Daily Press

GAO: Military aircraft missing readiness target

- By Dave Ress

Key U.S. military aircraft, including some of the most common ones flown around Hampton Roads, have for years been missing goals for their readiness to fly missions, the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office reports.

The agency said the Navy’s F/A-18E and F Super Hornet fighter jets, its E-2C Hawkeye early warning aircraft and C-2A cargo planes did not meet annual goals for the total time they can fly and perform their mission at any time between fiscal years 2011 and 2019.

The Air Force’s F-22 Raptors also missed their annual goals for all of those years.

The Navy’s E-2D Advanced Hawkeye, which is to replace the E-2C, missed its goal in each of the six years since its introducti­on. Navy F/A-18A-D Hornets met

their goal once in the nineyear period.

“The average annual mission capable rate for the selected Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps aircraft decreased since fiscal year 2011,” the GAO said.

Analysts inside and outside the military have warned for years that a shortage of people and replacemen­t parts could affect air operations and make the aircraft less safe.

The GAO’s review of 46 military aircraft found that only one, the Air Force’s UH-1N Huey, reached its goal every year. Most missed their goals a majority of the time, with 24 never making the target and five hitting their goals only once.

For the Navy’s workhorse F/A-18E and F, with an average age of 12 years and time aloft averaging 3,526 hours, unexpected repairs, parts shortages and components that are no longer useful or are no longer being made were significan­t problems, GAO reported.

Maint e n a n c e costs account for $700 million of the Super Hornet’s $3.29 billion annual operating cost in fiscal year 2018.

The Navy has a contract with Boeing to extend the service life of the Super Hornet from 6,000 to 10,000 hours t hrough modificati­ons, but that comes with big maintenanc­e cost increases since several life-limited components require replacemen­t at 6,000 flight hours,

T h e Nav y ’s older F/A-18A-D fighters, with average ages of more than 27 years and an average of 7,585 hours in the air, are operating beyond their planned service life. The Navy aims to address the maintenanc­e and supply challenges that come with that by allowing maintainer­s to work overtime to reduce backlog, and streamlini­ng repair processes, GAO said.

For the other fighter jets regularly seen in Hampton Roads skies, the Air Force’s F-22, the systems and structures that make the planes harder to detect and spare parts shortages have been challenges, GAO said.

Maintenanc­e costs rose from $1.04 billion to $1.59 billion between 2011 and 2018, GAO said, citing constant increases i n contractor support costs.

The Air Force is contractin­g to i ncrease repair capacity for those “low observable” systems and structures and is securing additional funding for spare parts.

Besides fighters, the other Navy planes vital to carrier operations are also aging.

The E-2C planes, some of which are 30 years old, are also operating beyond planned service life, while demand for the limited number of these aircraft keep them in the air a lot.

And the E-2D slated to replace it also faces maintenanc­e and supply challenges, which the Navy is tackling by troublesho­oting component failures and cannibaliz­ing parts.

Some of the downtime for these planes was due to an increase in inspection­s and maintenanc­e needs, and some because of inadequate funding for spare parts when the planes are first fitted out, the Navy told GAO.

The C-2A, which brings supplies to aircraft carriers while they are at sea, is also operating beyond its planned service life, after modificati­ons from 2004 to 2011 extended flight hours from 10,000 to 15,000 and landings from 16,020 to 36,000.

These planes, with an average age of 32 years and an average of 10,677 hours in flight, needed unexpected and extensive repairs to landing gears and outer wing panels.

 ?? JEFF SHERMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An F-18 Super Hornet is launched from the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea.
JEFF SHERMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS An F-18 Super Hornet is launched from the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea.
 ?? STAFF FILE ?? The Navy’s E-2D Advanced Hawkeye, which is to replace the E-2C, missed its goal in each of the six years since its introducti­on.
STAFF FILE The Navy’s E-2D Advanced Hawkeye, which is to replace the E-2C, missed its goal in each of the six years since its introducti­on.

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