A wide variety of helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft are used for aerial firefighting. In 2003, it was reported that "The
U.S. Forest Service and
Bureau of Land Management own, lease, or contract for nearly 1,000 aircraft each fire season, with annual expenditures in excess of US$250 million in recent years".
Helicopters (DSNS)
Mil Mi-8MTV picking up water near
Nizhyn Helicopters may be fitted with tanks (helitankers) or they may carry buckets. Some helitankers, such as the Erickson AirCrane, are also outfitted with a front-mounted foam cannon. Buckets are usually filled by submerging or dipping them in lakes, rivers, reservoirs, or portable tanks. The most popular of the buckets is the flexible
Bambi Bucket. Tanks can be filled on the ground (by water tenders or truck-mounted systems) or water can be siphoned from lakes, rivers, reservoirs, or a portable tank through a hanging snorkel. Popular firefighting helicopters include variants of the Bell UH-1H Super Huey,
Bell 204,
Bell 205,
Bell 212,
Boeing Vertol 107,
Boeing Vertol 234,
Sikorsky S-70 "Firehawk" and the
Sikorsky S-64 Aircrane helitanker, which features a snorkel for filling from a natural or man-made water source while in hover. Currently the world's largest helicopter, the
Mil Mi-26, uses a Bambi bucket. File:N267KA.JPG|
Kaman K-Max K-1200 used for aerial firefighting in Idaho File:Kfd-205-N408KC-050428-26cr.jpg|
Kern County (California) Fire Department Bell 205 dropping water during a training exercise at the Mojave Spaceport File:Laco-s70-N160LA-040501-01.jpg|
Los Angeles County Fire Department's
Sikorsky S-70C Firehawk during a water drop demonstration at Station 129 in
Lancaster, California File:U.S. Airmen with the 129th Rescue Wing, California Air National Guard drop water on the Rim Fire near Yosemite, Calif., Aug. 26, 2013 130826-Z-ZZ999-004.jpg|U.S. Airmen with the
129th Rescue Wing, California Air National Guard drop water on the Rim Fire near Yosemite, California, August 26, 2013
Water and fire retardant bombers amphibious
flying boat air tanker at work drops water in an exercise near Mobridge, South Dakota, in the US. filling water tanks in the
Mediterranean Sea while in operation against the
2010 Mount Carmel forest fire of Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps demonstrates aerial firefighting at an air show. of the
State Emergency Service of Ukraine dumps water on a forest fire.
Airtankers or
water bombers are fixed-wing aircraft fitted with tanks that can be filled on the ground at an air tanker base or, in the case of
flying boats and
amphibious aircraft, by skimming water from lakes, reservoirs, or large rivers without needing to land. Various aircraft have been used over the years for firefighting. In 1947, the
United States Air Force and
United States Forest Service experimented with military aircraft dropping water-filled bombs. The bombs were unsuccessful, and the use of internal water tanks was adopted instead. The
Mendocino Air Tanker Squad formed by
Joseph Bolles Ely in 1956 was the first such unit in the United States to drop water and retardant on fires. Based at the
Willows-Glenn County Airport it soon led the way for other agencies to form similar squads. Though World War II- and Korean War-era bombers were for a long time the mainstay of the aerial firefighting fleet, newer purpose-built tankers have since come online. The smallest are the Single Engine Air Tankers (SEATs). These are agricultural sprayers that generally drop about of water or retardant. Examples include the
Air Tractor AT-802, which can deliver around 800 gallons of water or fire retardant solution in each drop, and the Soviet
Antonov An-2 biplane. Both of these aircraft can be fitted with floats that scoop water from the surface of a body of water. Similar in configuration to the World War II–era
Consolidated PBY Catalina, the
Canadair CL-215 and its derivative the
CL-415 are designed and built specifically for firefighting. The
Croatian Air Force uses six CL-415s as well as six AT 802s for firefighting purposes. Medium-sized modified aircraft include the
Grumman S-2 Tracker (
retrofitted with turboprop engines as the S-2T) as used by the
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE), as well as the
Conair Firecat version developed and used by
Conair Group Inc. of Canada, while the
Douglas DC-4, the
Douglas DC-7, the
Lockheed C-130 Hercules, the
Lockheed P-2 Neptune, and the
Lockheed P-3 Orion – and its commercial equivalent, the
L-188 Electra – have been used as air tankers. Conair also converted a number of
Convair 580 and
Fokker F27 Friendship turboprop airliners to air tankers. The largest aerial firefighter ever used is a
Boeing 747 aerial firefighter, known as the
Global Supertanker, that can carry fed by a pressurized drop system. The Supertanker was deployed operationally for the first time in 2009, fighting a fire in Spain. The tanker made its first American operation on August 31, 2009, at the
Oak Glen Fire. It has since been replaced by a
Boeing 747-400. Another wide body jetliner that is currently being used as an air tanker is the modified
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 operated by the
10 Tanker Air Carrier company as the
DC-10 Air Tanker. It can carry up to of fire fighting retardant. The Russian
Ministry of Emergency Situations operates convertible-to-cargo
Ilyushin Il-76 airtankers that have been operating with tanking systems, and several
Beriev Be-200 jet powered
amphibian aircraft. The Be-200 can carry a maximum payload of about of water, making "scoops" in suitable stretches of water in 14 seconds. Bombardier's
Dash 8 Q Series aircraft are the basis of new, next-generation air tankers.
Cascade Aerospace has converted two pre-owned Q400s to act as part-time water bomber and part-time transport aircraft for France's
Sécurité Civile, while Neptune Aviation is converting a pre-owned Q300 as a prototype to augment its
Lockheed P-2 Neptune aircraft. The Sécurité Civile also operates twelve Canadair CL-415 and nine
Conair Turbo Firecat aircraft. Neptune Aviation also currently operates converted
British Aerospace 146 jetliners as air tankers. The BAe 146 can carry up to 3,000 gallons of fire fighting retardant. Air Spray USA Ltd. of Chico, California has also converted the BAe 146 jetliner to the role of air tanker. Another modern-era passenger aircraft that has now been converted for aerial firefighting missions in the U.S. is the
McDonnell Douglas MD-87 jetliner operated by Erickson Aero Tanker. The MD-87 can carry up to 4,000 gallons of fire fighting retardant.
Coulson Aviation unveiled a
Boeing 737-300 firefighting conversion in May 2017. Six aircraft have been purchased from
Southwest Airlines for the RADS system conversion which was planned to enter service in December 2017. The 737 aircraft is smaller than the C-130Q which allows for a wider range of airfields to be utilized. Britt Coulson further stated the aircraft will be able to retain the current seat and galley configuration for tanker operations. On 22 November 2018, the 737 was used for the first time to fight a fire near Newcastle, Australia. In July 2022, Airbus tested the aerial firefighting capacity of the
A400M using a roll-on/roll-off kit comprising a 20-tonne water tank and piping allowing the load to be expelled from the end of the cargo ramp.
Comparison table of fixed-wing firefighting tanker airplanes All links, citations and data sources are listed in the paragraph above. For accident and grounding citations, see paragraph below table. Category legend: Light: under , Medium: under , Heavy: Greater than Other former military aircraft utilized as firefighting air tankers in the U.S. in the past included the
B-17 and the
PB4Y-2, a version of the
B-24.
Leadplanes The Lead Plane function directs the activities of the airtankers by both verbal target descriptions and by physically leading the airtankers on the drop run. The leadplane is typically referred to as a "Bird Dog" in Canada or "Supervision" aircraft in Australia. The
O-2 Skymaster, Cessna 310 and
OV-10 Bronco have been used as spotter and lead plane platforms. The
Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources has also used the
Cessna 337. The
Beechcraft Baron was long used as a leadplane or air attack ship, but most were retired in 2003; more common now is the
Beechcraft King Air and the
Twin Commander 690. A Cessna Citation 500 jet owned by Air Spray (1967) LTd. was used by the British Columbia Ministry of Forests beginning in 1995 and used for two fire seasons to lead the very fast Electra L188 air tanker to the fires. This was the first time a jet aircraft was used as a lead plane or "bird dog". The Department of Parks and Wildlife in Western Australia operates a fleet of nine
American Champion Scouts 8GCBC during the summer months as spotter aircraft and Air Attack platforms. The Provinces of Alberta and British Columbia and the Yukon Territories contract to supply Twin Commander 690 as bird dog aircraft for their air tanker fleets. Air Spray owns 9 Twin Commander 690 for use as bird dog aircraft.
Fleet grounding In the United States, most of these aircraft are privately owned and contracted to government agencies, and the
National Guard and the
U.S. Marines also maintain fleets of firefighting aircraft. On May 10, 2004, The
U.S. Forest Service (USFS) and the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) announced that they were cancelling contracts with operators of 33 heavy airtankers. They cited liability concerns and an inability to safely manage the fleet after the wing failure and resulting
crash of a
C-130A Hercules in
California and a
PB4Y-2 in
Colorado during the summer of 2002. Both aged aircraft broke up in flight due to catastrophic
fatigue cracks at the wing roots. After subsequent third-party examination and extensive testing of all USFS contracted heavy airtankers, three companies were awarded contracts and now maintain a combined fleet of 23 aircraft. ==Fire retardant==