Dan Jones wrote:
When the last C-17 goes to the boneyard, you can bet that that crew is gonna catch a ride home in the back of a C-130.
That's a good tag line, but it won't happen. The C-17 is designed for a much longer lifetime. The only reason T-1 is being retired is because it would be too expensive to upgrade to the standard of the current production aircraft. They already have P-122 as the other dedicated flight test aircraft at Edwards AFB.
The USAF already priced what it would cost to upgrade T-1 when they were considering using it to replace the aircraft that crashed at Elmendorf.
I think you'll find after the Tempo of operations in the gulf, that the crew training issues are in the past. C-17s are being put in harms way on a daily basis. Just ask Brad if you don't believe me. Combat descents and night vision goggle landings are commonplace, one aircraft was hit by a shoulder launched rocket which penetrated just aft of the cockpit and thankfully didn't detonate (it was a dud).
Right now the C-17 is doing MORE than it was originally designed to do, not less, and is maintaining better than its contractual 85% mission capability rate. What is the C-5s, maybe 35%? The C-130 is an iconic aircraft, but it does not offer the throughput that the C-17 does.