Tag Archives: a-10

World War 3: USAF preps to use C-130 on U.S. Highways! Red Dawn for reals?

Wyoming Air National Guard photo by Jacqueline Marshall.

“This is an exercise evolution of the Rally in the Valley 2020 exercise conducted in West Virginia. Our efforts will prepare Reserve and National Guard units to execute at the speed and range required to take on near-peer adversaries. Additional training included combat airlift as well as multi-capable mobility Airmen who are able to refuel and re-arm aircraft in austere locations with minimal support.”-Major Christopher Acs, 327th Airlift Squadron, U.S. Air Force Reserve (USAFR)

WANG photo by Jacqueline Marshall, 13SEP2021.

U.S. Air Force Reserve photo by Major Ashely Walker, 13SEP2021.

13SEP2021 saw a dramatic opening to wargame Rally in the Rockies 2021; for the first time a C-130J Super Hercules intentionally landed on U.S. Route 287, in the middle of nowhere rural Wyoming (near Rawlings)!

U.S. Air Force Reserve video by Major Ashely Walker, 13SEP2021:

WANG photo by Jacqueline Marshall.

So far, all the news outlets reporting this landing are calling it Highway 287 which is incorrect.  It is officially U.S. Route 287 (aka US287).  It would be okay if they wrote highway with a lower case ‘h’, but they use an upper case ‘H’ which indicates an official title.

Cowboy State Daily’s quick slo-mo video of landing:

WANG photo by Jacqueline Marshall.

Anybody thinking about the Cold War era movie Red Dawn, supposedly taking place in next-door-from-Wyoming Colorado?

USAFR photo by Major Ashley Walker.

Rally in the Rockies is scheduled to run from September 13th through the 16th.  It involves 12 military units from various state National Guards and the USAFR, as well as the Wyoming Department of Transportation.  The wargame is preparation for combat operations within the United States, for ‘contested areas’!

USAF photo by Lieutenant Colonel Marnee A.C. Losurdo, 14SEP2021.

C-130H from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia, drops supplies near Rifle Garfield County Airport, Colorado.

USAF photo by Major Ashley Walker, 13SEP2021.

The first day of Rally in the Rockies also involved USAFR C-130Hs operating from a Landing Zone near Guernsey, Wyoming.  The wargame simulating conflict inside the United States involved the states of Colorado, Utah and Wyoming.

USAF photo by Major Ashley Walker.

Cold War era (late 1960s) film of C-130 and C-160 landing on European highway:

World War Three, 2021: USAF PREPS TO USE U.S. HIGHWAYS AS AIR BASES! With a link to Operation Highway 1984 in Germany.

USAF COLLECTS COUNTY TAXES & PATROLS FLORIDA HIGHWAYS, COVERT OP TO EXPAND FEDERAL POLICE FORCE?

AC-130J Banshee Heralds the coming Third World War

Operation CoViD-19: USCG C-130J MAKES 1ST ‘BILL & MELINDA GATES’ VACCINE DELIVERY TO HAITI

A-10C: Afghan Phase Inspection

The following are U.S. Air Force (USAF) photos of 451st Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron’s phase inspection (inspection based on flight hours) of A-10C Thunderbolt-2 at Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan, December 2009, model kit builders notice the plethora of raised rivets on the fuselage of the A-10C:

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Francisco V. Govea the Second, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Francisco V. Govea the Second, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Francisco V. Govea the Second, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Efren Lopez, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Francisco V. Govea the Second, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Francisco V. Govea the Second, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Francisco V. Govea the Second, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Efren Lopez, 27DEC2009.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Francisco V. Govea the Second, 27DEC2009.

USAF video from 2011, simple explanation of Phase Inspection of A-10C in Afghanistan:

Vehicle I-D:

USN photo by Petty Officer Third Class Drew Verbis.

A-10C SEA CAMO

Pocatello Airport:

The awesome A-10 is the last of Idaho’s Air National Guard air assets. Photo by AAron B. Hutchins.

IDAHO NATIONAL GUARD A-10C THUNDERBOLT-2 my personal ‘walk around’ photos

Morale booster A-10C Gun-Run in Idaho!

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Joseph R. Morgan, 06MAR2021.

Anticipating an A-10C fly-by of Sailor Creek Range control tower in Idaho, 06MAR2021. 

‘Cleared Cold’ Idaho Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Joseph R. Morgan, 06MAR2021.

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Joseph R. Morgan, 06MAR2021.

The image reminds me of many such flyby’s when I worked on the Edwards Air Force Base, California, bombing range in the early 1980s.     

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Joseph R. Morgan, 06MAR2021.

At some point somebody figured out that letting personnel, and their families, watch bombing/gunnery runs was a great morale booster.     

‘Cleared Hot’ Idaho Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Joseph R. Morgan, 06MAR2021.

124th Fighter Wing Thunderbolt-2 turns for a ‘hot’  gun-run on Sailor Creek Range, 06MAR2021.

Idaho ANG photo by Senior Airman Joseph R. Morgan

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Joseph R. Morgan, 06MAR2021.

Sailor Creek Range is in the Owyhee Valley in Southwestern Idaho.  You can barely see the A-10C.

Vehicle I-D: IDAHO MILITIA’S 2020 EUROPEAN DEPLOYMENT CANCELED, SUDDENLY DEPLOYED TO MIDDLE EAST

IDAHO A-10C WARTHOGS WALLOWING IN THE CALIFORNIA DIRT, JUNE 2019

SINGAPORE SKY PIRATES & IDAHO GUNSLINGERS

Pandemic OverFlight: A-10C (for CoViD?) Thunderbolt-2

Salute to Heroes, Operation American Resolve, America Strong, or whatever is the latest Defense Department name for it, apparently massive flights of military aircraft flying over metro areas makes people feel more secure about fighting the “invisible enemy” of a Pandemic.

U.S. Air Force photo by Airman First Class Jacob T. Stephens, 14MAY2020.

In Arizona, A-10C and F-16D from Davis Monthan AFB fly over Tucson, 14MAY2020.

USAF photo by Second Lietenant Kaylin P. Hankerson, 15MAY2020.

23rd Wing A-10Cs flew over hospitals in both Florida and Georgia, 15MAY2020.

Video, Idaho’s 124th FW A-10Cs join USAF and RSAF F-15 Strike Eagles in CoViD-19 morale booster flight around the Gem State:

https://www.facebook.com/CBS2Boise/videos/1909010232564549/?t=19

(The 124th Fighter Wing strongly supports the communities in Idaho.  As part of our commitment to be a great neighbor, we often showcase our A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft at various events such as airshows, patriotic observances and some collegiate sporting events.)

USAF photo by Airman First Class Andrew Kobialka, 15MAY2020.

Idaho’s A-10s suddenly deployed to Middle East during Pandemic OverFlights

Video, Indiana Air National Guard’s 122nd FW begins CoViD-19 Air Force Salutes flyovers, 28APR2020:

Indiana Air National Guard 122nd Fighter Wing over Terre Haute, 02MAY2020.

122nd Fighter Wing, Indiana Air National Guard, over Fort Wayne on 13MAY2020.

Maryland Air National Guard 175th Wing A-10Cs over local hospitals, 08MAY2020.

Michigan Air National Guard photo by Munnaf H. Joarder, 13MAY2020.

Michigan Air National Guard A-10 and KC-135 Stratotanker, 13MAY2020.

Michigan Air National Guard photo by Munnaf H. Joarder, 13MAY2020.

Music video of Michigan National Guard A-10 flyover, it was the only A-10 covid-19 music video that didn’t have sappy music or was interspersed with people saying “thank you”:

Pandemic OverFlight: C-130 HERKS FOR HEROES

ROBOTS STRIP AN A-10 NAKED!

124TH MILITIA A-10 SHOOTIN’ & SCOOTIN’ THRU IDAHO NEVADA CALIFORNIA

Robot Wars: A-I strips an A-10 naked!

Personnel seal panel lines, rivets and any other ‘openings’ to prevent the stripping material from entering the aircraft. U.S Air Force photo by Todd Cromar, 04DEC2019.

In December 2019, a robot paint stripper at Hill Air Force Base (AFB), Utah, was used to strip an A-10 Thunderbolt-2 for the first time.  Normally, it’s used on F-16s.

Corrosion control technicians seal up the seams and holes in the skin to prevent the blast media from entering the aircraft. USAF photo by Todd Cromar, 04DEC2019.

“There are going to be across-the-board improvements including a dramatic reduction in exposure to a Hexavalent Chromium dust environment. This is perhaps the greatest benefit to the robotic system. Savings will also be seen with reduced operating time and less power consumption, as well as reduced costs in material. We really haven’t found a downside to this system.”-Tim Randolph, 576th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron

USAF photo by Todd Cromar.

Two robots, with four hose attachments each, move independently along both sides of the aircraft. The time to strip an A-10 is decreased from three days to 9-12 hours!

Sorry, they didn’t release any pics of the naked A-10.

This Davis-Monthan ‘Paint Barn’ video, released in January 2020, shows you how many humans are needed in order to paint an A-10:

 

Robot Wars:

Photo via Aerobotix.

A-I PAINTERS TO SAVE THE F-22 RAPTOR?

TEXAS TURNS TO ROBOTS TO WASH F-16

A-10 Thunderbolt-2: ANOTHER A-10C WITH INVASION STRIPES

THE OWL HAD A BLUE UMBRELLA!: HOW LANTIRN KILLED THE N/AW-10, AND, WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE TRUMPETER/HOBBY BOSS KITS?

Another A-10C with invasion stripes

U.S. Air Force photo by Airman First Class Hayden Legg, 03NOV2019.

An A-10C flying formation with a TF-51D Mustang at the Moody Air Force Base air show, 03NOV2019.

USAF photo by Airman Azaria E. Foster, 02NOV2019.

Formate-ing with an TF-51D and a F-22 Raptor.

The A-10C got its new stripes back in September (RETROGRADE AN A-10 INTO A P-51?).  Here’s a music video of how they did it:

 

The new invasion striped A-10C of the A-10 Demonstration Team takes first flight over Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, 23SEP2019.

Idaho Air National Guard: 124TH MILITIA A-10 SHOOTIN’ & SCOOTIN’ THRU IDAHO NEVADA CALIFORNIA

The owl had a blue umbrella!: How LANTIRN killed the N/AW-10, and, what’s wrong with the Trumpeter/Hobby Boss kits?

The N/AW-10 over what looks like the beginning development of California City, near Edwards Air Force Base, 04MAY1979. Photographer not known.

The two seat A-10 had a very short service life, brought to an end by rapid advances in technology, specifically the LANTIRN (Low Altitude Navigation Targeting Infrared Night) pod system.

It was a conversion of the first pre-production A-10 Thunderbolt-2, and was initially called Night/Adverse Weather-10 , or N/AW-10.  But, once the N/AW-10 conversion was completed the nomenclature was changed to YA-10B.

The ‘owl’ nose art has yet to be added.

First flight of the N/AW-10 was 04MAY1979.

Edwards AFB, 04MAY1979, photographer not known.

04MAY1979, photographer not known.

Near Rogers Dry Lake, 04MAY1979. Photographer not known.

04MAY1979, photographer not known.

I read several model building blogs where it’s thought the N/AW-10 was built for the LANTIRN program, but it was actually the LANTIRN program that killed the N/AW-10 before it even got started.  The two seat A-10 required a second crew-member precisely because the targeting pods it used required a separate weapons/targeting systems operator, the LANTIRN system does not.

Freshly painted nose art, no more nose probe.

The N/AW-10 used a large modified weather radar pod under its port wing (inboard) and a large laser-combo-infrared (FLIR) pod mounted centerline.

Laser-combo-FLIR pod.

Modified WX radar pod.

Also, the Pave Penny system (in the small pod below the cockpit on the starboard side) was replaced with a low light TV (LLTV) video camera.

The LANTIRN system uses two pods, but they’re much smaller and can be operated by the pilot.

I worked on the Edwards Air Force Base bombing range in the early 1980s, right after the promise of the LANTIRN killed-off the N/AW-10.   LANTIRN missions were carried out late in the evening, and at night.  As range techs we had to operate the static and portable infrared target boards (IR Boards).  The missions were flown by single seat A-10s, F-16s and I think even an F-16XL.

The portable IR Boards used large towed field generators to create the power to heat them up.

Static IR Board just after completion. Note wires at bottom of adjustable panels. The aluminum triangle on the side is a radar reflector.

The static board was two stories tall and looked like a small drive-in movie screen.  It had movable individually heated vertical panels, one side white, the other black.  We got to sit behind the static panel and watch the low flying airshow.  By the way, being a Army National Guard armor crewman I learned that you can’t hear the A-10 if it’s flying right at you, kind of like you can’t hear the bullet that kills you.

The LANTIRN system itself has finally been outdated for U.S. military use, however, in July 2018 Lockheed-Martin got a $100-million contract to upgrade LANTIRNs being used by foreign air forces.

Many model building blogs point out nit-picky things that are wrong with the Trumpeter and Hobby Boss N/AW-10 kits, mostly stuff that also applies to the single seater.

10JUL1979, photographer not known.

Hobby Boss’ 1:72 owl decals.

My biggest complaint is that the ‘owl’ decals are wrong, being just black outlines, and they were not on both sides of the aircraft.

Trumpeter’s 1:32 owl decals.

1979, photographer not known.

Hobby Boss’ 1:48 owl decals.

Early 1980s, photo by me, AAron B. Hutchins.

During the 1981 Edwards AFB open house I took a photo of the N/AW-10 owl nose art.  It’s not just a black outline.  Official USAF photos also reveal that initially it had a blue umbrella, and it was located only on the port side of the nose.

The first flight of the N/AW was in 1979, photos show a bright colorful owl, blue umbrella, brown feathers, blue eyes and breast shield (also note the nose probe).  My photo, taken a couple of years later, shows the umbrella so faded that you wouldn’t know it was there.

Photo by AAron B. Hutchins, 1981.

The eyes contain the words FLIR and LASER, the breast shield says N/(the slash is in the form of a lightening bolt)AW and an additional letter I can’t make-out,  and it’s outlined in white not black.  The latest pics of the now ‘gate guard’ (Edwards Museum display) N/AW shows the owl nose art is no longer present as the aircraft has been painted a different color.

Also, the white cross markings on the vertical tails were used for only a short time, towards the end of the program.  Robert DeMaio, in his rare self-published book A-10 Thunderbolt II: Details for the Modeler, says the original overall color of the N/AW was FS36118 Dark Grey.

Another major problem with all available N/AW kits is that they don’t provide you with the giant laser-FLIR pod or the giant modified Westinghouse WX radar pod. 

I’ve seen many modelers incorrectly add the LANTIRN pods to their YA-10Bs.

One other major problem with the Trumpet 1/32 scale kit is that the engineers who designed the two-seat fuselage failed to match-up the surface detailing with the parts originally designed for the single seater.   Specifically the single seater rear fuselage has raised rivets (correct) while the two-seat fuselage parts have recessed rivets (no such thing in real life, I call them divots).  Then there’s the problem that applies to both the N/AW and A-10; the surface detailing of the flying surfaces don’t match the fuselage, have fun rectifying that for a contest build.

Hobby Boss makes the 1/48 and 1/72 scale versions of the N/AW.  Their 1/48 scale kit comes with a bunch of weapons, and the surface detailing is uniform across fuselage and flying surfaces; recessed panel lines and divots (recessed rivets).

1:72 resin intake compared to kit intake.

The 1/72 scale Hobby Boss kit is basically one of their Easy Assembly kits as the simplified major parts literally snap-together.  But the engine intake openings are too small, which can be fixed by resin correction parts. It has recessed panel lines (no rivets no divots), yet there are no weapons.

YA-10B rocket sled, used for ejection seat tests at Holloman AFB, New Mexico. Now at Chino Museum in California.

In the rare book A-10 Thunderbolt II: Details for the Modeler, the author explained that the rocket sled used for ejection seat tests revealed that the side opening canopies interfered with the ejection process.  It was planned to fit a single clam-shell canopy on production models.

Proposed N/AW clam-shell canopy.

Despite the YA-10B (N/AW-10) being so short lived it has always been something model builders wanted to build.

In the late 1980s  and early 1990s conversion kits were made available by Falcon (1/72 scale) and Maintrack (1/48 scale for Monogram kits), but also failed to provide the unique laser-FLIR and WX radar pods. 

Monogram’s B-25 PANCHITO!

C-47 kit round-up

F-8C DFBW conversion

1/48 F-105G WILD WEASEL SHOWDOWN, HOBBYBOSS VS MONOGRAM

Retrograde an A-10 into a P-51?

At the end of August 2019, the 355th Equipment Maintenance Squadron, at Davis Monthan Air Force Base, began repainting an A-10 Thunderbolt-2.  They claim it’s going to look like a World War-2 P-51 Mustang!

It’s part of preparations for the USAF 2020 air show season.

But wait, this isn’t the first A-10 to be painted like a P-51.  In 2013 the Michigan National Guard got one painted to represent a P-51(F-6A) of the 107th TRS Red Devils during the invasion of Normandy.

Can you find the P-51(F-6A) painted A-10?

Video from October 2018:

Have they painted any Thunderbolt-2s to look like their namesake, the P-47 Thunderbolt?

IDAHO A-10C warthogs wallowing IN THE CALIFORNIA DIRT, JUNE 2019

Dorian more powerful than U.S. military aircraft?

02SEP2019, U.S. Coast Guard deploys C-130s in anticipation of Hurricane Dorian.

Evacuation of E-8C J-STARS from Warner Robins Air Force Base, Georgia, 02SEP2019:

On 01SEP2019, U.S. Customs & Border Protection transferred one of their UH-60 Black Hawks from Puerto Rico to Homestead, Florida, to be used in hurricane rescue operations:

U.S. CBP also deployed P-3 Orions to Homestead, Florida, 31AUG2019.

Florida National Guard helicopters staged in the Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport, in anticipation of Hurricane Dorian, 01SEP2019.

MH-60R Sea Hawks assigned to USN’s Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron 48, in Florida, were sent to Maxwell Air Force Base, in Alabama, to escape the wrath of Dorian, 01SEP2019.

Video of preparations to exodus Naval Air Station Jacksonville:

Video of arrival at Maxwell AFB:

On 30AUG2019, Florida National Guard F-15C/D Eagles evacuated to Ohio.  Video of arrival of Florida Eagles at Wright-Patterson AFB:

A USN Patrol Squadron 26 P-8 Poseidon arrives at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 30AUG2019.

30AUG2019, USN’s Patrol Squadron 10 evacuates P-8 Poseidon from NAS Jacksonville:

On 30AUG2019, Little Rock Air Force Base, Alabama, began accepting military aircraft from locations within the projected path of Hurricane Dorian:

HC-130 Combat King from Georgia.

A-10C Thunderbolt-2s from Georgia.

At Moody Air Force Base, Georgia, A-29 Super Tacanos were locked down in the hangers: 

29AUG2019, KC-135Rs evacuate MacDill Air Force Base, Florida:

WC-130J & WP-3D: HUNTING DORIAN

SLOW DISASTER RELIEF: FLORIDA MILITIA DISCOVERS A MAJOR CAUSE, NEW PREPS FOR HURRICANES!

ALABAMA MILITIA PREPS FOR HURRICANE USING WORLD’S LARGEST MAP OF ALABAMA!

Idaho A-10C warthogs wallowing in the California dirt, June 2019

Idaho Army National Guard photo by Sergeant Mason Cutrer, 13JUN2019.

Idaho’s Air and Army National Guard, as well as a unit from Oregon’s Army National Guard, took part in U.S. Army NTC wargames from the end of May to the middle of June, 2019.

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Mercedee Wilds, 11JUN2019.

The U.S. Army’s OpFor (Opposition Force) used UH-72 Lakotas against National Guard ground troops.

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Master Sergeant Joshua C. Allmaras, 11JUN2019.

Brazilian Air Force TACP (Tactical Air Control Party) allied themselves with the Idaho Air Guard TACPs.

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Master Sergeant Joshua C. Allmaras, 11JUN2019.

Brazilian A-29 Super Tucanos took part in the invasion of California, as well.

Video (by Master Sergeant Joshua Allmaras), TACP calls in A-10 airstrikes, unfortunately you don’t see the A-10s, just their bombs impacting on the ground (also video of M1A2 and M2 live fire):

Idaho Army National Guard photo by Sergeant Mason Cutrer, 05JUN2019.

A-10C Thunderbolt-2 assigned to the 190th Fighter Squadron, Idaho Air National Guard, lands on the NTC desert.

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Master Sergeant Joshua C. Allmaras, 11JUN2019.

Video (by Private First Class Bailey Breving), dirt field landing and take-off:

Idaho Air National Guard photo by Master Sergeant Joshua C. Allmaras, 11JUN2019.

Not only did Idaho’s A-10s take part in wargames in California, but at the same time took part in Green Flag West at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada!

January 2019: A-10C SNOWBLIND WALKAROUND IN IDAHO!

Vehicle I-D, 2016: A-29B SUPER TUCANO, GREEN FLAG EAST