Regarding A400M ability to airdrop boats, which has come to be totemic in ability to support "special forces" (i'm probably more concerned about the Submarine Parachute Assistance Group...), process to procure an initial 25 Large Boat Air Drop platforms began last year.
Main contender is exact same system already used on C-130s, the MCADS by IrvinGQ, consisting of 2 platforms (PURIBAD and PRIBAD), handling RHIBs from 6.5 to 12 meters long. In the december 2022 tender, ground assessment in Brize Norton is/was planned for september 2023.
The MOD is also looking for an initial 40 Medium Weight Air Drop platforms for the A400M, to be used for launching vehicles, artillery pieces and other equipment up to 12 tons.
Last year, focus for A400 was on clearing other capabilities for use, passing them from 206 Sqn (the trials unit) to frontline. This included rough strips (first frontline crews cleared in April at Geronimo LZ in Lousiana); first airdrop of supplies outside of UK (Estonia, march)
The summer saw work on Air Landed Aircraft Refuelling System (ALARS) and september saw the first big drops with the Low Level Parachute, working towards the necessary certifications.
August 2022 also saw the first operational use of air to air refueling to get A400M directly from Ascension to the Falklands. The UK also integrated early a SAR rafts and smoke floats launcher that is employed by the A400 based in the Falklands in its maritime patrol sorties.
The A400M has covered the Falklands cargo aircraft committment since 2018, first arriving there in march. It was one of the first tasks it took up from C-130. The priority in terms of airdrop capability was clearing the full drop sequence of 24 x 1-ton Container Delivery System.
One capability UK does not at the moment plan to exploit is air to air refueling. Any A400M, fitted with necessary kit, can become tanker (unlike KC-130 that is its own variant with permanent mods). A400 tanker kit even comes with centreline drogue in addition to 2 under wings.
Centreline drogue enables A400 to refuel large aircraft. There have been well documented difficulties with helicopters due to air flows, but progress has been made with use of longer drogues. In general, ability to refuel jets is mature. Helicopters, should eventually also mature
Regarding ability to operate from short, rough airstrips, beaches etc, RAF was responsible for most/all trials and knows. Depending exactly on the terrain and loads, parameters can vary a lot, but IN GENERAL, the A400 will mostly be able to go where a C-130 goes, carrying more.
Ultimately, C-130 has a growing problem that will never be solved: its fuselage is really quite small. The ability of A400M to carry more is driven more by VOLUME than by WEIGHT. With every single vehicle in use with army growing larger over the years, the C-130 is boxed out.
The A400M will carry anything a C-130 carries, and then some, and the greater volume/weight margin allows the embarkation of APACHE, PUMA, ARES (AJAX?), MASTIFF, wheeled tactical tanker etcetera. It really does "intrude" into strategic cargo territory.
Initially, A400M was delivered with little self-defense equipment fitted, and it took time to clear DASS and Large Aircraft IR Countermeasure. But "eagle eyed" observers should have noticed, for example in pictures from Sudan most recently, that LAIRCM fit is now commonly seen.
Is everything perfect and fully mature? No. In terms of availability, out of 22 aircraft now delivered, some 3 routinely in depth maintenance & 3-4 more are cycling through retrofits to replace parts that gave issues/pass 7-years propeller inspections. This will last out to 2025.
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I want to make my opinion clear about "the Army". It is not that i wouldn't like, or consider useful, a larger british army, but I get the feeling that too much of the discussion only ever leads to a self-licking lollipop. What geopolitical change is supposed to come out of it?
My absolute priority for Land is structuring and resourcing the toughest, most survivable and hard hitting deployable force that the available manpower and budget can sustain. An enablers-rich force that smaller armies could and would wish to attach to (JEF and beyond) during ops
If by whatever kind of miracle (read: gutting Navy and Air Force) i could rebuild army up to 2 Divisions (note of caution: Poland started building up its fourth mechanized division in 2018 and expects to be "done", all being well, by 2029), what would i have solved, in practice?
It is a well known fact that timelines slip and ambitions sometimes are not realized, but fact is: Royal Navy is working on its Future Maritime Aviation Force vision of a variety of drones integrating helicopters and a "standard" carrier wing of 2x F-35B Sqns (24 embarked jets)
The road to FMAF is undoubtedly long and complex. Much of what is being pursued was, quite simply, never done before. There is no ready manual, much of it has yet to be written and progress will come in stages, both for technical and budgetary reasons.
1) carriers: Royal Navy has already demonstrated it can operate both to sea at same time if needed, and might do so again this autumn, considering Prince of Wales is scheduled to return and work up ahead of high readiness next year, and QE will be deploying.
Looks like we are finally close to contract award for Project TYRO. WFEL's Dry Support Bridge to replace ABLE and LEGUAN sets for TITAN... and BOXER, maybe. A wheeled close support bridgelayer requirement had been added in. shephardmedia.com/news/landwarfa…
The Close Support Bridge requirement, last time the tender was publicly issued, included bridge sets for fitting upon the existing 33 TITAN but also a requirement for "14-36 Wheeled Close Support Launch Vehicles".
Unsurprisingly, ever since TYRO sprung a requirement for a wheeled close support bridgelayer, BOXER option has been showing up everywhere. WFEL owns one of the 2 BOXER assembly lines in the UK, as well as the bridging stuff it is most renowned for, so they have been all over this
L115A4 and new sights/ballistic calculator at WESSEX STORM 2023. I can't tell from photos if the new Day scope is on or if it is still the L24A1 Schmidt and Bender, but the In-Line should be the PHOENIX-S medium wave infra-red, and thus the new Sniper In-line Low Sight System 1.
The L115A4 is a reconstruction of the existing L115A3 which changes the chassis with a modern one offering the panoply of rails needed to take full advantage of the new sights and accessories. The range of sighs is being entirely renewed with contracts placed last year.
Qioptiq was picked x Sniper In-Line Low Light System - Weapon Sight 1, aka medium-wave infrared mounted ahead of day scope, as seen here. Theon Sensors delivers WS2, long wave IR. New ballistic calculator. Also, new day scope on the way, plus spotter thermal binocular.
While there is much in french military procurement that can be admired, and i think the transparency of Military Planning Law mechanism is something UK needs, beware of celebrating it as perfect and always make sure to distinguish between long term goals and real numbers.
For example, people reads that France plans to procure 50 A400M and thinks they really have them. Reality is, they actually have less than the RAF due to slower acquisition. Rafale: 225 has been the goal for so many years that some people think they have that many. Not even close
What France undoubtedly tends to have is a more prudent approach to transitions between old and new. Unlike the UK they don't entirely remove old fleet early. Number of Rafale is still below the number of Typhoon RAF received, for example, but they hang on to Mirages.
This was already done earlier with the UK taking 3 old norwegian M270, that will be upgraded and rebuilt to the new and latest standard within the British Army's ongoing project. Existing, GMLRS-ready British M270s in the meanwhile go to Ukraine to kick asses.
Note: transfer of 8 M270s from Norway to UK might actually translate in a NEW transfer of "just" 5 to Ukraine. This is because UK already sent 6 modernized M270s to Ukraine but only received 3 from Norway. UK planning to increase, not reduce M270s in service, so deficit needs fix
My periodic explainer in case you have missed it before:
- M270 production shut down many years ago. It MIGHT be feasible to restart, technically, but fact is, no wants seem to want to and so the base fact is: to have more M270s you need to reactivate and upgrade existing ones.