The Fairchild C-26 "Metroliner" is the designation for the
Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner series twin
turboprop aircraft in the service of the
United States military. It was not officially named by the US Armed Forces,[1] but is unofficially known by the same name as its civilian counterpart.[2] The C-26A is the military version of the Model SA227-AC Metro III; the C-26B is the military version of the Model SA227-BC Metro III and Model SA227-DC Metro 23; and UC-26C is the military designation for the Model SA227-AT Merlin IVC.
Design and development
The
United States Air Force bought eleven C-26A aircraft based on the SA227-AC,[3][4] two of these being supplied to the
Venezuelan Air Force.[5][6] The first three C-26Bs were procured later in the 1980s, two for the
US Army and one for the USAF. These three had been built as SA227-BC models. Later C-26Bs were the military equivalent of the Metro 23 and the USAF took delivery of 37 examples. Some of these were transferred to the
Peruvian Air Force and the US Army, while six were transferred to the
US Navy as C-26Ds.[4][7][8] The US Army also took a second-hand Merlin IVC and operated it as the solitary UC-26C.[9]
A Metro III, c/n AC-614, was modified as the Fairchild Aircraft/Lockheed Multi Mission Surveillance Aircraft, featuring a
Lockheedphased arrayradar in a long pod under the fuselage.[10] Several aspects of the MMSA aircraft were incorporated on some USAF C-26s redesignated as the RC-26B, operated by the
Air National Guard (ANG) in various states. These aircraft have been primarily used for Department of Defense reconnaissance mission support to various agencies of the
Department of Homeland Security such as the
United States Coast Guard (USCG) and
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in the
War on Drugs, and to USCG and/or the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in the wake of natural disasters.[11] The RC-26B aircraft were originally configured with a belly pod containing a sensor turret and a data recorder.[12] Recently, this pod has been removed and a sensor turret has been added to the belly of the aircraft.[13] Some of the RC-26Bs were operated for a time with civil registrations.[14][15] On 4 February 2019, a contract for
Elbit Systems of America to provide an avionics upgrade to the Air National Guard's RC-26Bs was announced.[16]
In early June 2020, the US National Guard deployed an RC-26B to El Dorado Hills near Sacramento, California, apparently in response to a walking tour by young black entrepreneurs.[19] The deployment occurred without the knowledge or approval of
Gavin Newsom, the Governor of California.[19] Three more RC-26Bs were used to observe demonstrators in Minneapolis, Phoenix and Washington, D.C.[20][19]
In January 2023, the U.S. Air Force retired its RC-26B Condors.[21][22]
Variants
C-26A
Military version of the Metro III (Model SA227-AC).
C-26B
Military version of the Metro III (Model SA227-BC) and Metro 23 (Model SA227-DC).
RC-26B
C-26B modified with electronic surveillance equipment for drug interdiction missions.[23] Ten remain in service with the Air National Guard as of March 2019.[16]
UC-26C
Was a used 1983-built Merlin IVC operated for several years as 89-1471.[9] Modified with an integrated sensor package including forward-looking infrared and high resolution radar.
C-26D
C-26Bs transferred from USAF inventory and modified with new navigation equipment for the US Navy, four used for rapid response cargo and passenger transportation in Europe.
^Verified by conducting an online search of the Fuerza Aérea Venezolana database at
"Scramble.nl site". Archived from
the original on 2008-03-13. Retrieved 2008-03-16. on 25 August 2007, using the serial numbers "0009" and "1964". It would appear that the
USAF took delivery of two aircraft serialled 86-0456 and the first (Fairchild c/n AC-745B) was passed to the FAV as 0009, the second being procured to replace that aircraft. The USAF FY1986 Serial Number list has 86-0455 (Fairchild c/n AC-744B) going to the FAV, but the other sources show it was 86-0456/AC-745B.
^"Coastwatch Tender to Usher In New Age of Surveillance." Australian Aviation magazine No. 93, December 1993, pp. 24–27. Aerospace Publications Pty. Ltd. ISSN 0813-0876.
^Hoyle Flight International 4–10 December 2018, p. 49.
^Hoyle Flight International 4–10 December 2018, p. 52.
^Hoyle Flight International 4–10 December 2018, p. 57.
^
abHoyle Flight International 4–10 December 2018, p. 59.
^Hoyle Flight International 4–10 December 2018, p. 60.
Bibliography
Donald, David, general editor. Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. Etobicoke, ON: Prospero Books, 1997.
ISBN1-85605-375-X.
Endes, Günter. "Fairchild (Swearingen) Metro/Merlin". The Illustrated Directory of Modern Commercial Aircraft. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company, 2001.
ISBN0-7603-1125-0.
Frawley, Gerard. "Fairchild Dornier Metro II, III & 23". The International Directory of Civil Aircraft. Canberra: Aerospace Publications Pty. Ltd., 1997.
ISBN1-875671-26-9.
Hoyle, Craig. "World Air Forces Directory". Flight International. 4–10 December 2018, Vol. 194, No. 5665, pp. 32–60.
ISSN0015-3710.
Palmer, Trisha, ed. "Swearingen Metro and Metro II/III". Encyclopedia of the World's Commercial and Private Aircraft. New York: Crescent Books, 2001.
ISBN0-517-36285-6.