...of course the tanking stuff is still new for EADS. Boeing has much more experience with it (eg the KC-135 series)...
The US Navy and Marine Corps often use VC-10 and TriStar tankers
Why choose the Airbus option over the Boeing competition? The A330 can carry 50 per cent. more fuel than alternative aircraft, without the need for auxiliary fuel tanks. That means that it can deploy more aircraft further, to frequent destinations such as Bahrain and Canada. Twice as many fighters can be carried by one A330 aircraft. Equally important, it can remain on station longer and refuel more aircraft in operation. The 330 can carry passengers and cargo without the aircraft having to be reconfigured, as the Boeing would have to be. Those are all major advantages in taking the AirTanker option.
Airbus is the only aircraft manufacturer with current experience of refuelling pod integration, and Cobham's Flight Refuelling Ltd., which works exclusively with AirTanker and Airbus, is the only company in the world with experience of providing refuelling pods and fuselage refuelling units. Airbus is currently converting A310s into tanker aircraft for the German and Canadian Governments, using the Cobham pods. As a modern aircraft, the A330 will cost less to operate over the 27-year life of the contract than the Boeing alternative.
only USAF uses that silly boom
The boom system is also easier for the crews of both aircraft to use.
It also has the problem of only refuelling one aeroplane at a time, unlike most hose and drogue tankers (the Tristar is an exception) which can do two...
Charlie
It used to be three.
Your reference to Cobham PLC (& its subsidiary Flight Refuelling Ltd) made me wonder if anyone appreciates Sir Alan Cobham's considerable contribution to in-flight refuelling...
This is exactly the same as the system in use today. It doesn't give any explanation as to why the B-29 is in USAF markings.
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