Lockheed P-3 Orion: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Deleted redudency
No edit summary
Line 56: Line 56:
**Radar/MAD/EWO (SS-3)
**Radar/MAD/EWO (SS-3)
**2 Acoustic (SS-1 and SS-2)
**2 Acoustic (SS-1 and SS-2)
*one enlisted in-flight technician (IFT)
*one awesome enlisted in-flight technician (IFT)
*one aviation ordnanceman (ORD position no longer used on USN crews; duties assumed by IFT.)
*one aviation ordnanceman (ORD position no longer used on USN crews; duties assumed by IFT.)



Revision as of 02:26, 10 April 2009

P-3 Orion
U.S. Navy P-3C Orion assigned to VP-22
Role Maritime patrol aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer Lockheed
First flight 25 November 1959
Introduction 1962
Status Active
Primary users United States Navy
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
Republic of Korea Navy
Number built Lockheed – 650,
Kawasaki – 107,
Total – 757
Developed from Lockheed L-188 Electra
Variants CP-140 Aurora
WP-3D Orion
Lockheed EP-3
AP-3C Orion

The Lockheed P-3 Orion is a maritime patrol aircraft used by numerous navies and air forces around the world, primarily for maritime patrol, reconnaissance, anti-surface warfare and anti-submarine warfare.

Development

The P-3 Orion, originally designated P3V, is based on the same design philosophy as the Lockheed L-188 Electra. It is not the same plane structurally; it has had seven feet of fuselage removed fore of the wings, as well as myriad internal, external, and airframe production technique enhancements. The prototype YP3V-1/YP-3A BuNo 148276 was in fact modified from the third Electra airframe c/n 1003. The P-3 Orion served as the replacement for the postwar era P-2 Neptune and P-5 Marlin. The Orion is powered by four Allison T56 turboprops which give it a speed comparable to fast propeller powered fighters, or even slow turbofan jets such as the A-10 Thunderbolt II or the S-3 Viking. Many other countries have seen the value of this platform design and have developed similar patrol aircraft based on this model, with the Soviets adapting their own counterpart to the Orion, the Ilyushin Il-38. The P-3 also competes with the British Hawker Siddeley Nimrod adaptation of the de Havilland Comet and the French Breguet Atlantique.

The first Orion prototype was a converted Lockheed Electra.

The first production version, designated P3V-1, first flew 15 April 1961. Initial squadron deliveries to VP-8 and VP-44 at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland began in August 1962. On 18 September 1962, the U.S. military transitioned to a unified designation system, making the aircraft the P-3A. Paint schemes have changed from an early 1960s blue and white scheme, to a mid-1960s white and gray, to a mid-1990s low visibility gray. Over the years more than 40 combatant & noncombatant variants of the P-3 have been developed due to the rugged reliability displayed by the platform flying 12 hour plus missions 200 feet (61 m) over salt water while maintaining an excellent safety record. Versions have been developed for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for research and hurricane hunting/hurricane wall busting, for U.S. Customs for drug interdiction and aerial surveillance mission with a rotodome adapted from the E-2 Hawkeye or an AN/APG-66 radar adapted from the F-16 Fighting Falcon, and for NASA for research and development.

There have also been unconfirmed claims of the CIA operating three P-3As, alternatingly described as having been painted all black or in the markings of the Taiwanese Air Force (RoCAF), for aerial surveillance and agent/leaflet delivery in the vicinity of the People's Republic of China. The veracity of these claims remains suspect.[citation needed]

The United States Navy remains the largest operator of the P-3, currently distributed between a single fleet replacement (i.e., "training) patrol squadron, twelve active duty patrol squadrons, two Navy Reserve patrol squadrons, and two active duty special projects patrol squadrons. Two additional active duty fleet reconnaissance squadrons operate the EP-3 Aries signals intenlligence (SIGINT) variant. The U.S. Navy's P-3Cs are slated for replacement between 2010–2013 by the Boeing P-8 Poseidon, which is based upon the Boeing 737-800 series airliner.

Design

P-3A of VP-49 in the original blue/white colours
Underside view of a P-3C showing the MAD (rear boom) and external sonobuoy launch tubes (grid of black spots towards the rear)
Allison T56-A-14 prop

The P-3 has an internal bomb bay under the front fuselage which can house conventional Mark 50 torpedoes or Mark 46 torpedoes and/or special (nuclear) weapons. Additional underwing stations, or pylons, can carry other armament configurations including the AGM-84 Harpoon, AGM-84E SLAM, AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER, the AGM-65 Maverick, 5 in (12.7 cm) Zuni rockets, and various other sea mines, missiles, and gravity bombs. The aircraft also had the capability to carry the AGM-12 Bullpup guided missile until that weapon was withdrawn from U.S./NATO/Allied service.

Crew complement

The number of crew on board a P-3 varies depending on the role being flown, the variant being operated, and the country who is operating. In US service[1], the normal complement for a P-3C is 12:

  • three Naval Aviators
    • Patrol Plane Commander (PPC)
    • Patrol Plane 2nd Pilot (PP2P)
    • Patrol Plane 3rd Pilot (PP3P)
  • two Naval Flight Officers
    • Patrol Plane Tactical Coordinator (PPTC or TACCO)
    • Patrol Plane Navigator/Communicator (PPNC or NAVCOM)
  • two enlisted aircrew flight engineers (FE1 and FE2)
  • three enlisted sensor operators
    • Radar/MAD/EWO (SS-3)
    • 2 Acoustic (SS-1 and SS-2)
  • one awesome enlisted in-flight technician (IFT)
  • one aviation ordnanceman (ORD position no longer used on USN crews; duties assumed by IFT.)

Engine loiter shutdown

On many missions, an engine is shut down (usually the No. 1 engine - the port outer engine) once on station to conserve fuel and extend the time aloft and/or range when at low level. On occasion, both outboard engines can be shut down, aircraft weight, weather, and remaining fuel permitting. Long deep-water, coastal or border patrol missions can last over ten hours and may include extra crew. The record time aloft for a P-3 is a 21.5 hour flight undertaken by the Royal New Zealand Air Force's No. 5 Squadron in 1972.

Engine 1 is the primary candidate for loiter shutdown because it is the only one without a generator, and is not needed for electrical power. Eliminating the exhaust from engine 1 also improves visibility from the aft observer station on the port side of the aircraft.

Operational history

P-3B of VP-6 near Hawaii
US P-3C Orion of VP-8
Changing a tire on a P-3C

Developed during the Cold War, the P-3's primary mission was to track and eliminate ballistic missile and fast attack submarines in the event of war. Reconnaissance missions in international waters led to occasions where Soviet fighters would "bump" a U.S. Navy P-3 or other P-3 operators such as the Royal Norwegian Air Force. On one occasion in the 1980s the MiG and pilot did not survive the "bump" while trying to ward off a P-3 photographing a Soviet fleet exercise. The P-3 lost more than 10 feet (3.0 m) of its wing in the collision. The P-3 completed its mission and returned to base. [citation needed]

Cuban Missile Crisis

In October 1962, P-3As flew several blockade patrols in the vicinity of Cuba. Having just recently joined the operational Fleet earlier that year, this was the first employment of the P-3 in a real world "near conflict" situation.

Vietnam
Operation Market Time

Beginning in 1964, forward deployed P-3s began flying a variety of missions under Operation Market Time from bases in the Philippines and Vietnam. The primary focus of these coastal patrols was to stem the supply of materials to the Viet Cong by sea, although several of these missions also became overland "feet dry" sorties. During one such mission, a small caliber artillery shell passed through a P-3 without rendering it mission incapable. During another overland mission, it is rumored, but not confirmed, that a P-3 shot down a North Vietnamese MiG with Zuni missiles. The only confirmed combat loss of a P-3 also occurred during Operation Market Time. In April 1968, a U.S. Navy P-3B of Patrol Squadron 26 (VP-26) was downed by anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) fire in the Gulf of Thailand with the loss of the entire crew. Two months earlier, in February 1968, another of VP-26's P-3Bs was operating in the same vicinity when it crashed with the loss of the entire crew. Originally attributed to be an aircraft mishap at low altitude, later conjecture is that this aircraft may have also fallen victim to AAA fire from the same source as the subsequent aircraft loss in April.[2]

Iraq
Desert Shield / Desert Storm

On August 2, 1990 Iraq invaded Kuwait and was poised to strike Saudi Arabia. Within forty-eight hours of the initial invasion of Kuwait, U.S. Navy P-3Cs were the first American forces to arrive in the area. One of these responding P-3Cs was a modified aircraft with a prototype system known as "Outlaw Hunter." Undergoing trials in the Pacific after being developed by the Navy’s Space & Naval Warfare Systems Command, "Outlaw Hunter" was testing a specialized over-the-horizon targeting (OTH-T) system package when it responded. Within hours of the start of the coalition air campaign, "Outlaw Hunter" detected a large number of Iraqi patrol boats and naval vessels attempting to make a run from Basra and Umm Qasar to Iranian waters. "Outlaw Hunter" vectored in strike elements which attacked the flotilla near Bubiyan Island destroying 11 vessels and damaging scores more. During Desert Shield, a P-3 using infrared imaging detected a ship with Iraqi markings beneath freshly painted bogus Egyptian markings trying to avoid detection. Several days before the 7 January 1991 commencement of Operation Desert Storm, a P-3C equipped with an APS-137 Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR) conducted coastal surveillance along Iraq and Kuwait to provide pre-strike reconnaissance on enemy military installations. Fifty-five of the one hundred and eight Iraqi vessels destroyed during the conflict were targeted by P-3C aircraft.[3]

Afghanistan
War in Afghanistan (2001–present)

Although the P-3 is a Maritime Patrol Aircraft, armament and sensor upgrades in the Surface Warfare Improvement program have made it suitable for sustained combat air support over land. Since the start of the current war in Afghanistan, U.S. Navy P-3's have been operating from Kandahar in that role.[4] Australian Air Force P-3's also operated there early in the war.[5] A USN P-3 was lost in a crash at Bagram on 21 Oct, 2008.[6]

Somalia
Piracy in Somalia

On October 29 2008, A Spanish P-3 aircraft patrolling the coast of Somalia reacted to a distress call from an oil tanker and dropped 3 Smoke bombs on the attacking pirate boats and foiled their attack. [7]

Pakistan

In late 2006, the US announced the intention to sell three P-3C Orions equipped with the E-2C Hawkeye 2000 AEW system to the Pakistan Navy, along with 10 regular P-3Cs. The AEW aircraft will provide Pakistan with search surveillance and control capability for maritime operations.[8] But the order never seemed to have materialised.

Civilian uses

Aero Union P-3A Orion taking off from Fox Field, Lancaster, California, to fight the North Fire.
NOAA WP-3D Hurricane Hunters
P-3C of the German Navy
P-3C of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
File:P-3K 5Sqn NZ4203 1.jpg
RNZAF P-3KII in Antartica, 2006
U.S. Department of Homeland Security P-3AEW&C to track drug couriers
Canadian CP-140 Aurora in June 2007

Several P-3s have been N-registered and are operated by civilian agencies. The United States Customs Service has a number of P-3A and P-3Bs used for maritime patrol. NOAA operates two WP-3D variants specially modified for hurricane research. One P-3B, N426NA, is used by NASA as an Earth science research platform, primarily for the NASA Science Mission Directorate's Airborne Science Program. It is based at Goddard Space Flight Center's Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia.

Aero Union, Inc. operates eight ex-USN P-3As configured as air tankers, which are leased to the U.S. Forest Service, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and other agencies for firefighting use. A unique capability of the P-3 is that on so-called "downhill runs," i.e. when the plane is commencing a low pass to drop fire retardant, it is possible to put the propellers into "Beta" range, which is reverse-thrust mode, in order to slow the plane for the drop of water-based retardant.[citation needed] Several of these aircraft were involved in the U.S. Forest Service airtanker scandal but have not been involved in any catastrophic aircraft mishaps.

Variants

  • P-3A: The original production version; 157 built.
  • P-3A (CS): Four with ex-USN P-3As reequipped with AN/APG-66 radars for use by the United States Customs Service.
  • EP-3A: Seven modified for electronic reconnaissance testing.
  • NP-3A: Three modified for the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory.
  • RP-3A: Two modified for scientific uses for the former Oceanographic Development Squadron EIGHT (VXN-8) at NAS Patuxent River.
  • TP-3A: 12 modified for training duties in Fleet Replacement Squadrons with all ASW gear removed.
  • UP-3A: 38 reconfigured as utility transports with all the ASW gear removed.
  • VP-3A: Three WP-3As and two P-3As converted into VIP/staff transports.
  • WP-3A: Four converted for weather reconnaissance.
  • P-3B: Second main production version/series T56-A14 engines in lieu of T56-A10W engines on P-3A..
  • EP-3B: Two P-3As converted into ELINT aircraft during the Vietnam War.
  • NP-3B: One P-3B converted into a testbed, for the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory.
  • P-3BR: Modification to P-3A model for Brazilian Air Force. Eight aircraft with EADS avionics.[9]
  • P-3C: Third main production version/series. T56-A14 engines. P-3C had A-NEW ASW suite and mission computer. Revised internal layout. Externally P-3C featured electrically operated entry ladder, small fin-top antenna, externally loaded belly sonobuoy chutes, 3 small windows on the aft right side (one window forward of the overwing emergency exit and two well aft). Initial production aircraft had camera nose located on lower part of radome. Later production aircraft had retractable IRDS turret in lieu of nose camera. Beginning in the early 1980s existing camera noses were retrofitted with IRDS turrets.
    • P-3C Update I: New and improved avionics, 31 built.
    • P-3C Update II: With infra-red detection system (IRDS), sonobuoy reference system (SRS), and able to carry the AGM-84 Harpoon anti-ship missile; 44 built.
    • P-3C Update II.5: 24 aircraft with more reliable LTN-72 inertial navigation system and enhanced communications equipment.
    • P-3C Update III: 50 aircraft with new acoustic processor, sonobuoy receiver, plasma displays, and improved auxiliary power unit (APU).
    • P-3C Update IV: P-3C with Boeing Update 4 avionics suite. Update 4 was going to be common avionics interior for P-3Cs and its planned replacement aircraft, the Lockheed P-7A, which never made it to production. One one P-3C was converted to UD4 interior and that aircraft was later stripped and turned into an Special Mission aircraft.
    • P-3C AIP(US)/UIP(RNoAF) with interior modification to add ASQ-222 mission computer, ASQ-78A/B acoustics system, APS-137 ISAR radar
    • P-3C BMUP (US) 25 aircraft/CUP (RNlAF) with interior modification to convert UD2 and UD2.5 to carry ASQ-227 mission computer and ASQ-78B acoustics suite
  • EP-3: ELINT aircraft for the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force.
  • NP-3C: One P-3C converted into a testbed for the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory.
  • RP-3C: One P-3C modified to replace the RP-3A.
  • OP-3C: 10 P-3C converted to reconnaissance aircraft for the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force.
  • UP-3C: Equipment test aircraft for the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force.
  • UP-3D: ELINT training aircraft for the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force.p
  • RP-3D: One P-3C modified on production line to optimize MAD capabilities. Aircraft did extensive MAD surveys and was painted "Project Magnet". In 1973 RP-3D was instrumental in pinpointing wreckage of Civil War USS Monitor..
  • WP-3D: Two P-3Cs modified on production line for NOAA weather research, including hurricane hunting.
  • EP-3E Aries: 10 P-3As and 2 EP-3Bs converted into ELINT aircraft.
  • EP-3E Aries II: 12 P-3Cs converted into ELINT aircraft.
  • EP-3E SIGINT: Eight US Navy EP3Es are to be converted by L-3 Communications Integrated Systems into "surge configuration" Signals Intelligence aircraft. This will expand their multi-source inteligence capacity to meet the increased intelligence demands of the "surge" in counter-terrorism operations. [10]
  • NP-3E: Various aircraft used for tests.
  • P-3F: Six Orions delivered to the former Imperial Iranian Air Force in the late 1970s. The airframe of the P-3F was based on the P-3C was which the then current production variant for the U.S.Navy. The P-3F and P-3C featured electrically operated entry ladder, small fin-top antenna, externally loaded belly sonobuoy chutes, 3 small windows on the aft right side (one window forward of the overwing emergency exit and two well aft), camera nose located on lower part of radome. The P-3F did not have ASW suite or mission computer of the P-3C. Most of the displays and processers were adapted from the P-3A/P-3B (although the P-3F had the APS-115 radar of the P-3C) The P-3F came from the factory with the then standard grey and white U.S Navy paint scheme, but while crews were undergoing training in the U.S., the aircraft were repainted in a unique 3-tone blue paint scheme.; three aircraft still operational with the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force.
  • P-3G: Original designation of the Lockheed P-7A.
  • P-3H: Proposed P-3C upgrade.
  • EP-3J: Two modified from P-3As for FEWSG use as a simulated adversary EW platform in exercises; later transferred to the former Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron Thirty-Three (VAQ-33), then transferred to the former Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron Eleven (VQ-11).
  • P-3K: five aircraft originally of P-3B standard but subsequently updated, delivered to New Zealand in 1965-67, replacing Short Sunderlands. The original P-3Bs were operated by No. 5 Squadron RNZAF from Whenuapai, Auckland. These received part of the P-3C Update II package and some local innovations, then being designated P-3K (for Kiwi), together with a P-3B purchased second hand from the Royal Australian Air Force and brought up to P-3K standard. Aircraft were re-winged and underwent a further round of avionics and sensor updates in 2005 (P-3KII).
  • P-3M: Five former RNoAF P-3B modernized by EADS-CASA for the Spanish AF. They have a new sensor suite integrated by a six console EADS-CASA Fully Integrated Tactical System (FITS)data system. New sensors include an Elta-2022 radar, SPAS-16 acoustic processor, new 99 channel sonobuoy receiver and AMES-C ESM system. Only the original MAD system was kept.
  • P-3N: Two P-3B modified for coast guard missions for the RNoAF.
  • P-3P: Six ex-RAAF originally of P-3B standard but subsequently updated for the Portuguese Air Force. Being replaced by newer P-3C Update II.5s formerly operated by the Royal Netherlands Navy.
  • P-3T: Two P-3A modified for Royal Thai Navy.
    • VP-3T: One P-3A modified for Royal Thai Navy VIP use and some surveillance operations.
  • P-3W: Designation used internally by the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) to distinguish the first 10 P-3C aircraft procured in the P-3C Update 2 configuration (1978-79) from the second 10 aircraft which were procured in the Update 2.5 configuration (1982-83). The older aircraft were designated as P-3Cs and the newer aircraft P-3Ws. All were equipped with the British AQS-901 Acoustics Processor. Eventually with various system upgrades to the mission systems the two types mergerd into one and they are now all known as AP-3Cs.
  • AP-3C: All Royal Australian Air Force P-3C/W aircraft which have been fully upgraded with totally new mission systems by L-3 Communications to include an Elta SAR/ISAR RADAR and a GD-Canada Acoustic Processor system.
    • TAP-3: 3 modified B-models for training duties with the Royal Australian Air Force, with all the ASW gear removed and passenger seating installed. Removed from service with the full introduction into service of the AP-3C Simulator. Designator reflected them as being 'Training Australian P-3'
  • P-3CK: Designation of the eight former P-3B aircraft that the Republic of Korea Navy procured from the USN and which are in the process of being rebuilt with P-3C configuration wings and fitted with updated Mission System Equipment by Korea Aerospace Industries and L-3 Communications.
  • P-3AEW&C (originally nicknamed "Sentinel"): Eight P-3B aircraft were converted into Airborne Early Warning and Control aircraft. The P-3AEW&Cs are used by U.S. Customs and Border Protection for drug interdiction and homeland security missions. "Slicks" are P-3s with an optical sensor turret in the nose which often work with the AEW ships.
  • CP-140 Aurora: Longe-range maritime reconnaissance, anti-submarine warfare aircraft for the Canadian Armed Forces. Based on the P-3C Orion airframe, but mounts the more advanced electronics suite of the S-3 Viking.
  • CP-140A Arcturus: Three CP-140s without ASW equipment installed for Aurora crew training and various coastal patrol missions.
  • P-7 proposed new-build and improved variant as a P-3 Orion replacement later cancelled.
  • Orion 21 proposed new-build and improved variant as a P-3 Orion replacement; lost to Boeing P-8 Poseidon.

Operators

Military operators

Argentine Navy P-3B
P-3W, 11 Sqn RAAF, in 1990
P-3F of the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force
 Argentina
 Australia
 Brazil
 Canada
 Chile
  • Chilean Navy - 4 P-3A; based at Base Aeronaval Torquemada, Con-Con
 Germany
 Greece
 Iran
 Japan
 New Zealand
 Norway
 Pakistan
 Portugal
 Republic of China (Taiwan)
 South Korea
 Spain
 Thailand
 United States

Civilian operators

File:Lockheed AWACS, 1984.jpg
Lockheed debuts AWACS plane, a converted P-3 Orion, Los Angeles, 1984; later used by U.S. Department of Homeland Security
 United States

Specifications (P-3C Orion)

File:P3corion.jpg
An armed US P-3C Orion
P-3s of the Royal New Zealand Air Force, Royal Australian Air Force, and the United States Navy

General characteristics

  • Crew: 11
  • Airfoil: NACA 0014-1.10 (Root) - NACA 0012-1.10 (Tip)

Performance Armament

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ "P-3C Orion long range ASW aircraft". US Navy Fact File. US Navy. 2007-1-25. Retrieved 2008-09-20. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ http://www.vpnavy.org/vp26mem.html
  3. ^ READE, DAVID (1998). THE AGE OF ORION THE LOCKHEED P-3 ORION STORY. ATGLEN, PA: SCHIFFER. pp. 42–49. ISBN 0-7643-0478-X. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ http://www.military.com/NewContent/0,13190,SS_070505_Navy,00.html
  5. ^ http://www.globalcollab.org/Nautilus/australia/afghanistan/adf-in-afghanistan-history
  6. ^ http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=51587
  7. ^ http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/News/0,,2-11-1447_2417932,00.html
  8. ^ "Possible Sale to Pakistan of three P-3 aircraft with the E-2C HAWKEYE 2000(AEW) Suite" 7 December 2006 in PDF format
  9. ^ interview with Rainer Hertrich (EADS CEO) in 2003
  10. ^ Jane's Defence Weekly 01/14/2009
  11. ^ "U.S. in deal to refurbish aircraft for Taiwan". Washington Post. 2009-03-13. Retrieved 2007-09-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. ^ "U.S. Grounds 39 P-3 Aircraft". Defensenews. 2008-01-11. Retrieved 2008-01-11.
  13. ^ "DHS Air Assets P-3 AEW".
  14. ^ "DHS Air Assets P-3 LRT".
  15. ^ [1]

Bibliography

External links