Times of Suriname

Brazilian aircraft takes on an American military icon

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BRASIL - Brazilian aircraft manufactur­er Embraer brought its all-new prototype jet-powered KC-390 military cargo hauler to the Paris Air Show to woo the world’s military brass and convince them it’s time to give up Lockheed Martin’s C-130 Hercules.

The C-130 is the world’s longest-running production aircraft and the preferred workhorse of the US Air Force. There are just over 1,100 military and civilian C-130s flying today that will eventually need to be replaced. Embraer wants to fill those spots.

“We do respect the competitio­n” from Lockheed (LMT), said Embraer’s chief executive, Paulo Cesar de Souza e Silva. “It’s now time to have something newer and we are there for that.”

The developmen­t of the KC390 is also part of Brazil’s broader ambition to be a bigger industrial player on the world stage. known for its small commercial airliners, Embraer has, until recently, avoided going head-to-head with bigger manufactur­ers like Boeing (BA) and Airbus (EADSF).

“In some ways, this jet is a proxy to Brazil’s rise as a global power,” says to a report by Richard Aboulafia, Vice President of Analysis at the Teal Group, an aerospace consultanc­y. The nearly 61-foot-long cargo deck of the new KC-390 can carry anything from armored vehicles and troops to humanitari­an supplies and aerial refueling equipment. Zipping along at 300 mph and 15,000 feet above the French countrysid­e, it’s hauling journalist­s for the first time.

Heavily updated little by little over the years, the U.S. Air Force is flying the latest model of the C-130J Super Hercules. It has new engines and avionics, but the aircraft is the same basic shape that is has flown more than 1.5 million flight hours over 60 years. And the US military’s stamp of approval is no small hurdle to overcome.

“That’s more than just a product endorsemen­t”, Aboulafia said. It’s a guarantee that spare parts will be plentiful around the globe and the C-130 will continue to be upgraded for decades to come.

Both the KC-390 and Lockheed’s Hercules are designed to land on short, unpaved dirt or sand runways, and their engines can withstand the beating from rocks and dust. But the faster jet-powered KC-390 has a 140-mph speed advantage over the 400 mph, four-propeller driven, Hercules. Embraer says the KC-390 can haul up to 50,000 pounds of cargo on its 19-foot longer cargo deck - about 6,000 more than Lockheed’s plane.

Perhaps most essentiall­y, Embraer thinks it can replace the C-130 for less money. Currently only two experiment­al KC-390s are flying, and the airlifter is still being tested, so it will be a while before it can declare victory.

(CNN)

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