4/25/2007 - ST. LOUIS -- The Boeing Company flew the
second C-130 Avionics Modernization Program (AMP)
aircraft for the first time March 25, logging another
milestone in the most comprehensive C-130 avionics
modification ever conducted.
The C-130 AMP aircraft, H2.5, successfully completed
its maiden flight from Lackland Air Force Base (AFB)
in San Antonio, Texas. Boeing test pilot Mike Leone
and U.S. Air Force pilot Maj. Adam Faulkner conducted
the 1.3-hour flight.
This is the second C-130 to undergo trial
installations. Boeing began modifying the aircraft in
April 2005, after accepting it from the Kentucky Air
National Guard in Louisville. Boeing delivered the
first C-130 AMP aircraft, an H2 model, to the U.S. Air
Force last November. The first C-130H aircraft to be
modified with an advanced avionics suite is ahead of
its planned ground and flight test programs, which
began at the Air Force Flight Test Center at Edwards
AFB, Calif., on Nov. 28, 2006.
The U.S. Air Force initiated the modernization
program to simplify multiple C-130 configurations in
its fleet. Awarded in 2001, the program is more than
60 percent through its design and development phase,
which will consolidate four mission design series into
one common core avionics suite for the combat delivery
type aircraft. The C-130 AMP provides enhanced digital
avionics that significantly increases situational
awareness for the warfighter. Upgrade commonality
brought by the AMP offers additional flexibility in
assigning aircrews regardless of the model design
type.
Source: Boeing Press Release