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Air Force News

Air Force RC-135 fleet to fly with new engines

Released: Jun 1, 1998


by Chuck Klasek
Oklahoma City Air Logistics Center Public Affairs

TINKER AIR FORCE BASE, Okla. (AFNS) -- It could be argued that sometimes the best ideas are ones where benefits extend well beyond their original goals. In the case of one Air Force reconnaissance aircraft, the RC-135, the benefits of an engine redesign are even greater than the original sister platform -- the KC-135R tanker.

The Air Force wanted the program for some time, according to Capt. Carlin Heimann, the RC-135 re-engining program manager here. Although funding was not made available until fiscal 1996, the effort was necessary because of the aircraft's unique mission.

"The RC-135 accomplishes a critical real-time intelligence and information-gathering mission that no other system in the U.S. Air Force inventory can cover," Heimann said. "Re-engining these planes ensures that the RC-135s will be able to efficiently accomplish that mission well into the 21st century."

In the program, managed by Tinker's C/KC-135 Management Directorate and accomplished by Boeing Aircraft, Wichita, Kan., the four current Pratt & Whitney TF-33 engines are to be replaced by the F108 engine, which also powers the KC-135R.

Installation of the new engines involves modifications to the basic airframe, Heimann said. New engine struts, engine cowling/ducting, fire detection and suppression systems, beefed up landing gear and wing, plus revisions to cockpit controls and displays are just the beginning.

First among the unique modifications is the method used to start the RC's engines. Most jets have as part of their internal equipment a small jet motor known as an Auxiliary Power Unit, or APU.

The APU provides electrical power to the aircraft when the engines aren't running, plus bleed air to start the engines when needed. The RC-135 has no room for an APU on board, so a Jet Fuel Starter, or JFS, will be installed on the No. 3 engine and used to start the aircraft when ground power is not available.

Also part of the re-engining process is supplying electrical power to the RC-135's systems.

"When the tankers are modified, they have 45 kVA generators installed," Heimann said. "Since RC-135s require 75/90 kVA generators, this drives significant differences to wiring harnesses, the engine strut making it different from the tanker variant and other areas in order to accommodate wiring and associated parts. A lot of 'up front' engineering work was necessary to design these systems to accommodate the increased power supply."

The extensive electronics suite on the RC-135 requires higher cooling capabilities than most aircraft, and this also must be considered in re-engining. To accommodate this, an extra bleed air stage is being added to the F108 engines for the RC-135.

These changes will provide increased benefits for both the Air Force and the American taxpayer, according to Heimann. Other benefits include:

-- Increased fuel efficiency (greater range with less cost and greater time-on-station than the TF33-engined RC-135).

-- Less manpower to maintain.

-- Increased thrust over the TF33. This allows for shorter take-off rolls and access to more runways throughout the world.

-- Less noise and air pollution than its predecessors.

An estimated $1.5 billion in life-cycle cost savings for the re-engined platform is probable according to a General Accounting Office report.

Heimann said that the modification for each aircraft is expected to take approximately five months to complete. The first aircraft will enter the program in August. The final plane is expected to complete the program in fiscal 2002. (Courtesy of Air Force Materiel Command News Service)

RELATED SITES

* KC-135 Stratotanker
* Air Force Materiel Command
* Tinker Air Force Base, Okla.