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KC-X

KC-X was the United States Air Force (USAF) program to procure its next-generation aerial refueling tanker aircraft to replace some of their older Boeing KC-135 Stratotankers. The contest was for a production contract for 179 new tankers with estimated value of US$35 billion. The two contenders to replace the KC-135 aircraft were Boeing and EADS, following the elimination of US Aerospace, Inc. from the bidding process.[1]

KC-X program
The Boeing KC-46 Pegasus, the winner of the KC-X program
General information
Project forAerial refueling tanker aircraft
Issued byUnited States Air Force
ProposalsAirbus A330 MRTT
Boeing KC-767
Antonov An-112KC
PrototypesBoeing KC-767
Airbus A330 MRTT
History
Concluded2011
OutcomeRound 1: EADS/Northrop Grumman KC-45 selected for production, but result protested
Round 2: Boeing KC-46 Pegasus selected for production, no protest
PredecessorsCommercial Derivative Air Refueling Aircraft

The KC-X program followed earlier attempts by the USAF to procure a new tanker. A 2002 plan had the USAF leasing Boeing KC-767 tankers, followed by a 2003 modification where the USAF would buy most of the KC-767 aircraft and lease several more of them. Corruption investigations revealed wrongdoing in the award of the contract and the contract was canceled in 2005, setting the stage for the KC-X program.

The USAF issued the KC-X request for proposal in January 2007,[2] then selected the Northrop Grumman/EADS team and their Airbus A330 MRTT-based tankers in February 2008.[3] In June 2008, the U.S. Government Accountability Office sustained a protest by Boeing on the award of the contract.[4][5] In July 2008, the U.S. Defense Department reopened the bidding process,[6] but canceled the KC-X solicitation in September 2008.[7] In September 2009, the USAF began the first steps toward accepting new bids.[8] In March 2010, Northrop Grumman announced that it would pull out of the bidding process.[9] Despite Northrop Grumman's withdrawal, EADS decided to remain in the ongoing competition alone.[10] The Air Force selected Boeing's KC-46 bid on 24 February 2011.[11]

Background edit

The initial plan was to lease Boeing KC-767 tankers on a sole-source basis; Boeing is the only American company with the requisite industrial capability to manufacture large-body aircraft. As such, the KC-767 was selected in 2002 [12] in 2003 Boeing was awarded a US$20 billion contract to lease KC-767 tankers to replace the KC-135.

Led by Senator John McCain, several US government leaders protested the lease contract as wasteful and problematic. In response to the protests, the Air Force struck a compromise in November 2003, whereby it would purchase 80 KC-767 aircraft and lease 20 more.[13]

However, in December 2003, the Pentagon announced the project was to be frozen while an investigation of allegations of corruption by one of its former procurement staffers, Darleen Druyun (who had moved to Boeing in January 2003) was begun. Druyun pleaded guilty of criminal wrongdoing and was sentenced to nine months in prison for "negotiating a job with Boeing at the same time she was involved in contracts with the company".[14] Additional fallout included the termination of CFO Michael M. Sears, who received a four-month prison sentence,[15] the resignation of Boeing CEO Philip M. Condit,[16][17] and Boeing paying $615 million in fines.[18] In January 2006, the lease contract was formally canceled.[19]

Proposals edit

Initial competition edit

The USAF then began the KC-X tanker replacement program. The DoD posted a request for proposal on 30 January 2007.[2] The U.S. Air Force's main requirements are "fuel offload and range at least as great as the KC-135", airlift capability, ability to take on fuel in flight, and multi-point refueling capability.[2]

Two manufacturers expressed interest in producing this aircraft. The team of Northrop Grumman and EADS/Airbus proposed a version of the Airbus A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport (MRTT), based on the Airbus A330-200.[20] Boeing proposed a version of the KC-767, based on the Boeing 767.[21] The Seattle Times commented on the pre-final designs in February 2007: "Northrop has been viewed as the underdog, with a heavier, less fuel efficient aircraft. The Airbus tanker would have a maximum fuel capacity of 200,000 pounds. Northrop spokesman Randy Belote said Northrop's K-30 would tack on roughly 20 percent in fuel capacity."[22]

Both competitors submitted their tanker proposals before 12 April 2007 deadline.[23][24] In September 2007, the USAF dismissed having a mixed fleet of new tankers from both Boeing and Northrop Grumman as being unfeasible because of increased costs from buying limited numbers of two types annually.[25] In December 2007, it was announced that the KC-X tanker would be designated KC-45A regardless of which design wins the competition.[26] The DoD anticipated that the KC-45A would start to enter service in 2013.[27]

On 3 January 2008, the competitors submitted final revisions of their proposals to the U.S. Air Force.[28] On 29 February 2008, the DoD announced the selection of the Northrop Grumman/EADS's KC-30.[29]

On 11 March 2008, Boeing filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office (GAO) of the award of the contract to the Northrop Grumman/EADS team. Boeing stated that there are certain aspects of the USAF evaluation process that have given it grounds to appeal.[30][31] The protest was upheld by the GAO on 18 June 2008, which recommended that the Air Force rebid the contract.[4][5]

Expedited recompetition edit

On 9 July 2008, the Defense Secretary Robert Gates put the tanker contract in an "expedited recompetition" with Defense Undersecretary John Young in charge of the selection process instead of the Air Force.[6] A draft of the revised RFP was provided to the contractors on 6 August 2008 for comments with the revised RFP to be finalized by mid-August. Proposals would be due in October 2008 and selection was to be done by the end of 2008.[32][33][34][35] In mid-August, there was speculation that Boeing was considering a "no bid" position.[36] On 21 August 2008 Boeing asked the DoD for an additional four months to submit a proposal centered on a larger aircraft,[37] but they opposed further delay.[38] Then on 10 September 2008, Defense Secretary Robert Gates decided that the new competition could not be fairly completed before the end of 2008. The DoD canceled the request for proposals and delayed the decision on when to issue another request until the new presidential administration was in office.[7][39][40]

Restarted competition edit

 
Deputy Secretary of Defense William Lynn, speaks about KC-X at a press conference at the Pentagon on 24 September 2009.

On 16 September 2009, Secretary Gates announced a renewed effort for the KC-X program. The selection process will be under the Air Force with a "robust oversight role" by the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) to prevent a repeated failure.[41][42] On 25 September 2009 the USAF issued a draft request for proposals (RFP) seeking comments for the official tanker replacement RFP.[43] The RFP for a fixed-price contract specified 373 requirements for the new plane, and stated that the price of each tanker would be adjusted to reflect how much it would cost to operate over 40 years and how well it would meet various war-fighting needs. The initial contract would be for 179 aircraft for $35 billion.[44][45][46] Northrop Grumman/EADS team claimed the requirement was advantaging Boeing and threatened to withdraw from the competition on 1 December 2009.[47][48][49]

The fiscal 2011 Defense Department budget relegates $864 million in research and development money. A contract award was expected in summer 2010.[50] On 24 February 2010, the US Air Force released the revised request for proposal (RFP) for KC-X. The RFP calls for the KC-X tanker to first fly in 2012 and aircraft deliveries to begin in 2013.[51]

On 8 March 2010, Northrop Grumman followed through with their earlier threat and decided to not submit a bid for the KC-X tanker stating that they believe the new evaluation methodology favors Boeing's smaller tanker.[9][52] EADS, however announced on 20 April 2010, that it was re-entering the competition on a stand-alone basis and intended to bid the KC-30 with final assembly to take place in Mobile, Alabama as planned under its prior teaming arrangement with Northrop Grumman.[53] On 18 June 2010, the USAF announced that the decision would be delayed until November 2010.[54]

On 1 July 2010, a surprise third bidder, consisting of the team of US Aerospace and the Ukrainian manufacturer Antonov announced its intention to bid in the competition. The two firms announced that they would be interested in supplying up to three types of aircraft to the United States Air Force. The types reportedly being offered are the four-engined An-124 and a twin-engined variant of the aircraft, the An-122. The third aircraft to be offered is known as the An-112.[55][56] The An-112 tanker is a version of the Antonov An-70, except with two jet engines. This tanker was proposed in the team's bid.[57]

By 9 July 2010 bids from Boeing, EADS and US Aerospace/Antonov were submitted to the Air Force.[58] However, the Air Force rejected the US Aerospace bid for allegedly arriving 5 minutes after the deadline, which US Aerospace disputes. US Aerospace filed separate protests with the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) on 2 August and 1 September.[57][59] The U.S. Air Force proceeded with source selection while GAO investigated.[60] The GAO dismissed U.S. Aerospace's protest on 6 October.[61]

In November 2010, the USAF mistakenly sent technical reviews of the other side's bids to each of the two remaining teams.[62] At this time contract selection was postponed from late December 2010 until early 2011.[63]

Boeing and EADS submitted their final bids on 10 February 2011.[64] On 24 February 2011, Boeing's KC-767 proposal was selected as the winning offer. The tanker will be designated the KC-46A.[65] EADS North America chairman Ralph Crosby declined to protest the award saying that Boeing's bid was "very, very, very aggressive" and carried a high risk of losing money for the company.[66] Loren B. Thompson of the Lexington Institute agreed that Boeing's bid was very aggressive due to the Air Force's fixed-price contract strategy.[67]

Projected follow-on programs edit

 
KC-Y Lockheed Martin LMXT refuelling a F-35
  • KC-Y Bridge Tanker Competition to replace KC-10.[68] Contenders: KC-46 and Lockheed Martin LMXT.
  • KC-Z (Next Generation Air-Refueling System (NGAS)) to replace KC-135Rs[69] with possible stealth characteristics[70][71][72]

Specifications edit

There were three different bids proposed in July 2010. EADS proposed the Airbus A330 MRTT/KC-30, Boeing proposed the KC-767, while the Antonov/US Aerospace team's bid was the An-112KC.

Specifications of KC-135 and tendered replacements[73][74][75][76][77][78][79][80][81]
KC-135R A330 MRTT / KC-30 KC-767 Advanced Tanker
(based on 767-200LRF)
An-112KC
Length 136 ft 3 in (41.5 m) 192 ft 11 in (58.8 m) 159 ft 2 in (48.5 m) 131 ft 5 in (40.1 m)
Height 41 ft 8 in (12.7 m) 57 ft 1 in (17.4 m) 52 ft (15.8 m) 53 ft 2 in (16.2 m)
Wingspan 130 ft 10 in (39.9 m) 197 ft 10 in (60.3 m) 156 ft 1 in (47.6 m) 166 ft 2 in (50.6 m)
Fuselage width 12 ft (3.66 m) 18 ft 6 in (5.64 m) 16 ft 6 in (5.03 m) 17 ft 1 in (5.21 m)
Fuselage height 14 ft (4.27 m) 18 ft 6 in (5.64 m) 17 ft 9 in (5.41 m)
Engines 4 x CFM International CFM56 2 x Pratt & Whitney PW4170, RR Trent 700 or
GE CF6-80 turbofans
2 x Pratt & Whitney PW4062 2 x Engine Alliance GP7277 or
Rolls-Royce Trent 972B- 84
Thrust 4 x 21,634 lbf (96.2 kN) 2 x 72,000 lbf (320 kN) 2 x 63,500 lbf (282 kN)
Passengers 80[82] 226–280[83] 190 300
Cargo 6 x 463L pallets 32 x 463L pallets 19 x 463L pallets 8 pallets
Maximum fuel capability 200,000 lb (90,700 kg)[84] 250,000 lb (113,000 kg) greater than 202,000 lb (91,600 kg) 139,000 lb (63,000 kg)
Max. takeoff fuel load Approximately 200,000 lb (90,700 kg)[84] 245,000 lb (111,000 kg)[73] greater than 202,000 lb (91,600 kg) 139,000 lb (63,000 kg)
Range 11,015 nmi (12,680 mi; 20,400 km)[84] 6,750 nmi (7,768 mi; 12,500 km) 6,590 nmi (7,584 mi; 12,200 km) 6,800 nmi (7,825 mi; 12,590 km)
Cruise speed Mach 0.79 (530 mph or 853 km/h) Mach 0.82 (534 mph or 859 km/h) Mach 0.80 (530 mph or 853 km/h)
Maximum speed Mach 0.90 (600 mph or 966 km/h) Mach 0.86 (570 mph or 917 km/h) Mach 0.86 (570 mph or 917 km/h)
Max. takeoff weight 322,500 lb (146,300 kg) 507,000 lb (230,000 kg) greater than 400,000 lb (180,000 kg) 364,000 lb (165,000 kg)
Max. landing weight 322,500 lb (146,300 kg),
normally 200,000 lb (91,000 kg)
396,800 lb (180,000 kg) 300,000 lb (140,000 kg)
Empty weight approx. 122,000 lb (55,000 kg) 263,700 lb (119,600 kg) 181,600 lb (82,400 kg) 164,000 lb (74,000 kg)

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • KC-X Tanker Modernization Program (FA8625-10-R-6600) – 2010 RFP version
  • KC-X Tanker Modernization Program (FA8625-10-R-6600-SpecialNotice) – 2009 RFP version
  • KC-X Aerial Refueling Tanker Aircraft (FA8625-07-R-6470) – 2007 RFP version

united, states, force, usaf, program, procure, next, generation, aerial, refueling, tanker, aircraft, replace, some, their, older, boeing, stratotankers, contest, production, contract, tankers, with, estimated, value, billion, contenders, replace, aircraft, we. KC X was the United States Air Force USAF program to procure its next generation aerial refueling tanker aircraft to replace some of their older Boeing KC 135 Stratotankers The contest was for a production contract for 179 new tankers with estimated value of US 35 billion The two contenders to replace the KC 135 aircraft were Boeing and EADS following the elimination of US Aerospace Inc from the bidding process 1 KC X programThe Boeing KC 46 Pegasus the winner of the KC X programGeneral informationProject forAerial refueling tanker aircraftIssued byUnited States Air ForceProposalsAirbus A330 MRTT Boeing KC 767 Antonov An 112KCPrototypesBoeing KC 767 Airbus A330 MRTTHistoryConcluded2011OutcomeRound 1 EADS Northrop Grumman KC 45 selected for production but result protested Round 2 Boeing KC 46 Pegasus selected for production no protestPredecessorsCommercial Derivative Air Refueling AircraftThe KC X program followed earlier attempts by the USAF to procure a new tanker A 2002 plan had the USAF leasing Boeing KC 767 tankers followed by a 2003 modification where the USAF would buy most of the KC 767 aircraft and lease several more of them Corruption investigations revealed wrongdoing in the award of the contract and the contract was canceled in 2005 setting the stage for the KC X program The USAF issued the KC X request for proposal in January 2007 2 then selected the Northrop Grumman EADS team and their Airbus A330 MRTT based tankers in February 2008 3 In June 2008 the U S Government Accountability Office sustained a protest by Boeing on the award of the contract 4 5 In July 2008 the U S Defense Department reopened the bidding process 6 but canceled the KC X solicitation in September 2008 7 In September 2009 the USAF began the first steps toward accepting new bids 8 In March 2010 Northrop Grumman announced that it would pull out of the bidding process 9 Despite Northrop Grumman s withdrawal EADS decided to remain in the ongoing competition alone 10 The Air Force selected Boeing s KC 46 bid on 24 February 2011 11 Contents 1 Background 2 Proposals 2 1 Initial competition 2 2 Expedited recompetition 2 3 Restarted competition 3 Projected follow on programs 4 Specifications 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBackground editThe initial plan was to lease Boeing KC 767 tankers on a sole source basis Boeing is the only American company with the requisite industrial capability to manufacture large body aircraft As such the KC 767 was selected in 2002 12 in 2003 Boeing was awarded a US 20 billion contract to lease KC 767 tankers to replace the KC 135 Led by Senator John McCain several US government leaders protested the lease contract as wasteful and problematic In response to the protests the Air Force struck a compromise in November 2003 whereby it would purchase 80 KC 767 aircraft and lease 20 more 13 However in December 2003 the Pentagon announced the project was to be frozen while an investigation of allegations of corruption by one of its former procurement staffers Darleen Druyun who had moved to Boeing in January 2003 was begun Druyun pleaded guilty of criminal wrongdoing and was sentenced to nine months in prison for negotiating a job with Boeing at the same time she was involved in contracts with the company 14 Additional fallout included the termination of CFO Michael M Sears who received a four month prison sentence 15 the resignation of Boeing CEO Philip M Condit 16 17 and Boeing paying 615 million in fines 18 In January 2006 the lease contract was formally canceled 19 Proposals editInitial competition edit The USAF then began the KC X tanker replacement program The DoD posted a request for proposal on 30 January 2007 2 The U S Air Force s main requirements are fuel offload and range at least as great as the KC 135 airlift capability ability to take on fuel in flight and multi point refueling capability 2 Two manufacturers expressed interest in producing this aircraft The team of Northrop Grumman and EADS Airbus proposed a version of the Airbus A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport MRTT based on the Airbus A330 200 20 Boeing proposed a version of the KC 767 based on the Boeing 767 21 The Seattle Times commented on the pre final designs in February 2007 Northrop has been viewed as the underdog with a heavier less fuel efficient aircraft The Airbus tanker would have a maximum fuel capacity of 200 000 pounds Northrop spokesman Randy Belote said Northrop s K 30 would tack on roughly 20 percent in fuel capacity 22 Both competitors submitted their tanker proposals before 12 April 2007 deadline 23 24 In September 2007 the USAF dismissed having a mixed fleet of new tankers from both Boeing and Northrop Grumman as being unfeasible because of increased costs from buying limited numbers of two types annually 25 In December 2007 it was announced that the KC X tanker would be designated KC 45A regardless of which design wins the competition 26 The DoD anticipated that the KC 45A would start to enter service in 2013 27 On 3 January 2008 the competitors submitted final revisions of their proposals to the U S Air Force 28 On 29 February 2008 the DoD announced the selection of the Northrop Grumman EADS s KC 30 29 On 11 March 2008 Boeing filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office GAO of the award of the contract to the Northrop Grumman EADS team Boeing stated that there are certain aspects of the USAF evaluation process that have given it grounds to appeal 30 31 The protest was upheld by the GAO on 18 June 2008 which recommended that the Air Force rebid the contract 4 5 Expedited recompetition edit On 9 July 2008 the Defense Secretary Robert Gates put the tanker contract in an expedited recompetition with Defense Undersecretary John Young in charge of the selection process instead of the Air Force 6 A draft of the revised RFP was provided to the contractors on 6 August 2008 for comments with the revised RFP to be finalized by mid August Proposals would be due in October 2008 and selection was to be done by the end of 2008 32 33 34 35 In mid August there was speculation that Boeing was considering a no bid position 36 On 21 August 2008 Boeing asked the DoD for an additional four months to submit a proposal centered on a larger aircraft 37 but they opposed further delay 38 Then on 10 September 2008 Defense Secretary Robert Gates decided that the new competition could not be fairly completed before the end of 2008 The DoD canceled the request for proposals and delayed the decision on when to issue another request until the new presidential administration was in office 7 39 40 Restarted competition edit nbsp Deputy Secretary of Defense William Lynn speaks about KC X at a press conference at the Pentagon on 24 September 2009 On 16 September 2009 Secretary Gates announced a renewed effort for the KC X program The selection process will be under the Air Force with a robust oversight role by the Office of the Secretary of Defense OSD to prevent a repeated failure 41 42 On 25 September 2009 the USAF issued a draft request for proposals RFP seeking comments for the official tanker replacement RFP 43 The RFP for a fixed price contract specified 373 requirements for the new plane and stated that the price of each tanker would be adjusted to reflect how much it would cost to operate over 40 years and how well it would meet various war fighting needs The initial contract would be for 179 aircraft for 35 billion 44 45 46 Northrop Grumman EADS team claimed the requirement was advantaging Boeing and threatened to withdraw from the competition on 1 December 2009 47 48 49 The fiscal 2011 Defense Department budget relegates 864 million in research and development money A contract award was expected in summer 2010 50 On 24 February 2010 the US Air Force released the revised request for proposal RFP for KC X The RFP calls for the KC X tanker to first fly in 2012 and aircraft deliveries to begin in 2013 51 On 8 March 2010 Northrop Grumman followed through with their earlier threat and decided to not submit a bid for the KC X tanker stating that they believe the new evaluation methodology favors Boeing s smaller tanker 9 52 EADS however announced on 20 April 2010 that it was re entering the competition on a stand alone basis and intended to bid the KC 30 with final assembly to take place in Mobile Alabama as planned under its prior teaming arrangement with Northrop Grumman 53 On 18 June 2010 the USAF announced that the decision would be delayed until November 2010 54 On 1 July 2010 a surprise third bidder consisting of the team of US Aerospace and the Ukrainian manufacturer Antonov announced its intention to bid in the competition The two firms announced that they would be interested in supplying up to three types of aircraft to the United States Air Force The types reportedly being offered are the four engined An 124 and a twin engined variant of the aircraft the An 122 The third aircraft to be offered is known as the An 112 55 56 The An 112 tanker is a version of the Antonov An 70 except with two jet engines This tanker was proposed in the team s bid 57 By 9 July 2010 bids from Boeing EADS and US Aerospace Antonov were submitted to the Air Force 58 However the Air Force rejected the US Aerospace bid for allegedly arriving 5 minutes after the deadline which US Aerospace disputes US Aerospace filed separate protests with the U S Government Accountability Office GAO on 2 August and 1 September 57 59 The U S Air Force proceeded with source selection while GAO investigated 60 The GAO dismissed U S Aerospace s protest on 6 October 61 In November 2010 the USAF mistakenly sent technical reviews of the other side s bids to each of the two remaining teams 62 At this time contract selection was postponed from late December 2010 until early 2011 63 Boeing and EADS submitted their final bids on 10 February 2011 64 On 24 February 2011 Boeing s KC 767 proposal was selected as the winning offer The tanker will be designated the KC 46A 65 EADS North America chairman Ralph Crosby declined to protest the award saying that Boeing s bid was very very very aggressive and carried a high risk of losing money for the company 66 Loren B Thompson of the Lexington Institute agreed that Boeing s bid was very aggressive due to the Air Force s fixed price contract strategy 67 Projected follow on programs edit nbsp KC Y Lockheed Martin LMXT refuelling a F 35KC Y Bridge Tanker Competition to replace KC 10 68 Contenders KC 46 and Lockheed Martin LMXT KC Z Next Generation Air Refueling System NGAS to replace KC 135Rs 69 with possible stealth characteristics 70 71 72 Specifications editThere were three different bids proposed in July 2010 EADS proposed the Airbus A330 MRTT KC 30 Boeing proposed the KC 767 while the Antonov US Aerospace team s bid was the An 112KC Specifications of KC 135 and tendered replacements 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 KC 135R A330 MRTT KC 30 KC 767 Advanced Tanker based on 767 200LRF An 112KCLength 136 ft 3 in 41 5 m 192 ft 11 in 58 8 m 159 ft 2 in 48 5 m 131 ft 5 in 40 1 m Height 41 ft 8 in 12 7 m 57 ft 1 in 17 4 m 52 ft 15 8 m 53 ft 2 in 16 2 m Wingspan 130 ft 10 in 39 9 m 197 ft 10 in 60 3 m 156 ft 1 in 47 6 m 166 ft 2 in 50 6 m Fuselage width 12 ft 3 66 m 18 ft 6 in 5 64 m 16 ft 6 in 5 03 m 17 ft 1 in 5 21 m Fuselage height 14 ft 4 27 m 18 ft 6 in 5 64 m 17 ft 9 in 5 41 m Engines 4 x CFM International CFM56 2 x Pratt amp Whitney PW4170 RR Trent 700 or GE CF6 80 turbofans 2 x Pratt amp Whitney PW4062 2 x Engine Alliance GP7277 or Rolls Royce Trent 972B 84Thrust 4 x 21 634 lbf 96 2 kN 2 x 72 000 lbf 320 kN 2 x 63 500 lbf 282 kN Passengers 80 82 226 280 83 190 300Cargo 6 x 463L pallets 32 x 463L pallets 19 x 463L pallets 8 palletsMaximum fuel capability 200 000 lb 90 700 kg 84 250 000 lb 113 000 kg greater than 202 000 lb 91 600 kg 139 000 lb 63 000 kg Max takeoff fuel load Approximately 200 000 lb 90 700 kg 84 245 000 lb 111 000 kg 73 greater than 202 000 lb 91 600 kg 139 000 lb 63 000 kg Range 11 015 nmi 12 680 mi 20 400 km 84 6 750 nmi 7 768 mi 12 500 km 6 590 nmi 7 584 mi 12 200 km 6 800 nmi 7 825 mi 12 590 km Cruise speed Mach 0 79 530 mph or 853 km h Mach 0 82 534 mph or 859 km h Mach 0 80 530 mph or 853 km h Maximum speed Mach 0 90 600 mph or 966 km h Mach 0 86 570 mph or 917 km h Mach 0 86 570 mph or 917 km h Max takeoff weight 322 500 lb 146 300 kg 507 000 lb 230 000 kg greater than 400 000 lb 180 000 kg 364 000 lb 165 000 kg Max landing weight 322 500 lb 146 300 kg normally 200 000 lb 91 000 kg 396 800 lb 180 000 kg 300 000 lb 140 000 kg Empty weight approx 122 000 lb 55 000 kg 263 700 lb 119 600 kg 181 600 lb 82 400 kg 164 000 lb 74 000 kg See also editFuture Strategic Tanker Aircraft competition for British replacement aircraft McDonnell Douglas KC 10 Extender from the Advanced Tanker Cargo Aircraft Program with a similar role but with a greater fuel capacity List of United States military aerial refueling aircraftReferences edit Censer Marjorie 7 October 2010 GAO clears Air Force in tanker case The Washington Post Retrieved 12 October 2010 a b c Air Force Posts Request for Proposals for Tankers United States Department of Defense 30 January 2007 Archived from the original on 8 June 2011 Retrieved 1 July 2011 Gates Dominic 29 February 2008 EADS Northrop trumps Boeing in Air Force tanker competition Seattle Times Retrieved 29 February 2008 a b Statement Regarding the Bid Protest Decision Resolving the Aerial Refueling Tanker Protest by the Boeing Company PDF Government Accountability Office 18 June 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 25 June 2008 Retrieved 18 June 2008 a b Gary L Kepplinger General Counsel 18 June 2008 B 311344 B 311344 3 B 311344 4 B 311344 6 B 311344 7 B 311344 8 B 311344 10 B 311344 11 The Boeing Company June 18 2008 a b Kruzel John J Pentagon Reopens Bidding on Tanker Contract Archived 15 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine US DoD 9 July 2008 a b DoD Announces Termination of KC X Tanker Solicitation Archived 13 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine US DoD 10 September 2008 Air Force Resumes Tanker Contest a b Ostrower Jon Northrop Grumman declines to bid on latest KC X RFP Flight International 9 March 2010 Avions ravitailleurs EADS va soumettre une offre en solo EADS concedes KC X contract award to Boeing Boeing Given Nod on Tanker Lease archived copy Military Aerospace Technology Magazine volume 1 issue 2 1 May 2002 Tanker Twilight Zone Air Force magazine February 2004 Vol 87 No 2 Cahlink George Ex Pentagon procurement executive gets jail time Archived 10 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Government Executive 1 October 2004 Palmer Kimberly Former Air Force acquisition official released from jail Archived 19 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine Government Executive com 3 October 2005 Holmes Stanley Boeing What Really Happened Archived 5 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Business Week Online 15 December 2003 Cashing In For Profit CBS 5 January 2005 Boeing to Pay United States Record 615 Million to Resolve Fraud Allegations US Department of Justice 30 June 2006 Majumdar Dave Boeing wins KC X tanker battle Archived 21 July 2012 at archive today AirForceTimes 24 February 2011 Northrop Grumman KC 30 marketing web site Northrop Grumman Archived from the original on 12 February 2007 Retrieved 16 February 2007 Boeing Offers KC 767 Advanced Tanker to U S Air Force Boeing 12 February 2007 Archived from the original on 14 February 2007 Retrieved 8 September 2008 Borak Donna 13 February 2007 Boeing Tweaks 767 for Tanker The Seattle Times Retrieved 8 September 2008 Boeing Submits KC 767 Advanced Tanker Proposal to U S Air Force Archived 21 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Boeing Northrop Grumman Submits KC X Tanker Proposal to U S Air Force Northrop Grumman Dual Sourcing Tanker Unfeasible Wynne Says ABC News 20 September 2007 Boeing Northrop vying for KC 10 service deal Archived 24 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Al com 7 December 2007 New tanker to bring increased capabilities to warfighter Archived 13 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine US Air Force 3 March 2008 Boeing Northrop Submit Final Tanker Proposals To USAF Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Week 4 January 2008 Northrop Wins Tanker Contract Beating Out Rival Boeing Wall Street Journal 29 February 2008 Boeing Protests U S Air Force Tanker Contract Award Archived 14 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Boeing 11 March 2008 Air Force officials respond to Boeing protest USAF 12 March 2008 Pentagon Issues New Tanker Bid Parameters Aviation Week 6 August 2008 Tanker Contest Officially Restarts Seattle Times 6 August 2008 Associated Press Pentagon Reopens Bidding For Aerial Tankers And Refines Expectations New York Times 7 August 2008 p C4 Pasztor Andy Boeing Says Bidding Changes Favor European Tanker Team Wall Street Journal 7 August 2008 p B3 Retrieved 1 July 2011 Butler Amy David A Fulghum 11 August 2008 Boeing Leaning Toward Not Re bidding KC X Aviation Week Hedgpeth Tanker Bid Moves Toward Endgame US Air Force General Urges Quick Action on Tanker Reuters 3 September 2008 The USAF s KC X Aerial Tanker RFP Canceled Defense Industry Daily 10 September 2008 Archived from the original on 17 September 2008 Hedgpeth Dana Pentagon Postpones Tanker Competition Washington Post 11 September 2008 p D1 Cole August J Lynn Lunsford Boeing Gets Reprieve In Fuel Tanker Contest Wall Street Journal 11 September 2008 p B1 Lyle Amaani 16 September 2009 SecDEF announces return of KC X program Washington DC USAF Retrieved 17 June 2016 Pentagon s new tanker rules exclude trade fight KC X Tanker Modernization Program Federal Business Opportunities Opportunities Drew Christopher 35 Billion Tanker Contract Opens New York Times 24 September 2009 Boeing Airbus tanker battle resumes today Alabama lawmakers say Pentagon tanker rules unfair Reuters UPDATE 2 Northrop threatens to boycott US tanker contest Northrop may withdraw tanker bid Politico Archived from the original on 20 May 2013 Northrop Grumman threatens to quit competition for tanker Archived 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Hill 1 December 2009 Defense Department budget request continues reform agenda Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Reed Jon USAF Sets KC X First Flight IOC Dates Defense News 25 February 2010 Wall Robert No Solo KC X Bid for EADS permanent dead link Aviation Week 9 March 2010 EADS North America intends to submit proposal for U S Air Force tanker Archived 26 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine EADS North America press release 20 April 2010 Air Force delays tanker contract John T Bennett In KC X Twist Ukrainian Aircraft Maker U S Aerospace Readying Bid Defense News Archived from the original on 21 January 2013 US company partners with Antonov in surprise KC X bid flightglobal 2 July 2010 Retrieved 2 July 2010 a b Trimble Stephen US Aerospace appeals against KC X exclusion blames USAF conspiracy Flight International 5 August 2010 Trimble Stephen USAF receives three proposals for KC X but Antonov team admits concerns Flight International 9 July 2010 Amy Butler U S Aerospace Files Second KC X Protest The McGraw Hill Companies Inc Retrieved 12 September 2010 permanent dead link Amy Butler 12 August 2010 KC X Bidder Dialogue Begins Despite Protest AVIATION WEEK Retrieved 13 August 2010 permanent dead link Bennett John T GAO Denies U S Aerospace Antonov KC X Protest dead link Defense News 6 October 2010 Muradian Vago USAF Gaffe Roils Tanker Contest Defensenews 19 November 2010 US Air Force delays tanker pick mixes up documents Reuters 19 November 2010 Gates Dominic Boeing EADS Submit Final Bids For Air Force Tanker Contract Seattle Times 11 February 2011 Boeing Wins U S Air Force KC X Program Archived 27 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Defense Update 24 February 2011 Gates Dominic Rival knocks Boeing s lowball tanker bid The Seattle Times 4 March 2011 Munoz Carlo Hill Questions Boeing Plant Closure Hearings Possible Archived 16 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Aol Defense 9 January 2012 KC Y KC 10 Replacement Global Security Retrieved 11 October 2019 Insinna Valerie 29 November 2016 KC Y Competition Still Under Consideration as Air Force Works to Define Future Tanker Fleet Defense News Sightline Media Group Trevithick Joseph 20 August 2018 Lockheed Martin Is Crafting New Stealth and Drone Tanker Concepts for the USAF The War Zone Hitchens Theresa 1 February 2023 Air Force wants its next gen tanker flying by 2040 Breaking Defense Breaking Media Trevithick Joseph 26 January 2023 Stealthy Tanker Transport Aircraft Concept Unveiled By Boeing The War Zone Recurrent Ventures a b KC 30 brochure NorthropGrumman com Archived 28 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine KC 30 Specifications Archived 24 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine NorthropGrumman com A330 200 specifications Archived 4 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Airbus KC 767 Advanced Tanker product card Archived 28 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine 767 Airplane Characteristics for Airport Planning Boeing Frawley Gerard The International Directory of Civil Aircraft 2003 2004 Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd 2003 ISBN 1 875671 58 7 A330 MRTT specification Archived 7 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Airbus Military An 112KC description wing com ua An112kc Aerospaceweb org Aircraft Museum C 135 Stratolifter KC 135 Stratotanker Northrop Grumman Integrated Systems KC 45 Tanker Archived 29 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b c Factsheets KC 135 Stratotanker Archived from the original on 24 October 2014 Retrieved 16 June 2016 External links editKC X Tanker Modernization Program FA8625 10 R 6600 2010 RFP version KC X Tanker Modernization Program FA8625 10 R 6600 SpecialNotice 2009 RFP version KC X Aerial Refueling Tanker Aircraft FA8625 07 R 6470 2007 RFP version Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KC X amp oldid 1177206928, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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