Hi folks, this is my first Post here, Mr Mudd sent me this thread, so I will throw in some thoughts about this.
I flew P-3C UII and UII.5's as a Naval Flight Officer from 1990-1994. During this time I participated in ASW, ASUW, Anti Drug ops in both regular Squadron aircraft and some specially modded P-3's.
Here are my experiences:
During Desert Storm I, I flew numerous flights doing Red Sea surveillance and forwarding interesting contacts the Battle Group. Now here is a dedicated Maritime Patrol Aircraft...know how we communicated with the civilian ships we would quiz? We would be issued a handheld Marine Band VHF...Also during this Time of war (we were flying out of Jedda, Saudi Arabia) we were not permitted live weapons or even the use of chaff and flares (Despite drawing Combat Time for these flights). Guess what we used for positioning? A handheld GPS that I would hold up to the NAVCOM's window to check our system position that was a combination of Omega and LTN 72 INS's. A couple years later in Panama doing Anti Drug ops, we got tasked to do a unexpected SAR, VHF marine radios were not standard issue, good thing I started flying with a personal Marine Band VHF because the Det Center did not have one to use/issue. They borrowed my radio for the follow on flights for that event.
Early in Desert Storm I, our squadron (on the home cycle) did some testing with Tank/SCUD busting at the ranges on the west coast. The idea was the long loiter time and ISAR radar to provide cuing for the A-10's and F-16's in a desert environment.
This mission evolved as the ASW threat waned with the fall of the Soviet Union. The P-3 Community scrambled for job and mission security as RIF's (Reduction In Force) came about, numerous Squadrons and a few bases were shut down. The P-3 then got the Maverick as a band aid mod, the controls and displays were literally attached in the flight station with hose clamps and temporary mounts. The P-3 Community took note of Desert Storm I and how they were used (no weapons), and during the Bosnia conflict P-3's were finally granted permission to carry live weapons during surveillance missions, a loadout of 2 Mavericks, 2 Harpoons, two MK 20's and a couple of torps was not uncommon for each patrol. I believe SLAM's added to the weapon inventory of the P-3 (just after I got out of the Navy) were taken and used on few occasions in Bosnia.
Anti-Drug ops and imaging surveillance became an important mission for the P-3 as submarine targets became few. The loiter and slow speed characteristics of the P-3 was used with both air contacts and "Stealth Boats" used for drug running. On-station times to monitor contacts of interest to allow other assets to intercept the bad guys was the strong point of the P-3. We could shut down two engines (usually #1 and possibly #4) to increase our endurance (try that with a 737, asymmetrical thrust shutting one down). We carried three pilots and two Flight engineers and had bunks aboard were the off guys could rest. A Cessna could lean out and try to outlast us, but during our Dets we did not come across one successfully outlasted us.
Back to ASW, the biggest threat when I was getting out was the little guys Diesel Fleet, short ranges and tough targets. Our gear was old and we could only track 16 bouys at a time (The update III was far superior to us in that respect, however I never had the opportunity to fly those platforms). How well can the 737 prosecute a sub contact at low level? Turboprops are a bit more effiecent at low altitude I believe.
My Point? Well this platform needs to do it all, personally I think the 737 may be good for high altitude ASW or optical distance surveillance but I have my doubts for low Altitude ASW (which would be how you would need to prosecute a Diesel Sub Threat), How well can a 737 loiter with a leaned out Cessna carrying Drugs? The fleets old P-3's have a survivability mod with foam in the fuel tanks and Chaff/Flare systems, these are necessary and would need to included in the new 737. I have about 30 hours in the USAF T-43 (Naval Air Training Unit) and the 737 certainly has room for the various acoustic and non acoustic stations and associated equipment racks, certainly a bomb bay can be integrated as well as required wing stations.
I believe the 737 can do most but not all the current P-3's do, I would rather see the P-7 LRAACCA reborn, or a new design.
Whatever replaces the Fleets current P-3 aircraft need to be state of the art. The equipment required onboard commercial ships now NEEDS to be integrated to the Maritime Patrol Plane's Standard equipment. AIS is required on merchant ships these days do to ISPS requirements (9/11 Ship and Port Security requirements), this is Automatic Identification System, with this unit from my ships radar I have available the from a transponder the Ships Name, Callsign, Position, Course, and Speed of any Radar Contact within range of my radar. Imagine this integrated into the next Gen P-3. Those Red Sea missions would be a pure joy with little radio traffic, a few sweeps of the aircrafts radar, screenshot, and VID (Visual ID) of the ship to collaborate the transponder info...piece of cake. Now add the ability of Data Link to include this AIS info to be forwarded to the battle group, and the surface picture is significantly enhanced...O yeah and include a couple built in Marine Band VHF radios with multi sourced DGPS (Like our Drillship, we have 3 different sources of Differential GPS corrections, this insures if one goes down we have other sources for getting a correct position)...
Cheers
Beer
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Edited by - Beer on Jun 29 2004 12:03 PM
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