Australia's first C-130H has notches up 20,000 hours

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Grumpy Old Man
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Mighty H milestone
By FLGOFF Eamon Hamilton

Edition 4909, 31 May, 2007

THE LONG HAUL: Headed by CO WGCDR Paul Nicholas, 37SQN aircrew and ground crew line up in front of their “lucky number one”, C-130H A97-001, which has just clocked-up a record 20,000 hours flying time.
Photo by LAC Christopher Dickson

Australia's first C-130H has notched up a record for its kind – 20,000 hours of logged flying time.

A97-001 reached the milestone on May 7 in a tri-Service fashion, having been tasked with the Army’s Red Berets parachute display team at a Navy Fleet Air Arm air show in Nowra.

Back home at RAAF Base Richmond, the 37SQN ground crew – including painters – were quick to celebrate the achievement by applying some temporary nose-art above the Hercules’ crew entry door.

As well as noting the achievement in writing, the painters affixed two rows of medal bars to honour the aircraft’s history of service – including deployments to East Timor, Somalia and Operation Catalyst.

Few people at 37SQN were prouder to see the feat than the unit’s CO, WGCDR Paul Nicholas.

He’s shared an association with A97-001 since June 1988, when he first arrived at the aircraft’s former unit of 36SQN.

“This Herc has been our ‘lucky number one’,” WGCDR Nicholas said.

“We’ve won Rodeo and Bullseye international airlift competitions with it, and I can remember being on its crew for a flight to Antarctica (in 1989).

“In those 20,000 hours, it would have flown almost a million kilometres – and all of it done accident-free.

“It’s a great achievement for the Air Force’s Hercules aircrews and maintainers who have worked to reach this milestone, and we expect continued service from this airframe with 37SQN for years to come.”

A97-001’s story began in July 1978, when it was first taken on by a RAAF crew at the Lockheed plant in Marietta, Georgia.

Along with its sister-ship, 002, the aircraft arrived at RAAF Base Richmond on July 28, 1978.

It was crewed by SQNLDR Hugo Dreimanis, FLGOFFs Leigh Bearman, Peter Hansen and Greg Clynick, WOFF Tony Ryan, FSGT Jim Smith, SGTs Gus Winen and Brian McKay, and CPL Bill Blyth.

Delivery pilot Greg Clynick recalled the flight across the United States and to Australia as being “very routine and incident free” – setting some precedent for its first 20,000 hours of service with the Air Force.

A97-001 is the second ALG airframe to surpass the 20,000 hour mark this year. On March 27, 38SQN Caribou A4-228 flew its 20,000th hour on a night-time training flight, having been in service since 1965.
 

qwerty223

New Member
If I am not mistaken, ROC (Taiwan) has quite a number of X hours air frame, but the situation is not the same tho'
 

Rich

Member
I have flown on C-130s an awful lot. I'd rather fly on one of them then any other Military aircraft. The airplane has been flying for over 50 years and it must be our most successful production aircraft ever and currently serves in over 60 air forces, and, is still in production.

Tactical airlift, aerial tanker, command & control, Maritime patrol, Spec OPs, Search & rescue, Relief flights, Recce, airborne hospital, Antarctic support, Drone control, EW warfare, Weather recce, Gunship, the C-130 can do it all. We've even landed the thing on an aircraft carrier.

Pretty amazing aircraft.
 

Raptor.22

New Member
I have flown on C-130s an awful lot. I'd rather fly on one of them then any other Military aircraft. The airplane has been flying for over 50 years and it must be our most successful production aircraft ever and currently serves in over 60 air forces, and, is still in production.

Tactical airlift, aerial tanker, command & control, Maritime patrol, Spec OPs, Search & rescue, Relief flights, Recce, airborne hospital, Antarctic support, Drone control, EW warfare, Weather recce, Gunship, the C-130 can do it all. We've even landed the thing on an aircraft carrier.

Pretty amazing aircraft.
i agree, it is an amazing aircraft. the c-130 is the west's most popular and widely used military transport aircraft, and has been in production longer than any other aircraft type in history. the payload is really impressive, it can carry up to 92 troops, or 64 paratroops.

theres a lot of different types of c-130s. transport versions of the hercules utilized by the USAAF in the vietnam war were the c-130A, B, and E. the c-130B has the largest internal fuel capacity, a strengthened undercarriage and more powerful engines, driving four bladed propellers.

definately one of the most popular aircrafts ever. the four rolls-royce AE2100D3 turboengines are great. a 175,000 lb aircraft that can go 400 mph is pretty impressive:)
 
Found this video of a C-130 landing and taking off from the USS Forrestal in October 1963. Pretty amazing video! Shows how versatile the C-130s are.


link

link
 
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