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Happy Birthday Herk….

Yes, my old plane fan chums… (did I sound English enough?)
The Herk is 50 today. With the “J” model still in production, I can’t think of another military aircraft to achieve this record.
(Beechcraft is still cranking out the Bonanza introduced in late 1947…but in comparing the Model 35 to the current A-36, only the wings have haven’t been changed).

SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE, Ill. (AFPN) — There is one hero that may not be the biggest or fastest, but for 50 years, has borne the U.S. standard as a welcome projection of both American will and American compassion throughout the world. In battle, this hero can pound the enemy from on high with munitions, electronic jamming or information warfare broadcasts. It can deliver forces to the fight, bring them a vast array of supplies and carry them home, wounded or well, when their duty is done. During the fight, it provides command and control, weather reconnaissance and even air refueling. But this warrior hero is also a key presence in humanitarian and disaster relief operations at home and abroad.

This hero is the legendary C-130 Hercules which has reached a 50-year milestone since its first flight Aug. 23, 1954, from Burbank to Edwards Air Force Base in California.

Gen. John W. Handy, commander of U.S. Transportation Command and Air Mobility Command, said the familiar aircraft is as important today as ever.

“As a career mobility pilot, I am convinced that the C-130 is one of the greatest aircraft ever built,” General Handy said. “The ‘Herc’ has earned its place in history through its enormous contributions to crisis response for 50 years. With our C-130 fleet and the dedicated active duty, Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve aircrews that fly them, we are a tremendous force multiplier in the global war on terrorism.”

With its first flight, a YC-130A prototype, tail No. 53-3397, inaugurated a half-century of continuous C-130 service to the Department of Defense. Test pilot Stanley Beltz and copilot Roy Wimmer used only 855 feet to make that first takeoff. Normally, an airplane with a gross weight of 100,000 pounds requires thousands of feet of runway. Mr. Beltz is said to have quipped: “She’s a real flying machine. I could land it crossways on the runway if I had to.”

Since that historic day, more than 2,200 C-130s in 70 variants to five basic models have been produced, and 676 are in service with the Air Force today. The Navy and Marine Corps fly C-130s, as do the armed forces of 66 other nations.

Testing and development of the new airlifter was rapid. Production introduced new technology including high-strength aluminum alloy for the wings and cargo floor and metal bonding and titanium alloys for the body of the aircraft and flap skins. Another new feature was the “all-round” vision flight deck.

The first C-130A became operational in December 1956, reporting for duty with Tactical Air Command to replace the far less capable Fairchild C-119 Flying boxcar. The C-130’s four Allison turboprop engines revolutionized aircraft performance, providing greater speed, range and takeoff. With a 33,810-pound payload at the time, the Herc could carry twice as much as the C-119. The C-130 could perform heavy equipment airdrops as well as airland operations. It was well suited as a tactical transport. Cargo loading was easier with the new aircraft’s rear-opening ramp instead of the side-door, steep ramp loading required by the World War II-vintage fleet.

In 1959, the Air Force completed its planned force of 12 C-130A squadrons — six in TAC, three in Europe and three for the Far East. Continuous improvement was the norm for the C-130 system. New external fuel tanks allowed the aircraft to fight heavy winds in flights across the ocean. The C-130B introduced more powerful engines and new propellers, added fuel capacity and beefed up landing gear. A lone C-130C, a modified “B,” demonstrated short takeoffs and landings. Twelve C-130Ds, modified from the original “A,” became “Ski-130s,” outfitted with ski landing gear to resupply Arctic expeditions. In early 1960, an “E” model entered the operational fleet; an updated “H” model followed in the 1970s. The “E” through “H” models are still in service today, and work will begin in 2007 on converting those models to meet the demands of modern aviation and streamline support through an avionics modernization program. With avionics upgrades and some changes to the engines, the number of basic C-130 models will be reduced to two, the C-130AMP and the C-130J.

The newest C-130 in the inventory, the “J” model, entered the Air Force inventory in February 1999, and since then, the Air Force received 34 more “Js.” The basic design remains true to the original, but adds 40-percent more range, flies 24-percent faster than previous models, can take off on shorter runways and has greater cargo and passenger capacity. Its new avionics will also allow for better data capability and control, and requires a crew of three rather than five.

Lt. Col. Mike Cassidy, chief of AMC’s Operational Programming Division, has 2,000 flying hours in the Herc, and almost 2,300 hours in other airlifters. He said the C-130 is without a doubt a special aircraft.

“Part of the attractiveness of the aircraft is you have to work the airplane hard sometimes, and you have to know how to work with it,” he said. “The other unique part is the close relationship with the ‘users,’ such as the Southern European Task Force Lion Brigade (at Vicenza, Italy), since we did a preponderance of their airdrop missions. The C-130 is all about the mission and the people who get that done together.”

One of the people who helped get C-130 missions off the ground is Master Sgt. Albert Mikolajczyk, a 23-year veteran maintainer who has worked with the several variations to the C-130 fleet. He is now assigned to the 22nd Air Refueling Wing at McConnell AFB, Kan., maintaining KC-135 Stratotanker refuelers.

“No other aircraft can do what the C-130 can. Name the location; it’s been there,” Sergeant Mikolajczyk said. “The C-130 will be flying long after other aircraft are in the ‘boneyard’ at Davis-Monthan (AFB, Ariz.), and the C-130 will be there to pick up their aircrews and bring them back home.”

Sergeant Mikolajczyk recalled an experience which speaks volumes. Recently deployed to the United Arab Emirates, he needed to be aeromedically evacuated. “It was an awesome feeling to be carried aboard a 1963 ‘E’ model I had worked on during my early days assigned to Little Rock AFB (Ark.),” he said.

The C-130’s combat record is an integral part of its distinguished history. The aircraft quickly earned its reputation as a tough aircraft for rough places. In the late 1950s, with Southeast Asia facing a communist take over, the Herc quickly became the armed services’ premier tactical airlifter. By late summer 1959, C-130 crews trained for Marine parachute assault operations in case Laos was invaded.

C-130s increasingly provided logistical support to the Army’s remote special operations camps, and the Herc proved itself with its ability to land and takeoff on short, unpaved runways. The heroics of C-130 crews flying Khe Sanh and An Loc missions are legendary. After the fall of Saigon, and the end of the war, C-130s were part of the American airlift armada, helping bring home 591 prisoners of war. A few C-130s also served as AC-130 gunships, and the Air Weather Service flew WC-130s as rainmakers over Laos, attempting to influence the seasonal monsoon rains to allied advantage. The Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Service first used HC-130s for command and control during search and rescue operations. And the Marine Corps flew the KC-130F, initially borrowing two C-130As from the Air Force and modifying them for air refueling. Those widely varying models remain in service.

And what a service the C-130 provides. From the 1991 Gulf War through the crisis in Kosovo to peacekeeping operations in Africa, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as humanitarian relief operations at home and around the world, the resilient C-130 answers the nation’s call.

Recently, C-130s have airlifted several Afghan battalions, national police, U.S. advisers and supplies into Shidand to help Afghanistan’s national government restore order to an area rife with factional fighting.

And in the United States, C-130s equipped with Modular Airborne Firefighting Systems are deployed to help combat wildfires in Western states, and WC-130s provided vital data as hurricane hunters over the Caribbean and Florida, collecting information for the National Hurricane Center.

These special duties, along with the daily tasks of deploying, supplying and redeploying joint service and allied forces throughout the world will build upon the C-130’s legacy of heroism as one of the premier, multirole aircraft in American history. (Courtesy of AMC News Service)

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By: EN830 - 24th August 2004 at 17:15

I remember being given the job of packing the butty boxes for the Spacey’s on the camp I did at Lyneham in the late 1970’s, they weren’t too impressed with the extra bits. The flying was good though 5 flights in total two backwards in VC10’s from Brize and the other 3 without hearing in the back of a fat albert. This was the year before the first one went back to Lockheed to be stretched. which we flew in, if I remember right it was XV223, I know that I have it my ATC log at home.

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By: Arm Waver - 24th August 2004 at 15:16

Fantastic work-horse.
Flew on an 8 and 1/2 hour day trip to Gib in one as a Spacey. The memory of holding on and peering out of the cockpit window on the landing at Gib as this poor cyclist realised that we were heading for him and his cycling rate increasing VERY noticably. Also the low pass over Wroughton on our return noting where an event had been held and the subsequent marks on the grass…
We had butty boxes then too. I’d forgotten about them…
Good old Fat Albert!
OAW

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By: Chiefy - 24th August 2004 at 14:58

Albert,
You are quite right the return butty boxes from the States were usually much better! They always seemed to contain a can of fizzy grape soda which was disgusting and was usually used for spraying your neighbour upon opening!

As you say: so many memories!

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By: ALBERT ROSS - 24th August 2004 at 14:40

Has the RAF scrapped some of them, I thought they were exchanged for the newer version and being refurbished by Marshalls at Cambridge.

Not all of the C-130Ks were exchanged for C-130Js.Some of the tankers were scrapped at Cambridge, as they were life-expired or had been over-stressed. It was not worth de-converting them to the transport role and replacing so many parts to extend their lives. Guess they were reduced to spares for the rest of the C-130K fleet.

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By: JDK - 24th August 2004 at 14:39

One of the world’s most important aircraft; and the one usually missed of the list of the true great world movers.

Here’s to the next 50 for the weightlifter. Great to see them still working at drops over Weston-on-the-Green (Is that an English enough place name for you John?)

Cheers

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By: ALBERT ROSS - 24th August 2004 at 14:36

I suspect the only way a Museum could get one, in the forseeable future, is to buy a basic wreck/carcass and rebuild it over time. The FAAM at Yeovilton once suggested that this method may be the only way that they get a Sea King.

Quite right – even the Sea Harrier in the FAAM is a composite airframe!

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By: ALBERT ROSS - 24th August 2004 at 14:34

Indeed happy birthday to the Fat Albert but I cannot share Albert Ross’ passion for riding in them! I left the RAF in 2000 and I would never, ever, willingly get in one again! I have spent too many uncomfortable hours/days down the back-end. If I was lucky I could beat the GE to get my hammock up in the best position but normally would have to make do with trying to get comfortable on top of some ground equipment! And don’t don’t get me started on the white boxes! (These contained your entire food for the day’s flight; usually an already stale sandwich, a bag of crisps and an apple.)

I didn’t say it was ‘comfortable’, just that I missed the experience! I fully share your sentiments but never thought the ‘butty boxes’ were that bad. However, if you went to the States or Canada, the return-leg ‘butty boxes’ were always much better! Ah, memories! :rolleyes:

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By: LN Strike Eagle - 24th August 2004 at 14:31

50 years of Hercs…..

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By: EN830 - 24th August 2004 at 13:52

I still don’t understand why even though the RAF has scrapped some, not one is being preserved in this country. 🙁
mmitch.

Has the RAF scrapped some of them, I thought they were exchanged for the newer version and being refurbished by Marshalls at Cambridge.

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By: stringbag - 24th August 2004 at 13:50

I suspect the only way a Museum could get one, in the forseeable future, is to buy a basic wreck/carcass and rebuild it over time. The FAAM at Yeovilton once suggested that this method may be the only way that they get a Sea King.

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By: Chiefy - 24th August 2004 at 13:32

The RAF will probably not offer any to museums or collections because they can still be sold for good money!

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By: duxfordhawk - 24th August 2004 at 12:40

I still don’t understand why even though the RAF has scrapped some, not one is being preserved in this country. 🙁
mmitch.

I wonder if any organisation requested one for there collection,They are in my view a very historic design and have been the best workhorse since the DC3 Dakota for the RAF and many other Airforces.
Long may they fly.

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By: mmitch - 24th August 2004 at 09:10

I still don’t understand why even though the RAF has scrapped some, not one is being preserved in this country. 🙁
mmitch.

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By: Chiefy - 24th August 2004 at 08:49

Indeed happy birthday to the Fat Albert but I cannot share Albert Ross’ passion for riding in them! I left the RAF in 2000 and I would never, ever, willingly get in one again! I have spent too many uncomfortable hours/days down the back-end. If I was lucky I could beat the GE to get my hammock up in the best position but normally would have to make do with trying to get comfortable on top of some ground equipment! And don’t don’t get me started on the white boxes! (These contained your entire food for the day’s flight; usually an already stale sandwich, a bag of crisps and an apple.)

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By: ALBERT ROSS - 23rd August 2004 at 21:04

Wonderful reliable plane, the Herk. Shame that the RIAT 50th Anniversary Meet wasn’t anywhere near the 25th celebrations! Have flown in many RAF examples all over the world from Lyneham, have done tanking with Phantoms in the Falklands, have tanked from Herks, Victors and VC-10s and have flown to air shows many times with the Falcons. Watched this workhorse put through its paces in so many rough strips with such ease.
Here is a shot I took of XV292 in its special scheme to commemorate 25 Years of RAF Service, taken over RAF Lyneham in May 1992 from the open ramp of another Herk. I left the RAF in 1993 and dearly missing my flights in these.

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