end of a practice ground control approach (GCA) landing, all six crew died.
  • 28 January 1971: Commander Donald H. Lilienthal, USN flew a P-3C Orion to a world speed record for heavyweight turboprops. Over 15–25 kilometers, he reached 501 miles per hour to break the Soviet Il-18's May 1968 record of 452 miles per hour.
  • 26 May 1972: USN P-3A BuNo 152155 disappeared over the Pacific Ocean on a routine training mission after departing NAS Moffett Field, California, with the loss of eight crew members.[94]
  • 3 June 1972: While attempting to fly through the Straits of Gibraltar, en route from Naval Station Rota, Spain to Naval Air Station Sigonella, Sicily, a P-3A of VP-44 hit a mountain in Morocco, resulting in the death of all 14 crew on board.[95]
  • 12 April 1973: A P-3C, BuNo 157332, operating from NAS Moffett Field, California collided with a Convair 990 (N711NA) operated by NASA during approach to runway 32L. They crashed on the Sunnyvale Municipal Golf Course, 0.5 miles (0.80 km) short of the runway, resulting in destruction of both aircraft and the death of all but one crewmember.[96]
  • 11 December 1977: USN P-3B BuNo 153428 from VP-11 operating from Lajes Field, Azores crashed on mountainous El Hierro (southwesternmost of the Canary Islands) in poor visibility. There were no survivors from the crew of 13.[97]
  • 26 April 1978: USN P-3B BuNo 152724 from VP-23 crashed on landing approach to Lajes Field, Azores. Seven of the crew were killed and the plane sank into deep water preventing recovery to assess the cause of the crash.[98]
  • 22 September 1978: USN P-3B BuNo 152757 from VP-8 disintegrated over Poland, Maine on 22 September 1978. An over-pressurized fuel tank caused the port wing to separate at the outboard engine.[99] The detached wing sheared off part of the tail; and aerodynamic forces caused the remaining engines and starboard wing to detach from the fuselage. Debris rained down near the south end of Tripp Pond shortly after 12:00. None of the 8-man crew survived.[100]
  • 26 October 1978: USN P-3C, BuNo 159892, call sign coded AF 586 from VP-9 operating from NAS Adak ditched at sea after an engine fire caused by a propeller malfunction. All but two of the 15-man crew were rescued by a Soviet trawler, but three crew members died of exposure.[101]
  • 27 June 1979: A P-3B, BuNo 154596, from VP-22 operating from NAS Cubi Point Philippines, had a propeller overspeed shortly after departure. The number 4 propeller then departed the aircraft, striking the number three with a subsequent fire on that engine. While attempting an overweight landing with two engines out, the aircraft stalled, rolled inverted and crashed in Subic Bay just past Grande Island. Four crew and one passenger were killed in the crash.[102]
  • 17 April 1980: USN P-3C BuNo 158213 from VP-50 while flying for a parachuting exhibition in Pago Pago, American Samoa struck overhead tram wires and crashed, killing all six crew on board.[102]
  • 17 May 1983: USN P-3B BuNo 152733 tail coded YB-07 from VP-1 inadvertently landed gear up during a routine dedicated field work (DFW) pilot training flight at NAS Barbers Point. No crew were injured but the aircraft was a total loss.[103]
  • 16 June 1983: USN P-3B, BuNo 152720, tail coded YB-06 from VP-1 at NAS Barbers Point crashed into a mountain top in fog and low clouds on the Napali Coast between the Hanapu and Kalalau valleys in Kauai, Hawai'i, killing all 14 on board.[102][104]
  • 6 January 1987: Following a seven-hour P-3 ASW patrol, VP-6's Crew Eight initiated restart of the loitered No. 1 engine, 830 nm from NAS Barbers Point. The engine encountered RPM problems and failed to feather leading to gearbox issues. After six hours of flight back to Barbers Point and only 12 nm from the runway, the No. 1 prop disconnected and collided with prop No. 2. This caused the aircraft to roll violently to the left until prop No. 2 was able to be locked with the prop brake. Despite this, the crew managed to touch down on centerline, 2,000 feet down the runway, completing its landing roll-out with 2,500 feet remaining and all crew surviving.[105] Due to this event, P3 engine oil protocol was adjusted.[106]
  • 13 September 1987: A Royal Norwegian Air Force P-3B, tail number "602", was hit from below by a Russian Sukhoi Su-27 of the 941st IAP V-PVO. The Su-27 flew below the P-3's starboard side, then accelerated and pulled up, clipping the #4 engine's propellers. The propeller shrapnel hit the P-3B's fuselage and caused a decompression. There were no injuries and both aircraft returned safely to base.[107]
  • 25 September 1990: The first production P-3C Update III, BuNo 161762, assigned to VP-31 at NAS Moffett Field, impacted the runway at an excessive rate of descent while conducting at dedicated field work sortie at Naval Auxiliary Landing Field Crows Landing. Both main landing gear failed and the aircraft slid down the runway. Some crewmembers sustained minor injuries, but there were no fatalities. The aircraft was a total loss.[108]
  • 21 March 1991: While on a training mission west of San Diego, California, two USN P-3Cs, BuNos 158930 and 159325, assigned to VP-50 based at NAS Moffett Field collided in midair, killing all 27 crew on board both aircraft.[109]
  • 26 April 1991: An RAAF AP-3C, tail number A9-754, lost a wing leading edge and crashed into shallow water in the Cocos Island; one crewman was killed. It was cut up and became an artificial reef.[110]
  • 16 October 1991: P-3A N924AU of Aero Union crashed into a mountain in Montana, United States killing both crew.[111]
  • 25 March 1995: USN P-3C BuNo 158217 assigned to VP-47 was returning from a training mission in the North Arabian Sea when it suffered catastrophic engine failure of the number 4 engine. The aircraft ditched at sea 2 miles (3.2 km) from RAFO Masirah, Oman. All 11 crewmembers were rescued by the Royal Omani Air Force.[112]
  • 1 April 2001: An aerial collision known as the Hainan Island incident between a USN EP-3E ARIES II, BuNo 156511, a signals reconnaissance version of the P-3C, and a People's Liberation Army Navy J-8IIM fighter resulted in the J-8IIM crashing and its pilot was killed. The EP-3 came close to becoming uncontrollable, at one point sustaining a near inverted roll, but was able to make an emergency landing on Hainan.[113]
  • 20 April 2005: P-3B N926AU of Aero Union crashed while conducting practice drops of water over an area of rugged mountainous terrain located north of the Chico Airport. All three crew on board were killed.[114]
  • 21 October 2008: P-3C USN 158573 On landing, the aircraft overrun runway and lost its right landing gear. Nobody was injured but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair.[115]
  • 22 May 2011: Twenty Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan militants claiming to avenge Osama Bin Laden's death destroyed two Pakistan Navy P-3Cs during an armed attack at PNS Mehran, a Pakistan Navy base in Karachi.[116] They had been frequently used to conduct overland counter-insurgency surveillance operations.[117]
  • 15 February 2014: Three USN P-3Cs were crushed beyond repair when their hangar, at NAF Atsugi, Japan, was destroyed by a massive snow storm.[118]

Surviving aircraft

Specifications (P-3C Orion)

 
P-3 aircraft of the Royal New Zealand Air Force, Royal Australian Air Force, and the United States Navy (with RAAF Dassault Mirage III)

Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1994-95,[123] Specifications: P-3,[124][1]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 11
  • Length: 116 ft 10 in (35.61 m)
  • Wingspan: 99 ft 8 in (30.38 m)
  • Height: 33 ft 8.5 in (10.274 m)
  • Wing area: 1,300.0 sq ft (120.77 m2)
  • Aspect ratio: 7.5
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 0014 modified; tip: NACA 0012 modified[125]
  • Empty weight: 61,491 lb (27,892 kg)
  • Zero-fuel weight: 77,200 lb (35,017 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 135,000 lb (61,235 kg) MTOW normal
142,000 lb (64,410 kg) maximum permissible
  • Maximum landing weight: (MLW) 103,880 lb (47,119 kg)
  • Fuel capacity: 9,200 US gal (7,700 imp gal; 35,000 L) usable fuel in 5 wing and fuselage tanks ; (62,500 lb (28,350 kg) maximum fuel weight) ; 111 US gal (92 imp gal; 420 L) usable oil in 4 tanks
  • Powerplant: 4 × Allison T56-A-14 turboprop engines, 4,910 shp (3,660 kW) each (equivalent)
  • Propellers: 4-bladed Hamilton Standard 54H60-77, 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m) diameter constant-speed fully-feathering reversible propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 411 kn (473 mph, 761 km/h) at 15,000 ft (4,572 m) and 105,000 lb (47,627 kg)
  • Cruise speed: 328 kn (377 mph, 607 km/h) at 25,000 ft (7,620 m) and 110,000 lb (49,895 kg)
  • Patrol speed: 206 kn (237 mph; 382 km/h) at 1,500 ft (457 m) and 110,000 lb (49,895 kg)
  • Stall speed: 133 kn (153 mph, 246 km/h) flaps up
112 kn (129 mph; 207 km/h) flaps down
  • Combat range: 1,345 nmi (1,548 mi, 2,491 km) (3 hours on station at 1,500 ft (457 m))
  • Ferry range: 4,830 nmi (5,560 mi, 8,950 km)
  • Endurance: 17 hours 12 minutes at 15,000 ft (4,572 m) on two engines
12 hours 20 minutes at 15,000 ft (4,572 m) on four engines
  • Service ceiling: 28,300 ft (8,600 m)
19,000 ft (5,791 m) one engine inoperative (OEI)
  • Rate of climb: 1,950 ft/min (9.9 m/s)
  • Time to altitude: 25,000 ft (7,620 m) in 30 minutes
  • Wing loading: 103.8 lb/sq ft (507 kg/m2)
  • Power/mass: 0.1455 hp/lb (0.2392 kW/kg) (equivalent)
  • Take-off run: 4,240 ft (1,292 m)
  • Take-off distance to 50 ft (15 m): 5,490 ft (1,673 m)
  • Landing distance from 50 ft (15 m): 2,770 ft (844 m)

Armament

Avionics

  • RADAR: Raytheon AN/APS-115 Maritime Surveillance Radar, AN/APS-137D(V)5 Inverse Synthetic Aperture Search Radar[126]
  • IFF: APX-72, APX-76, APX-118/123 Interrogation Friend or Foe (IFF)[126]
  • EO/IR: ASX-4 Advanced Imaging Multispectral Sensor (AIMS), ASX-6 Multi-Mode Imaging System (MMIS)
  • ESM: ALR-66 Radar Warning Receiver, ALR-95(V)2 Specific Emitter Identification/Threat Warning
  • Hazeltine Corporation AN/ARR-78(V) sonobuoy receiving system[126]
  • Fighting Electronics Inc AN/ARR-72 sonobuoy receiver[126]
  • IBM Proteus UYS-1 acoustic processor
  • AQA-7 directional acoustic frequency analysis and recording sonobuoy indicators[126]
  • AQH-4 (V) sonar tape recorder[126]
  • ASQ-81 magnetic anomaly detector (MAD)[126]
  • ASA-65 magnetic compensator[126]
  • Lockheed Martin AN/ALQ-78(V) electronic surveillance receiver[126]

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

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Further reading

  • Eden, Paul (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft. London: Amber Books, 2004. ISBN 1-904687-84-9.
  • McCaughlin, Andrew. "Quiet Achiever." Australian Aviation, December 2007.
  • (PDF). Canberra: Australian National Audit Office. 2005. ISBN 0-642-80867-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 February 2009.
  • Winchester, Jim, ed. (2006). Military Aircraft of the Cold War (The Aviation Factfile). London: Grange plc. ISBN 1-84013-929-3.

External links

  • Royal Australian Air Force, 28 November 2008. Retrieved: 14 July 2010.
  • ADF-Serials RAAF Lockheed AP-3C, P-3B/C, TAP-3B Orion Page
  • P-3 Orion Computer Development History and Project A-New
  • P-3C fact file 16 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • P-3 Orion Research Group

lockheed, orion, four, engined, turboprop, anti, submarine, maritime, surveillance, aircraft, developed, united, states, navy, introduced, 1960s, lockheed, based, electra, commercial, airliner, easily, distinguished, from, electra, distinctive, tail, stinger, . The Lockheed P 3 Orion is a four engined turboprop anti submarine and maritime surveillance aircraft developed for the United States Navy and introduced in the 1960s Lockheed based it on the L 188 Electra commercial airliner 4 it is easily distinguished from the Electra by its distinctive tail stinger or MAD boom used for the magnetic anomaly detection MAD of submarines P 3 OrionA P 3C of the Japan Maritime Self Defense ForceRole Maritime patrol aircraftNational origin United StatesManufacturer Lockheed Lockheed Martin Kawasaki Aerospace CompanyFirst flight November 1959 1 Introduction August 1962 1 Status ActivePrimary users United States NavyRoyal New Zealand Air Force Japan Maritime Self Defense Force Royal Australian Air ForceProduced 1961 1990 2 Number built Lockheed 650 Kawasaki 107 Total 757 3 Developed from Lockheed L 188 ElectraVariants Lockheed AP 3C OrionLockheed CP 140 AuroraLockheed EP 3Lockheed WP 3D OrionDeveloped into Lockheed P 7Over the years the P 3 has seen numerous design developments most notably in its electronics packages Numerous navies and air forces around the world continue to use the type primarily for maritime patrol reconnaissance anti surface warfare and anti submarine warfare 1 A total of 757 P 3s have been built In 2012 it joined the handful of military aircraft including the Boeing B 52 Stratofortress Boeing KC 135 Stratotanker Lockheed C 130 Hercules and the Lockheed U 2 that the United States military has been using for more than 50 years In the twenty first century the turbofan powered Boeing P 8 Poseidon began to supplement and will eventually replace the U S Navy s P 3s Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 Further developments 2 Design 2 1 Crew complement 2 2 Engine loiter shutdown 3 Operational history 3 1 United States 3 2 In Cuba 3 3 In Vietnam 3 4 In Iraq 3 5 In Afghanistan 3 6 In Libya 3 7 Iran 3 8 Pakistan 3 9 In Somalia 3 10 Civilian uses 4 Variants 5 Operators 5 1 Military operators 5 2 Former military operators 5 3 Civilian operators 5 3 1 United States 5 3 2 Former civilian operators 5 3 2 1 United States 6 Notable events accidents and incidents 7 Surviving aircraft 8 Specifications P 3C Orion 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDevelopment EditOrigins Edit In August 1957 the U S Navy called for proposals for replacement of the piston engined Lockheed P2V Neptune later redesignated P 2 and Martin P5M Marlin later redesignated P 5 with a more advanced aircraft to conduct maritime patrol and antisubmarine warfare Modifying an existing aircraft should save on cost and to allow rapid introduction into the fleet Lockheed suggested a military version of its L 188 Electra then still in development and yet to fly In April 1958 Lockheed won the competition and was awarded an initial research and development contract in May 4 The first Orion prototype was a converted Lockheed Electra Lockheed modified the prototype YP3V 1 YP 3A Bureau Number BuNo 148276 from the third Electra airframe c n 1003 5 The first flight of the aircraft s aerodynamic prototype originally designated YP3V 1 took place on 19 August 1958 While based on the same design philosophy as the Electra the aircraft differed structurally it had 7 feet 2 1 m less fuselage forward of the wings with an opening bomb bay and a more pointed nose radome a distinctive tail stinger for detection of submarines by MAD wing hardpoints and other internal external and airframe production technique enhancements 4 The Orion has four Allison T56 turboprops which give it a top speed of 411 knots 761 km h 473 mph comparable to the fastest propeller fighters or even to slow high bypass turbofan jets such as the Fairchild Republic A 10 Thunderbolt II or the Lockheed S 3 Viking Similar patrol aircraft include the Soviet Ilyushin Il 38 the French Breguet Atlantique and the British jet powered Hawker Siddeley Nimrod based on the de Havilland Comet The first production version designated P3V 1 was launched on 15 April 1961 Initial squadron deliveries to Patrol Squadron Eight VP 8 and Patrol Squadron Forty Four VP 44 at Naval Air Station Patuxent River Maryland began in August 1962 On 18 September 1962 the U S military transitioned to a unified designation system for all services with the aircraft being renamed the P 3 Orion 4 Paint schemes have changed from early 1960s gloss seaplane gray and white to mid 1960s 1970s 1980s early 1990s gloss white and gray to mid 1990s flat finish low visibility gray with fewer and smaller markings In the early 2000s the paint scheme changed to its current overall gloss gray finish with the original full sized color markings However large sized BuNos on the vertical stabilizer and squadron designations on the fuselage remained largely omitted 6 Further developments Edit P 3s from Japan Canada Australia Republic of Korea and the United States at MCAS Kaneohe Bay during RIMPAC 2010 In 1963 the U S Navy s Bureau of Naval Weapons contracted Univac Defense Systems Division of Sperry Rand to engineer build and test a digital computer a device then in its infancy to interface with the many sensors and newly developing display units of the P 3 Orion Project A NEW was the engineering system which after several early trials produced the engineering prototype the CP 823 U Univac 1830 Serial A 1 A NEW MOD3 Computing System Univac delivered the CP 823 U to the Naval Air Development Center at Johnsville Pennsylvania in 1965 this directly led to the production computers later equipped on the P 3C 7 Three civilian Electras were lost in fatal accidents between February 1959 and March 1960 Following the third crash the FAA restricted the maximum speed of Electras pending determination of the causes After an extensive investigation two of the crashes those of September 1959 and March 1960 were identified as due to insufficiently strong engine mounts unable to damp a whirling motion that could affect the outboard engines When the oscillation was transmitted to the wings a severe vertical vibration escalated tearing off the wings 8 9 The company implemented an costly modification program labelled the Lockheed Electra Achievement Program which strengthened the engine mounts and the wing structures supporting the mounts and replaced some wing skins with thicker material At its own expense Lockheed modified all surviving Electras of the 145 built at that time the process taking 20 days for each aircraft These changes were incorporated into subsequent aircraft as they were built 8 The Electra s sales were limited as Lockheed s technical fix did not completely erase the aircraft s poor reputation in an era in which turboprop powered aircraft were being replaced by faster jets 10 In military roles that valued fuel efficiency more than speed the Orion remained in service for over 50 years after its 1962 introduction Although surpassed in production longevity by the Lockheed C 130 Hercules 734 P 3s were produced through 1990 2 11 12 Lockheed Martin opened a new P 3 wing production line in 2008 as part of its Service Life Extension Program ASLEP for delivery in 2010 A complete ASLEP replaces the outer wings center wing lower section and horizontal stabilizers with newly built parts 13 In the 1990s the U S Navy attempted to procure a successor aircraft to the P 3 and selected the improved P 7 over a naval specific variant of the twin turbofan powered Boeing 757 but this program was subsequently cancelled In a second program to select a replacement the advanced Lockheed Martin Orion 21 another P 3 derived aircraft lost out to the Boeing P 8 Poseidon a Boeing 737 variant which entered service in 2013 Design Edit A USN P 3A of VP 49 in the original blue white colors The P 3 has an internal bomb bay under the front fuselage which can house conventional Mark 50 torpedoes or Mark 46 torpedoes and or special nuclear weapons Additional underwing stations or pylons can carry other armament configurations including the AGM 84 Harpoon AGM 84E SLAM AGM 84H K SLAM ER AGM 65 Maverick 127 millimetres 5 0 in Zuni rockets and various other sea mines missiles and gravity bombs The aircraft also had the capability to carry the AGM 12 Bullpup guided missile until that weapon was withdrawn from U S NATO Allied service 14 The P 3 is equipped with a MAD in the extended tail This instrument is able to detect the magnetic anomaly of a submarine in the Earth s magnetic field The limited range of this instrument requires the aircraft to be near the submarine at low altitude Because of this it is primarily used for pinpointing the location of a submarine immediately prior to a torpedo or depth bomb attack Due to the sensitivity of the detector electromagnetic noise can interfere with it so the detector is placed in P 3 s fiberglass tail stinger MAD boom far from other electronics and ferrous metals on the aircraft 15 Crew complement Edit Flight instruments and controls in the cockpit of the P 3C Orion Update II in Dutch service An underside view of a USN P 3C showing the MAD rear boom and external sonobuoy launch tubes grid of black spots towards the rear A German Navy Rolls Royce Allison T56 A 14 engine with Hamilton Standard 54H60 77 propeller The crew complement varies depending on the role being flown the variant being operated and the country that is operating the type In U S Navy service the normal crew complement was 12 until it was reduced to its current complement of 11 in the early 2000s when the in flight ordnanceman position was eliminated as a cost savings measure and the ORD duties assumed by the in flight technician 1 Data for U S Navy P 3C only Officers three Naval Aviators Patrol Plane Commander PPC Patrol Plane 2nd Pilot PP2P Patrol Plane 3rd Pilot PP3P two Naval Flight Officers Patrol Plane Tactical Coordinator PPTC or TACCO Patrol Plane Navigator Communicator PPNC or NAVCOM NOTE NAVCOM on P 3C only USN P 3A and P 3B series had an NFO Navigator TACNAV and an enlisted Airborne Radio Operator RO Enlisted aircrew two enlisted Aircrew Flight Engineers FE1 and FE2 three enlisted Sensor Operators Radar MAD EWO SS 3 two Acoustic SS 1 and SS 2 one enlisted In Flight Technician IFT one enlisted Aviation Ordnanceman ORD position no longer used on USN crews duties assumed by IFT The senior of either the PPC or TACCO will be designated as the aircraft Mission Commander MC Engine loiter shutdown Edit Once on station one engine is often shut down usually the No 1 engine the left outer engine to conserve fuel and extend the time aloft and or range when at low level It is the primary candidate for loiter shutdown because it has no generator Eliminating the exhaust from engine 1 also improves visibility from the aft observer station on the left side of the aircraft On occasion both outboard engines can be shut down weight weather and fuel permitting Long deep water coastal or border patrol missions can last over 10 hours and may include extra crew The record time aloft for a P 3 is 21 5 hours undertaken by the Royal New Zealand Air Force s No 5 Squadron in 1972 Operational history EditUnited States Edit A P 3B of VP 6 near Hawaii A US P 3C Orion of VP 8 Changing a tire on a P 3C A P 3C on final approach at Kadena AB in 2019 Developed during the Cold War the P 3 s primary mission was to localize Soviet Navy ballistic missile and fast attack submarines detected by undersea surveillance systems and eliminate them in the event of full scale war 16 17 At its height the U S Navy s P 3 community consisted of twenty four active duty Fleet patrol squadrons home based at air stations in the states of Florida and Hawaii as well as bases which formerly had P 3 operations in Maryland Maine and California There were also thirteen Naval Reserve patrol squadrons identical to their active duty Fleet counterparts said Reserve Fleet squadrons being based in Florida Pennsylvania Maryland Michigan Massachusetts later relocated to Maine Illinois Tennessee Louisiana California and Washington Two Fleet Replacement Squadrons FRS also called RAG squadrons from the historic Replacement Air Group nomenclature were located in California and Florida The since deactivated VP 31 in California provided P 3 training for the Pacific Fleet while VP 30 in Florida performed the task for the Atlantic Fleet These squadrons were also augmented by a test and evaluation squadron in Maryland two additional test and evaluation units that were part of an air development center in Pennsylvania and a test center in California an oceanographic development squadron in Maryland and two active duty special projects units in Maine and Hawaii the latter being slightly smaller than a typical squadron In fiscal year 1995 the U S Navy planned to reduce active duty patrol squadrons from 16 to 13 seven on the East Coast six on the West 18 The patrol squadrons planned to survive were VP 8 10 11 and 26 at NAS Brunswick Maine and VP 5 16 and 45 at NAS Jacksonville Florida The Pacific squadrons that were to be retained were VP 1 4 9 and 47 at Barbers Point Hawaii and 40 and VP 46 at NAS Whidbey Island Washington Thus Patrol Squadrons 17 23 and 24 were to be disestablished and the remaining units were to operate nine aircraft instead of eight augmented by VP 30 and the nine at the time USNR P 3 squadrons Reconnaissance missions in international waters led to occasions where Soviet fighters would bump a P 3 either operated by the U S Navy or other operators such as the Royal Norwegian Air Force On 1 April 2001 a midair collision between a United States Navy EP 3E ARIES II signals surveillance aircraft and a People s Liberation Army Navy J 8II jet fighter interceptor resulted in an international dispute between the U S and the People s Republic of China PRC 19 More than 40 P 3 variants have demonstrated the type s rugged reliability commonly flying 12 hour plus missions 200 ft 61 m over water citation needed Versions were developed for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA for research and hurricane hunting hurricane wall busting for the U S Customs Service now U S Customs and Border Protection for drug interdiction and aerial surveillance mission with a rotodome adapted from the Grumman E 2 Hawkeye or an AN APG 66 radar adapted from the General Dynamics F 16 Fighting Falcon and for NASA for research and development The U S Navy remains the largest P 3 operator currently distributed between a single fleet replacement i e training patrol squadron in Florida VP 30 12 active duty patrol squadrons distributed between bases in Florida Washington and Hawaii two Navy Reserve patrol squadrons in Florida and Washington one active duty special projects patrol squadron VPU 2 in Hawaii and two active duty test and evaluation squadrons One additional active duty fleet reconnaissance squadron VQ 1 operates the EP 3 Aries signals intelligence SIGINT variant at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island Washington In January 2011 the U S Navy revealed that P 3s have been used to hunt down third generation narco submarines 20 This is significant because as recently as July 2009 fully submersible submarines have been used in smuggling operations 21 As of November 2013 the US Navy began phasing out the P 3 in favor of the newer and more advanced Boeing P 8 Poseidon In May 2020 Patrol Squadron 40 completed the transition to the P 8 marking the retirement of the P 3C from U S Navy active duty service The last of the active duty P 3Cs aircraft 162776 was also delivered to the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola Florida Two Navy Reserve squadrons Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 30 and One Active duty Squadron VQ 1 continue to fly the P 3C with final phaseout of the aircraft expected in 2025 22 In Cuba Edit Main article Cuban Missile Crisis In October 1962 P 3As flew several blockade patrols in the vicinity of Cuba Having only joined the operational Fleet earlier that year this event marked the first employment of the P 3 in a real world heightened threat situation citation needed In Vietnam Edit Main article Operation Market Time Beginning in 1964 forward deployed P 3s began flying various missions under Operation Market Time from bases in the Philippines and Vietnam The primary focus of these coastal patrols was to stem the supply of materials to the Viet Cong by sea although several of these missions also became overland feet dry sorties During one such mission a small caliber artillery shell passed through a P 3 without rendering it mission incapable The only confirmed combat loss of a P 3 also occurred during Operation Market Time 23 In April 1968 a U S Navy P 3B of VP 26 was downed by anti aircraft fire in the Gulf of Thailand with the loss of the entire crew Two months earlier in February 1968 another one of VP 26 s P 3Bs was operating in the same vicinity when it crashed with the loss of the entire crew Originally attributed to a low altitude mishap later conjecture is that this aircraft may have also fallen victim to anti aircraft artillery AAA fire from the same source as the April incident 23 In Iraq Edit Main articles Operation Desert Shield Gulf War Desert Storm and Operation Iraqi Freedom On 2 August 1990 Iraq invaded Kuwait and was poised to strike Saudi Arabia Within 48 hours of the initial invasion U S Navy P 3Cs were among the first American forces to arrive in the area One was a modified platform with a prototype over the horizon targeting OTH T system package known as Outlaw Hunter it had been undergoing trials in the Pacific after being developed by Tiburon Systems Inc for NAVAIR s PMA 290 Program Office 24 Within hours of the coalition air campaign s start Outlaw Hunter detected a large number of Iraqi patrol boats and naval vessels attempting to move from Basra and Umm Qasr to Iranian waters Outlaw Hunter vectored in strike elements which attacked the flotilla near Bubiyan Island destroying 11 vessels and damaging scores more During Desert Shield a P 3 using infrared imaging detected a ship with Iraqi markings beneath freshly painted bogus Egyptian markings trying to avoid detection 24 Several days before the 7 January 1991 commencement of Operation Desert Storm a P 3C equipped with an APS 137 Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar ISAR conducted coastal surveillance along Iraq and Kuwait to provide pre strike reconnaissance on enemy military installations A total of 55 of the 108 Iraqi vessels destroyed during the conflict were targeted by P 3Cs 24 The P 3 s mission expanded in the late 1990s and early 2000s to include battlespace surveillance both at sea and over land The long range and long loiter time of the P 3 proved to be an invaluable asset during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom being able to instantaneously provide the gathered battlespace information to ground troops particularly the U S Marines 1 In Afghanistan Edit Main article War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Although the P 3 is a MPA armament and sensor upgrades in the Anti surface Warfare Improvement Program AIP 25 have made it suitable for sustained combat air support over land 25 In what became known as the Decade in the Desert Navy P 3Cs patrolled combat zones in the Middle East and Southwest Asia 26 From the start of the war in Afghanistan U S Navy P 3s operated from Kandahar in that role 27 Royal Australian Air Force AP 3Cs operated out of Minhad Air Base in the UAE from 2003 until their withdrawal in November 2012 Between 2008 and 2012 AP 3Cs conducted overland intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance tasks in support of coalition troops across Afghanistan 28 The United States Geological Survey used the Orion to survey parts of southern and eastern Afghanistan for lithium copper and other mineral deposits 29 In Libya Edit Main article 2011 Libyan civil war Several U S Navy P 3Cs and two Canadian CP 140 Auroras a variant of the Orion participated in maritime surveillance missions over Libyan waters in the framework of enforcement of the 2011 no fly zone over Libya 30 31 A U S Navy P 3C supporting Operation Odyssey Dawn engaged the Libyan coast guard vessel Vittoria on 28 March 2011 after the vessel and eight smaller craft fired on merchant ships in the port of Misrata Libya The Orion fired AGM 65 Maverick missiles on Vittoria which was subsequently beached 32 Iran Edit A U S Navy F 14A Tomcat belonging to VF 213 escorts an Imperial Iranian Airforce P 3F Orion over the Indian Ocean 1981 Lockheed produced the P 3F variant of the P 3 Orion for Iran Six examples were delivered to the former Imperial Iranian Air Force IIAF in 1975 and 1976 Following the Iranian Revolution in 1979 the Orions continued in service after the IIAF was renamed the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force IRIAF They were used in the Tanker War phase of the Iran Iraq War citation needed A total of four P 3Fs remain in service Pakistan Edit A Pakistan Navy P 3C Orion in Quetta in October 2010 Three P 3C Orions delivered to the Pakistan Navy in 1996 and 1997 were operated extensively during the Kargil conflict After the crash of one with the loss of an entire crew the type was grounded nonetheless the aircraft were maintained in an armed state and airworthy condition throughout the escalation period of 2001 and 2002 During 2007 they were used by the navy to conduct signals intelligence airborne and bombing operations in a Swat offensive and Operation Rah e Nijat Precision and strategic bombing missions were carried out by the P 3Cs intelligence management operations were also conducted against Taliban and al Qaeda operatives 33 On 22 May 2011 two out of the four Pakistani P 3Cs were destroyed in an attack on PNS Mehran a Pakistani Naval station in Karachi 34 In June 2011 the U S agreed to replace the destroyed aircraft with two new ones 35 In February 2012 the U S delivered two additional P 3Cs to the Pakistan Navy 36 On 18 November 2016 during tensions with India the Pakistan Navy dispatched various ASW units including P 3Cs in response to reports of an Indian Navy submarine that was allegedly loitering in close proximity to the Southern territorial waters of Pakistan in the Arabian Sea This submarine was swiftly intercepted by the Navy Orions and forced away from the territorial boundaries 37 In March 2019 a P 3C from the Pakistan Naval Air Arm intercepted an Indian submarine attempting to enter Pakistani waters at night 38 39 In October 2021 Pakistani Orions again intercepted an Indian Kalvari class submarine and blocked it from entering Pakistani Waters at the Arabian Sea 40 41 42 In Somalia Edit A U S Navy P 3C Orion monitoring the hijacking of MV Maersk Alabama 2009 Main article Piracy in Somalia The Spanish Air Force deployed P 3s to assist the international effort against piracy in Somalia On 29 October 2008 a Spanish P 3 patrolling Somalia s coast reacted to a distress call from an oil tanker in the Gulf of Aden it overflew the pirate vessels three times dropping a smoke bomb on each pass as they attempted to board the tanker After the third pass the pirates broke off their attack 43 On 29 March 2009 the same P 3 pursued the assailants of the German navy tanker Spessart A1442 resulting in the pirate s capture 44 In April 2011 the Portuguese Air Force also contributed to Operation Ocean Shield by sending a P 3C 45 which had early success when on its fifth mission detected a pirate whaler with two attack skiffs 46 Since 2009 the Japan Maritime Self Defense Force has deployed P 3s to Djibouti for anti piracy patrols 47 48 49 from 2011 from its own base 50 The German Navy has also periodically contributed a P 3 to address the piracy problem citation needed Civilian uses Edit Aero Union P 3A Orion taking off from Fox Field Lancaster California to fight the North Fire Several P 3s have been N registered and are operated by civilian agencies The US Customs and Border Protection has several P 3A and P 3B aircraft that are used for aircraft intercept and maritime patrol NOAA operates two WP 3D variants specially modified for hurricane research One P 3 N426NA is used by National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA as an Earth science research platform primarily for the NASA Science Mission Directorate s Airborne Science Program it is based at Goddard Space Flight Center s Wallops Flight Facility Virginia Aero Union Inc operated eight secondhand P 3As configured as air tankers which were leased to the U S Forest Service the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and other agencies for firefighting use Several of these aircraft were involved in the U S Forest Service airtanker scandal but have not been involved in any catastrophic aircraft mishaps Aero Union has since gone bankrupt and their P 3s have been put up for auction 51 Variants EditMain article P 3 Orion variants A Japan Maritime Self Defense Force Lockheed UP 3C Orion 9151 Over the years numerous variants of the P 3 have been created A few notable examples are WP 3D Two P 3C aircraft as modified on the production line for NOAA weather research including hurricane hunting EP 3E Aries 10 P 3A and 2 EP 3B aircraft converted into ELINT aircraft EP 3E Aries II 12 P 3C aircraft converted into ELINT aircraft AP 3C Royal Australian Air Force P 3C W aircraft which have been extensively upgraded by L 3 Communications with new mission systems including an Elta SAR ISAR radar and a General Dynamics Canada acoustic processor system CP 140M Aurora Long range maritime reconnaissance anti submarine warfare ASW aircraft for the Canadian Forces Based on the P 3C Orion airframe but mounts the more advanced electronics suite of the Lockheed S 3 Viking 18 built CP 140A Arcturus Three P 3s without ASW equipment for CP 140 Aurora crew training and various coastal patrol missions P 7 proposed new build and improved variant as a P 3 Orion replacement later canceled Orion 21 proposed new build and improved variant as a P 3 Orion replacement lost to the Boeing P 8 Poseidon P 3K2 Royal New Zealand Air Force P 3K2 aircraft which have been fully upgraded with totally new mission systems by L 3 Mission Integration Division Greenville Texas The flight deck now has glass instrumentation and navigation computer automation The Tactical Rail Tacrail has been completely refitted with modern sensors communication and data management systems Operators Edit A map with P 3 operators in red former operators in light red An Argentine Navy P 3B P 3C 11 Sqn RAAF in 1990 A Canadian CP 140 Aurora in June 2007 A P 3C of the German Navy A Portuguese Air Force P 3C Orion Cup s n 14810 A Japan Maritime Self Defense Force P 3C NOAA WP 3D Hurricane Hunters A U S Department of Homeland Security P 3AEW amp C used to track drug couriers Military operators Edit ArgentinaArgentine Naval Aviation six P 3B based at Base Aeronaval Alte Zar Trelew non operational though being refurbished as of 2021 citation needed AustraliaRoyal Australian Air Force 18 AP 3C 1 P 3C No 92 Wing 10 Sqn 11 Sqn and No 292 Sqn based at RAAF Base Edinburgh 52 BrazilBrazilian Air Force 9 P 3AM Upgraded in 2008 12 ex USN airframes purchased 53 Integrated with the CASA FITS Fully Integrated Tactical System utilized in antisubmarine warfare ChileChilean Navy four P 3A based at Base Aeronaval Torquemada Concon Three used as patrol aircraft one used for personnel transport Chile plans to extend their service lives past 2030 by changing the wings modernizing the engines and integrating the AGM 84 Harpoon anti ship missile 54 CanadaRoyal Canadian Air Force Canada purchased 18 P 3A in 1980 The CP 140 Aurora are operated by 404 Long Range Patrol and Training Squadron 405 Long Range Patrol Squadron 415 Long Range Patrol Force Development Squadron all three from 14 Wing Greenwood 407 Long Range Patrol Squadron 19 Wing Comox 55 56 Upgraded aircraft now referred to as CP 140M The RCAF also operated 3 CP 140A Arcturus P 3 aircraft purchased in 1991 without an anti submarine warfare suite and used primarily for pilot training and long range surface patrol The last two were retired in 2011 and transferred to AMARG GermanyGerman Navy four P 3C CUP ex Royal Netherlands Navy originally bought eight machines 57 based at NAS Nordholz Marinefliegergeschwader 3 Graf Zeppelin GreeceHellenic Air Force six P 3B operated jointly with the Hellenic Navy 1 in operable condition as of 2019 3 additional are undergoing maintenance as of 2016 which should return them to airworthy condition the first of which was completed in May 2019 58 IranIslamic Republic of Iran Air Force five P 3F 71ASW SQN based at Shiraz International Airport Shahid Douran Air Base JapanJapan Maritime Self Defense Force 93 P 3C five EP 3 five OP 3C one UP 3C three UP 3D 59 The Kawasaki Aerospace Company assembled five airframes produced by Lockheed and then Kawasaki produced more than 100 P 3s under license in Japan 60 The Kawasaki P 1 is gradually replacing them As of March 2022 the JMSDF operated 40 P 3Cs 61 Air Patrol Squadron 3 JMSDF 1984 2017 62 New ZealandRoyal New Zealand Air Force six P 3K2 5 Sqn based in RNZAF Base Auckland Operated by 5 SQN Five were originally delivered in 1966 as P 3Bs Another was purchased from the RAAF in 1985 All six have been upgraded by L 3 Communications Canada and now designated as P 3K2 63 with the first upgraded aircraft returned to New Zealand in April 2011 64 The New Zealand Government announced 65 they are to be replaced in 2023 with the purchase of 4 Boeing P 8A Poseidons An interim upgrade contract worth NZ 36M has been awarded to Boeing to upgrade the underwater intelligence reconnaissance and surveillance capability of the P 3K2 66 with a capability similar to that provided in the P 8 67 NorwayRoyal Norwegian Air Force four P 3C two P 3N 333 Sqn based in Andoya Air Station PakistanPakistan Naval Air Arm Four P 3C based in Naval aviation base Faisal Karachi Upgraded P 3C MPA and P 3B AEW models equipped with Hawkeye 2000 AEW system ordered in 2006 68 first upgraded P 3C delivered in early 2007 In June 2010 two more upgraded P 3Cs joined the Pakistan Navy with anti ship and submarine warfare capabilities A total of nine 69 Two aircraft were destroyed in an attack by armed militants at the Mehran Naval Airbase PortugalPortuguese Air Force five P 3C CUP Orion ex Royal Netherlands Navy operated by 601 Squadron Lobos based in Beja Air Base all upgraded from 2008 to 2010 with new sensors and a Missile and Laser Warning System 70 71 In 2022 Portuguese Air Force General Dynamics and Canadian Commercial Corporation signed a contract to modernize the Portuguese P 3C s fleet with new communications mission electronics and an Mission Management System They replaced six former RAAF P 3Bs upgraded to P 3Ps in the late 1980s The last P 3P flew on 13 October 2011 South KoreaRepublic of Korea Navy eight P 3Cs eight P 3CKs based in Pohang Airport Patrol Squadron 615 72 and Jeju international airport Korean Air L 3 Communications upgraded the P 3Cs with new electronics including magnetic anomaly detectors electro optical sensors surveillance equipment and a self protection suite The Navy s impetus stems from a 2010 experience in which ROK forces detected only 28 of North Korean submarines involved in exercises 73 TaiwanRepublic of China Air Force 1966 1967 Three P 3As 149669 149673 149678 obtained by the CIA from the U S Navy under Project STSPIN in May 1963 as replacement aircraft for CIA s own covert operation fleet of RB 69A P2V 7U versions Converted by Aerosystems Division of LTV to be used as both ELINT and COMINT platform the three P 3As were known as black P 3As under Project Axial Officially transferred to the CIA on June July 1964 the first of three black P 3As arrived in Taiwan and officially transferred to ROCAF s secret Black Bat Squadron on 22 June 1966 Armed with four Sidewinder short range AAM missiles for self defense the three black P 3A flew peripheral missions along China s coast to collect SIGINT and air samples When the project was terminated in January 1967 all three black P 3As were flown to NAS Alameda CA for long term storage In September 1967 Lockheed at Burbank converted two of the three aircraft 149669 and 149678 into the only two EP 3B examples in existence while the third aircraft 149673 was converted by Lockheed in 1969 1970 to serve as a development aircraft for various electronic programs The two EP 3Bs known as Bat Rack owing to their service with Taiwan s Black Bat Squadron were issued to U S Navy s VQ 1 Squadron in 1969 and deployed to Da Nang Vietnam Later the two EP 3Bs were converted to EP 3E ARIES along with seven EP 3As The two EP 3Es retired in the 1980s when replaced by 12 EP 3E ARIES II versions 74 Republic of China Navy The Republic of China Navy obtained 12 P 3Cs under the U S government s Foreign Military Sales program in 2007 which were then modernized for an additional 15 000 flight hours 75 12 P 3Cs ordered with deliveries starting in 2012 with three spare airframes that may be converting to EP 3E standard based in the south part of the island and offshore 76 In May 2014 Lockheed Martin were awarded a contract to upgrade and overhaul all 12 P 3Cs by August 2015 77 United StatesUnited States Navy 100 P 3Cs and 14 EP 3Es in service 78 The government of Singapore has expressed an interest in buying surplus P 3Cs from the U S Navy 79 Former military operators Edit NetherlandsRoyal Netherlands Navy Netherlands Naval Aviation Service former operator citation needed Sold to Portugal and Germany SpainSpanish Air and Space Force Two P 3A HWs four P 3B ex Norway upgraded to P 3M based at Moron Air Base Withdrawn from active service in 2022 80 ThailandRoyal Thai Navy two P 3Ts one VP 3T one UP 3T based at RTNAB U Tapao 102 Sqn Withdrawn from active service in 2014 Civilian operators Edit United States Edit Buffalo Airways one P 3A Aerial firefighting Waterbomber Buffalo Airways USA Inc N922AU 81 82 National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA two WP 3Ds flown by NOAA Commissioned Corps officers previously based at MacDill AFB now based at Lakeland Linder International Airport Florida National Aeronautics and Space Administration one ex USN P 3B based at NASA s Wallops Flight Facility Virginia used for low altitude heavy lift airborne science missions modified to support passive microwave instruments such as NOAA s Polarimetric Scanning Radiometer PSR NASA s 2 DSTAR and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL polarimetric scatterometer POLSCAT instruments 83 United States Department of Homeland Security Bureau of Customs and Border Protection Office of Air and Marine eight P 3 AEWs based at NAS Corpus Christi Texas and Cecil Field and NAS Jacksonville Florida Used for border patrol and anti drug duties Former USN aircraft modified and equipped with the same airborne early warning radar as fitted to the E 2 Hawkeye 84 United States Department of Homeland Security Bureau of Customs and Border Protection Office of Air and Marine 8 P 3 LRTs Long Range Tracker Former USN aircraft also based at NAS Corpus Christi Texas and Cecil Field Jacksonville Florida Normally operate in tandem with P 3 AEW aircraft 85 MHD ROCKLAND Services Inc 5 former RAAF AP 3Cs Aircraft are FAA Registered as L285D and based in Keystone Heights Florida 86 Airstrike Firefighters 1 former Aero Union Tanker 23 with plans for 6 more P 3s 87 Former civilian operators Edit United States Edit Aero Union eight ex USN P 3A aircraft based at Chico Municipal Airport in Chico California and converted into aerial firefighting platforms 88 Aero Union shut down and put its Orions up for auction in 2011 51 Notable events accidents and incidents Edit30 January 1963 A P 3A BuNo 149762 was lost at sea in the Atlantic Ocean 14 crew killed 89 4 July 1966 A P 3A BuNo 152172 construction number 185 5142 assigned to VP 19 Radio call sign Papa Echo Zero Five PE 05 crashed 7 miles 11 km northeast Battle Creek MI It was on the return leg of a cross country training flight from NAS New York Floyd Bennett Field New York to NAS Moffett Field California via NAS Glenview Illinois all four crew lost 90 6 February 1968 A P 3B Registration 153440 construction number 185 5237 assigned to VP 26 crashed during an Operation Market Time combat patrol off Phu Quoc Island Vietnam All 12 crew were lost as MIA Initially attributed to mechanical failure it was later suggested that it may have been shot down 91 1 April 1968 A P 3B Registration 153445 construction number 185 5241 assigned to VP 26 was shot down by surface anti aircraft fire during an Operation Market Time combat patrol off Phu Quoc Island Vietnam The AAA fire set an engine on fire and during a subsequent landing attempt the wing separated and the aircraft crashed with the loss of all 12 crew 92 11 April 1968 An RAAF P 3B Registration A9 296 construction number 185 5406 crashed on runway 32L at NAS Moffett Field California after departing the manufacturer s facility during pre delivery acceptance trials The left main mount undercarriage collapsed upon landing and the aircraft ground looped All crew survived without serious injury but the aircraft was completely destroyed by the resulting fire 93 6 March 1969 USN P 3A BuNo 152765 tail coded RP 07 of VP 31 crashed at NAS Lemoore California at the end of a practice ground control approach GCA landing all six crew died 28 January 1971 Commander Donald H Lilienthal USN flew a P 3C Orion to a world speed record for heavyweight turboprops Over 15 25 kilometers he reached 501 miles per hour to break the Soviet Il 18 s May 1968 record of 452 miles per hour 26 May 1972 USN P 3A BuNo 152155 disappeared over the Pacific Ocean on a routine training mission after departing NAS Moffett Field California with the loss of eight crew members 94 3 June 1972 While attempting to fly through the Straits of Gibraltar en route from Naval Station Rota Spain to Naval Air Station Sigonella Sicily a P 3A of VP 44 hit a mountain in Morocco resulting in the death of all 14 crew on board 95 12 April 1973 A P 3C BuNo 157332 operating from NAS Moffett Field California collided with a Convair 990 N711NA operated by NASA during approach to runway 32L They crashed on the Sunnyvale Municipal Golf Course 0 5 miles 0 80 km short of the runway resulting in destruction of both aircraft and the death of all but one crewmember 96 11 December 1977 USN P 3B BuNo 153428 from VP 11 operating from Lajes Field Azores crashed on mountainous El Hierro southwesternmost of the Canary Islands in poor visibility There were no survivors from the crew of 13 97 26 April 1978 USN P 3B BuNo 152724 from VP 23 crashed on landing approach to Lajes Field Azores Seven of the crew were killed and the plane sank into deep water preventing recovery to assess the cause of the crash 98 22 September 1978 USN P 3B BuNo 152757 from VP 8 disintegrated over Poland Maine on 22 September 1978 An over pressurized fuel tank caused the port wing to separate at the outboard engine 99 The detached wing sheared off part of the tail and aerodynamic forces caused the remaining engines and starboard wing to detach from the fuselage Debris rained down near the south end of Tripp Pond shortly after 12 00 None of the 8 man crew survived 100 26 October 1978 USN P 3C BuNo 159892 call sign coded AF 586 from VP 9 operating from NAS Adak ditched at sea after an engine fire caused by a propeller malfunction All but two of the 15 man crew were rescued by a Soviet trawler but three crew members died of exposure 101 27 June 1979 A P 3B BuNo 154596 from VP 22 operating from NAS Cubi Point Philippines had a propeller overspeed shortly after departure The number 4 propeller then departed the aircraft striking the number three with a subsequent fire on that engine While attempting an overweight landing with two engines out the aircraft stalled rolled inverted and crashed in Subic Bay just past Grande Island Four crew and one passenger were killed in the crash 102 17 April 1980 USN P 3C BuNo 158213 from VP 50 while flying for a parachuting exhibition in Pago Pago American Samoa struck overhead tram wires and crashed killing all six crew on board 102 17 May 1983 USN P 3B BuNo 152733 tail coded YB 07 from VP 1 inadvertently landed gear up during a routine dedicated field work DFW pilot training flight at NAS Barbers Point No crew were injured but the aircraft was a total loss 103 16 June 1983 USN P 3B BuNo 152720 tail coded YB 06 from VP 1 at NAS Barbers Point crashed into a mountain top in fog and low clouds on the Napali Coast between the Hanapu and Kalalau valleys in Kauai Hawai i killing all 14 on board 102 104 6 January 1987 Following a seven hour P 3 ASW patrol VP 6 s Crew Eight initiated restart of the loitered No 1 engine 830 nm from NAS Barbers Point The engine encountered RPM problems and failed to feather leading to gearbox issues After six hours of flight back to Barbers Point and only 12 nm from the runway the No 1 prop disconnected and collided with prop No 2 This caused the aircraft to roll violently to the left until prop No 2 was able to be locked with the prop brake Despite this the crew managed to touch down on centerline 2 000 feet down the runway completing its landing roll out with 2 500 feet remaining and all crew surviving 105 Due to this event P3 engine oil protocol was adjusted 106 13 September 1987 A Royal Norwegian Air Force P 3B tail number 602 was hit from below by a Russian Sukhoi Su 27 of the 941st IAP V PVO The Su 27 flew below the P 3 s starboard side then accelerated and pulled up clipping the 4 engine s propellers The propeller shrapnel hit the P 3B s fuselage and caused a decompression There were no injuries and both aircraft returned safely to base 107 25 September 1990 The first production P 3C Update III BuNo 161762 assigned to VP 31 at NAS Moffett Field impacted the runway at an excessive rate of descent while conducting at dedicated field work sortie at Naval Auxiliary Landing Field Crows Landing Both main landing gear failed and the aircraft slid down the runway Some crewmembers sustained minor injuries but there were no fatalities The aircraft was a total loss 108 21 March 1991 While on a training mission west of San Diego California two USN P 3Cs BuNos 158930 and 159325 assigned to VP 50 based at NAS Moffett Field collided in midair killing all 27 crew on board both aircraft 109 26 April 1991 An RAAF AP 3C tail number A9 754 lost a wing leading edge and crashed into shallow water in the Cocos Island one crewman was killed It was cut up and became an artificial reef 110 16 October 1991 P 3A N924AU of Aero Union crashed into a mountain in Montana United States killing both crew 111 25 March 1995 USN P 3C BuNo 158217 assigned to VP 47 was returning from a training mission in the North Arabian Sea when it suffered catastrophic engine failure of the number 4 engine The aircraft ditched at sea 2 miles 3 2 km from RAFO Masirah Oman All 11 crewmembers were rescued by the Royal Omani Air Force 112 1 April 2001 An aerial collision known as the Hainan Island incident between a USN EP 3E ARIES II BuNo 156511 a signals reconnaissance version of the P 3C and a People s Liberation Army Navy J 8IIM fighter resulted in the J 8IIM crashing and its pilot was killed The EP 3 came close to becoming uncontrollable at one point sustaining a near inverted roll but was able to make an emergency landing on Hainan 113 20 April 2005 P 3B N926AU of Aero Union crashed while conducting practice drops of water over an area of rugged mountainous terrain located north of the Chico Airport All three crew on board were killed 114 21 October 2008 P 3C USN 158573 On landing the aircraft overrun runway and lost its right landing gear Nobody was injured but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair 115 22 May 2011 Twenty Tehrik i Taliban Pakistan militants claiming to avenge Osama Bin Laden s death destroyed two Pakistan Navy P 3Cs during an armed attack at PNS Mehran a Pakistan Navy base in Karachi 116 They had been frequently used to conduct overland counter insurgency surveillance operations 117 15 February 2014 Three USN P 3Cs were crushed beyond repair when their hangar at NAF Atsugi Japan was destroyed by a massive snow storm 118 Surviving aircraft EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message 150509 P 3A Moffett Field Historical Society former NAS Moffett Field California 151370 P 3A Cockpit Moffett Field Historical Society former NAS Moffett Field California 150511 VP 3A Pima Air and Space Museum adjacent to Davis Monthan AFB Tucson Arizona Aircraft last assigned to Executive Transport Det NAS Signonella Sicily 151374 P 3A NAS Jacksonville Heritage Park NAS Jacksonville Florida 152152 P 3A National Naval Aviation Museum NAS Pensacola Florida Aircraft last assigned to VP 69 152156 P 3A Brunswick Executive Airport former NAS Brunswick Maine 152184 VP 3T U Tapao RTAFB Thailand Former US Navy aircraft transferred to operated by and later retired as gate guard by Royal Thai Navy 152729 P 3B U S Customs and Border Protection Washington D C Registered as N769SK 152748 P 3B Navy Operational Support Center formerly Naval Air Facility Detroit Selfridge ANGB Michigan Aircraft last assigned to VP 93 154574 P 3B Wings of Freedom Aviation Museum adjacent to Horsham Air National Guard Station former NAS JRB Willow Grove Horsham Pennsylvania 160770 P 3C CDU Naval Air Museum Barbers Point Kalaeloa Airport former Naval Air Station Barbers Point Hawaii Aircraft last assigned to VP 9 but carrying 1960s era markings of VP 6 for U S Naval Aviation Centennial celebration in 2011 156515 P 3C Hickory Aviation Museum at Hickory Regional Airport Hickory North Carolina 160753 AP 3C Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Shellharbour Airport New South Wales Australia Ex Royal Australian Air Force A9 753 former 10 Squadron aircraft and later 292 Squadron as a static training aid 119 Officially handed over to HARS by the RAAF on 3 November 2017 120 Civil registered as VH ORI and will be maintained as a flying warbird 121 160756 AP 3C South Australian Aviation Museum South Australia Construction number 5666 RAAF A9 756 received by 10 Squadron as a P 3C in 1978 upgraded to AP 3C in early 2000s 122 160999 P 3C UD II Marine Corps Air Station Kaneohe Bay Hawaii Aircraft last assigned to VP 9 161006 P 3C UD II Joint Base Andrews former Naval Air Facility Washington Maryland Aircraft last assigned to VP 68 162776 P 3C AIP National Naval Aviation Museum NAS Pensacola Florida RCAF Serial 140119 CP 140A Greenwood Military Museum CFB Greenwood Canada Aircraft last assigned to RCAF 404 MP Squadron RCAF Serial 140102 CP 140A National Air Force Museum of Canada CFB Trenton Canada Specifications P 3C Orion Edit P 3 aircraft of the Royal New Zealand Air Force Royal Australian Air Force and the United States Navy with RAAF Dassault Mirage III Data from Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1994 95 123 Specifications P 3 124 1 General characteristicsCrew 11 Length 116 ft 10 in 35 61 m Wingspan 99 ft 8 in 30 38 m Height 33 ft 8 5 in 10 274 m Wing area 1 300 0 sq ft 120 77 m2 Aspect ratio 7 5 Airfoil root NACA 0014 modified tip NACA 0012 modified 125 Empty weight 61 491 lb 27 892 kg Zero fuel weight 77 200 lb 35 017 kg Max takeoff weight 135 000 lb 61 235 kg MTOW normal142 000 lb 64 410 kg maximum permissible dd dd dd Maximum landing weight MLW 103 880 lb 47 119 kg Fuel capacity 9 200 US gal 7 700 imp gal 35 000 L usable fuel in 5 wing and fuselage tanks 62 500 lb 28 350 kg maximum fuel weight 111 US gal 92 imp gal 420 L usable oil in 4 tanks Powerplant 4 Allison T56 A 14 turboprop engines 4 910 shp 3 660 kW each equivalent Propellers 4 bladed Hamilton Standard 54H60 77 13 ft 6 in 4 11 m diameter constant speed fully feathering reversible propellersPerformance Maximum speed 411 kn 473 mph 761 km h at 15 000 ft 4 572 m and 105 000 lb 47 627 kg Cruise speed 328 kn 377 mph 607 km h at 25 000 ft 7 620 m and 110 000 lb 49 895 kg Patrol speed 206 kn 237 mph 382 km h at 1 500 ft 457 m and 110 000 lb 49 895 kg Stall speed 133 kn 153 mph 246 km h flaps up112 kn 129 mph 207 km h flaps down dd dd dd Combat range 1 345 nmi 1 548 mi 2 491 km 3 hours on station at 1 500 ft 457 m Ferry range 4 830 nmi 5 560 mi 8 950 km Endurance 17 hours 12 minutes at 15 000 ft 4 572 m on two engines12 hours 20 minutes at 15 000 ft 4 572 m on four engines dd dd dd Service ceiling 28 300 ft 8 600 m 19 000 ft 5 791 m one engine inoperative OEI dd dd dd Rate of climb 1 950 ft min 9 9 m s Time to altitude 25 000 ft 7 620 m in 30 minutes Wing loading 103 8 lb sq ft 507 kg m2 Power mass 0 1455 hp lb 0 2392 kW kg equivalent Take off run 4 240 ft 1 292 m Take off distance to 50 ft 15 m 5 490 ft 1 673 m Landing distance from 50 ft 15 m 2 770 ft 844 m Armament Hardpoints 10 wing stations in total 3x on each wing and 2x on each wing root and eight internal bomb bay stations with a capacity of 20 000 lb 9 100 kg 1 with provisions to carry combinations of Rockets None Missiles Air to surface missile 4 AGM 65 Maverick 6 AGM 84 Harpoon 4 AGM 84 Standoff Land Attack Missile SLAM ER 1 Bombs Depth charges Mk 101 Lulu nuclear depth bomb 10 MK20 Rockeye MK80 Series 18 MK82 MK83 MK84 general purpose bombs B57 nuclear bomb US service only retired 1993 Other Mk 44 mostly retired from service 8 Mk 46 1 6 Mk 50 7 Mk 54 or MU90 Impact torpedoes Mk 25 Mk 39 Mk 55 7 Mk 56 Mk 60 CAPTOR or 6 Mk 65 or 18 Mk 62 or 11 Mk 63 Quickstrike naval mines 126 Stonefish naval mine in Australian service Active and passive SonobuoysAvionics RADAR Raytheon AN APS 115 Maritime Surveillance Radar AN APS 137D V 5 Inverse Synthetic Aperture Search Radar 126 IFF APX 72 APX 76 APX 118 123 Interrogation Friend or Foe IFF 126 EO IR ASX 4 Advanced Imaging Multispectral Sensor AIMS ASX 6 Multi Mode Imaging System MMIS ESM ALR 66 Radar Warning Receiver ALR 95 V 2 Specific Emitter Identification Threat Warning Hazeltine Corporation AN ARR 78 V sonobuoy receiving system 126 Fighting Electronics Inc AN ARR 72 sonobuoy receiver 126 IBM Proteus UYS 1 acoustic processor AQA 7 directional acoustic frequency analysis and recording sonobuoy indicators 126 AQH 4 V sonar tape recorder 126 ASQ 81 magnetic anomaly detector MAD 126 ASA 65 magnetic compensator 126 Lockheed Martin AN ALQ 78 V electronic surveillance receiver 126 See also Edit Aviation portalLockheed P 2 Neptune Martin P 5 MarlinRelated development Lockheed CP 140 Aurora Lockheed EP 3 Lockheed L 188 Electra Lockheed P 7 Lockheed WP 3D OrionAircraft of comparable role configuration and era ATR 72MP Avro Shackleton Boeing P 8 Poseidon Bombardier Aerospace DHC 8 MPA D8 Breguet Atlantique Canadair CP 107 Argus CASA CN 235 MPA CASA C 295 MPA EADS HC 144 Ocean Sentry Hawker Siddeley Nimrod Ilyushin Il 38 Kawasaki P 1 Shin Meiwa PS 1Related lists List of Lockheed P 3 Orion variants List of military aircraft of the United States List of active United States military aircraft List of Lockheed aircraftReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i P 3C Orion long range ASW aircraft Archived 16 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine navy mil 18 February 2009 Retrieved 14 July 2010 a b Lockheed Martin P 3 Orion Archived 11 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Aeroflight co uk 31 July 2010 P 3 production Archived 1 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine p3orion nl Retrieved 7 June 2011 a b c d P 3 history Archived 24 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine GlobalSecurity org Retrieved 14 July 2010 Reade 1998 Second VP 9 Archived 27 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Dictionary of American Naval Aviation Squadrons Volume 2 p 74 Retrieved 7 July 2012 Thomas Todd J First Digital Airborne Computing System UNIVAC 1830 CP 823 U Serial A New Mod 3 Engineering Prototype Lockheed P 3 Orion Archived 15 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine p3oriontopsecret com 2010 Retrieved 9 December 2010 a b Serling Robert J Loud and Clear Dell 1970 Lessons of a turboprop inquest Archived 4 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Flight 17 February 1961 p 225 Murphy Pat Fighting fire like a regular military ground air war Onetime jinxed airliner now a superstar fire bomber mtexpress com 2010 Retrieved 16 November 2010 P 3 Orion Overview Archived 23 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Federation of American Scientists FAS Retrieved 25 January 2011 Barbour John 14 July 1990 Retooling the war machine Idahonian Moscow Associated Press p 6C Lockheed Martin Awarded Contract to Build Outer Wing Sets for the US Navy s P 3 Orion Fleet Archived 18 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine deagel com 4 September 2008 P 3C Archived 28 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine history navy mil Retrieved 14 July 2010 Air Anti Submarine Warfare Archived 12 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine fas org Retrieved 14 July 2010 Holler Roger A 5 November 2013 The Evolution Of The Sonobuoy From World War II To The Cold War PDF U S Navy Journal of Underwater Acoustics 332 333 Archived PDF from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2020 Whitman Edward C Winter 2005 SOSUS The Secret Weapon of Undersea Surveillance Undersea Warfare Vol 7 no 2 Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2020 Peter Felsted Orion Hunts a Different Prey Jane s Defence Weekly 12 November 1994 p25 Born to Fly by Lt Shane Osborn abcnews go com 6 January 2006 Archived from the original on 29 January 2011 Retrieved 28 July 2010 P 3 Subhunters Using ASW Gear to Find Narco Subs defensetech org 14 January 2011 Archived from the original on 19 January 2011 Retrieved 25 January 2011 Page Lewis First true submarine captured from American drug smugglers Archived 5 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Register 6 July 2010 Retrieved 25 January 2011 Ziezulewicz Geoff 4 June 2020 Fair winds and following seas to the Navy s P 3C Navy Times a b VP 26 Memorial VP 26 Crew In Memorium VP 26 Crew Archived 10 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine vpnavy org Retrieved 14 July 2010 a b c Reade 1998 pp 42 49 a b Chudy Jason P 3C Anti Surface Warfare Improvement Program P 3C AIP Archived 29 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine lockheedmartin com Retrieved 14 July 2010 Rogoway Tyler 2 July 2014 Confessions Of A US Navy P 3 Orion Maritime Patrol Pilot Foxtrot Alpha Retrieved 11 August 2019 Chudy Jason P 3C Anti Surface Warfare Improvement Program P 3C AIP Archived 11 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine military com Retrieved 14 July 2010 Defence Ministers Minister for Defence and Minister for Defence Science and Personnel Joint Media Release Last AP 3C Orion Aircraft welcomed home from Middle East defence gov au Archived from the original on 29 April 2013 Risen James U S Identifies Vast Mineral Riches in Afghanistan Archived 15 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 13 June 2010 Retrieved 14 July 2010 British ships protected by borrowed US spy plane in Libya Archived 11 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Telegraph Retrieved 7 January 2012 Strelieff Captain Jill Auroras fly first missions over Libya Archived 12 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine Sicily Air Wing Public Affairs 4 October 2011 Retrieved 7 January 2012 US Navy P 3C USAF A 10 and USS Barry Engage Libyan Vessels Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine africom mil 29 March 2011 Retrieved 29 March 2011 Mackey Robert Before Attack Pakistan s Navy Boasted of Role in Fight Against Taliban Archived 17 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 23 May 2011 Retrieved 10 April 2012 Foreign Hand Behind PNS Mehran Base Attack in Pakistan Pakalert Press 26 May 2011 Archived from the original on 29 May 2011 US to replace two P3C Orion aircraft Archived 2 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Dawn com 17 June 2011 Pakistan Navy receives two P3Cs Archived 19 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine News International 22 February 2012 Retrieved 9 April 2012 Inter Services Public Relations Pakistan Pakistan Navy foils attempt by Indian submarine to enter Pakistani waters 5 March 2019 Navy thwarts attempt by Indian submarine to enter Pakistani waters 5 March 2019 Navy wards off Indian submarine from entering Pakistani waters ISPR 19 October 2021 Pakistan Navy Anti Submarine Warfare Unit intercepts and tracked latest Kalvari class Indian submarine PN blocks Indian submarine s attempt to enter Pakistani waters 19 October 2021 Spain foils pirates plans Archived 1 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine news24 com Retrieved 14 July 2010 Boxer Supports International Counter Piracy Effort in Gulf of Aden Other Attacks Increase Off Somali Coast Archived 16 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine dvidshub net 28 October 2008 Retrieved 14 July 2010 P 3 na Operacao Ocean Shield Archived 5 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Forca Aerea Portuguesa 5 April 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 News Release NATO S latest counter piracy weapon strikes early blow Allied Maritime Command Headquarters Northwood 29 April 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Japan Joining the Anti Piracy Effort off the Somali Coast May 28 2009 Archived 18 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 November 2016 Here s how Coalition Patrol Planes Hunt Somali Pirates in the Horn of Africa January 23 2013 Archived 2 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Aviationist Retrieved 21 November 2016 Japan s Actions against Piracy off the Coast of Somalia February 15 2016 Archived 9 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of Foreign Affairs Retrieved 21 November 2016 Japan to expand Djibouti military base to counter Chinese influence October 13 2016 Archived 19 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine Reuters Retrieved 21 November 2016 a b Aero Union to auction their P 3 air tankers wildfiretoday com 2 January 2012 Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2013 AP 3C Orion maritime patrol aircraft raaf gov 29 March 2009 Archived from the original on 19 December 2008 World Air Forces listing A B 24 November 1999 Archived from the original on 21 November 2016 Chile P 3 Orions life extension plans Dmilt com Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Retrieved 13 July 2013 Green William 1988 Aircraft 37 ed Frederick Warne pp 142 143 ISBN 0 7232 3534 1 CP 140 Aurora Royal Canadian Air Force 10 April 2013 Archived from the original on 15 January 2018 Retrieved 14 January 2018 Joker zieht nicht mehr Kein Seefernaufklarer der Marine einsatzbereit Augen geradeaus augengeradeaus net Retrieved 13 April 2022 Igor Bozinovski 21 May 2019 Greek P 3B re enters service Jane s 360 Skopje Archived from the original on 21 May 2019 Retrieved 21 May 2019 1 permanent dead link Polmar Norman 2005 The Naval Institute guide to the ships and aircraft of the U S fleet 18th ed Annapolis Maryland USA Naval Institute p 416 ISBN 1 59114 685 2 Defence of Japan 2022 Annual White Paper p 53 Japan Ministry of Defence 厚木航空基地HP トピックス P 1への移行完了 Archived 30 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 28 September 2017 in Japanese Royal New Zealand Air Force Archived from the original on 12 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 NZDF Arrival of the RNZAF P3K2 Orion Archived from the original on 12 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 New Zealand to buy four P 8A Poseidon Maritime Patrol Aircraft The Beehive Archived from the original on 10 July 2018 Retrieved 9 July 2018 Further investment in new Defence capabilities Archived from the original on 12 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Boeing to upgrade RNZAF Orions Archived from the original on 12 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Ansari Usman Pakistan Navy To Boost Air Surveillance Capability dead link defencenews com 30 January 2010 Retrieved 14 July 2010 Ansari Usman Pakistan navy planes to get more teeth Archived 5 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine expressindia com 14 February 2007 Retrieved 14 July 2010 Hoyle2008 01 04T15 30 00 00 00 Craig Lockheed Martin to upgrade Portuguese P 3C Orion fleet Flight Global Retrieved 25 October 2022 WEBTEAM FAP Forca Aerea Portuguesa www emfa pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 25 October 2022 https theaviationgeekclub com republic of korea navy p 3 orion squadron marks 40 years of mishap free flights bare URL Perrett Bradley Sub hunting Aviation Week and Space Technology 8 July 2013 p 27 Pocock Chris The Black Bats CIA Spy Flights Over China From Taiwan 1951 1969 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing 2010 ISBN 978 0 7643 3513 6 Taiwan Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Archived from the original on 14 November 2017 Retrieved 13 November 2017 P 3 The Taiwan Navy obtained 12 P 3C aircraft under the U S government s Foreign Military Sales program in 2007 which were then modernized to provide an additional 15 000 flight hours U S in deal to refurbish aircraft for Taiwan Washington Post 13 March 2009 Retrieved 14 July 2010 dead link Contract View defense gov Archived from the original on 31 May 2014 WorldAirForces2016 Corrected pdf Flightglobal com Archived from the original on 19 January 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2016 Hoyle Craig Singapore interested in ex US Navy P 3s Archived 1 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Flight via flightglobal com 15 December 2010 El Ejercito del Aire despide a su ultimo P 3 Orion tras casi medio siglo en servicio Retrieved 15 January 2023 FAA Registry Aircraft N Number Inquiry registry faa gov Retrieved 28 October 2020 Buffalo purchases a P3 Fire Aviation Retrieved 28 December 2017 Eastmunt Catherine P 3B Description Archived 11 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine Wallops Flight Facility NASA Retrieved 14 July 2010 DHS Air Assets P 3 AEW Lockheed Orion P 3B AEW Archived 29 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine cbp gov 11 March 2009 Retrieved 14 July 2010 DHS Air Assets P 3 LRT Lockheed Orion P 3B AEW Archived 29 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine cbp gov 11 March 2009 Retrieved 14 July 2010 Aircraft Inquiry Colorado signs CWN contract for P 3 air tankers Archived 26 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine accessed 28 August 2018 at Fire Aviation Firefighting Archived 5 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine aerounion com 2003 Retrieved 14 July 2010 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network P 3 Orion Crash Site Michigan Wreckchasing Message Board pacaeropress websitetoolbox com Archived from the original on 14 July 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2015 No Title aviation safety net Retrieved 9 February 2020 ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed P 3B Orion 153445 Dao Phu Quoc Island Retrieved 9 February 2020 No Title aviation safety net Retrieved 9 February 2020 Ranter Harro and Fabian I Lujan ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed P 3A 50 LO Orion 152155 California Archived 4 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Safety Network 2005 Retrieved 28 June 2011 United States Navy Aircrew 3 June 1972 Archived 19 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Arlington National Cemetery Retrieved 25 January 2011 ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed P 3C 125 LO Orion 12 April 1973 Archived 6 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 28 June 2011 Lockheed P 3B 80 LO Orion Archived 9 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 21 January 2012 Third VP 23 Archived 9 July 2011 at the Library of Congress Web Archives United States Navy Retrieved 21 January 2012 VP 8 Mishaps Archived 22 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine U S Navy Patrol Squadrons Retrieved 21 January 2012 The ultimate sacrifice wreck sites a reminder of military plane disasters Archived 10 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Lewiston Sun Journal Retrieved 20 January 2012 Jampoler Andrew C A Adak the rescue of Alfa Foxtrot 586 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 2003 ISBN 1 59114 412 4 a b c Accident List United States Archived 10 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine VPI Book of Remembrance 27 September 2008 Retrieved 7 July 2012 VPNAVY VP 1 Mishap Summary Page VP Patrol Squadron vpnavy com Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2016 The Crash of YB 06 Archived 16 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine youtube com Retrieved 7 July 2012 VP 6 Crew 8 lost propeller flight January 1987 vp 6 org vp 6 org Retrieved 14 August 2022 VPNAVY VP 6 Mishap Summary Page VP Patrol Squadron vpnavy com Retrieved 14 August 2022 Bear Hunters Part 3 Collision with Flanker Archived from the original on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 10 March 2013 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed P 3C Orion 161762 Crows Landing Aux Field CA NRC aviation safety net Archived from the original on 13 September 2016 Retrieved 12 September 2016 VP 50 Crew 2 11 In Memoriam VP 50 Crew 2 11 21 March 1991 Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine U S Navy Patrol Squadrons Retrieved 25 January 2011 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network A P 3 ditches with Four engines Out All Survive http www vpnavy org vp47ditch html Archived 25 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 20 February 2014 Brookes Andrew 2002 Destination disaster aviation accidents in the modern age London Ian Allan pp 101 110 ISBN 0 7110 2862 1 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed P 3B Orion N926AU Chico CA aviation safety net Archived from the original on 15 October 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2017 Archived copy Archived from the original on 28 November 2020 Retrieved 20 November 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Jung Ahmed Faraz Khan and Jahanzaib Haque Navy says PNS base under control after attack Archived 23 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine tribune com 23 May 2011 Retrieved 23 May 2011 Mackey Robert The Lede blog Before Attack Pakistan s Navy Boasted of Role in Fight Against Taliban Archived 17 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 23 May 2011 Navy Orions likely damaged in hangar collapse Stars and Stripes 18 February 2014 Archived from the original on 18 May 2014 Retrieved 9 May 2014 ADF Serials Orion Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2015 Lockheed AP 3C Orion Signed over to HARS Historical Aircraft Restoration Society 4 November 2017 Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 18 November 2017 Lockheed AP 3C Orion Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 18 November 2017 Lockheed AP 3C Orion A9 756 South Australian Aviation Museum 11 January 2018 Archived from the original on 4 October 2018 Retrieved 4 October 2018 Lambert Mark Munson Kenneth eds 1994 Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1994 95 85th ed Coulson Surrey UK Jane s Information Group pp 554 557 ISBN 978 0710611604 Specifications P 3 lockheedmartin com Archived from the original on 15 August 2012 Retrieved 13 October 2012 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 a b c d e f g h i j P 3C Orion Maritime Patrol and Anti Submarine Warfare Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Naval Technology Com Retrieved 1 August 2010 Reade David 1998 The Age of Orion The Lockheed P 3 Orion Story Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer publications ISBN 0 7643 0478 X Further reading EditEden Paul ed The Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft London Amber Books 2004 ISBN 1 904687 84 9 McCaughlin Andrew Quiet Achiever Australian Aviation December 2007 Upgrade of the Orion maritime patrol aircraft fleet Department of Defence Defence Materiel Organisation PDF Canberra Australian National Audit Office 2005 ISBN 0 642 80867 8 Archived from the original PDF on 24 February 2009 Winchester Jim ed 2006 Military Aircraft of the Cold War The Aviation Factfile London Grange plc ISBN 1 84013 929 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lockheed P 3 Orion AP 3C Orion maritime patrol aircraft Royal Australian Air Force 28 November 2008 Retrieved 14 July 2010 ADF Serials RAAF Lockheed AP 3C P 3B C TAP 3B Orion Page P 3 Orion Computer Development History and Project A New P 3C fact file Archived 16 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine P 3 Orion Research Group 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