The Lockheed AC-130 gunship is a heavily-armed
ground-attack aircraft variant of the C-130 Hercules transport plane. The basic
airframe is manufactured by Lockheed, while Boeing is responsible for the
conversion into a gunship and for aircraft support. The AC-130A Gunship II
superseded the AC-47 Gunship I during the Vietnam War.
The gunship's sole user is the United States Air
Force, which uses AC-130H Spectre, AC-130U Spooky, and AC-130W Stinger II
variants for close air support, air interdiction and force protection. Close
air support roles include supporting ground troops, escorting convoys, and
flying urban operations. Air interdiction missions are conducted against
planned targets and targets of opportunity. Force protection missions include
defending air bases and other facilities. AC-130Us are based at Hurlburt Field,
Florida, while AC-130Hs and AC-130Ws are based at Cannon AFB, New Mexico. The
AC-130s deploy to bases worldwide in support of operations. The gunship
squadrons are part of the Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC), a
component of the United States Special Operations Command (SOCOM).
All of the weaponry aboard is mounted to fire out
from the left or port side of the aircraft. During an attack, the gunship
performs a pylon turn over the target area (flying in a large circle around a
fixed point on the ground, the fixed point being the target). This allows it to
maintain fire at a target far longer than a conventional attack aircraft. The
AC-130H "Spectre" was armed with two 20 mm M61 Vulcan cannons, one
Bofors 40mm autocannon, and one 105 mm M102 cannon, although on most missions
after 1994 the 20mm cannons were removed due to their incompatibility with
precision targeting and to enable transport of more 40mm and 105mm ammunition.
The upgraded AC-130U "Spooky" has a single 25 mm GAU-12 Equalizer in
place of the Spectre's twin 20 mm cannons, as well as an improved fire control
system and increased ammunition capacity. New AC-130J gunships based on MC-130J
Combat Shadow II special operations tankers are planned. The AC-130W is armed
with one 30MM Bushmaster Cannon.
Design
The AC-130 is a heavily-armed long-endurance
aircraft carrying an array of anti-ground orientated weapons that are
integrated with sophisticated sensors, navigation, and fire control systems. It
is capable of delivering precision firepower or area-saturation fire over a
target area over a long period of time, at night or in adverse weather. The
sensor suite consists of a television sensor, infrared sensor, and radar. These
sensors allow the gunship to visually or electronically identify friendly ground
forces and targets in most weather conditions.
The AC-130U is equipped with the AN/APQ-180, a
synthetic aperture radar for long-range target detection and identification.
The gunship's navigational devices include inertial navigation systems and a Global
Positioning System. The AC-130U employs technologies developed in the 1990s
which allow it to attack two targets simultaneously. It has twice the munitions
capacity of the AC-130H.[1] Although the AC-130U conducts some operations in
daylight, most of its combat missions are conducted at night. The AC-130H's
unit cost is US$132.4 million, and the AC-130U's cost is US$190 million (fiscal
2001 dollars).
During the Vietnam era, the various AC-130 versions
following the Pave Pronto modifications were equipped with a magnetic anomaly
detector (MAD) system called the Black Crow (AN/ASD-5), a highly sensitive
passive device with a phased-array antenna located in the left-front nose
radome that could pick up localized deviations in earth's magnetic field that
is normally used to detect submerged submarines. The Black Crow system was
slaved into the targeting computers of the AC-130A/E/H, enabling the detection
of the unshielded ignition coils of North Vietnamese trucks hidden under dense
jungle foliage, typical along the Ho Chi Minh trail. It could also detect
hand-held transmitter signals of air controllers on the ground to identify and
locate targets.
The PGM-38/U Enhanced 25 mm High Explosive
Incendiary (HEI) round was created to expand the AC-130U gunships' mission in
standoff range and survivability for its 25 mm GAU-12/U gun system. This round
is a combination of the existing PGU-25 HEI and a M758 fuse designated as
FMU-151/B to meet the MIL-STD-1316. The FMU-151 has an improved arming delay
with multi-sensitive range.
Development
During the Vietnam War, the C-130 Hercules was
selected to replace the Douglas AC-47 Spooky gunship (Project Gunship I) in
order to improve mission endurance and increase capacity to carry munitions.
Capable of flying faster than helicopters and at high altitudes with excellent
loiter time, the use of the pylon turn allowed the AC-47 to deliver continuous
accurate fire to a single point on the ground.
In 1967, JC-130A USAF 54-1626 was selected for
conversion into the prototype AC-130A gunship (Project Gunship II). The
modifications were done at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base by the Aeronautical
Systems Division. A direct view night vision telescope was installed in the
forward door, an early forward looking infrared (FLIR) in the forward part of
the left wheel well, and Gatling guns fixed facing down and aft along the left
side. The analog fire control computer prototype was handcrafted by RAF Wing
Commander Tom Pinkerton at the USAF Avionics Laboratory at Wright-Patterson
AFB. Flight testing of the prototype was performed primarily at Eglin Air Force
Base, followed by further testing and modifications. By September 1967, the
aircraft was certified ready for combat testing and was flown to Nha Trang Air
Base, South Vietnam for a 90 day test program. The AC-130 was later
supplemented by the AC-119 Shadow (Project Gunship III), which later proved to
be underpowered.
Seven more warplanes were converted to the
"Plain Jane" configuration like the AC-130 prototype in 1968, and one
aircraft received the "Surprise Package" equipment in 1969. Surprise
Package included the latest 20 mm rotary cannons and 40 mm Bofors cannon but no
7.62 mm close support armament. Surprise Package served as a test bed for the
avionic systems and armament for the AC-130E.
In 1970, ten more AC-130As were acquired under the
"Pave Pronto" project. In the summer of 1971, Surprise Package
equipped AC-130s were converted to the Pave Pronto configuration and assumed
their new nickname 'Thor'. Conversion of C-130Es into AC-130Es for the
"PAVE Spectre" project followed. Regardless of their project names
the aircraft were more commonly referred to by the squadron's call sign
'Spectre'.
In 2007, Air Force Special Operations Command
(AFSOC) initiated a program to upgrade the armament of AC-130s. The test
program planned for the 25 mm GAU-12/U and 40 mm Bofors cannon on the AC-130U
gunships to be replaced with two 30 mm Mk 44 Bushmaster II cannon. In 2007, the
Air Force modified four AC-130U gunships as test platforms for the Bushmasters.
These were referred to as AC-130U Plus 4 or AC-130U+4. AFSOC, however, canceled
its plans to install the new cannons on its fleet of AC-130Us. It has since
removed the guns and re-installed the original 40 mm and 25mm cannons and
returned the planes to combat duty. Brigadier General Bradley A. Heithold,
AFSOC's director of plans, programs, requirements, and assessments, said on 11
August 2008 that the effort was canceled because of problems with the
Bushmaster's accuracy in tests "at the altitude we were employing
it". There were also schedule considerations that drove the decision, he
said.
There are also plans to possibly replace the 105 mm
cannon with a breech-loading 120 mm M120 mortar, and to give the AC-130 a
standoff capability using either the AGM-114 Hellfire missile, the Advanced
Precision Kill Weapon System (based on the Hydra 70 rocket), or the Viper
Strike glide bomb.
The Air Force awarded L-3 Communications a $61
million contract to add weapons packages to eight MC-130W Combat Spear
special-mission aircraft to give them a gunship-like attack capability. L-3
will provide weapons kits, named "precision strike packages", for
installation on the aircraft at Warner Robins Air Logistics Center, Georgia.
MC-130Ws fitted with the weapons will be known as Dragon Spears. Air Force
Special Operations Command is arming these aircraft to relieve the high
operational demands on its regular AC-130 gunships until new AC-130Js enter the
fleet. The MC-130W Dragon Spear was renamed the AC-130W Stinger II in 2011.
The Air Force launched an initiative in 2011 to
acquire 16 new gunships based on new-built MC-130J Combat Shadow II special
operations tankers outfitted with a "precision strike package" to
give them an attack capability. The Air Force is requesting $1.6 billion from
Fiscal 2011 through 2015 for this recapitalization. These aircraft would
increase the size of the Air Force's gunship fleet to 33 aircraft, a net
increase of eight, after accounting for the planned retirement of eight aging
AC-130Hs. The first aircraft would be bought in Fiscal 2012, followed by two in
Fiscal 2013, five in Fiscal 2014, and the final eight in Fiscal 2015. The
decision to stick with the C-130s to fill the need came after funding to
acquire 16 C-27Js was removed from the fiscal 2010 budget. The AC-130J will
follow the path of the Dragon Spear program, along generally similar lines as
the USMC Harvest HAWK program.
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