Airbus has successfully tested a removable firefighting demonstrator kit on the A400M transport aircraft during a flight test campaign in Spain.

The firm say that the test campaign took place in daylight conditions with a minimum operating height of 150ft, flight speeds as low as 125 knots and drops involving up to 20 tonnes of water from the current tank in less than 10 seconds.

“The main objective of the campaign is to validate the drop water quantity and time as well as the ability of the A400M to carry out this new role with the kit.”

“The development of this firefighting kit is an intrinsic part of our journey towards helping to create a more sustainable and safer world, not only by our actions but also through our products. We strongly believe the A400M can play a vital role in the fight against the ever increasing threat posed by wildfires and support the restoration of social and environmental systems,” said Mike Schoellhorn, CEO of Airbus Defence and Space, in this news release.

According to a statement:

“The Airbus firefighting solution created for the A400M is a roll-on/roll-off (RORO) kit that requires no modification to the aircraft and therefore is interchangeable to any aircraft in the A400M fleet. The water is stored in a fixed tank in the cargo hold, and retained by two independent doors. These doors are connected to two flood pipes, so when the discharge is triggered, the water is expelled through two sections at the end of the ramp. The introduction of this RORO solution allows a rapid reaction to unforeseen fires and reconfiguration of the aircraft to any of its other roles.”

You can read more here.

Tom Dunlop
Tom has spent the last 13 years working in the defence industry, specifically military and commercial shipbuilding. His work has taken him around Europe and the Far East, he is currently based in Scotland.

36 COMMENTS

      • Sorry Paul gonna have to argue that one! More Army were deployed as full crews, with the RN lads doing the BART team in a white transit following behind our swift and sleek Goddesses (who mostly couldn’t enter a burning building anyway as their team needed 2 x 2 person teams, but most had 1 x 2 person team and a driver and a controller for the board) But at least it gave the RN an opportunity to see real professionals at work 😂👍!

    • The RAF have always covered Stiking Fireman, along side the Army. It was a massive drain on us back in the rarly 2000s. I was at Kinloss, having to supply personnel to cover the Liverpool area

  1. Given the inherent dangers associated with “water bombing” isn’t this an ideal application for a drone vehicle? Maybe the smaller helicopter variants first.

    • It doesn’t appear to have a water scoop capability, thus allowing it to skim water into the tanks from a lake or sea, so it will have to land and refill every time so the tonnage of water delivered per hour won’t be spectacular…

      Mind you I don’t think an A400M would be too useful with a scoop….

      Maybe buying some specialist affrighting aircraft would be the way forwards?

      • There is a demountable kit available for C-130 as well.

        Personally I think we should buy 3 of these kits (2 operational and 1 spare). We’re having increasing numbers of moorland fires in the UK every year so the capability could be very useful. But it’s also a cheap and easy way of deploying some soft power, particularly to other European states. The demand on aerial firefighting aircraft has increased exponentially in recent years and will only increase as each year goes by. Pretty much every year we support the Cypriot government with the Bell 212 at Akrotiri carrying Bambi buckets so there is a precedent. It’s a nice capability to keep in the kit bag…

        Money should come from Home Office or DFID (now in the FCO) though…

      • Just watched the video and noticed the part where Airbus states that the kit is a roll on roll off bit of equipment that requires no modification to the plane. But thats a lot of spray and I do wonder how that would effect the plane over time.

        • I wouldn’t have thought that clean fresh water would have much effect.

          Trouble is not much is clean fresh water – tap water is chlorinated and therefore mildly corrosive to aluminium.

          Lane water generally has high mineral concentration depending on what it has flowed over to get there and what the lane shores are.

          And we all know sea water is a nightmare….

      • Turnaround might be faster than you think. Roll on, fly away and empty. Land back, roll off, roll on new full tank, Fly away – repeat

        • Where do you fast deliver 20,000kg of water from?

          Even with a standard 2.5” mains hydrant that would take an appreciable time?

          You could pump into a couple of fire trucks and then replenish using their pumps if mains starvation was an issue.

          I suspect you would need a plastic ground tank which was pre filled with the exact weight of water and then pumped across to the aircraft with some high capacity pumps.

          • 2.5″ mains at 40 psi = 421GPM, 20 ton 40K lbs @ 8lb/G = 5000G, 5000/421=11.88 minutes. Drop pressure to 30psi and it’s 13.89 minutes, drop pipe size to 2″ and pressure to 30psi and it’s 25 minutes. Using purely gravity or low pressure (about 6f/s) gives 80GPM with 2.5″ ID pipe, it would take just over an hour at 62.5 minutes.

  2. It’s probably just tests to show how versatile the aircraft can be. I doubt it’s a payload that will be carried very often especially by RAF crews.

  3. A400 won’t replace Candair planes, even if Canadair only carries 6 tons of watr it has much higher rate per hour because it can refill quickly in lakes or at sea.. Plan is to used A400 as a supplement when needed.
    Also current Canadair are unable to fight fires at night, which the A400 can do.
    The Canadair prod. lines have reopened for first delivery of upgraded vrsion by 2025, not sure if this newer model will have night capability.

  4. We definitely need a few of these kits. It would also make sense to get some proper fire planes that we have in stock that can then be also lent out as needed across Europe or further afield either rented out or as soft power projection.

    Not everything needs to be provided by a company can be strategic UK stock. If need be we can go as per the Navy smaller port boats which are MOD owned but not necessarily MOD operated.

  5. Many people have said this already but getting a few of these kits would be great for power projection and would also help the publication perception of the armed forces.
    COVID helped a lot with RAF planes transporting stuff from turkey and wherever, and personnel helping with testing and transporting via trucks within the UK.
    The biggest shame via public perception of the armed forces was getting rid of the army and navy SAR squadrons, which affected many people positively, it also means we don’t have proper CSAR or SAR for the carriers.
    As a side note the forces news video about the AW149 was interesting, apparently it can be used for CSAR, and armed with 8 hellfire or equivalent rockets- half as much as the apache but compared to puma which was unarmed other than machine guns, is better.

  6. Fun as this capability might be, it only makes sense in an emergency and the UK would probably be better served buying a couple of purpose built aircraft. That said it’s nice to see A400 maturing as a platform, I’d quite like to see the AAR pods fitted to some of the RAF aircraft as well as an increase in fleet size to around 45. Cutting C130 without the numbers to truly replace them, alongside the immense work rate of the C17, is a particularly silly idea considering the state of geopolitics.

  7. Looks like a great extra capability. I spend 5 months of the year in my second home in central Cape Town and every single summer there there are multiple days when I can smell smoke in the air and can sit on my balcony watching helicopters water-bomb fires on the mountains surrounding the city centre. If our UK heatwaves and droughts continue to get more frequent and more severe this is definitely something we need to consider.

    As I watch those helicopters from my balcony I marvel at the skill that I assume is involved. I can’t fly a helicopter but I have a few friends who have learned and experienced vicariously how hard it is to get the basic skills to fly a stable configuration in clear air. As an outsider I would have thought that having the mass characteristics (both the overall mass and the centre of gravity) change so suddenly as the water is released, and on top of that presumably being in very turbulent and unpredictable air due to the intense heat coming from the fire, must take a whole extra level of piloting skill. I really respect those helicopter pilots.

  8. They should keep the Hercules they are figuring on flogging off, and form some kind of national firefighting organization. Summer’s are only going to get hotter, large fires are only going to become more often.

    • Surely it would have been best to build some modern type of large flying boat,ie rebuild MARS or something better

    • The Guardian Aerial Firefighting system is ideal for any rear-loading cargo aircraft. Currently being used by Isreal, Peru, and Romania just to name a few. A C-130 can deliver 16,000 liters of water or retardant. No modifications needed.

  9. Very interesting and potential for huge benefits
    How is it filled with waand how long does it take to fill?

  10. Not in the short term, but these aircraft aren’t combating climate change, they’re going to be putting out fires the frequency of which is likely to increase with climate change.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here