Boeing's
seemingly perpetually troubled KC-46A Pegasus tanker has
yet another major problem, its fuel system leaks excessively.
This comes nearly
a month after the U.S. Air Force made clear that it would not use its existing
examples for aerial refueling, their core mission set, except in an absolute
emergency. This was due to already serious existing issues,
especially with the complex Remote Vision
System that boom operators use to see what's going on at the
back of the aircraft while linking up with receiving aircraft.
The Air Force announced that it had
defined the KC-46A's fuel system leaks as a so-called "Category I"
deficiency on Mar. 30, 2020. Category I issues are problems that would prevent
the aircraft from performing one or more primary missions. The service also
said that it had first become aware of the leaking in July 2019 during a test,
but had initially categorized it as a less severe issue.
"The Air Force and Boeing are
working together to determine the root cause and implement corrective
actions," according to an Air Force statement. "The KC-46 Program
Office continues to monitor the entire KC-46 fleet and is enhancing acceptance
testing of the fuel system to identify potential leaks at the factory where
they can be repaired prior to delivery."
The
refueling system aboard the KC-46 leaks fuel excessively. The problem has been
known for eight months, but is now regarded as a third Category 1 deficiency.
Here’s the USAF statement.
The Air
Force took delivery of its first KC-46A in January 2019, years behind schedule.
As of December, the service had received 30 of the tankers. Even before the
announcement of the fuel system leaks, the Air Force had already publicly
described a number of other Category I deficiencies with the existing aircraft,
as well as those in production right now.
This
includes the aforementioned issues with the Remote Vision
System (RVS), as well as the fact that it requires more force for
the boom on the Pegasus to connect with a receiving aircraft than with previous
Air Force tankers. Boeing is still working to fix these problems, but has
resolved another Category I issue with the cargo locks on
the cabin floor in the aircraft.
USAF
A view of the boom operator work
stations on the KC-46A.
"Boeing
is contractually obligated to remedy this deficiency at no additional cost to
the government," the Air Force statement adds with regards to the fuel
system leaking issue. The service signed a firm, fixed-price contract with
Boeing for the KC-46, which has left the company on the hook for
hundreds of millions of dollars worth of fixes already.
It's
not clear why it took eight months for the Air Force to upgrade the leaking
issue, which it describes as excessive and for which it says there is no known
root cause, to a Category I deficiency. The service has also not provided a
timetable for when it might heave the issue resolved. Boeing told Defense
News that it had fixed seven of 16 planes with the issue,
despite the Air Force saying the root cause remained unexplained.
“The KC-46 fuel system is equipped
with redundant protection for fuel containment," Boeing's statment
to Defense
News further explained. "In some
cases with this issue, aircraft maintenance crews are finding fuel between the
primary and secondary fuel protection barriers within the system."
Sjekk første refuelling her:
https://youtu.be/jOv3oAajtsA
Sjekk første refuelling her:
https://youtu.be/jOv3oAajtsA
Of
course, the Air Force had already said it will not use the KC-46A for aerial
refueling missions on a day-to-day basis or in combat until Boeing completely
overhauls the RVS system. At present, work on a fix for that problem isn't
expected to be finished until some time between 2023 and 2024 and
it will take some amount of time afterward to update the dozens of existing
aircraft.
It is
possible that the expanding COVID-19 pandemic may further delay fixes to all of
the KC-46A's outstanding issues. Boeing suspended
production of new Pegasuses, as well as P-8A Poseidon maritime
patrol planes, last week after a worker at one of the company's plants in
Washington State died from complications from
the novel coronavirus.
"Certain
non-production work for all commercial derivative aircraft programs, including for
the KC-46 remote vision system enhancements, will continue being done by
employees working remotely," Boeing told Defense
News on Mar. 23.
All of
this is already driving the Air Force closer and closer to hiring private
contractors to provide aerial refueling solutions. The service
has already begun to walk back a plan to retire a number of existing tankers,
which other senior U.S. military officials have warned could
create a dangerous capability gap while the KC-46As remain largely incapable of
performing their main mission set.
No matter what happens, the fuel
system leaks are just another black mark for the tanker program and another
issue that Boeing will have to fix before the Air Force will be able to make
any real use of them on aerial refueling missions.
Contact
the author: joe@thedrive.com
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