Edwards team tests new brake system for C-130

  • Published
  • By Kenji Thuloweit
  • 95th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
A small test team from the 418th Flight Test Squadron has been tasked with replacing a legacy as well as the ensuring the safety of future C-130 Hercules air crews.

The 418th Flight Test Squadron's C-130 Wheel Brake System Improvement program is testing the performance of carbon brakes and the new Mark IV Digital Antiskid Control Unit for the aircraft. The new system is needed to replace the C-130's legacy brake system.

To this test group, they know the lives of current and future C-130 crewmembers rest on them doing their job right.

"My primary objective is to make sure the carbon brakes and the Mark IV are equivalent to or better than the legacy steel brakes and the Mark II Analog Antiskid system," said Colin Young,418th FLTS subsystems engineer. "If the tests are successful, then the brakes will be retrofitted to all C-130s other than the C-130J (which already use the new brakes)."

Parts for the current legacy brake system are becoming scarce because they are no longer being manufactured, so the need for new brakes is significant.

The testing involves max-effort braking where the pilot would apply the maximum pressure to the brakes to stop the cargo plane.

Different test points include observing how the carbon brakes perform with different cargo weights and wet runway tests to evaluate the digital antiskid system.

Mr. Young said the carbon brakes are designed to have a 25-percent increase in thermal capacity when compared to the current steel brakes, which reduces potential for brake fires and locking up. The brakes also reduce stopping distance.

For testing purposes, team members drilled holes into the center stator and inserted thermal probes into the brakes to obtain real-time brake temperatures during testing.

Temperatures are essential to determine how hot the brakes get during maximum effort braking and to evaluate the cooling profile of the brakes.

"The one thing you find with steel brakes is they cannot handle as much heat, and they certainly heat up a lot quicker than carbon brakes," said 1st. Lt. Nicole Potter, 418th FLTS flight test engineer. "The nice thing about steel brakes is they dissipate the heat quickly, and we're finding with the carbon brakes it takes a little longer to cool, but their capacity to handle heat is a lot better."

Along with better performance, the new carbon brakes are more durable and efficient.

"From a logistics point of view, the old brakes can last up to 4,000 miles of landing distance. The new brakes can last 25,000 so it's almost six times better in terms of logistics support," said Mr. Young.

With C-130s doing constant missions throughout Central Command, a new braking system stands to benefit cargo pilots down range, and that fact is not lost on the test team.

"The warfighters have had a continuous problem with the wear-out of the brakes and the turnaround time to rebuild them," said Lance Stoebling, assistant program manager.
 
"Composite brake systems are coming out throughout the Air Force and the C-130 is next on the list."

The aircraft used to accomplish this testing - a Little Rock Air Force Base C-130E on loan from the 19th Airlift Wing - is completing one last mission for the Air Force before it heads off to the old bone yard in the sky.

WBSI testing is scheduled to wrap up in July. That's when the 1962-built C-130, tail number 62-1824, will make its final journey back to Little Rock AFB where it will be decommissioned. But not before this last assignment has been completed to improve the entire Hercules fleet.

Since testing began in March, Mr. Stoebling said the 418th FLTS has completed 100 percent of the legacy baseline brake testing and about 75 percent of the new brake system tests.

"So far, it looks very promising," said Mr. Stoebling.