Why isn't the new Air Force 1 a 777?

I have no idea what you were talking about but it sounded really awesome.

Basically, when a tanker and its receivers are joining up for an air refueling session, one of them.....the tanker or the receivers....have to do the maneuvering to effect the join up into one formation to commence refueling ops. For fighter jets as receivers, 9 times out of 10, they will be the ones doing the maneuvering to join up with the tanker (receiver turn-on) because they have the far better maneuverability. Every now and again, the tanker will affect the rejoin (tanker turn on) because the tanker needs to know how to do them, for when their receiver is another heavy aircraft like them, where the tanker more often does the rejoin. All of this is prebriefed on who is going to do what, or it's otherwise made clear on initial radio contact, as the last thing you want is for both the tanker and the receivers to be doing maneuvering to effect a rejoin, which ends up being both entities maneuvering against one another like a mild dogfight, and no rejoin happening because each entity is messing up the geometry of the other (as i experienced once firsthand in Iraq).
 
The 747-8 and A380 are the only 2 civil jets in ADG VI, they both carry tons of operational restrictions that bars them from operating at many airports. From a purely operational standpoint, anything bigger than a 777-300ER doesn't really make sense. I'll bet the C-32s(757s) end up doing a lot more presidential flying than they have in recent years.
 
Impossible. All the jigs and tooling for the 757 was destroyed by Boeing to ensure no one ever got their hands on them and restarted the line.

A manufacturer would never do such a thing. Oh wait, Airbus did that and then reopened the A300-600F line when UPS placed an order.
 
I've had many "high aspect BFM setups" that were initially tanker-turn on rejoins.

This sounds like some of our more creative Air rejoins when the air assault/lift aircraft gives no updates to the Attack Weapons Team overhead and just pulls pitch out of the LZ on an random heading..

Nothing like being on the wrong end of the racetrack and doing a pitch back turn and dive to regain airspeed while over the Baghdad embassy so as to regain position on the lift guys.




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This sounds like some of our more creative Air rejoins when the air assault/lift aircraft gives no updates to the Attack Weapons Team overhead and just pulls pitch out of the LZ on an random heading..

And hence why they went lift track, instead of being good enough to go the attack route out of Rucker






:stir:
 
And hence why they went lift track, instead of being good enough to go the attack route out of Rucker






:stir:

We seem to get both ends of the barrel and very little of the middle ground unfortunately.


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And hence why they went lift track, instead of being good enough to go the attack route out of Rucker






:stir:

Hahahaha. Nice try. Tracks go by class rank and lift/assault were chosen by the top eight in my class. Hope the attack community liked our number 9 guy.

:stir::stir::stir:
 
I'm all about saving every ounce of fuel too, especially in my old steed that didn't have any to waste in country. Geometry is how you do that though. The missing ingredient with some tankers is being predictable. I take a radar lock out at range, see them right on the line on a long leg in left hand flow, and I am going to work the geometry to join them on the crosswind/short turn with auto throttles set at 250 knots. Then they inexplicably turn hard super early and now are pointed directly at me. I take an offset to build some turning room to once again use geometry, and then they hot nose me all the way to a high aspect pass. Yes, our aircraft have technically reached one another in a shorter amount of time, but now I have to do some crazy hiyaka turn, roll out either 2 miles in trail and have to run them down, or if I time it perfectly, I end up a couple miles abeam on the outside of the turn (unless I also go full AB and do a 6-7G join, not exactly fuel efficient). So it ends up taking longer, and requiring more fuel since I am now jockeying the throttles, than it would have had they just maintained their published track in a predictable manner. Granted not every crew is this way, but a lot of the guys who have just started their 30 day "deployment" didn't get it.
Believe me brother, I feel your pain. I've spent many a night watching a rejoin come together nicely on our TCAS display, only to ask, "Wait, why are you turning into them?" as the PF makes a sudden and unannounced turn. Almost every time the reply was, "I don't want to get too close to the AR track border" as I watch them roll out 5 miles parallel to it. Then they turn to me and explain how they've saved the fighters some time/gas by closing the distance faster. Formation geometry just isn't taught to tanker crews anymore.
 
Believe me brother, I feel your pain. I've spent many a night watching a rejoin come together nicely on our TCAS display, only to ask, "Wait, why are you turning into them?" as the PF makes a sudden and unannounced turn. Almost every time the reply was, "I don't want to get too close to the AR track border" as I watch them roll out 5 miles parallel to it. Then they turn to me and explain how they've saved the fighters some time/gas by closing the distance faster. Formation geometry just isn't taught to tanker crews anymore.

Funny thing is that they don't even need to go outside the AR track, they literally just need to not do weird bananas turns that don't make sense, in various directions, and generally in the direction of severe thunderstorms. It is readily apparent that they have no understanding of formation flying or rejoins. I still love them though……….especially when their hose doesn't rupture mid tanking.
 
Funny thing is that they don't even need to go outside the AR track, they literally just need to not do weird bananas turns that don't make sense, in various directions, and generally in the direction of severe thunderstorms. It is readily apparent that they have no understanding of formation flying or rejoins. I still love them though……….especially when their hose doesn't rupture mid tanking.

The drogue unit on the -135 was most definitely an afterthought. Most probe-equipped fighters dislike the -135 greatly, with its smaller basket and hose that has to be kept in an S in order to keep fuel flowing.

In the USN Vipers, you guys ever get the chance to refuel with boom-AR using the receptacle?
 
No, though it would be an interesting experience if we did.

Like I mentioned, I like the flow of a -135 compared to the rest. Once you have the muscle memory, it isn't hard by any means, and actually it is a pretty easy basket to get plugged into (its heavy and doesn't move a lot unless in an AFG thunderstorm). Staying in is the hard part. Quick power off at contact, and then a bunch of power back on to catch it, then a little power back off to stabilize. Then you just stare at the knuckle and keep it over the inboard right motor and you are pretty much in position. Some guys use the outboard right, but that doesn't do it for me. Neither does "just flying form with the tanker". That last category is just straight lying………you have a tolerance of about 2 feet of travel in any direction before you disconnect or rip off a probe………it probably sounds cool to those types to tell such a lie, but it isn't something you can actually do without a more precise point of reference.
 
No, though it would be an interesting experience if we did.

Like I mentioned, I like the flow of a -135 compared to the rest. Once you have the muscle memory, it isn't hard by any means, and actually it is a pretty easy basket to get plugged into (its heavy and doesn't move a lot unless in an AFG thunderstorm). Staying in is the hard part. Quick power off at contact, and then a bunch of power back on to catch it, then a little power back off to stabilize. Then you just stare at the knuckle and keep it over the inboard right motor and you are pretty much in position. Some guys use the outboard right, but that doesn't do it for me. Neither does "just flying form with the tanker". That last category is just straight lying………you have a tolerance of about 2 feet of travel in any direction before you disconnect or rip off a probe………it probably sounds cool to those types to tell such a lie, but it isn't something you can actually do without a more precise point of reference.
When probe and drogue goes wrong. This was with an F-35 out of MCAS Yuma. He left his probe tip in the basket too. Waaaaay too easy to get a class B with these new jets.
 

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haha nice, yeah I have seen a number of baskets make it back to the boat, to be hung over the unlucky/untalented aviator's ready room chair, only to be reclaimed by the USAF a few days later. I'd imagine ripping a probe is a bigger deal on the -35 for sure.
 
haha nice, yeah I have seen a number of baskets make it back to the boat, to be hung over the unlucky/untalented aviator's ready room chair, only to be reclaimed by the USAF a few days later. I'd imagine ripping a probe is a bigger deal on the -35 for sure.

See that the USMC has made a tanker fit for the V-22? Apparently certed for F/A-18, AV-8, F-35, and CH-53 receivers.

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See that the USMC has made a tanker fit for the V-22? Apparently certed for F/A-18, AV-8, F-35, and CH-53 receivers.

Probably at least as un-fun as tanking off a KC-130 in the Hornet. 217 knots IAS, plus prop wash and lightweight MPRS style pods/baskets. Not exactly the ideal regime to tank. Though that was my first tanking experience as a RAG student and it went ok, so I suppose it couldn't have been that hard.
 
I simply can't see what that's not at least a little fixed-wing.

Freaking Feds and Congressmen. :(
 
haha nice, yeah I have seen a number of baskets make it back to the boat, to be hung over the unlucky/untalented aviator's ready room chair, only to be reclaimed by the USAF a few days later. I'd imagine ripping a probe is a bigger deal on the -35 for sure.
To be fair to the receiver pilot, it was his first AR attempt in the -35. According to the USAF -35 pilots I've spoken to, the jet has a "refuel" mode that changes the control sensitivity considerably, causing many to actually over control while they're getting used to it. My boom operator's directions on the radio drive me to believe that's exactly what happened with the student.
 
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