No plans AFAIKThe carriers will carry four AEW helicopters as part of their standard air group. Buddy refuelling could be done, though I don't know of any plans for it.
No plans AFAIKThe carriers will carry four AEW helicopters as part of their standard air group. Buddy refuelling could be done, though I don't know of any plans for it.
Whilst as you say it's not a critical element at this stage, but as time goes on and the CVF gets used to its potencial having the ability to incorparate AAR will give mission planning staff options that might not be avalible. The Buccaneer overflight of Bleize in 72? at the limit of there endurance comes to mindThe requirement for an organic air-refueller is less critical with STOVL jets which don't bolt during landings. IIRC that was a complicating issue with the F-35C operating off of CVFs.
For the meantime, if the need is to extend range, then the current A2A refuelling options come into play including USAF, USN and USMC assets in a likely coalition scenario.
Agree on that, but the conops will be vastly diffrent.I expect a lot of lessons to be learned and exchanged between the Brits and USMC re optimizing F-35B capabilities.
I sort of assumed a conversion would be possible. Do you feel it is even necessary as I assume the patrol area will be reasonably close to the UK or allied airfields for most missions?The A330 can certainly be fitted with a boom. Australia operates boom-equipped A330s, France, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Singapore & S. Korea have ordered them, & the last I heard Qatar & a consortium of the Netherlands, Norway & Poland were negotiating to buy them. The UK is an oddity in having bought only hose-equipped A330s, & even odder in not fitting probes (which shouldn't be too difficult, with the main issue being placing, where the receptacle is badly placed for fitting a probe directly over it) to its aircraft fitted for receiving from booms.
Retrofitting some of the UK aircraft with booms would be entirely possible.
AirTanker even offered to foot the bill to convert the 5 airframes which aren't in the core fleet to have a boom, their intention being that chartering out boom AAR services is more profitable than using them as civilian airliners. We didn't take it up for some reason, but I don't know enough of the guts of the decision.I sort of assumed a conversion would be possible. Do you feel it is even necessary as I assume the patrol area will be reasonably close to the UK or allied airfields for most missions?
But it's all effectively one fleet. Another basket doesn't make it operationally and functionally any different in my opinion, it's another refuelling assembly true, but there's no real difference, not compared to adding a boom which would require a different training and spares pipeline to get an effective capability.We already have fleets within fleets. All our A330 MRTT have underwing hoses, but not all are fitted for a fuselage refuelling unit.
It's the mail reporting on the SAS so I'll believe it when it flies overhead...The Mail on Sunday has reported the UK will either purchase or lease CV22 Osprey to be used to transport SAS
Revealed, a new British weapon in the war on terror: 'Transformer' heli-planes to scramble SAS to fight IS in the UK* | Daily Mail Online
If true it would a great addition to UK forces, in addition to this role would a great asset if flown off the 2 x carriers.
Sorry mate its the mail and the article is typical of the mail as others have said I'll believe it when it actually happens.The Mail on Sunday has reported the UK will either purchase or lease CV22 Osprey to be used to transport SAS
Revealed, a new British weapon in the war on terror: 'Transformer' heli-planes to scramble SAS to fight IS in the UK* | Daily Mail Online
If true it would a great addition to UK forces, in addition to this role would a great asset if flown off the 2 x carriers.