Beechcraft T-6 Texan II

T-6 Texan II
A USAF T-6A Texan II out of Randolph Air Force Base
Role Trainer aircraft
Manufacturer Raytheon Aircraft Company
Hawker Beechcraft
Primary users United States Air Force
United States Navy
Royal Canadian Air Force
Hellenic Air Force
Produced 435+[1]
Developed from Pilatus PC-9

The Beechcraft T-6 Texan II is a single-engined turboprop aircraft built by the Raytheon Aircraft Company (now Hawker Beechcraft). Based on the Pilatus PC-9, the T-6 is used by the United States Air Force for basic pilot training and by the United States Navy for Primary and Intermediate Joint Naval Flight Officer (NFO) and Air Force Combat Systems Officer (CSO) training. It has replaced the Air Force's T-37B Tweet and is replacing the Navy's T-34C Turbo Mentor. The T-6A is also used as a basic trainer by the Royal Canadian Air Force (CT-156 Harvard II), the Luftwaffe of Germany, the Greek Air Force, the Israeli Air Force (Efroni), and the Iraqi Air Force.

Contents

Design and development

The T-6 is a development of the Pilatus PC-9, modified significantly by Beechcraft in order to enter the Joint Primary Aircraft Training System (JPATS) competition in the 1990s.[2] A similar arrangement between Pilatus and British Aerospace had also been in place for a Royal Air Force competition in the 1980s, although this competition selected the Short Tucano. The aircraft was designated under the 1962 United States Tri-Service aircraft designation system and named for the decades-earlier T-6 Texan.

The Beechcraft brand has since been purchased from Raytheon by Onex Corporation a Canadian "private equity fund" which retained the name Hawker Beechcraft.[3]

The JPATS competition winning design was based on a commercial off the shelf Pilatus PC-9, with minor modifications. Additional requirements and conflicts between the Air Force and the Navy resulted in delays, cost increases (from initial estimates of $3.9 to roughly $6 million per aircraft) and a completely new aircraft that is 22% or 1,100 lbs heavier than the Pilatus.[4]

On April 9, 2007 the U.S. Department of Defense released their Selected Acquisition Reports, which reported that the T-6 JPATS program was one of only eight programs cited for Congressional notification for 25-50% cost overrun over initial estimates, which is referred to as a "Nunn-McCurdy Breach" after the Nunn-McCurdy Amendment. It is unusual for a program so far into full rate production to experience significant enough cost overruns to trigger this Congressional notification.[5]

Operational history

United States

The T-6A was introduced to Moody Air Force Base and Randolph Air Force Base in 2000-2001, and the Air Force awarded the full rate T-6 production contract in December 2001. Laughlin Air Force Base began flying the T-6 in 2003 where it is now the primary basic trainer, replacing the T-37. Vance Air Force Base completed transitioning from the T-37 to the T-6 in 2006. That year, Columbus Air Force Base began its transition, and retired its last T-37 in April 2008. The last active USAF T-37Bs were retired at Sheppard Air Force Base in the Summer of 2009.[6]

The T-6A also replaced all T-34Cs with Training Air Wing SIX at Naval Air Station Pensacola in early 2005. T-6Bs began replacing T-34Cs as the primary trainer with Training Air Wing FIVE at NAS Whiting Field in the late summer of 2009 and the installation will operate both aircraft as it transitions over the next few years.[7] Training Air Wing FOUR at NAS Corpus Christi will continue to operate the T-34C as the primary trainer, with the arrival of the T-6B scheduled for that location in 2012.[7] On 18 May 2010 Training Wing 5 had the first training flight of a T-6B.[8]

The Texan failed to qualify for the Light Attack/Armed Reconnaissance program, because the USAF mailed the exclusion notice to the wrong address, leaving the company with no time to protest the decision.[9]

Canada

The CT-156 Harvard II is a variant used for pilot instruction in the NATO Flying Training in Canada (NFTC).,[10] located at 15 Wing, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.[11] They are leased to the Royal Canadian Air Force by the program's administrator, Bombardier. NFTC's Harvard II aircraft are almost identical in cockpit layout and performance to the American JPATS Texan IIs. Within NFTC, students fly the Harvard II in Phase 2A and 2B of the training program, and some will go on to fly the CT-155 Hawk jet trainer also used by NFTC for Phase 3 (Moose Jaw) and Phase 4 Fighter Lead-In Training (4 Wing, Cold Lake, Alberta). The NFTC has 25 Harvard II aircraft owned and maintained by Bombardier.[12]

Greece

The Hellenic Air Force operates 25 T-6A and 20 T-6A NTA aircraft.[13][14]

Israel

On 9 June 2008, the Defense Security Cooperation Agency announced a possible FMS sale to Israel of 25 T-6As for the Israeli Air Force.[15][16] In July 2009, Beechcraft delivered the first four of 20 T-6As under contract to the Israeli Air Force.[17]

Iraq

On 16 December 2009: The first 4 of 15 T-6A aircraft are delivered to Iraq under a $210 million contract. No AT-6 aircraft were included as was previously reported. This equates to an average of $14 million per aircraft with support and training included. The first 8 aircraft, purchased by the Government of Iraq, will arrive at Tikrit by the end of January 2010. The last 7, purchased by the United States, are expected by the end of December 2010.[18]

Morocco

In October 2009, Hawker Beechcraft announced the sale of 24 T-6Cs for the Royal Moroccan Air Force.[19]

Variants

T-6A Texan II 
Standard version for the USAF, USN, and Hellenic Air Force (25).
T-6A NTA Texan II 
Armed version of the T-6A for the HAF (20). T-6A NTA has the capability to carry rocket pods, gun pods, external fuel tanks, and bombs.[14]
T-6B Texan II 
Upgraded version of the T-6A with a digital glass cockpit that includes a Head-Up Display (HUD), six multi-function displays (MFD) and Hands On Throttle And Stick (HOTAS).[20]
AT-6B Texan II 
Armed version of the T-6B for primary weapons training or light attack roles. It has the same digital cockpit, but upgraded to include datalink and integrated electro-optical sensors along with several weapons configurations.[14][21] Engine power is increased to 1,600 hp and the structure is reinforced.[22]
T-6C Texan II 
Upgraded version of the T-6B with wing hard points.
CT-156 Harvard II 
Version of the T-6A for NTFC with the Canadian Forces.[11] Nearly identical to standard USAF and USN in terms of avionics, cockpit layout, and performance.

Operators

 Canada
 Germany
 Greece
 Israel
 Iraq
 Morocco
 United States

Accidents and incidents

Specifications (T-6A)

Data from Global Security[30] and USAF[31]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

Related lists

References

  1. ^ HawkerBeechcraft Production
  2. ^ Hawker Beechcraft - T-6 is not a PC-9 Article
  3. ^ Biz Yahoo Onex Acquires Hawker Beechcraft Article
  4. ^ [1] Strapping in and Bailing out, Navy and Air Force Joint Acquisition of Aircraft
  5. ^ [2] Department of Defense Selected Acquisition Reports, 2007
  6. ^ USAF (undated). "80th Flying Training Wing". http://www.sheppard.af.mil/units/80thflyingtrainingwing.asp. Retrieved 2009-10-24. 
  7. ^ a b http://www.navair.navy.mil/press_releases/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.view&Press_release_id=4173&site_id=15
  8. ^ First Student Takes Flight in T-6
  9. ^ Trimble, Stephen. "Mail mix-up makes Hawker Beechcraft miss protest deadline for USAF contract; appeal filed in federal court." Flight Global, 27 December 2011.
  10. ^ Bombardier Military Aerospace Training (November 2011). "NFTC The Concept". http://www.nftc.com/nftc/en/flash/nftc.jsp. Retrieved 2011-11-01. 
  11. ^ a b c Department of National Defence Public Affairs (March 2007). "CT-156 Harvard II". http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/v2/equip/ct156/index-eng.asp. Retrieved 4 November 2011. 
  12. ^ Department of National Defence Public Affairs (March 2007). "CT-156 Harvard II Specs". http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/v2/equip/ct156/specs-eng.asp. Retrieved 4 November 2011. 
  13. ^ Amynanet (undated). ">ΑΜΥΝΑ & ΔΙΠΛΩΜΑΤΙΑ 18. Εκπαιδευτικά αεροσκάφη". http://www.amynanet.gr/isoropia/18.htm. Retrieved 2009-10-24. 
  14. ^ a b c Bertorelli, Paul (October 2009). "NBAA 2009 Video Series: Hawker Beechcraft's Turboprop Attack Aircraft". http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/exclusivevids/NBAA2009_ExclusiveVideo_HawkerBeechcraft_T6LightAttackAircraft_201365-1.html. Retrieved 2009-10-15. 
  15. ^ http://defense-update.com/newscast/0608/news/news1006_texan_il.htm
  16. ^ http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36-b/2008/Israel_08-42.pdf
  17. ^ Egozi, Arie. "Israel receives first four T-6A 'Efroni' trainers". Flight International, 13 July 2009.
  18. ^ Defense Industry Daily, The Penny Drops: Iraq Chooses its Training & COIN Aircraft
  19. ^ a b Hawker Beechcraft sells 24 trainers to Morocco
  20. ^ CMC Electronics Cockpit 4000 for Turboprop and Jet Trainers Article
  21. ^ Hawker Beechcraft Corporation (undated). "Beechcraft AT-6". https://www.hawkerbeechcraft.com/military/at-6_ab/. Retrieved 2008-10-04. 
  22. ^ Light Attack - Affordable. Capable. Sustainable
  23. ^ T-6 Texan II, www.luftwaffe.de. Accessed July 11, 2009.
  24. ^ Flightglobal World Air Forces – December 2009
  25. ^ "The Penny Drops: Iraq Chooses its COIN Aircraft". Defense Industry Daily. August 12, 2009. http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/iraq-issues-rfp-for-coin-aircraft-03281/. Retrieved 14 August 2009. 
  26. ^ Air Force Link (November 2007). "T-6 Texan IIs collide". http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123077354. Retrieved 2007-11-28. 
  27. ^ USAF (undated). "Executive Summary Accident Investigation Board T-6A". http://usaf.aib.law.af.mil/T-6A_Columbus_28Nov07.pdf. Retrieved 2009-03-12. 
  28. ^ T-6A Texan crashes near Laughlin
  29. ^ Tan, Michelle, "Crash report blames pilot who shut down engine", Military Times, 7 March 2011, retrieved 8 March 2011.
  30. ^ T-6A JPATS Texan II/Harvard II
  31. ^ USAF Fact sheet T-6A Texan II

External links