Flight International - 10Dec2019

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24 | Flight International | 10-16 December 2019 flightglobal.com

ANNIVERSARY


system that was the result of national
workshare requirements.
After more than two years of negotiations,
OCCAR signed a so-called contract
“re-baselining” agreement with Airbus in
June 2019. This established the timeline for
delivering remaining tactical capabilities,
removed the threat of further financial
damages and slowed annual output – only
eight will be delivered in 2020 – in a step that
will extend production activities until 2030,
keeping the door open for future exports.
Crucially for Airbus, the financial impact of
this revised deal was described by OCCAR as
being “cost neutral”.
Speaking at the Paris air show the same
month, Airbus Defence & Space head of mili-
tary aircraft Alberto Gutierrez said the new
deal had been forged in part after the compa-
ny fully met its contractual requirements for
the first time during 2018.
With programme stability seemingly now
in place – albeit at the third time of asking,
what might the coming decade hold in store
for the Atlas?
By mid-October, a total of 85 A400Ms had
been delivered to six nations, leaving 89 to
follow, according to the company’s current
orderbook. Germany is the type’s clear fleet
leader today, with 31 in use. Three of these
are employed in the tanker role, including in
support of operations in the Middle East. It is
followed by the UK Royal Air Force, which
has received 20 examples, and the French air
force, which has 15. Turkey has received all
but one of its contracted 10 units, while
Spain has made a slow start, with just six of

its 27 on-order examples fielded so far.
Malaysia has taken all four of its transports,
while Belgium will receive a first of seven in
2020, along with another funded by
Luxembourg.
Operational use of the type has now
topped the 60,000 flight hour mark, Airbus
says.
Nations including Chile, Indonesia, Mexi-
co and Saudi Arabia have at various points
been eyed as potential future buyers, and Gut-
ierrez also believes that India is emerging as a
possible candidate. But to close future sales,
Airbus needs to have the support of a
satisfied base of core customers, making
its delivery against their re-baselining
contract essential.
Gutierrez says the military personnel
who operate the Atlas love the platform,
but concedes that its reliability and avail-
ability need to improve further. With
Boeing already having ended production
of the C-17, competition remains from the
C-130J, which recently gained selection
in New Zealand – another previous Atlas
target – and Embraer’s C/KC-390 twinjet.

“There is clear export potential, with a
number of countries expressing interest in
the A400M,” Gutierrez says, adding: “This
needs to be part of our government-to-
government sales strategy.” His view is
echoed by Airbus Defence & Space chief
executive Dirk Hoke, who says the company
is “very optimistic that the speed of discus-
sions for export will increase, as we have
delivered important capabilities to our
customers”.
Airbus officials decline to speculate on the
potential timing of a next export order, but
Gutierrez says he would like to see this hap-
pen “the sooner the better”. He adds that feed-
back from the A400M user group shows that
the aircraft is delivering “capabilities that
even the air forces were not aware of”.

GAINING LIFT
Pointing to the 40,000ft operating altitude and
up to Mach 0.72 cruise performance of the
Atlas, Airbus Defence & Space head of mar-
keting Ioannis Papachristofilou notes: “The
aircraft is now proving its game-changing
characteristics.” Giving as an example its

15-21 DECEMBER 2009

FLIGHT
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A400M FLIGHT SCHEDULE
A LIFT AT LAST,
BUT TESTING
TIMES AHEAD Getting airborne is just start of long credibility
battle for Airbus’s delay-plagued programme

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A-Z OF AIR FORCES WE DETAIL EVERY NATION’S MILITARY
AIRCRAFT FLEETSPECIAL SURVEY

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11-17 June 2013 | Flight International | 93

flightglobal.com flightglobal.com
92 | Flight International | 11-17 June 2013


FLIGHT TESTPARIS

SPECIAL REPORTPARIS

As Airbus Military prepares to deliver its first production example to the French air force,
Europe’s new airlift and refuelling asset through its pacesFlight International puts

A five-strong Grizzly has been used since development fleet
December 2009

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T
he A400M is Airbus Military’s first bespoke product and traces its roots to a European Staff Requirement for a more -
broad terms the type would replace the C160 Transall and Lockheed Martin C-130 Hercules capable airlifter for the 21st century. In
of purchasing countries’ air forces. The eight partner nations specified an aircraft that could perform both tactical and strategic airlift roles.
alised that in an era of tight budgets, any new Aerospace Industries and Belgium’s Flabel re-Airbus Military and project partners Turkish
aircraft would have to be able to fulfil a number of roles. In addition to transport duties, the A400M would be designed from the outset to
provide an aerial refuelling capability. It would be no mere form/fit/function replacement for the C-130; but offer dramatically improved
performance and operational capabilities.

rolled out from Airbus Military’s Seville pro-duction facility in Spain on 26 June 2008. The The first A400M development aircraft was
medium transport features the largest Western turboprop engines to date swinging massive eight-bladed scimitar propellers. The first
came nicknamed, was flown on 11 December 2009. Following an extensive developmental Grizzly, as the five developmental aircraft be-
programme, Airbus Military is set to deliver the first operational A400M, or Atlas, to the French air force in late June or early July 2013.
In advance of the milestone being achieved, Flight Internationalto fly the new-generation product. was invited to Toulouse
HEAVY LIFTINGFrom an overall size perspective the A400M slots neatly between the C-130J-30 Super Her-
cules airlifters, the business end of the A400M fea- and the Boeing C-17. Like both these US tures a flat-floored cargo hold with an aft-mounted ramp.(88 x 108in) cargo pallets: one more than the C-130J-30 and nine fewer than the C-17. Two The A400M can carry a total of nine 463L
variants of the LD7 civil pallet can also be transported, with dimensions of 88 x 125in and 96 x 125in. All three airlifters can be oper-
ated with a single loadmaster, working from a dedicated station in the cargo hold.While palletised cargo capability is one meas-
ure of a transport’s usefulness, the ability to carry outsized loads has assumed greater importance. Pallets can be loaded on any number of civil
bases. Moving armoured fighting vehicles and helicopters for deploying rapid reaction forces freighters and landed at in-theatre logistics
demands a voluminous cargo hold. The A400M has demonstrated the ability to load both the NH Industries NH90 and Eurocopter EC725 heli-
copters with minimal disassembly. Airbus Mili-tary is confident it will even be able to load a Boeing CH-47 Chinook heavy-lift helicopter.
spectable 37t maximum payload, the A400M has a unique aerial tanker capability. Several In addition to its large cargo hold and re-
variants of the C-130 can refuel slow-moving

aircraft and helicopters from wing-mounted hose and drogue units. This capability has proven to be an effective force multiplier for
combat search and rescue operations, as well as special operations missions. With a top speed of less than Mach 0.58 the
C-130J would struggle to refuel tactical jets. The A400M has a top-end calibrated airspeed giving it the ability to refuel fighters, but it will
also support helicopters flying as slow as 105kt (194km/h). It comes plumbed for aerial tanking duties, with the option for two wing-
is from the A400M’s normal fuel system, but mounted pods as well as a ramp centerline-mounted hose and drum unit. Offloaded fuel
additional capability can be realised with the installation of optional pallet-mounted cargo hold fuel tanks. These are connected directly
to the aircraft’s fuel system and controlled by the centralised fuel management system.In terms of range and payload, compared to
the C130-J the A400M excels. At cruise, the Super Hercules has a true airspeed in the region of 348kt, while the A400M can comfortably
cruise at 422kt. In general terms the A400M can carry the same payload twice as far, or twice the payload the same distance. Compared to the

C-17, which cruises at speeds between M0.74 and M0.77, the more fuel-efficient A400M cruis-es in the M0.68-0.72 range.
can be illustrated by France’s recent Mali op-erations. With the A400M, according to Air-How this plays out in operational terms
the French forces could have been deployed more rapidly, and with a dramatic reduction bus Military chief test pilot Ed Strongman,
in total air movements.south of France and arrival in Bamako, Mali, Assuming staging out of Istres air base in the
the A400M would require only 5h 30min to transport 31t of cargo. The air force’s current Transall would require 10h to deliver only 5t,
while a C-130 would need 7h 30min to deliver 13t. “While C-17s were used to deliver outsized cargo and fighting vehicles, it was to Bamako,
which was 900km [486nm] from the front lines,” says Strongman.
Blagnac, with Strongman acting as the pilot in FIRST IMPRESSIONSOur preview flight was flown out of Toulouse
command. Prior to the flight he introduced me to the A400M and our proposed flight profile with a session in a fixed-base engineering de-

MSN6/F-WWMZ/Grizzly 5, was production-representative, with the exception of some velopmental simulator. The preview aircraft,
software loadings. The aircraft was configured with an air refuelling receiver probe, but did not have wing-mounted pods installed.
facility, the A400M looked out of place, sur-rounded by a large variety and number of Parked on the ramp at Airbus’s Toulouse
civil airliners. While the grey camouflage paint is new, it lacks the shine of a passenger aircraft.
is not your typical Airbus. The high wing, four Europrop International TP400-D6 turboprop The A400M’s appearance screams that this
gear pontoons all say military transport. The general configuration of the A400M is the engines and fuselage-mounted main landing
same as the venerable Hercules. aircraft that is more akin to the C-17. In place Closer examination however, reveals an
of the C-130’s straight, highly cambered wing, the A400M has a thin supercritical one with 15 ̊ of sweep. Instead of a fuselage-
mounted horizontal stabiliser and elevator, it has a high-mounted all-moving T-tail. The propeller-driven A400M was built for speed.

GETTING TO
GRIPS WITH
THE A400M

The aircraft’s flightdeck was developed from the A380 and adapted to military requirements

MIKE GERZANICS TOULOUSE

Craig Hoyle/Flightglobal

Airbus Military

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Flight test
flagged
type‘s early
potential
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