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KC-135 refuels F-22 with synthetic blend

  • Published
  • By Senior Master Sgt. Matt Proietti
  • SECAF, Public Affairs
An Air Force Reserve aircrew from March Air Reserve Base, Calif., made history Aug. 28 by air refueling an F-22 Raptor with a 50/50 synthetic fuel blend, the same blend used to fuel its KC-135R.

Both aircraft used only the blended fuel mix during the 2.5-hour sortie, which included two refuelings.

The aircrews completed individual qualification activities. No problems were found, and all operations were nominal.

The 827th Aircraft Sustainment Group at Tinker Air Force Base, Okla., which oversees all aspects of the KC-135, ordered the testing of the fuel blend. People in the Air Mobility Command Test and Evaluation Squadron evaluated the suitability of JP-8 fuel blended with 50 percent Synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene (SPK) fuel (Fischer-Tropsch) for use in a KC-135R aircraft.

The Air Force officials are working to certify the JP-8/SPK fuel blend in other aircraft, and this assessment will assist in those efforts. The fuel blend has been successfully tested on B-52, B-1, C-17 and F-15 aircraft.

The most recent assessment used a single KC-135R and began with ground testing to demonstrate the JP-8/SPK compatibility with fuel tanks, auxiliary power units and aircraft engines.

After ground testing, a crew performed an isolated engine flight test using the No. 2 engine. That was followed by a flight test using JP-8/SPK blend in all four engines and included aerial refueling of an F-22 Raptor in conjunction with the Air Force Flight Test Center's assessment of the fuel blend in the F-22.

Certification of the fuel blend in KC-135 aircraft will allow for continued unrestricted refueling support to not only Air Force aircraft but also compatible aircraft in from sister services and allied air forces, thus ensuring continued worldwide interoperability.

Air Force officials said successful flight testing of the F-22 validates that the synthetic fuel blend is capable of sustaining even the most demanding performance requirements posed by the most modern and the highest performance fighter aircraft in existence. (Air Force Reserve Command News Service)