"You will not be able to give orders to the US Military from this aircraft" tends to leave a mark on even the most determined Yes-man.
Who said that, and why would anyone think the current Signal run administration would listen?
"You will not be able to give orders to the US Military from this aircraft" tends to leave a mark on even the most determined Yes-man.
That would be the USAF and STRATCOM, reminding the SECDEF that without a very expensive and time consuming radio upgrade, a Civilian plane cannot talk to strategic assets at all, will be very limited in ability to talk to USAF in general (only on 121.5MHz, so basically useless because everyone can hear you), and unable to talk to Army or Marines at all.Who said that, and why would anyone think the current Signal run administration would listen?
You are correct that this 747 would have to grounded for several years for physical modifications to its' airframe followed by the installation of classified electronics to bring it up to at least the standard of the VC-25A if not VC-25B which would defeat the ostensible purpose of this 747-8.
That would be the USAF and STRATCOM, reminding the SECDEF that without a very expensive and time consuming radio upgrade, a Civilian plane cannot talk to strategic assets at all, will be very limited in ability to talk to USAF in general (only on 121.5MHz, so basically useless because everyone can hear you), and unable to talk to Army or Marines at all.
Why are VC-25A (the 747-200, vintage AF1) not good enough for Trump ? Do they have maintenance issues, because too old the airframe ?
Something I wondered as well. I know they are due to be replaced by a program that has lapsed over the previous two administrations, but are they unserviceable in any way? Look at how old Marine 1 was (is?). Presidential aircraft are a huge pain - vast requirements and weight gain spread across a fleet you can count on one hand.
Basically.Why are VC-25A (the 747-200, vintage AF1) not good enough for Trump ? Do they have maintenance issues, because too old the airframe ?
Less political post, all of us so far have ignored the huge security concerns of accepting a foreign operated jet. Qatar has close ties with Iran and its proxy groups. The security consequences of even hosting a president there without completely disassembling the aircraft are profound.
An excellent technical explanation for the need for a new AF1 that completely misses the point about the “President” clearly accepting a foreign gift that will end up as his private plane.Basically.
I don't think there are any 747-200s left flying anywhere else in the world. This means that any "new" spare parts are actually stuff that was pulled out of the Boneyard. Which then needs to be inspected/rebuilt to Yankee White standards (at major cost).
The VC-25As were brought into service in 1990, but the 747-200 first saw service in 1971. Technically, the USAF bought the "previous model year" plane when they bought the -200s, as the -400 was entering service at the same time the VC-25As were being built and delivered, and the -300s entered service in 1983. So even when the VC-25As were brand new in 1990, most of their spare parts specific to the -200 model were coming out of the Boneyard because the base design was 20 years old and most of the planes were being retired. The airlines were buying 747-400s in 1989-1990 and flew them until about 2012, when they replaced the -400s with -8s.
The new 747-8s were basically the last planes off the assembly line or pretty close to it, as well, since the last 747-8i was rolled out in 2022.
So as a side note, it means that the USAF is going to have to pay a LOT of money in 2030 to get a 4-engined VVIP transport developed for service in ~2045-50.
This is what I was thinking too, when that aircraft arrives it will have to be given an extremely detailed, lengthy and expensive inspection of its' airframe and systems for anything untoward (Such as electronic for example).
That's the basis of a D-Check; all panelling and flooring removed, airframe scanned with x-ray machine for cracks or defirmations, every single engine blade removed and inspected, toilets disassembled and tested. Then put together again.
Takes one to two months, costs about $5 million.
Add a couple more months for extra MIB attention?
View attachment 769985
Quel dommage! That's one of those cheap, small tank, low water usage golden toilets. That won't go with the flow.And don't forget the golden toilet ! It's all good, man.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsJauuROB00
A Trojan connection could result in condomnation but that could be stretching things too far.Let's get a thoroughly experienced and qualified equine dentist then to examine that particular gift horse's mouth, just to make sure there is no potential Trojan connection whatsoever, stat, shall we? Just make sure there is no potential bug infestation of any sort...
Then fit a new custom interior, a totally bespoke secure comms system, defensive countermeasures, and all the other special provisions needed for a President to actually do the business of the United States from the plane.
That's a lot more than a D check.
I don't think there are any 747-200s left flying anywhere else in the world.
![]()
Turning Qatar's Gifted 747 Into Air Force One Will Be Anything But Free
Trump rightly said only "a stupid person" would turn down the free Qatari jet, but turning it into Air Force One for a few years of service isn't realistic.www.twz.com
Saying only a “stupid person” would turn down a free, highly-modified 747-8i airliner, President Donald Trump on Monday doubled down on his justification for receiving a donated jet from Qatar to serve as a presidential plane until Boeing completes delivery of two future VC-25B Air Force One aircraft.
I'd imagine it would take at least a year for the aircraft, if accepted, to hasten the in-service date of the VC-25B, but perhaps not as the actual interim airframe.
The Qatari aircraft's current lack of EMP protection may be an insurmountable issue in and of itself as an AF1 airframe. (Which triggers the question, are the C-32s/757s the President flies in on occasion fully EMP protected? I have no idea. If not, that may point to how the Qatari aircraft may be relatively quickly modified for the President's [possibly only US domestic] use.)
However, the additional airframe may enable one of the two VC-25Bs currently in queue to enter service earlier on an interim, less-capable standard, as the #2 formerly Transaero-slated airframe and then maybe this former Qatari aircraft are modified and completed to the full standard.
At best, it might provide part of a three-plane AF1 fleet, all ultimately modified to a somewhat common standard. The Qatari airframe would be the third and last such airframe modified should be - again, should be - the most straightforward to modify, given lessons learned and the manufacturing process learned and set for first two.
At worst, it will serve as a valuable source of very low-time 747-8 parts and structures for the two VC-25B's and four E-4C's in the years to come, especially given the relatively small 747-8 production run.
I'd be surprised if the aircraft will ever find its way to anyone's Presidential library for at least 20-30 years, barring some sort of disruptive technology making it and the other VC-25Bs/747-8s obsolete in the near future.
More like an extra year just to clear the workers to do the work, once work starts there's several months to install the minimum military radios, self-protection suites, and EMP protection. Then you can start installing the custom interior, which will take several months to do right.That's the basis of a D-Check; all panelling and flooring removed, airframe scanned with x-ray machine for cracks or defirmations, every single engine blade removed and inspected, toilets disassembled and tested. Then put together again.
Takes one to two months, costs about $5 million.
Add a couple more months for extra MIB attention?
Nevermind the full VC-25B electronics fit, which involves adding an amount of wire equal to the existing amount in the plane.
I believe so. But it also flies with a much lighter passenger load, so the MTOW isn't hurt.I suppose that the VC-25A is significantly heavier than a regular 747-200 due to all of the extra avionics and associated wiring?
To not be in the same place as the POTUS, so that when someone nukes the city where the POTUS is, the National Command Authority still exists.What's the role of VP mean in the modern context if the President seemingly can't delegate to him whilst travelling?
At best, it might provide part of a three-plane AF1 fleet, all ultimately modified to a somewhat common standard. The Qatari airframe would be the third and last such airframe modified should be - again, should be - the most straightforward to modify, given lessons learned and the manufacturing process learned and set for first two.
At worst, it will serve as a valuable source of very low-time 747-8 parts and structures for the two VC-25B's and four E-4C's in the years to come, especially given the relatively small 747-8 production run.
How did Reagan do the business of the USA and end the Cold War when flying around in an old 707? He delegated.
Read a post on FB from an "AF1 stewardess" about how having a third bird would make the squadron's lives a hell of a lot easier. Planning phase checks around the POTUS schedule has caused basically all Maintenance Officers at that unit to skip "gray hair" and go straight to "balding rapidly". Just having 3 birds means that you can have one in maintenance and still have the required 2 birds following the POTUS around.