US Air Force retires first of 13 E-3 Sentry aircraft following A-10C Thunderbolt II
![US Air Force retires first of 13 E-3 Sentry aircraft following A-10C Thunderbolt II US Air Force retires first of 13 E-3 Sentry aircraft following A-10C Thunderbolt II](/media/post_big/e-3-sentry_001.jpg)
The US Air Force retired the A-10C Thunderbolt II last week. As part of its final flight, it flew to Arizona, where it will be dismantled for parts. Following the A-10C, the E-3 Sentry long-range radar detection aircraft was retired.
Here's What We Know
The US Air Force first began talking about wanting to retire AWACS aircraft in April 2022. The first E-3 Sentry left for Davis-Monthan, Arizona in early April 2023. The flight number is 0560.
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The US Air Force's desire to retire the E-3 Sentry aircraft is due to the fact that it is based on a Boeing 707. The planes are no longer in commercial use, so maintenance of the E-3 is a heavy blow to the service budget. In addition, the availability rate has fallen below 65 percent in recent years.
A U.S. Air Force press release states that eliminating 13 E-3s will allow the service to focus on maintaining the remaining aircraft. In doing so, the service must provide the US Congress with an acquisition strategy for the E-7 Wedgetail aircraft, which will become a replacement for the E-3 Sentry. Only then will they be able to decommission 10 aircraft. Three more planes will be retired after the E-7 contract is awarded.
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At the end of February 2023, the U.S. Air Force signed an agreement with Boeing to purchase the first two Wedgetail aircraft. The deal amounted to more than $1 billion. In total, the service wants a fleet of 26 E-7s. Deliveries will begin in 2027.
Source: Air & Space Forces Magazine