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2022-10-29

LMXT


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The Critical Moment關鍵時刻, a hot talk show of EBC, introduced LXMT on October 28.  The Lockheed Martin’s LMXT is American’s new strategic tanker to replace KC-135.  The participants of the talk show demonstrated how the LMXTs work with F-35s, the satellites, Hypersonic Missiles, HIMAS, and others, to penetrate PLA’s A2/AD to neutralize PLA’s sources of threat, the strike against the missiles launching sites.

What interesting me most is that the Autoevolution, an automobile website, detailed the tactical thinking.

Lockheed Martin Shows Future Strategic Tanker in Action, Whites Fight Reds in CGI Battle    Autoevolution 20220223

Fully engaged in an all-out effort to modernize its operational fleet of aircraft, the American military is not neglecting logistics machines either. For a while now, for instance, it has been looking for a more capable tanker to feed the needs of its aircraft.

That possible future tanker is for now called LMXT, and it’s a flying beast being put together by the talented hands over at Lockheed Martin. Fresh from announcing production sites for the aircraft, the company has now released one of the first videos of it in action (you can watch it below this text).

The little over 1-minute clip is a show of simulated airplane in action, combined with glimpses of the real deal, while using some of its fancy systems.

We even get a simulated deployment of the plane (1-minute mark in the video), in conjunction with fighter and decoy aircraft (white is used to depict them in the graphics), going up against an imagined adversary, pictured in red, of course.

The LMXT is Lockheed Martin’s entry in the USAF’s quest for a replacement for the current KC-135. It is based on the Airbus A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport (MRTT), and promises to come with "significantly improved range and fuel offload capacity over current tankers.”

It will also feature the world's first fully automatic boom/air-to-air refueling (A3R) system, will be able to refuel multiple aircraft directly from its wings, and will be fitted with a permanently installed medevac suite.

Lockheed said it would assemble the LXMT in Mobile, Alabama, and Marietta, Georgia. The former location is where Airbus assembles the A320 and A220, while the latter is where Lockheed completes the C-130J Super Hercules and assembles the F-35 Lightning II center wing.

It announced these moves even before the Air Force decided to go for it – that is expected sometime next year, with production expected to begin sometime in 2029.

 

LMXT Is a Flying Gas Station for Future Wars, Only Military Aircraft Are Allowed a Sip    Autoevolution 20220625

The U.S. Air Force (USAF), now going through a full-blown modernization and streamlining process, plans to cut that number to about 450, but also replace some of the existing hardware it uses for such tasks. As you’re reading this, American fighter and transport planes, but also helicopters, get their fill mid-air from the likes of the KC-135 Stratotanker and KC-46 Pegasus, the pillars of this fleet.

Most of these planes are getting old, though, and the U.S. has plans to replace some of them for the future, shrunken lineup. And the Lockheed Martin - Airbus LMXT seems to be one of the best solutions at hand.

Described by the companies making it “America’s next strategic tanker,” the LMXT is part of the Air Force’s KC-Y program. It is in fact a modified Airbus A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport (MRTT), it in turn based on the civilian A330. The MRTT is in the service of about 14 countries, with about 60 units ordered thus far.

The American LMXT will be the most advanced variant of the European-made flying platform and, most importantly, it will be put together in the U.S., in Mobile, Alabama, and Marietta, Georgia. The thing that sets it apart from the pack, the fully automatic boom (the air-to-air refueling system), will be made in Arkansas, at a new facility Airbus is planning to erect.

The plane is 193 feet (59 meters) long and 57 feet (17 meters) high. From wing tip to wing tip, it measures 198 feet (60 meters), and it comes with a maximum takeoff weight of 533,500 lbs (242,000 kg). Of that, 271,700 lbs (123,240 kg) is fuel for the military aircraft in need of it.

All that fuel will be sent to the recipient tanks by something Lockheed Martin and Airbus describe as the world’s first fully automatic boom/air-to-air refueling (A3R) system (check second video below the text), a fly-by-wire system that will allow faster refueling operations at increased range.

It was back in 2020 when Airbus announced it achieved the world’s first fully automatic refueling contacts. The missions took place over the Atlantic Ocean, where the MRTT refueled a Portuguese Air Force F-16.

What fully automatic means in this case is that the A3R boom, once deployed, keeps the alignment between its tip and the receiver receptacle, on its own, “with an accuracy of a couple of centimeters.”

The system also determines “the optimum moment to extend the telescopic beam to achieve the connection with the receiver.” Once that happens, the fuel transfer is a go. Once the receiver plane’s tanks are full, the boom disconnects, gets clear, and retracts.

During all of this, the air refueling operator (ARO) is reduced to just an observer, ready to jump in if and only when something goes wrong.

At the time of writing, the boom system deployed on the Airbus machine is certified for refueling no less than ten aircraft, namely the F-35A, F-22, F-16, A-10, B1-B, C-17, E-3, E-7, F-15, P-8A.

Aside from being a capable refueler, the LMXT is also envisioned as a Joint All Domain Operations node, meaning it will integrate and be integrated with air, land, maritime, cyberspace, and space assets (first video below for more details).

More details on the LMXT (but, of course, not all) will be released as work on the project progresses. Presently, the tanker aircraft is scheduled to start rolling off production lines by the end of the decade.

 



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