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"This film tells the story of the "
Tankers," the
KC-135 aircraft that were used worldwide to refuel aircraft of the
Air Force and
Navy.
Combat stories of refueling over
Vietnam are related on camera by fighter pilots, bomber pilots, and famous generals."
US Air Force film SFP-1797
Public domain film from the
US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and one-pass brightness-contrast-color correction & mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/
3.0/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_KC-135_Stratotanker
The
Boeing KC-135 Stratotanker is a military aerial refueling aircraft. It and the
Boeing 707 airliner were developed from the
Boeing 367-80 prototype. The KC-135 was the US Air Force's first jet-powered refueling tanker and replaced the
KC-97 Stratofreighter. The KC-135 was initially tasked to refuel strategic bombers, but was used extensively in the
Vietnam War and later conflicts such as
Operation Desert Storm to extend the range and endurance of US tactical fighters and bombers.
The KC-135 entered service with the
United States Air Force (
USAF) in
1957; it is one of six military fixed-wing aircraft with over 50 years of continuous service with its original
operator. The KC-135 is supplemented by the larger
KC-10. Studies have concluded that many of the aircraft could be flown until 2040, although maintenance costs have greatly increased. The aircraft will eventually be replaced by the
Boeing KC-46 Pegasus...
Development
Background
Like its sibling, the commercial Boeing 707 jet airliner, the KC-135 was derived from the Boeing 367-80 jet transport "proof of concept" demonstrator, which was commonly called the "Dash-80". The KC-135 is similar in appearance to the
707, but has a narrower fuselage and is shorter than the 707. The KC-135 predates the 707, and is structurally quite different
from the civilian airliner. Boeing gave the future KC-135 tanker the initial designation
Model 717.
In 1954 USAF's
Strategic Air Command (
SAC) held a competition for a jet-powered aerial refueling tanker.
Lockheed's tanker version of the proposed
Lockheed L-193 airliner with tail-mounted engines was declared the winner in
1955. Since Boeing's proposal was already flying, the KC-135 could be delivered two years earlier and Air Force
Secretary Harold E. Talbott ordered 250 KC-135 tankers until the Lockheed's design could be manufactured
. In the end, orders for the Lockheed tanker were dropped rather than supporting two tanker designs. Lockheed never produced its jet airliner, while Boeing would eventually dominate the market with a family of airliners based on the 707.
In 1954 the Air Force placed an initial order for 29 KC-135As, the
first of an eventual 820 of all variants of the basic
C-135 family. The first aircraft flew in August
1956 and the initial production
Stratotanker was delivered to
Castle Air Force Base,
California, in June 1957. The last KC-135 was delivered to the Air Force in
1965...
The KC-135Q variant was modified to carry
JP-7 fuel necessary for the
Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird, segregating the JP-7 from the KC-135's own fuel supply (the body tanks carrying JP-7, and the wing tanks carrying
JP-4 or
JP-8)...
Replacing the KC-135
The Air Force projected that E and R models have lifetime flying hour limits of 36,
000 and 39,000 hours, respectively. According to the Air Force, only a few
KC-135s would reach these limits by 2040, when some aircraft would be about 80 years old. The Air Force estimated that their current fleet of KC-135s have between 12,000 to 14,000 flying hours on them-only 33 percent of the lifetime flying hour limit.
Between
1993 and
2003, the amount of KC-135 depot maintenance work doubled, and the overhaul cost per aircraft tripled. In
1996, it cost $8,400 per flight hour for the KC-135, and in
2002 this had grown to $11,000. The Air Force’s 15-year cost estimates project further significant growth through fiscal year 2017. KC-135 fleet operations and support costs are estimated to grow from about $
2.2 billion in fiscal year 2003 to $
5.1 billion (2003 dollars) in fiscal year 2017, an increase of over 130 percent, which represents an annual growth rate of about 6.2 percent...
In
February 2010, the US Air Force restarted the
KC-X competition with the release of a revised request for proposal (
RFP). After evaluating bids, the USAF selected Boeing's 767-based tanker design, with the military designation
KC-46, as a replacement in
February 2011...
- published: 11 Nov 2015
- views: 644