I haven't seen any reports on Volga-Dnepr being banned from transporting satellite but the closure of EU airspace to Russian aircraft causes challenges.https://twitter.com/vonderleyen/status/1497973334847414278
What are the dispositions of the Russian and Ukrainian An-124's? These superheavy airlift craft are often used to ship large and heavy satellites on transcontinental and transoceanic flights.The use of a Volga-Dneiper An-124 required a waiver in the United States (as part of the 2014 sanctions?).Is use of the Russian craft now forbidden?Will there be spacecraft delivery delays as a result?(Example: Upcoming delivery of the MEASAT and GSAT geocomm satellites to Kourou for launch in late April)
For transport to Kourou, another alternative would be to transport the satellites on the Maritime Nantaise ships (Toucan and Colibri).
Haven't they used C-5's for this in the past?
Quote from: StormtrooperJoe on 03/01/2022 01:02 pmHaven't they used C-5's for this in the past?Commercial versus military contracting. You don't just "hire" a C-5 to get your stuff to Kourou, because they are all in military service. Unlike an Antonov 124.
For satellites, the Airbus Belugas could be an alternative. Airbus already offers them for charter flights. For transport to Kourou, another alternative would be to transport the satellites on the Maritime Nantaise ships (Toucan and Colibri).
Airbus has just retired the A300 generation Beluga - five aircraft - to replace them with A330 Beluga XL. Yet the five Belugas still had potential, so they have created an oversized cargo company with the retired aircraft: "Airbus Beluga Transport".
Quote from: zubenelgenubi on 02/28/2022 09:34 pmWhat are the dispositions of the Russian and Ukrainian An-124's? These superheavy airlift craft are often used to ship large and heavy satellites on transcontinental and transoceanic flights.The use of a Volga-Dneiper An-124 required a waiver in the United States (as part of the 2014 sanctions?).Is use of the Russian craft now forbidden?Will there be spacecraft delivery delays as a result?(Example: Upcoming delivery of the MEASAT and GSAT geocomm satellites to Kourou for launch in late April)Antonov Airlines AN-124's not in the country at the time (The since destroyed AN-225 was scheduled to fly to an unannounced airfield per a later cancelled prefiled flight plan with EUROCONTROL):UR-82029/UR-82072/UR-82073/UR-82007/UR-82008/UR-82027The UAE has one they bought a long time ago along with an IL-76TD which are in active service and can transport spacecraft.https://www.maximus-air.com/Note that Volga-Dnepr has a US subsidiary in Houston, Texas with unspecified numbers of AN-124-100 (various versions) and Ilyushin Il-76TD-90VD aircraft for charter service. The Irkut MC-21-200 Freighter is the newest addition on order to the Volga-Dnepr fleet.
Quote from: woods170 on 03/01/2022 01:25 pmQuote from: StormtrooperJoe on 03/01/2022 01:02 pmHaven't they used C-5's for this in the past?Commercial versus military contracting. You don't just "hire" a C-5 to get your stuff to Kourou, because they are all in military service. Unlike an Antonov 124.The successive civilian versions of the C-5 family are the L-500 and L-500M. No ordered were received despite a warm reception of the prototype resulting in it being outfitted as planned for USAF. No retired aircraft have been purchased back for conversion to the civilian model and upgraded to the M version.
It's possible that a number of C-5s at the Davis-Monthan boneyard could be converted by Lockheed Martin into twin-fuselage airlifters that could be used by the USAF to ferry LM-built components for Vulcan rockets optimized for military launches to the Vehicle Assembly Building to be attached to Boeing-built components of the Vulcan ferried to the VAB by potential NASA-operated Boeing 747 freighters.