Requiem for a veteran Hercules
Longest-serving aircraft of its kind in the world
Chris Wattie
National Post
Wednesday, November 23, 2005
The first of the Canadian air force's fleet of long-suffering CC-130 Hercules transport planes has finally succumbed to old age after 40 years and 20,816 flights on its log books.
Hercules 315 was the oldest aircraft of its kind in military service in the world.
It now rests, partially disassembled, in a maintenance hangar at the Canadian Forces 8 Wing in Trenton, Ont., the first of the stalwart cargo aircraft to fall victim to decades of wear and tear -- but not the last. Its retirement comes as Cabinet announced the purchase of 16 new replacements yesterday.
Hercules 315 flew into more than 50 countries, conducted life-saving search and rescue missions in Canada's North and carried thousands of soldiers and hundreds of tonnes of cargo to dirt landing strips in the Sudan and shell-cratered runways in the former Yugoslavia.
It was the first coalition aircraft into Sarajevo in 1992, carrying food and humanitarian aid into the besieged Bosnian city -- literally through the crossfire of Serb and Bosnian artillery duels.
"We flew her right down the middle of a battle ... but we never took a hit," says Warrant Officer Colin MacDonald, a flight engineer who served on 315 for more than half of the aircraft's long life. "She was a great old girl."
The transport plane also flew 75 missions into the dangerous skies of Afghanistan, dodging surface-to-air missiles and bullets over Kandahar, and developed a reputation over the years for being the most reliable aircraft in the Hercules fleet.
Captain Tim Hatheway, a Hercules pilot at CFB Trenton, recalls how 315 got him out of a potentially dangerous situation in a remote airstrip in Sudan last year despite losing one of its four engines.
"This was not a place where we wanted to spend the night, so we had to do a three-engine takeoff," he says. "It handled it no problem, which was a real relief to us."
Hercules 315 first flew in April, 1965, at Lockheed's Marietta, Ga., plant, one of 90 G-model C-130s produced that year, during the height of the Vietnam War. Her siblings were all bound for service with the U.S. Air Force and all have since been retired to aircraft graveyards.
She was among 20 G-models delivered between 1964 and 1967 to the then-Royal Canadian Air Force. At just over 40 years of age, 315 is not the oldest Hercules, but it has racked up the greatest amount of flying time -- the real measure of an aircraft's age -- with a total of 45,277.8 hours in the air.
Peter Simmons, a spokesman for Lockheed-Martin, marvels at the longevity of Hercules 315.
"That plane was the oldest military C-130 anywhere in the world," he said. "It had a staggeringly high number of flying hours."
By comparison, the U.S. military retires its Hercules after about 25,000 hours, he said.
"The Canadian maintainers have done just an amazingly good job. You have to hand it to them -- they kept that plane and the rest of the Canadian C-130s flying," he said. "But there comes a point where you just can't fight time."
Hercules 315 served in three different squadrons over its long life with the Canadian military, but since its retirement this summer it has become the property of 8 Air Maintenance Squadron. It is used to train aircraft mechanics who keep the rest of the Hercules fleet flying.
Much of the original airframe delivered in 1965 has been replaced over the years, and the rest has been repaired or overhauled during more than 600 modifications during its career.
Sergeant Gary Wall, at 59 one of only a handful of the aircrew who are older than the Hercules they fly, pats the dull grey fuselage of 315 -- sitting on blocks in a hangar surrounded by scaffolding and mechanics.
"Most flight engineers who've been flying for a while will tell you that you get a feel for each aircraft," he said. "This was a good one. I'm of the opinion that they shouldn't have retired this airplane -- it's still got some good flying hours in it.
"If they put a new wing on it, it'd be good for another 45,000 hours."
© National Post 2005