Transall C-160

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C-160

C-160T of the Turkish Air Force

Type Transport aircraft
Manufacturer Transport Allianz
Maiden flight 25 February 1963
Introduction 1967
Primary users Luftwaffe
Armée de l'Air,
South African Air Force
Produced 1965-1985
Number built 214

The Transport Allianz Transall C-160 is a military transport aircraft developed by a consortium of French and German aircraft manufacturers for the air forces of those two nations and that of South Africa. The name Transall comes from the contraction of Transport Allianz.

Contents

[edit] Development

The C-160 was originally conceived as a replacement for the Armée de l'Air's Nord Noratlas fleet. It is turboprop-powered and of conventional configuration for aircraft of this type, with high wings, and a loading ramp built into the rear of the fuselage. Size-wise, it falls between the Aeritalia G.222 and the C-130 Hercules.

Three prototypes flew in 1963, followed by pre-production machines in 1965 and production machines from 1967. The first batch included 110 C-160Ds for the Luftwaffe, 50 C-160Fs for the Armée de l'Air, and 9 C-160Zs for the South African Air Force, 4 C-160Fs were converted to air mail transport aircraft, they were operated by Air France and given the designation C-160P. Production continued until 1972 with French aircraft built by Aérospatiale and German aircraft by Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm..

[edit] Service and upgrades

A Luftwaffe Transall
A Luftwaffe Transall

In 1977, the Armée de l'Air ordered an updated version (designated C-160NG, for Nouvelle Génération - "New Generation"). From 1981, 29 of these aircraft were delivered, half of them configured as tanker aircraft for aerial refuelling. Another 4 were configured as C-160H TACAMO aircraft, for communication with submerged submarines. Finally, 2 more were converted to SIGINT electronic surveillance aircraft, designated C-160G Gabriel, replacing the Noratlases that had been in this role previously. While still new, the C-160Gs took part in the Gulf War of 1991.

From 1994 to 1999, all French C-160s underwent an avionics upgrade and the addition of new anti-missile countermeasures. The C-160Fs and NGs so updated were redesignated C-160R (Renové - "renovated"). Luftwaffe machines have similarly undergone life-extension programmes by BAE Systems, but all French and German machines are reaching the end of their service lives as of 2004. All South African machines have already been retired, while the Turkish Air Force continues to operate 20 machines obtained from Germany (C-160T).

To replace the Transall, the Luftwaffe, the Armée de l'Air, and the South African Air Forces ordered respectively 60, 50 and 8 Airbus A400M.

[edit] Operators

Transall Gabriel from French Air Force (EEA 1/54 Dunkerque)
Transall Gabriel from French Air Force (EEA 1/54 Dunkerque)
A German Transall of the Luftwaffe dropping cargo
A German Transall of the Luftwaffe dropping cargo

[edit] Military operators

Flag of France France
Flag of Germany Germany
Flag of South Africa South Africa
Flag of Turkey Turkey

[edit] Civil operators

Flag of France France
Flag of Indonesia Indonesia
  • Manunggal Air Service
Flag of Switzerland Switzerland

[edit] Specifications (Transall C-160D)

Orthographic projection of a Transall C-160

General characteristics

  • Crew: five - two pilots, flight engineer, tactics officer, Loadmaster
  • Capacity: cargo or up to 80 troops
  • Payload: 16,000 kg (32,300 lb)
  • Length: 32.40 m (106 ft 4 in)
  • Wingspan: 40.00 m (131 ft 3 in)
  • Height: 12.36 m (38 ft 3 in)
  • Wing area: 160 m² (1,721 ft²)
  • Empty weight: 30,000 kg (62,700 lb)
  • Loaded weight: 46,000 kg (103,400 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 49,150 kg (112,200 lb)
  • Powerplant:Rolls-Royce Tyne 22 turboprops, 4,225 kW (5,565 hp [1]) each

Performance

Avionics

  • Flight management system
  • GPS
  • Laser-INS (inertial navigation system)
  • TCAS II collision avoidance system

[edit] References

[edit] See also

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