C-5 Galaxy
Mission
The
gigantic C-5 Galaxy, with its tremendous payload capability,
provides the Air Mobility Command intertheater airlift in
support of United States national defense. The C-5, the C-17
Globemaster III and the C-141 Starlifter are partners of AMC's
strategic airlift concept. The aircraft carry fully equipped
combat-ready military units to any point in the world on short
notice then provide field support required to help sustain the
fighting force.
Features
The
C-5 is one of the largest aircraft in the world. It can carry
outsize and oversize cargo intercontinental ranges and can take
off or land in relatively short distances. Ground crews can load
and off load the C-5 simultaneously at the front and rear cargo
openings. Other features of the C-5 are:
-
Able
to take off fully loaded within 8,300 feet (2,530 meters)
and land within 4,900 feet (1,493 meters).
-
High
flotation landing gear with 28 wheels sharing the weight.
-
Nose
and aft doors that open the full width and height of the
cargo compartment to permit faster and easier loading.
-
A
"kneeling" landing gear system that permits
lowering of the parked aircraft so the cargo floor is at
truck-bed height or to facilitate vehicle loading and
unloading.
-
Full
width drive-on ramps at each end for loading double rows of
vehicles.
-
A
system that records and analyzes information and detects
malfunctions in more than 800 test points.
The
C-5 is similar in appearance to its smaller sister transport,
the C-141 Starlifter, although the C-5 is much larger. Both
aircraft have the distinctive high T-tail, 25-degree wing sweep,
and four turbofan engines mounted on pylons beneath the wings.
The
Galaxy carries nearly all of the Army's combat equipment,
including such bulky items as its 74-ton mobile scissors bridge,
from the United States to any theater of combat on the globe.
Four
TF39 turbofan engines power the big C-5, rated at 43,000 pounds
thrust each. They weigh 7,900 pounds (3,555 kilograms) each and
have an air intake diameter of more than 8.5 feet (2.6 meters).
Each engine pod is nearly 27 feet long (8.2 meters).
The
Galaxy has 12 internal wing tanks with a total capacity of
51,150 gallons (194,370 liters) of fuel -- enough to fill 6 1/2
regular size railroad tank cars. A full fuel load weighs 332,500
pounds (150,820 kilograms). A C-5 with a cargo load of 270,000
pounds (122,472 kilograms) can fly 2,150 nautical miles,
offload, and fly to a second base 500 nautical miles away from
the original destination -- all without aerial refueling. With
aerial refueling, the aircraft's range is limited only by crew
endurance.
Background
Lockheed-Georgia
Co. delivered the first operational Galaxy to the 437th Airlift
Wing, Charleston Air Force Base, S.C., in June l970. C-5s are
stationed at Altus AFB, Okla.; Dover AFB, Del.; and Travis AFB,
Calif. AMC transferred some C-5s to the Air Reserve components
starting with Kelly AFB, Texas, in 1985; followed by Stewart Air
National Guard Base, N.Y.; and Westover Air Reserve Base, Mass.
In
March 1989, the last of 50 C-5B aircraft was added to the 76
C-5As in the Air Force's airlift force structure. The C-5B
includes all C-5A improvements as well as more than 100
additional system modifications to improve reliability and
maintainability. All 50 C-5Bs are scheduled to remain in the
active-duty force, shared by comparably sized and collocated Air
Force Reserve Associate units.
Based
on a recent study showing 80 percent of the C-5 airframe service
life remaining, AMC began an aggressive program to modernize the
C-5. The C-5 Avionics Modernization Program began in 1998 and
includes upgrading avionics to Global Air Traffic Management
compliance, improving navigation and safety equipment, and
installing a new autopilot system. Another part of the plan is a
comprehensive re-engining and reliability improvement program,
which includes new engines, pylons and auxiliary power units,
with upgrades to aircraft skin and frame, landing gear and the
pressurization system. This modernization program will restore
aircraft reliability and maintainability, maintain structural
and system integrity, reduce cost of ownership and increase
operational capability well into the 21st century.
General
Characteristics
Primary
Function: Outsize cargo transport
Prime Contractor: Lockheed-Georgia Co.
Power Plant: Four General Electric TF-39 engines
Thrust: 43,000 pounds, each engine
Wingspan: 222.9 feet (67.89 meters)
Length: 247.1 feet (75.3 meters)
Height: 65.1 feet (19.84 meters)
Cargo Compartment: height , 13.5 feet (4.11 meters);
width, 19 feet (5.79 meters); length, 143 feet, 9 in (43.8
meters)
Pallet Positions: 36
Maximum Cargo: 270,000 pounds (122,472 kilograms)
Maximum Takeoff Weight: C-5B 769,000 pounds (348,818
kilograms) (peacetime), 840,000 pounds (381,024 kilograms)
(wartime)
Speed: 518 mph (.77 Mach)
Range: 6,320 nautical miles (empty)
Crew: 7 (pilot, co-pilot, two flight engineers and three
loadmasters)
Unit Cost:C-5A - $152.8 million (FY98 constant dollars)
C-5B - $179 million (FY98 constant dollars)
Deployed:C-5A - 1969, C-5B - 1980
Inventory: unavailable
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