Last Lockheed Martin C-141 StarLifter in Active Duty Air Force Service
Retired
After Nearly Four Decades of Service
Thursday September 16, 11:13 am ET - from Yahoo Finance News web site.
McGUIRE AFB, N.J., Sept. 16 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The last two Lockheed
Martin (NYSE: LMT - News) C-141 StarLifters assigned to the 305th Air Mobility
Wing (AMW) were retired in ceremonies here this morning, closing out the
turbofan-powered airlifter's historic 39-year career with the active-duty
component of the U.S. Air Force. Crews from two Air Force Reserve Command
units, the 452nd AMW at March Air Reserve Base, Calif., and the 445th Airlift
Wing at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, will continue to fly the C-141 until the
summer of 2006, when the very last StarLifter is scheduled to be retired. A
total of 285 StarLifters were built between 1963 and 1968, and 20 aircraft
remain in service.
"The C-141 was the world's first jet transport, and it has served as the
backbone of this country's strategic airlift force since 1965," said June
Shrewsbury, Lockheed Martin's vice president of Strategic Airlift. "In every
conflict, every disaster, every contingency anywhere on the globe, StarLifter
crews have been the first responders. The C-141 has quite a record of
achievement."
The first flight of the first C-141A (there was no prototype) came at the
then-Lockheed-Georgia Co. facility in Marietta, Ga., on Dec. 17, 1963, the 60th
anniversary of the Wright Brothers' first powered flight. The StarLifter
entered Air Force service at Tinker AFB, Okla., in April 1965.
Recognizing that the C-141 often filled up well before its max cargo capacity
was reached, the Air Force had 270 C-141 aircraft "stretched" by adding two
plugs in the fuselage, increasing usable volume by nearly 75 percent. The first
modified aircraft, re-designated C-141B, was flown in 1977 from Marietta and
the modification program, which also included provisions for aerial refueling,
ran until 1983. The C-141B can carry 200 troops, 155 paratroops, 103 litters
and 14 attendants, or 68,725 lbs (31,239 kilograms) of cargo.
Since the StarLifter entered service, more than 30 squadrons with 10 active
duty Air Force, Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve Command units have
flown the aircraft. The C-141 fleet has accumulated more than 10.6 million
flight hours since that first flight.
In August of 1965, the first C-141 missions were flown to Vietnam. The C- 141A
aircraft were capable of carrying either 138 troops or approximately 62,000
pounds of cargo, reducing to 36 hours what had been a 72-hour trip with stops
from Travis AFB, Calif., to Tan Son Nhut Air Base, South Vietnam, in a C-124,
the C-141's piston-powered predecessor. On the return trip, the crews could
carry up to 80 litters plus attendants on medevac flights. Some 6,000 medevac
flights were flown on StarLifters from 1965 until 1972.
Three events in StarLifter history stand out.
* In 1969, a C-141A was used to fly the Apollo 11 astronauts and their special
containment house trailer from Hawaii to Houston after the first moon landing
mission was completed.
* On Feb. 12, 1973, a C-141A was flown to Gia Lam Airport, near Hanoi, North
Vietnam in the first mission of Operation Homecoming, the repatriation of
former American prisoners of war. That C-141, known as the Hanoi Taxi, is still
in service. It has been modified to C-141C standard with digital cockpit
instruments, and is currently scheduled to be retired to the National Museum of
the U.S. Air Force (formerly the Air Force Museum) at Wright-Patterson AFB in
early 2006.
* In Oct. 1973, StarLifter crews flew 421 missions and delivered more than
10,000 tons of equipment and supplies to Israel during the 1973 Yom Kippur War.
Most recently, StarLifter crews flew suspected terrorists to the detainment
facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and have borne the brunt of aeromedical
evacuation flights from the Middle East and later Iraq since Operation Iraqi
Freedom began last year.
The first C-141A (Air Force serial number 66-7947) for McGuire Air Force Base
was delivered on Aug. 8, 1967. Nicknamed "Garden State Airlifter," that
aircraft, now a C-141B, will remain at the base as a static display. Prior to
the conclusion of C-141 operations at McGuire, the StarLifters were flown by
active duty crews from the 6th Airlift Squadron and Air Force Reserve Command
crews from the 514th AMW, the Reserve Associate unit there. Both will convert
to the C-17 airlifter. The last two C-141s at McGuire, serial numbers 64-0633
and 67-0012, were flown to the Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Center at
Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz., where they will eventually be scrapped.
Those aircraft, the 46th and 263rd aircraft off the assembly line, had recorded
40,792 and 39,193 flight hours (as of Sept. 13) respectively.
Last Updated: Thursday, November 11 2004 (03:54 PM)