avatar_Rory

Inflight refueling.

Started by Rory, November 06, 2006, 12:58:15 PM

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Rory

What method, if any, did the Canadian Air Force use for inflight refueling in the 60's please?

Am I going to have to paint a stuuuupid little door for the flying boom or can I build a stonking gurt lance type ala Gloster Javelin (please, please, please)?

rallymodeller

The RCAF/CAF didn't really go in for IFR until the CF-5's came along, and even then that was a relatively late addition. Our Starfighters (IIRC) never had the probes, and most of out A/C before that were never designed for them. The CC137s didn't get IFR hose and drogue pods until the 80's, as far as I can remember.
--Jeremy

Poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part...


More into Flight Sim reskinning these days, but still what-iffing... Leading Edge 3D

Rory

Just had a poke about on Google for a CC137 still none the wiser though I do like the look of the        " The Simpsons CC137 Lisa Montage Circular Jigsaw " that was first on the listings (NOT). So if no system was in use 60's probe and drogue is the system that is used now.

((thinking Javelin again YIPPEE!)

rallymodeller

Yep -- likely it would have been probe-and-drogue as it is the drogue reel is most easily adaptable to many carrier aircraft, and it is MUCH easier to fit the probe to existing aircraft. Boom-type refuelling was originally designed for USAF strategic bombers and since they had the infrastructure for it they went to boom-style for fighters as well.

A good RCAF IFR refueller would have been a development of the CL-44/CC-106 Yukon turboprop transport (itself a development of the Bristol Britannia).  The RCAF was also one of the first air forces in the world (if not the first) to use a jet transport in the form of the Comet airliner.

Wanna go for a double What If? How about a C-102 Jetliner in-flight refueller...:wub:  :wub:  :wub:


So, what -- gonna replace the Canuck? Say it ain't so!  
--Jeremy

Poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part...


More into Flight Sim reskinning these days, but still what-iffing... Leading Edge 3D

Rory

Quote
So, what -- gonna replace the Canuck? Say it ain't so!
Now we both know that the only thing to replace a Clunk with is another Clunk!

Once I have sanded down a couple of pounds of filler and slapped some paint on "IT" I will show you :D

And if you are lucky the kit as well :P  

mrdj

CF-101s had a probe. The first batch had a retractable probe right in front of the cockpit. At the time, the RCAF didn't have tankers, and when the CC-137s came out, the Batch 2 Voodoos had the probe replaced by an IR ball.

upnorth

#6
QuoteCF-101s had a probe. The first batch had a retractable probe right in front of the cockpit. At the time, the RCAF didn't have tankers, and when the CC-137s came out, the Batch 2 Voodoos had the probe replaced by an IR ball.
I thought we ordered our CF-101Bs without the probe and the probe doors sealed shut at the factory.
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nev

QuoteWhat method, if any, did the Canadian Air Force use for inflight refueling in the 60's please?

Am I going to have to paint a stuuuupid little door for the flying boom or can I build a stonking gurt lance type ala Gloster Javelin (please, please, please)?
I have a part-done RCAF VC-10.  Would be ideal for refuelling your RCAF Javelins :)
Between almost-true and completely-crazy, there is a rainbow of nice shades - Tophe


Sales of Airfix kits plummeted in the 1980s, and GCSEs had to be made easier as a result - James May

mrdj

QuoteI thought we ordered our CF-101Bs without the probe and the probe doors sealed shut at the factory

As I recall, RCAF Voodoos weren't ordered from the factory, they were taken from USAF stocks. It was an exchange for some NORAD radar sites.

rallymodeller

Quote
QuoteI thought we ordered our CF-101Bs without the probe and the probe doors sealed shut at the factory

As I recall, RCAF Voodoos weren't ordered from the factory, they were taken from USAF stocks. It was an exchange for some NORAD radar sites.
Yep -- the 101B's were offered both in exchange for the Pinetree Line and DEW stations, and because NORAD ADC wasn't very happy about the whole BOMARC thing. Later ('70-'71) we traded in the B and F's we had on a similar number of refurbished B's and new F's -- these are the ones with the IR seeker ball.
--Jeremy

Poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part...


More into Flight Sim reskinning these days, but still what-iffing... Leading Edge 3D