The A-10C Thunderbolt II \u2014 50 years old, officially headed for retirement, and still picking up new tricks in its final war. (Wikimedia Commons)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\nOn April 2, an A-10C Thunderbolt II plugged into an HC-130’s drogue basket and took on fuel \u2014 something the Warthog has never been able to do in its five decades of service. A newly developed Probe Refueling Adapter, fitted into the A-10’s existing boom receptacle on the nose, converted the aircraft from a boom-only refueler to a probe-and-drogue customer in a matter of hours.<\/p>\n\n
It sounds simple. It changes everything about how the A-10 operates in combat.<\/p>\n\n
The Problem It Solves<\/h2>\n\n The A-10 was designed in the 1970s to refuel exclusively via the flying boom system \u2014 the method used by KC-135 Stratotankers and KC-46 Pegasus aircraft, where a rigid telescoping tube extends from the tanker into a receptacle on the receiver. It works beautifully when large tankers are available. In the thick of a combat deployment, they often are not.<\/p>\n\n
HC-130 Combat King aircraft, operated by Air Force Special Operations Command and rescue wings, use the hose-and-drogue system instead \u2014 a flexible hose with a basket on the end that the receiving aircraft must fly into. Until now, the A-10 could not use this system. If no boom-equipped tanker was available, the Warthog could not refuel.<\/p>\n\n
In a theatre like the Persian Gulf, where tanker scheduling is already stretched to breaking point and every KC-135 sortie is being fought over by F-15Es, F-35s, B-1Bs, and every other boom-receiver in the inventory, that limitation was becoming an operational bottleneck.<\/p>\n\n\nAn HC-130 Combat King \u2014 A-10s can now refuel from these drogue-equipped tankers for the first time, dramatically expanding fuel availability in combat. (U.S. Air Force \/ Wikimedia Commons)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\nWartime Innovation at Speed<\/h2>\n\n The adapter was developed in response to an urgent combatant command requirement \u2014 military shorthand for “we need this yesterday.” ARCWERX, the innovation hub run jointly by the Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve, handled the rapid contract acquisition. Luke Air Force Base in Arizona fabricated the supporting hardware. The entire project moved from concept to first flight in a timeline that would be unrecognisable to the Pentagon’s normal procurement process.<\/p>\n\n
The beauty of the design is its simplicity. The adapter fits into the existing air refueling receptacle on the A-10’s nose. Flight-line maintenance crews can install or remove it in hours using standard tools \u2014 no depot work, no structural modifications, no new wiring. A squadron can configure some jets for boom refueling and others for probe-and-drogue depending on the day’s tanker availability.<\/p>\n\n
Old Dog, Last Trick<\/h2>\n\n The timing carries a certain poetry. Idaho and Michigan Air National Guard A-10 units deployed to the Middle East in what everyone acknowledges is the Warthog’s final war. The airframe is officially headed for retirement, its replacement by the F-35 a matter of when, not if. And yet here it is \u2014 50 years after its first flight \u2014 gaining a capability that makes it more flexible and more survivable in combat than it has ever been.<\/p>\n\n
For the A-10 community, the probe adapter is more than a piece of hardware. It is proof that the jet still earns its place on the ramp \u2014 not through political lobbying or congressional protection, but through operational results. The Warthog has always been the aircraft that does more with less. In its final deployment, it is still finding new ways to prove that.<\/p>\n\n
Sources: The Aviationist, AATC Public Affairs, Air & Space Forces Magazine<\/em><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Related: Warthog’s Last War: A-10s Deploy Before Retirement Quick Facts Aircraft Fairchild Republic A-10C Thunderbolt II (“Warthog”) New Capability Probe Refueling Adapter \u2014 converts the A-10’s boom receptacle to accept probe-and-drogue refueling First Successful Test April 2, 2026 \u2014 A-10 refueled from a C-130 drogue basket Why It Matters Dramatically expands refueling options in theatre […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":10,"featured_media":259740,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_yoast_wpseo_focuskw":"","_yoast_wpseo_title":"","_yoast_wpseo_metadesc":"","_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","editor_notices":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[664,670],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-259736","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-military-aviation","category-news"],"yoast_head":"\n
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