An Irish entrepreneur is trying to convince the U.S. Navy that
it should lease refurbished Boeing 707s as refueling tankers for
naval jets.
Omega Air, based in Dublin, Ireland, recently completed a series
of tests at Patuxent Naval Air Station, Md., where a commercial
tanker refueled an F/A-18C jet. The company wants to prove that
commercial tankers can do the job and can save the Navy money, said
Ulick McEvaddy, director of Omega Air. McEvaddy conceived the idea
of buying used 707s, DC-9s and DC-10s from airlines and transforming
them into tankers.
McEvaddy believes the demand for U.S. military aerial refueling
will grow, as the pace of American deployments abroad increases
and the availability of pilots declines, he told National Defense
in an interview.
According to McEvaddy, most military tankers fly less than 300
hours a year. This is less than one month’s flying for a civilian
aircraft. And he predicts that the military services will become
increasingly reluctant to buy more tankers because of the large
investment involved in aircraft, flight crews and maintenance personnel.
Omega offers a modified 707 aerial refueling tanker as a “turnkey”
solution, with the company providing all fight and maintenance crews,
the aircraft and the logistics support, he said. The lease periods
could range from one week to 10 years. The tankers could be leased
for routine training missions, scheduled deployments, exercises
and contingencies.
The company has liability insurance that covers all peacetime operations.
In wartime, said McEvaddy, “the jury is still out. ... Normally,
you wouldn’t bring a tanker into harm’s way. Refueling
[typically] takes place behind the front lines.
“We are targeting the U.S. Navy and the Marine Corps to fill
the dearth they have in tanker capability,” he said. “They
are losing people to the airlines. The requirement is going up all
the time.”
Omega’s tankers are equipped with hose/drogue systems, which
makes them suitable for aerial refueling of Navy jets. The tanker
releases a hose with a drogue (a funnel-shaped device) attached
to it. The pilot seeking to receive fuel releases a probe and has
to “fly into the drogue.”
The 707 tanker has a dual hose/drogue centerline system, which
allows it to refuel two airplanes simultaneously.
This refueling system would not work with most Air Force fighters
and bombers, which require a tanker with a boom, a rigid tube that
must be aimed into a receptacle on the receiving plane’s fuselage.
The Air Force KC-135 tanker is equipped with a boom only.
The Navy currently relies on C-130 and S3 Viking tankers for short-range
aerial refueling. It also plans to reconfigure some F/A-18E/F Super
Hornet fighters with external fuel tanks, to serve as tactical tankers.
The service does not have its own fleet of long-range tankers. The
Air Force KC-10 strategic tanker, which can do both probe/drogue
and boom/receptacle refueling, is used for Navy long-range refueling.
For an Air Force KC-135 to be able to refuel a Navy jet, the boom
operator must attach a hose with a drogue at the end of the boom,
so the fighter pilot then must insert the so-called probe into the
drogue. The Navy also has employed commercial tankers. Other navies
around the world, such as Australia’s, use commercial tankers
equipped with probe-and-drogue systems.
Omega currently has one prototype tanker, which was on display
at this summer’s Farnborough air show, in the United Kingdom.
“We have a couple more in the United States, waiting to be
overhauled,” said McEvaddy. “There is no shortage of
supplies of 707s.”
Even though Boeing discontinued production of 707 airframes, it
is not difficult to get spare parts, said McEvaddy. The U.S. government
still uses them, and there are about 560 in service around the world
today. Omega also is marketing its services to the U.K. Ministry
of Defence, which is looking for a “future tanker concept
that will involve leasing services,” said McEvaddy. “We
are hoping to participate in that program also.”
The price of leasing an Omega tanker varies, depending on the number
of hours and the terms agreed, he said. “The more hours they
contract, the lower the price.” Omega crews would consist
of former military pilots and maintainers, he said.
Among the potential customers who visited the display at the show
was Gen. James L. Jones, the commandant of the Marine Corps, who
supports contracting out military refueling services. McEvaddy said
Jones “was very positive that this tanker capability is what
he needs.”
Omega currently owns a fleet of about 20 DC-9s and DC-10s, none
of which is configured as a tanker, but could become tankers “once
we make some management decisions,” said Gale E. Matthews,
president of Omega.
The projected hourly rate for an Omega tanker is $5,500, said Matthews.
That compares favorably with the cost operating a KC-135, he noted,
which runs at about $11,000 an hour.
In addition to the Navy work, he said, “We did a joint study
with the Air Force and the results indicated there are measurable
opportunities for contracting air refueling.
“Based on the enthusiasm at Farnborough, we believe we will
expand.”