The
Boeing (formerly
McDonnell Douglas)
C-17
Globemaster III is a large military
transport aircraft. The C-17 was developed
for the
United States Air
Force from the 1980s to the early 1990s by McDonnell Douglas.
The aircraft carries on the name of two previous United States
military cargo aircraft, the
C-74
Globemaster and the
C-124
Globemaster II. The C-17 is used for rapid
strategic airlift of troops and
cargo to
main operating
bases or
forward operating
bases throughout the world. It has the ability to rapidly
deploy a combat unit to a potential battle area and sustain it with
on-going supplies. The C-17 is also capable of performing tactical
airlift,
medical evacuation and
airdrop missions.
C-17 fact sheet. US Air Force, October
2008.
The C-17
is operated by the US Air Force, the United Kingdom
, Australia, Canada
, NATO
and Qatar
, while the
United Arab
Emirates
has placed orders.
Development
Background
In the 1970s, the US Air Force began looking for a replacement for
the
C-130 Hercules tactical
airlifter. The
Advanced
Medium STOL Transport (AMST) competition was held, with
Boeing proposing
the
YC-14, and
McDonnell Douglas proposing the
YC-15. Though both entrants exceeded
specified requirements, the AMST competition was canceled before a
winner had been selected. The Air Force subsequently started the
C-X program to develop a larger AMST with longer range to augment
its strategic airlift.
By 1980, the USAF found itself with a large fleet of aging
C-141 Starlifter cargo aircraft.
Compounding matters, USAF historically never possessed sufficient
strategic airlift capabilities to fulfill its airlift requirements.
The USAF set mission requirements and released a request for
proposals (RFP) in October 1980. McDonnell Douglas elected to
develop a new aircraft using the YC-15 as the basis. Boeing bid an
enlarged version of its AMST YC-14. Lockheed submitted a C-5 based
design and an enlarged C-141 design. McDonnell Douglas was selected
to build its proposed aircraft on 28 August 1981, by then
designated C-17. The new aircraft differed in having swept wings,
increased size, and more powerful engines. This would allow it to
perform all work performed by the C-141, but to also fulfill some
of the duties of the
C-5 Galaxy, freeing
the C-5 fleet for larger outsize cargo.
Design phase
Development continued until December 1985 when a full-scale
production contract was signed for 210 aircraft. Development
problems and limited funding caused delays in the late 1980s.
Questions were also raised about more cost-effective alternatives
during this time. In April 1990, Defense Secretary
Dick Cheney reduced the order from 210 to 120
aircraft.
The C-17's maiden flight was on 15 September
1991 from the McDonnell Douglas west coast plant in Long Beach,
California
, about a year behind schedule. The first aircraft
(T-1) and five more production models (P1-P5) participated in
extensive flight testing and evaluation at Edwards Air
Force Base
. The C-17 received the "Globemaster III"
name in early 1993. In late 1993, the DoD gave the contractor two
years to solve production and cost overrun problems or face
termination of the contract after the delivery of the fortieth
aircraft. By accepting the 1993 terms, McDonnell Douglas incurred a
loss of nearly
US$1.5 billion
on the development phase of the program.
In April 1994, the C-17 program was still experiencing cost
overruns, and did not meet weight, fuel burn, payload and range
specifications. Airflow issues caused problems with parachutes and
there were other technical problems with mission software, landing
gear, etc. A July 1994 GAO document revealed that to justify
investing in the C-17 rather than in the C-5, Air Force and DoD
studies from 1986 and 1991 had claimed that the C-17 could use
6,400 more runways (outside the US) than the C-5. It was later
discovered that this study had only considered the runway
dimensions, but not their strength or Load Classification Numbers
(LCN). The C-5 has a lower LCN than the C-17, although the US Air
Force places both in the same broad Load Classification Group
(LCG). When considering runway dimensions and their load ratings,
the C-17's worldwide runway advantage over the C-5 shrank from
6,400 to 911 airfields. However, the C-17's ability to use lower
quality, austere airfields was not considered.
A January 1995 GAO report revealed that while the original C-17
budget was US$41.8 billion for 210 aircraft, the 120 aircraft
already ordered at that point had already cost US$39.5 billion. In
March 1994, the U.S. Army had decided it no longer needed the
Low Altitude
Parachute Extraction System (LAPES) delivery that the C-17 was
supposed to provide, feeling that the capability of the C-130
Hercules was sufficient. It was decided not to conduct C-17 LAPES
training beyond the testing of a LAPES delivery. There were still
airflow problems making it impossible for the C-17 to meet its
original airdrop requirements. A February 1997 GAO Report revealed
that a C-17 with a full payload could not land on wet runways, for
simulations suggested was required.
By the mid-1990s, most of the problems had been resolved. The first
C-17 squadron was declared operational by the U.S. Air Force in
January 1995. In 1996, DoD ordered another 80 aircraft for a total
of 120. In 1997 McDonnell Douglas merged with its former
competitor, Boeing. In 1998, the order was increased to 134 units
and in August 2002 to 180.
Recent developments
In October 2007, 190 C-17s were on order to the USAF and Boeing had
purchased parts for 30 new C-17s at its own expense in hopes that
Congress will approve the funds requested. Fifteen C-17s are
earmarked in a FY2008 War Supplemental that Congress passed and was
signed into law in June 2008. These funds extended production from
August 2009 to August 2010. On 6 February 2009, Boeing was awarded
a contract for 15 additional C-17s for US$2.95 billion, thus
pushing total C-17s on contract to the USAF to 205. On 6 April 2009
US Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates
announced that there would be no more C-17s ordered beyond the 205
planned. This announcement may have been a bit early because a
month later in May, a war funding bill was put forward that
requested an additional US$2.2bn for up to 8 more aircraft. And on
June 12, 2009 the
House Armed Services Air and Land Forces Subcommittee added 17
C-17s to the authorized force level.
In November 2009, 205 C-17s are on contract with the USAF.
Potential C-17 contracts yet to be awarded are one for the war
funding bill for 8 aircraft and a contract for 10 aircraft once
differences are resolved between the Senate and House over the FY
2010 DOD budget. That would bring total C-17s contracted to 223 if
8 from the war supplemental bill and 10 from the FY 2010 DOD budget
were counted.
Design

The inside of a C-17
In recent years the size and weight of U.S. mechanized firepower
and equipment have grown, which has significantly increased air
mobility requirements, particularly in the area of large or heavy
outsize cargo. The C-17 can airlift such cargo fairly close to a
potential battle area.
The C-17
is powered by four fully reversible,
F117-PW-100 turbofan engines (the Department of
Defense
designation for the commercial Pratt and Whitney
PW2040, used on the Boeing 757).
Each engine is rated at 40,400 lb
f (180 kN) of
thrust. The thrust reversers direct the flow
of air upward and forward. This reduces the probability of
foreign object damage and provides
reverse thrust capable of backing the aircraft. Additionally, the
C-17's thrust reversers can be used in flight at idle-reverse for
added drag in maximum-rate descents.

C-17 landing, showing its landing
gear.
The aircraft requires a crew of three (pilot, copilot, and
loadmaster) for cargo operations. Cargo is loaded through a large
aft door that accommodates both rolling stock (trucks, armored
vehicles, trailers, etc.) and palletized cargo. The cargo floor has
rollers (used for palletized cargo) that can be flipped to provide
a flat floor suitable for rolling stock. One of the larger pieces
of rolling stock that this aircraft can carry is the 70-ton
M1 Abrams tank.
Maximum payload capacity of the C-17 is 170,900 lb
(77,500 kg), and its
maximum
Takeoff Weight is 585,000 lb (265,350 kg). With a
payload of 160,000 lb (72,600 kg) and an initial cruise
altitude of 28,000 ft (8,500 m), the C-17 has an unrefueled
range of approximately 2,400 nautical miles (4,400 km) on the
first 71 units, and 2,800 nautical miles (5,200 km) on all
subsequent units—which are extended-range models using the sealed
center wing bay as a fuel tank. These units are informally referred
to by Boeing as the
C-17 ER. The C-17 cruise speed
is approximately 450 knots (833 km/h) (0.76 Mach). The C-17 is
designed to airdrop 102
paratroopers and
their equipment.
The C-17 is designed to operate from runways as short as
3,500 ft (1,064 m) and as narrow as 90 ft (27 m). In
addition, the C-17 can operate out of unpaved, unimproved runways
(although there is the increased probability of damage to the
aircraft). The thrust reversers can be used to back the aircraft
and reverse direction on narrow taxiways using a three-point (or in
some cases, multi-point) turn maneuver.
Operational history
United States Air Force
The first
production model was delivered to Charleston Air
Force Base
, South
Carolina
on 14 July
1993. The first squadron of C-17s, the
17th Airlift Squadron, was declared
operationally ready on 17 January 1995. The C-17 has broken 22
records for oversized payloads. The C-17 was awarded US aviation's
most prestigious award, the
Collier
Trophy in 1994.

A USAF C-17 during takeoff
The Air Force originally programmed to buy a total of 120 C-17s,
with the last one being scheduled for delivery in November 2004.
The fiscal 2000 budget funded another 14 aircraft, primarily for
Air Mobility Command (AMC)
support of the
United States Special
Operations Command (USSOCOM).
Basing of the original 120 C-17s was with
the 437th Airlift Wing and
315th Airlift Wing at Charleston
AFB, South Carolina, the 62d Airlift
Wing and 446th Airlift Wing
at McChord Air
Force Base
, Washington (first aircraft arrived in July 1999),
the Air Education and
Training Command's (AETC) 97th Air Mobility Wing at Altus
AFB
, Oklahoma, and the Air Mobility Command-gained 172d Airlift Wing of the Mississippi Air National
Guard at Jackson-Evers International
Airport
/ANGB, Mississippi. Although
operationally-gained by the
Air
Mobility Command, the C-17 aircraft assigned to the 172 AW are
the only C-17s strictly under direct control of the
Air National Guard (ANG).
Basing of
the additional 13 aircraft went to the 305th Air Mobility Wing and 514th Air Mobility Wing at McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey;
the 3d Wing and 176th
Wing at Elmendorf Air Force Base
, Alaska; 15th Airlift
Wing and 154th Wing at Hickam Air
Force Base
, Hawaii; and 60th
Air Mobility Wing and 349th
Air Mobility Wing at Travis Air Force Base
, California. An additional 60 units were
ordered in May 2002.

A C-17 lands at Ramstein Air Base,
Germany, after dropping humanitarian food rations over
Afghanistan.
In FY
2006, eight C-17s were delivered to March Joint
Air Reserve Base
, California. Although operationally-gained
by the
Air Mobility Command,
these C-17s are the only aircraft strictly under direct control of
the
Air Force Reserve
Command (AFRC).
In 2007,
Congress
appropriated funds for 10 additional USAF C-17s, bringing the total
planned fleet size (on order + delivered) to 190.
Additional aircraft
were subsequently assigned to Dover Air Force Base
, Delaware which had previously been strictly
equipped with C-5 Galaxy
aircraft.
The C-17
have been and continue to deliver military
goods and humanitarian aid during
Operation Enduring
Freedom in Afghanistan
as well as Operation Iraqi
Freedom in Iraq
.
On 26
March 2003, fifteen USAF C-17s participated in the biggest combat
airdrop since the United States invasion of
Panama in December 1989: the night-time airdrop of 1,000
paratroopers from the 173rd
Airborne Brigade occurred over Bashur, Iraq
. It
opened the northern front to combat operations and constituted the
largest formation airdrop carried out by the United States since
World War II.
A C-17 also accompanies the
President of the United
States on his visits to both domestic and foreign arrangements,
consultations, and meetings. The C-17 is used to transport the
Presidential
Limousine and security detachments.
USAF C-17s have also been used to assist US allies transport
military equipment, including Canadian armored vehicles to
Afghanistan in 2003 and the redeployment of Australian forces in
Australia and the Solomon Islands during the
Australian-led military deployment to East
Timor in 2006. In late September and early November 2006, USAF
C-17s flew 15
Canadian Forces
Leopard C2 tanks from Kyrgyzstan into
Kandahar in support of the Afghanistan NATO mission.
There has been debate regarding follow-on orders for the C-17, with
the Air Force requesting line shutdown, and members of
Congress attempting to reinstate
production. Furthermore, in
FY2007, the
Air Force requested $1.6 billion to deal with what it termed
"excessive combat use" on operational airframes.
However, in testimony before a House of Representatives
subcommittee on air and land forces, General
Arthur Lichte, USAF, the Commander of
Air Mobility Command indicated
extending production to another 15 aircraft, bringing the total to
205. Pending on the delivery of the results of two studies in 2009,
Lichte opines that the Air Force may eventually have to keep the
production line open for purchase of even more C-17s to satisfy
airlift requirements. In February 2009 the USAF ordered 15 more
C-17s which will bring its total to 205.
United Kingdom
Boeing
has actively marketed the C-17 to many European nations including
Belgium
, Germany
, France
, Italy
, Spain
and the
United
Kingdom
. Of these, the UK was seen as the most
likely customer given its increasingly expeditionary military
strategy and global commitments. The
Royal Air Force has established an aim of
having interoperability and some weapons and capabilities
commonality with the
United
States Air Force. The UK's 1998
Strategic Defence Review identified
a requirement for a strategic airlifter. The Short-Term Strategic
Airlift (STSA) competition commenced in September of that year,
however tendering was canceled in August 1999 with some bids
identified by ministers as too expensive (including the
Boeing/
BAe C-17 bid) and others
unsuitable. The project continued, with the C-17 seen as the
favorite. In the light of continuing delays to the
EADS A400M program, the UK
Defence Secretary,
Geoff Hoon, announced in May 2000 that
the RAF would lease four C-17s at an annual cost of
£100 million from Boeing for an initial seven
years with an optional two year extension. At this point the RAF
would have the option to buy the aircraft or return them to Boeing.
The UK committed to upgrading the C-17s in line with the USAF so
that in the event of their being returned to Boeing the USAF could
adopt them.
The first
C-17 was delivered to the RAF at Boeing's Long Beach facility on 17
May 2001 and flown to RAF Brize Norton
by a crew from No. 99 Squadron which had previously trained
with USAF crews to gain competence on the type. The RAF's fourth
C-17 was delivered on 24 August 2001. The RAF aircraft were some of
the first to take advantage of the new center wing fuel tank.
The RAF declared itself delighted with the C-17 and reports began
to emerge that they wished to retain the aircraft regardless of the
A400M's progress. Although the C-17 fleet was to be a fallback for
the A400M, the UK announced on 21 July 2004 that they had elected
to buy their four C-17s at the end of the lease, even though the
A400M appeared to be moving closer to production. They also
announced there would be a follow-on order for one C-17, with
possible additional purchases later. While the A400M is described
as a "strategic" airlifter, the C-17 gives the RAF true strategic
capabilities that it would not wish to lose, for example a maximum
payload of 169,500 lb (77,000 kg) compared to the Airbus'
82,000 lb (37,000 kg).
The
Ministry of
Defence (MoD) announced on 4 August 2006 that they had ordered
an additional C-17 and that the four aircraft on lease would be
purchased at the end of the current contract in 2008.
A fifth aircraft was
delivered on 22 February 2008 and reported for duty on 7 April 2008
at Brize Norton
air base
in Oxfordshire.
Due to fears that the A400M may suffer further delays, the MoD
announced in 2006, that it planned to acquire three more C-17s (for
a total of eight) with delivery in 2009-2010. On 26 July 2007,
Defence Secretary
Des Browne announced
that the MoD intends to order a sixth C-17 to boost operations in
Iraq and Afghanistan. On 3 December 2007, the MoD announced a
contract with Boeing for a sixth C-17, which was handed over to the
RAF on 11 June 2008.
In RAF service the C-17 has not been given an official designation
(e.g., C-130J referred to as Hercules C4 or C5) due to its leased
status, but is referred to simply as the C-17 or "C-17A
Globemaster".
Australia
The
Royal Australian Air
Force (RAAF) began investigating options to acquire heavy lift
transport aircraft for strategic transport in 2005. In late 2005
the then
Minister for
Defence Robert
Hill stated that the
Australian Defence Force was
considering such aircraft due to the limited availability of
strategic airlift aircraft from partner nations and air freight
companies. The C-17 was considered to be favoured over the A400M as
it was a "proven aircraft" and was already in production. One major
requirement from the RAAF was the ability to airlift the
Army's new
M1
Abrams main
battle tanks; another requirement was immediate delivery.
Though unstated, commonality with the USAF and the United Kingdom's
RAF was also considered advantageous. The aircraft for the RAAF
were ordered directly from the USAF production run, and are
identical to American C-17 even in paint scheme, the only
difference being the
national
marking. This allowed delivery to commence within nine months
of commitment to the program.
On 2 March 2006 the Australian Government announced the purchase of
three aircraft and one option with an entry into service date of
2006. The Australian Government's 2006–07 budget included funding
of
A$2.2 billion to fund the
purchase of three or four C-17s and related spare parts and
training equipment. In July 2006 a fixed price contract was awarded
to Boeing to deliver four C-17s for US$780m (AUD$1bn). Australia
also signed a US$80.7m contract to join the global 'virtual fleet'
C-17 sustainment program and the RAAF's C-17s will receive the same
upgrades as the USAF's fleet.
The Royal Australian Air Force took delivery of its first C-17 in a
ceremony at Boeing's plant at Long Beach, California on 29 November
2006.
Several days later the aircraft flew from
Hickam Air
Force Base
, Honolulu,
Hawaii
to Defence
Establishment Fairbairn, Canberra
, arriving on 4 December 2006. The aircraft
was formally accepted in a ceremony at Fairbairn shortly after
arrival. The second aircraft was delivered to the RAAF on 11 May
2007 and the third was delivered on 18 December 2007. The fourth
Australian C-17 was delivered on 19 January 2008. All the
Australian C-17s are operated by
No. 36
Squadron and are based at RAAF Base Amberley
in Queensland
. The squadron is working towards reaching
its full operational capability in mid 2011.
Australia's C-17s have supported ADF operations around the world.
Tasks have included supporting
Air
Combat Group training deployments to the United States,
transporting
Royal Australian
Navy Sea Hawk helicopters and
making fortnightly missions to the Middle East to supply Australian
forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The C-17s have also carried humanitarian
supplies to Papua New
Guinea
during Operation Papua New Guinea
Assist in 2007, supplies and South
African Puma helicopters
to Burma
in 2008
following Cyclone Nargis, and relief
supplies to Samoa
following
the 2009
earthquake
.
Canada

Canadian Forces C-17 (CC-177) at Lake
Front Airport, New Orleans
Canada
has had a
long-standing need for strategic airlift for humanitarian and
military operations around the world. The Canadian Forces (CF) had followed a pattern
similar to the Luftwaffe in using rented
Antonovs and Ilyushins for many of their needs, including
deploying the Disaster
Assistance Response Team (DART) to tsunami-stricken Sri Lanka
in 2005. The CF was forced to rely entirely on leased
An-124 Ruslan for a
deployment to Haiti
in 2003, as
well as a combination of leased Ruslans, Ilyushins and
USAF C-17s for moving heavy equipment into Afghanistan
. The Canadian Forces Future Strategic
Airlifter Project was initiated in 2002 to study alternatives,
including long-term leasing arrangements.
On 5 July 2006, the Canadian government issued a notice that it
intended to negotiate directly with Boeing for the purchase of four
airlifters. Then on 1 February 2007 Canada awarded a contract for
four C-17s with delivery beginning in August 2007. Like Australia,
Canada was granted airframes originally slated for the U.S. Air
Force, to accelerate delivery.
On 16 June 2007, the first Canadian C-17 rolled off the assembly
line at Long Beach, California and into the paint hangar for
painting and addition of Canadian markings including the national
logo and air force
roundel. The first
Canadian C-17 made its initial flight on 23 July.
It was turned over to
Canada on 8 August, and participated at the Abbotsford International
Airshow on 11 August prior to arriving at its new home base at
8 Wing, CFB
Trenton
, Ontario on August 12. Its first operational
mission was delivery of disaster relief to Jamaica
in the aftermath of Hurricane Dean. The second C-17
arrived at 8 Wing, CFB Trenton on 18 October 2007. The last of four
aircraft was delivered in April 2008. The C-17 is officially
designated
CC-177 Globemaster III within the
Canadian Forces. The aircraft are
assigned to
Canadian Forces
Air Command's 429 Squadron based at CFB Trenton.
NATO (Strategic Airlift Capability Program)
A number
of NATO countries signed a letter of
intent to purchase C-17s on 19 July 2006 at the 2006 Farnborough Airshow to participate in
the joint purchase and operation of C-17s within NATO
, a program
called the NATO
Strategic Airlift Capability. A further letter of intent
was announced on 12 September 2006 that included a few other
countries, some of which have since withdrawn.
The
present members are Bulgaria
, Estonia
, Hungary
, Lithuania
, the Netherlands
, Norway
, Poland
, Romania
, Slovenia
, the United States, as well as two Partners for
Peace countries Finland
and Sweden
.
The purchase is for two C-17s, and a third which is the US
contribution to the pool, which is operated in the same fashion as
the NATO
AWACS aircraft. The AWACS
aircraft are jointly manned by crew from NATO countries. The
Aircraft are based as Papa Air Base in Hungary.
On 14 July 2009, Boeing delivered the first C-17 under NATO's
Strategic Airlift Capability (SAC) program. The second and third
C-17s were delivered in September and October 2009.
Qatar
The Qatar Emiri Air Force operates two Boeing C-17s. Boeing
delivered Qatar's first C-17 on August 11, 2009 and the second on
September 10, 2009.
Future and potential operators
India
In June 2009, the
Indian Air Force
(IAF) selected the C-17 to fulfill its
Very Heavy Lift
Transport Aircraft requirement. If the deal is approved by the
Indian Defense Ministry, the C-17 would replace the
Ilyushin Il-76 as the largest heavy lift
transport aircraft in-service with the IAF. According to the Chief
of Air Staff
Air Chief Marshal
P. V. Naik, the IAF plans to induct ten C-17
Globemaster III aircraft. As of June 2009, the selection was being
reviewed by the Indian Defense Ministry, but an order has not been
placed.
According to Indian media report in October 2009, the Defense
Acquisition Council of India has "almost finalized" the US$2
billion deal with the United States for 10 C-17s. US Ambassador to
India,
Timothy J. Roemer, expressed optimism over the deal
and said that the United States was committed to expanding the
"strategic lift capability" of the Indian Air Force.
Commercial interest
In the mid-1990s, McDonnell Douglas began to market the C-17 to
commercial civilian operators, under the name
MD-17. Due to its high projected fuel, maintenance
and depreciation cost for a low-cycle military design in commercial
service, as well as a limited market dominated by the
An-124 and
A300-600ST, very little interest was
expressed. After McDonnell Douglas merged with Boeing, the
commercial version was renamed
BC-17. However, the
aircraft received no orders and Boeing stopped offering the
BC-17
for sale.
Potential commercial markets are for Saudi Arabia, China, and
commercial airlines suitable for heavy lifting of air freight and
midair refueling.
Others
During
the summer 2008 it was reported that the South Korea
had allocated funds for the purchase of three or
four C-17-class airplanes for use in supporting expeditionary
deployments.
In
February 2009, the United Arab Emirates
signed an agreement to purchase four C-17
airlifters.
Variants
- C-17A: The initial military airlifter
version.
- C-17A "ER": Unofficial name for C-17As with
extended range due to the addition of the center wing tank. This
upgrade was incorporated in production beginning in 2001.
- C-17B: Proposed tactical airlifter version.
The design includes double-slotted flaps, an additional main
landing gear on center fuselage, more powerful engines and other
systems for shorter landing and take-off distances. Boeing offered
the C-17B to the US military in 2007 for carrying the Army's Future
Combat System (FCS) vehicles and other equipment.
Operators

Current operators of the C-17
Globemaster are shown in dark blue and future operators in light
blue.

A training mission in Jan.
2007 over the Hawaiian Islands

A C-17 release a barrage of
flares.
The wing-tip vortices can be seen in the flare smoke behind
the aircraft.
- NATO

- United States Air Force:
185 total (71 C-17, 114 C-17ER) as of April 2009. Total on order is
205 (last C-17 will be delivered in FY 2010).
Deliveries
| 2009 |
2008 |
2007 |
2006 |
2005 |
2004 |
2003 |
2002 |
2001 |
2000 |
1999 |
1998 |
1997 |
1996 |
1995 |
1994 |
1993 |
1992 |
1991 |
| 6 |
16 |
16 |
16 |
16 |
16 |
16 |
16 |
14 |
13 |
11 |
10 |
7 |
6 |
6 |
8 |
5 |
4 |
1 |
|
Sources: C-17 Globemaster III Pocket Guide, Boeing IDS Major
Deliveries
Notable incidents

C-17 on the runway at Bagram Air Base,
Afghanistan on 31 January 2009 after landing with landing gear
retracted.
- On 10 September 1998, a US Air Force C-17 (AF Serial
No.96-0006) suffered a landing gear failure as it landed
in Vestmannaeyjar, Iceland, a 3,800 foot runway, to deliver
Keiko the whale. The aircraft suffered
damage in excess of $1 million. After receiving temporary repairs,
it was ferried to Iceland for further repairs.
- On 10 December 2003, a US Air Force C-17 (AF Serial No.
98-0057) was hit by a SAM after take-off from Baghdad,
Iraq. One engine was disabled and the aircraft returned for a safe
landing. The aircraft was repaired and returned to service.
- On 6 August 2005, a US Air Force C-17 (AF Serial No.
01-0196) ran off the runway at Bagram Air Base in
Afghanistan while attempting to land, destroying the airplane's
nose and main landing gear, at the time making it the most
extensively damaged C-17 to date. A Boeing recovery team spent two
months getting the aircraft ready to attempt a flight back to
Boeing's Long Beach production facility. The five day flight back
to the United States had to be performed by a test pilot, because
the temporary repairs done to the aircraft resulted in numerous
performance limitations. The aircraft repair was completed at Long
Beach in October 2006 and the aircraft has reentered normal
operations. The aircraft underwent the Block 16 upgrade in December
2007.
- On 30 January 2009 a US Air Force C-17 (AF Serial No.
96-0002 - "Spirit of the Air
Force") made a belly landing at
Bagram Air
Base
. As of 29 April 2009, the aircraft had
successfully flown out of Bagram AB and arrived at Nova Scotia for
an overnight stay after making several stops along the way. It was
limited to flying under 10,000 ft and a speed of no more than
250 knots. The aircraft has since been ferried back to Boeing's
plant in Long Beach, California for more permanent repairs. It is
expected to return to service once the repairs are completed.
Specifications (C-17)
See also
References
Notes
- "Boeing Delivers Canada's First C-17"
- "Multinational Alliance's 1st Boeing C-17 Joins Heavy
Airlift Wing in Hungary". Boeing, 27 July 2009.
- Kennedy 2004, p. 3-20.
- Norton 2001, pp. 12-13.
- Historical Realities of C-17 Program
- RL30685 "Military Airlift: C-17 Aircraft Program".
Congressional Research Service, 5 June 2007.
- GAO Testimony before the SubCommittee on Military
Acquisition
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External links