WICHITA, Kan., 8 June 2009Boeing announced the successful first flight of a B-52 Stratofortress upgraded with Combat Network Communications Technology (CONECT), a modification that equips the legendary B-52 with 21st-century situational awareness and mission flexibility. The aircraft made the 3.5-hour flight last month from the Boeing Integrated Defense Systems facility in Wichita.
"The CONECT modification gives our warfighters equal footing in a network-centric battlefield," says Scot Oathout, Boeing director of B-52 Programs. "It is fitting that this very airplane was delivered from Boeing Wichita in 1960 as the most advanced aircraft in the U.S. Air Force and now it's on track to be delivered from Wichita again, transformed with a new capability for today's mission."
The CONECT modification installs a digital communications infrastructure in the B-52 that allows the aircraft to communicate with the Air Force's digital communications network and tie in with Air Force command and control centers, ground forces and other platforms. This first aircraft will leave Wichita in June to go into flight test at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. All 76 aircraft in the fleet will receive the CONECT modification after the flight test program is complete.
Boeing employees celebrated the achievement today at a ceremony that also included Air Force staff, state, and local elected officials, and representatives from the city of Wichita.
"We are excited to be taking the CONECT program into the flight test phase," says Lt. Col. Darren Cochran of the Air Force's 651st Aeronautical Systems Squadron, which is responsible for the development, acquisition, fielding, modernization and sustainment of the B-52.