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