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No. 40 Squadron RNZAF

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No. 40 Squadron RNZAF
ActiveJune 1943 – October 1947
December 1954 – present
Country New Zealand
Branch Royal New Zealand Air Force
RoleStrategic and Tactical Air Transport
Garrison/HQRNZAF Base Auckland
Motto(s)Maori: Ki nga hau e wha
English: To the four winds
Mascot(s)Mariners compass star
Anniversaries1 June
EquipmentBoeing 757, C-130H Hercules, C-130J-30 Super Hercules
EngagementsWorld War II, Korean War, Malayan Emergency, Vietnam War, Rwandan civil war, Somali civil war, Gulf War, 1999 East Timorese crisis, Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands, Iraq war, Operation Enduring Freedom.
Commanders
Current
commander
Wing Commander Bradley Scott [1]
Insignia
Squadron BadgeA Mariners compass representing the "Four winds."
Aircraft flown
Transport

No. 40 Squadron RNZAF is a transport squadron in the Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF). Established in June 1943, it remains on active duty.

History

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Origins

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A RNZAF Hastings C.3 in 1953

The squadron was formed at Whenuapai on 1 June 1943 as No. 40 Transport Squadron RNZAF. It was equipped with Dakota and Lockheed Lodestars and carried men and supplies to forward areas throughout the Pacific theatre. Within the squadron organisation was a ferry flight of aircrew which regularly flew delivery flights from the mainland United States and Hawaii to New Zealand of new aircraft such as the Catalina flying boat and Ventura. The squadron was disbanded on 31 October 1947 and most of its crews and aircraft were transferred to the government-owned National Airways Corporation.

No. 40 Squadron reformed on 8 December 1954 with four Handley Page Hastings which had previously been operated by No. 41 Squadron RNZAF. The Squadron was supplemented with three Douglas DC-6 acquired from the defunct Australian airline, British Commonwealth Pacific Airlines by 1961. The three current Lockheed C-130H Hercules were purchased in 1965 and two more in 1968.

Boeing 727

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Three Boeing 727s were purchased second hand from Boeing in 1981, all ex-United Airlines. NZ7271 19892 entered service in July 1981 and was retired on 7 July 2003. (It became 3D-KMJ and then 9Q-CMP in Africa and was scrapped in 2005). NZ7272 19893 entered service in July 1981 and was retired to Woodbourne as an instructional airframe on 25 August 2003. NZ7273 19895 was the first 727 delivered, on 6 May 1981, but flew only 21 hours, being intended from the start to be a source of spare parts. It was retired 25 June 1981.[5] The 727s were purchased by the administration of Sir Rob Muldoon and used by the fourth and fifth Labour governments, as well as the administration of Jenny Shipley. The Boeing 727s were replaced in 2003 by two Boeing 757s.

RNZAF Boeing 727 in 2001.

Present

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Located at RNZAF Base Whenuapai 40 Squadron today operates three C-130H(NZ) Hercules, two Boeing 757-2K2's, and has now begun phasing out the C-130H’s with the new C-130J-30 Super Hercules.

A Boeing 757 lands at Pegasus airfield on the Ross Ice Shelf
Boeing 757 of the RNZAF in 2009.

The squadron saw action throughout the Pacific War against Japan, helped supply New Zealand forces fighting in Korea, Malaya, Vietnam, East Timor, Afghanistan, and Iraq, and provided transport to United States and United Kingdom forces in the 1990 Gulf War.

Humanitarian missions have included flying in the first Cyclone Tracy relief supplies to Darwin, assisting victims of the Bali bombing and the Boxing Day tsunami. Since the late 1960s the squadron has detached aircraft each summer to work in the Ross Dependency of Antarctica. During the period 29 November to 12 December 1979, the squadron flew flights to Antarctica in support of body recovery operations associated with the Air New Zealand Flight 901 DC-10 crash which impacted the slopes of Mt Erebus with the loss of all 257 lives.[6]

A major operation for the squadron was the 2011 Christchurch earthquake which saw nearly the entire fleet working around the clock distributing personnel, freight, SAR teams and medical supplies to the people of Christchurch. 40 Squadron aircraft worked in conjunction with C-130s from the Republic of Singapore Air Force[clarification needed], Royal Australian Air Force, and U.S. Air Force.

40 Squadron is held in high regard internationally having won various tactical flying competitions in the USA competing against other air forces in exercises such as Green Flag East at Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas.

Fleet

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Boeing 757-2K2

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In 2003 two second-hand Boeing 757-200s[3] were purchased from Transavia, which 40 Squadron operate in transport, freight, cargo and troop movement roles. They can also be converted for medical use in emergencies. Their registrations are NZ7571 and NZ7572. In 2024, it was decided by the Ministry of Defence that aircraft should now be replaced due to ongoing issues and maintenance problems for both aircraft.

A No. 40 Squadron Boeing 757-200 in 2006

C-130H(NZ) Hercules

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The RNZAF purchased the three first ever, H model Hercules (NZ 7001, NZ 7002, NZ 7003) from the US in April 1965 and then another two aircraft (NZ 7004, and NZ 7005) in 1968. Since 2024 Three Hercules aircraft have been withdrawn from service and replaced by the new C-130J-30 Super Hercules. [2]

A 40 Squadron Hercules on a visit to Australia in 2010

C-130J-30 Super Hercules

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The first of five new C-130J-30 Super Hercules was delivered to the RNZAF on 9 September 2024. The first Hercules, NZ7011 arrived at RNZAF Base Whenuapai and has begun familiarisation flights to various airports around New Zealand. A further two Super Hercules, NZ7012, and NZ7013, arrived at Whenuapai on 30 September 2024, with the final two aircraft to be delivered by the end of 2024.

Fleet upgrade

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In 2008, the squadron began modernising its C-130H Hercules aircraft with new avionics, centre wing refurbishment, aircraft systems upgrade, and complete re-wiring and replacement of major parts and interior to extend their life expectancy (for NZ$234 million).

The package for each aircraft was known as the Life Extension Programme (LEP). Initially two aircraft were completed in Canada however the programme ran into difficulties when the company tasked with carrying out the refurbishments went into receivership. The remaining aircraft were then completed by Safe Air in Blenheim, New Zealand.

The Hercules fleet now operate with glass cockpits and had one of the most extensive upgrades ever completed on this type of aircraft anywhere in the world.

The Boeing 757s were also upgraded with new avionics and more powerful engines. A cargo door was also fitted to allow pallet loading and an aero medical facility if needed.[7]

Gray twinjet stationary on ice, with aft stairs and surrounding personnel.
In 2009, 40 Squadron flew one of its Boeing 757s to Antarctica for the first time.

Future procurement

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The Lockheed Martin C-130J Super Hercules was announced as the replacement for the C-130Hs in June 2019 with deliveries beginning in 2024.[8] The RNZAF opted for the stretched C-130J-30 model that has an extra 4.6-metre longer fuselage, providing space for an additional two pallets of extra freight.[4] The first of the aircraft is expected to be delivered from mid 2024 with the full fleet of five operational in 2025.[4]

The RNZAF is now looking at a suitable replacement for the two 757-2K2 aircraft was originally expected in the early 2020s[9] however it is now expected between 2028 and 2030. [10]

References

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  1. ^ Squadron member, 29 SEP 24
  2. ^ a b "C-130H(NZ) Hercules". NZDF. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Boeing 757-2K2". NZDF. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  4. ^ a b c "New C-130-Js taking shape". NZ Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  5. ^ "RNZAF Boeing 727-22QC: NZ7271 to NZ7273". NZDF Serials. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  6. ^ Air Force News, Issue 110, December 2009
  7. ^ Mateparae, Jerry (8 September 2008). "Jerry Mateparae: Can't fight? In fact we still punch above our weight". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  8. ^ "Royal New Zealand Air Force to get C-130J-30 Super Hercules". Australian Aviation. 11 June 2019. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  9. ^ Sachdeva, Sam (25 October 2016). "How does John Key fly around the world, and why did his plane break down?". Stuff. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  10. ^ "Luxon won't use 'ancient' Defence Force planes, will fly commercial instead". NZ Herald. 27 June 2023. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
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