A
Aussie Digger
Guest
As I see it, RAAF's Caribou's and C-130H's are stuffed.Is there a need?
The C-130 takes over LAPES missions. Transport is supplemented by the MRTTs.
Every MRTT can carry more than 10 DHC-4 load. MRH-90s for shorter ranged and humanitarian missions from the new Canberra LHDs. let's not forget the C-17s.
The way I see it, the RAAF might just retire the lot and focus on C-130 replacement. Don't really see a need for caribou replacements.
RAAF requires additional airlift to be capable of meeting it's concurrent deployment requirements AND it requires new aircraft to replace existing capability.
It currently operates brand new C-17's and fairly new (less then 10 years old) C-130J-30's.
The options therefore are:
1. Retire the DHC-4 Caribous and C-130H without replacement (The C-17 is technically the replacement of the C-130H capability anyway and Chinooks can conduct the majority of DHC-4 missions, albeit at a higher cost).
2. Extend the life of the C-130H and DHC-4 through SLEP type programs and retain them in-service.
3. Buy additional C-130J's or C-130J-30's to replace C-130H and "make do" with existing helicopter resources to replace the DHC-4 capability or provide DHC-4 with a SLEP.
4. Buy additional C-17's to replace C-130H on a closer "one for one" basis.
5. Buy a new aircraft type (such as A400m or C-27J) to replace C-130H capability on something close to a "one for one" basis.
6. Buy a new aircraft (such as C-27J, C-235/295M, CH-47D/F Chinook or additional MRH-90) to replace DHC-4 capability on something close to a "one for one" basis.
7. Buy a new aircraft to replace C-130H, C-130J-30, DHC-4 fleets to allow for standardisation amongst a disparate aircraft fleet. (A C-27J Spartan for instance is rated as possessing somewhere in the vicinity of 85% of the capability of a C-130 Hercules).
My personal preferrence therefore would be to acquire additional C-17 aircraft to replace overall C-130 capability. An addition of 4-8 aircraft would provide an overall fleet of C-17 aircraft which would halve the current C-130 fleet in numbers, yet provide a significant boost in overall airlift capability (1x C-17 provides roughly 4x times the capability of a C-130H) and reduce the number of aircraft types in-service.
Our fleet of 12x C-130J aircraft, being quite new, should attract a reasonable price on the market, or on sale back to the manufacturer.
Combined with a C-27 acquisition to replace DHC-4 and "lower end" C-130 taskings this would allow for a flexible "hi lo" airlift fleet, expecially with new A330 MRTT "strategic airlift" (hi end) and additional CH-47D/F "Chinook" ("lo end") capability coming online in a few short years...