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Photos and story – The US Navy’s new floating base for Marines and Navy SEALs is named for a Vietnam war hero Lauren Frias Feb 29, 2024, 11:35 AM GMT+13

USS John L. Canley in San Diego Harbor.

USS John L. Canley in San Diego Harbor.
US Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist Mark D. Faram
  • USS John L. Canley joined the active fleet as the US Navy’s newest warship, a floating sea base.
  • The Canley is the Navy’s sixth expeditionary mobile base (ESB).
  • The first of its name, the warship honors the Vietnam war hero, the late Sgt. Maj. John L. Canley.
  • The US Navy commissioned a new warship earlier this month, a massive floating sea base named after a Vietnam war hero.
  • The first of its name

    Donald Trump presents the Medal of Honor to US Marine Corps retired Sgt. Maj. John Canley

    Donald Trump presents the Medal of Honor to US Marine Corps retired Sgt. Maj. John Canley. 
    Susan Walsh/AP

    Born in Caledonia, Arkansas, in December 1937, John Canley went on to enlist in the Marine Corps in 1953.

    In his nearly 30 years in service, Canley was deployed on three combat tours to the Vietnam War, serving as a rifle platoon leader, company gunnery sergeant, and company first sergeant before retiring as a sergeant major in 1981.

    In 2018, Canley was awarded the nation’s highest military honor for his actions during the Battle of Hue City in Vietnam in 1968, when he carried more than 20 wounded Marines to safety while under enemy fire. He also took command for three days of Alpha Company, 1st battalion, 1st Marines after his company commander was wounded.

    He became the first Black Marine to receive a Medal of Honor while still living.

  • Honoring the ship’s namesake

    The crew of the expeditionary mobile base USS John L. Canley held a memorial service to honor the ship's namesake

    The crew of the Lewis B. Puller-class expeditionary mobile base USS John L. Canley held a memorial service to honor the ship’s namesake, Sgt. Maj. Canley. 
    US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Julio Rivera

    Canley died on May 11, 2022, in Bend, Oregon, of complications related to prostate cancer. He was 84.

    He was honored by the ship’s crewmembers in a memorial service and buried with full military honors at the Arlington National Cemetary.

    “The actions in the face of danger Sgt. Maj. Canley took are incredible and remarkable,” Marine Corps Sgt. Maj. Troy Black said in 2022. “Sgt. Maj. Canley was a leader and a warfighter who undoubtedly contributed to the battles won in Vietnam.”

    “His first priority was and has always been his Marines — a true example of Semper Fidelis,” Black added. “I’m saddened by the loss of such a great Marine, yet I’m grateful for the legacy he established for generations of warriors.”

  • Joining the active fleet

    US Marines fire a 21-gun salute during the expeditionary sea base USS John L. Canley commissioning ceremony

    US Marines fire a 21-gun salute during the expeditionary sea base USS John L. Canley commissioning ceremony at Naval Base Coronado, California 
    US Marine Corps photo by 1st Lt. Joshua Estrada

    USS John L. Canley joined the active fleet in a commissioning ceremony at Naval Air Station North Island in San Diego, California, on February 17.

  • The third largest flight deck of the US Navy

    USS John L. Canley in San Diego Harbor in front of the city skyline.

    USS John L. Canley in San Diego Harbor in front of the city skyline. 
    US Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist Mark D. Faram

    Canley’s legacy lives on in the Navy’s newest expeditionary sea base, the first of its name and the sixth ESB to join the Navy’s active fleet.

    The Lewis B. Puller-class warship acts as a highly flexible mobile staging area to support military operations at sea, including the Marine Corps, special operations forces like the Navy SEALs, and other embarked units. It can also serve as a mothership for unmanned aerial systems.

    It is designed to include aviation facilities, equipment staging support, and command-and-control assets.

    With a length of 785 feet, it also has the Navy’s third-largest flight deck. The diesel-electric vessel has four large rotary-wing landing spots that can support nearly every helicopter within the joint forces: MH-53E Sea DragonsMV-22 OspreysCH-47 ChinooksCH-46 Sea KnightAH-1 Cobras, and AH-64 Apaches.

    Fully loaded, the Canley has a displacement of 90,000 tons and can travel at 15 knots with a range of 9,500 nautical miles.

  • Supporting a variety of operations

    Expeditionary Sea Base USS John L. Canley at Naval Air Station North Island, where the ship was commissioned.

    Expeditionary Sea Base USS John L. Canley at Naval Air Station North Island, where the ship was commissioned. 
    US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Kelby Sanders

    General Dynamics National Steel and Shipbuilding Company built the mobile sea platform. David Carver, President of General Dynamics NASSCO, noted the “remarkable capabilities” of the Canley.

    “Canley has substantial residual space, weight, and power to accommodate a wide range of current and future, manned and unmanned, surface, aerial, and undersea systems across multiple warfighting functions,” Carver said. “This is a massive, capable, flexible warship that gives fleet commanders decision space they need throughout their operating theaters.”

    The ship can accommodate MK-105 mine sleds, rigid hull inflatable boats (RHIBs) used by SEALs and Marines, and twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs). The ship can also carry high-speed interceptor patrol boats and has weapon mounts and stowage space for weapons and ammunition.

  • A look inside the Canley

    Sailors aboard the expeditionary sea base USS John L. Canley

    Sailors assigned to the expeditionary sea base USS John L. Canley participate in a reenlistment ceremony following the ship’s commissioning. 
    US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Claire M. DuBois

    Xavier Vavasseur, chief editor of Naval News, toured the Canley with Capt. Thomas Mays, the commanding officer of the ESB.

    They walked through the ship’s parking-garage-like structure, where the crew could store boats and vehicles.

    “One of our primary mission sets is US Marine Corps aviation mine-sweeping,” Mays told Naval News. “The MH-53 can drop sleds in the water, and then sweep a minefield free to enable an amphibious assault if needed.”

    Flying low over the water, the powerful MH-53 tows the sled through the minefield to trigger any lurking mines so ships can later pass through.

    Operating with the Navy’s Forward Deployed Naval Force

    Ship's crew members of USS John L. Canley man the ship

    Ship’s crew members of USS John L. Canley man the ship during the ship’s commissioning ceremony at Naval Station North Island, California. 
    Sarah Cannon

    Mays said the ship’s crew will undergo a few more months of certification and training before likely joining the USS Miguel Keith (ESB 5) in the Seventh Fleet operating area in the Western Pacific.

  • Christened by Canley’s daughter

    Patricia Sargent, the ship sponsor, christens Military Sealift Command's newest ship, expeditionary sea base USS John L. Canley.

    Patricia Sargent, the ship sponsor, christens Military Sealift Command’s newest ship, expeditionary sea base USS John L. Canley. 
    Sarah Cannon

    A few weeks after his death, Canley’s daughter and the ship’s sponsor, Patricia Sargent, christened the ship in a time-honored tradition, breaking a bottle of sparkling wine across the ship’s bow in a ceremony in June 2022.

    She delivered an address during the ship’s commissioning in February 2023, highlighting her father’s heroism and other Marines in the Vietnam War.

    “To be able to give the order to bring this ship to life, I need to give you some information in regards to my father,” Sargent said. “My father understood that greatness is not achieved by the individual; it is achieved by the courageous acts of the many. The Marines of Alpha Company 1/1 are an example of that in what they achieved in the Battle of Hue City.”

    “This ship will achieve greatness, but it will only do that by the courageous actions of the many,” Sargent continued. “It is in honor of my father, my family, members of the 1/1, and the great people of the United States that I give the command: officers and crew of the USS John L. Canley, man our ship and bring her to life!”

  • ‘A beautiful ship named after a very brave man’

    Expeditionary Sea Base USS John L. Canley at Naval Air Station North Island

    Expeditionary Sea Base USS John L. Canley at Naval Air Station North Island. 
    US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Kelby Sanders

    Paul Garcia recalled his time serving alongside Canley in 1968, saying he “earned the respect of every member of our unit because of his selflessness during combat.”

    “During major battles, he’d go out into the open and save Marines after they were shot,” Garcia told the Orange County Register. “I just feel honored I served with him.”

    Garcia was part of a private tour of the warship following its commission, describing it as a “beautiful ship named after a very brave man.”

    “It will afford the Marine Corps the ability to be prepared in any location to attack in an amphibious landing,” he said.

  • ‘An inspiration to all who follow in her wake’

    Expeditionary Sea Base USS John L. Canley at Naval Air Station North Island, where the ship was commissioned.

    Expeditionary Sea Base USS John L. Canley at Naval Air Station North Island, where the ship was commissioned. 
    US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Kelby Sanders

    “It is my firm belief that USS John L. Canley will serve as an inspiration to all who follow in her wake,” US Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro said during the commissioning ceremony earlier this month.

    “It is my sincere hope that for those who come aboard this ship — those in the United States Navy, the Marine Corps, Military Sealift Command — when they cross that bow, they’re also challenged to live up to the unwavering devotion to duty that this ship’s namesake.”

  • https://www.businessinsider.com/us-navy-warship-floating-sea-base-uss-canley-marines-seals-2024-2#an-inspiration-to-all-who-follow-in-her-wake-10

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Ships with New Zealand connections – HMS Driver was a Driver-class wooden paddle sloop of the Royal Navy. She is credited with the first global circumnavigation by a steamship when she arrived back in England on 14 May 1847

She embarked for the East Indies and China in March 1842. She served some time in China (losing her original commanding officer) before being ordered to New Zealand in September 1845. She was damaged by a storm en route, necessitating repairs to her engine and boiler and other parts of the ship.[3]

During her circumnavigation Driver became the first steamship to visit New Zealand, arriving on 20 January 1846,[5] and was involved in the Hutt Valley Campaign, which was part of the New Zealand Wars. At the time of her visit she was described as a brig-rigged 6-gun warship displacing 1,058 tons with engines rated 280 horsepower.[6]

Driver set off east from New Zealand for her return journey to England via Cape Horn on 28 January 1847. She stopped for six days in Argentina to pick up more coal, finally arriving in Portsmouth, England on Friday 14 May 1847, 105 days after starting from New Zealand. Of the ship’s original officers, the second in command Lieutenant Thomas Kisbee, the master, purser, surgeon and assistant surgeon completed the entire circumnavigation.

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USS Wichita, a unique 8 in ‘heavy’ variant of the Brooklyn class light cruisers: she saw distinguished WW2 service, including in 1942 as an Arctic convoy escort (notably to the ill fated PQ17) and at the Operation Torch landings in North Africa; thereafter in the Pacific, notably at the battle of Leyte Gulf in 1944.

USS Wichita, a unique 8 in ‘heavy’ variant of the Brooklyn class light cruisers: she saw distinguished WW2 service, including in 1942 as an Arctic convoy escort (notably to the ill fated PQ17) and at the Operation Torch landings in North Africa; thereafter in the Pacific, notably at the battle of Leyte Gulf in 1944.


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Balao Class: Segundo (SS-398) Cat (SS-399) Blenny (SS-324) Blower (SS-325) Blueback (SS-326) Charr (SS-328)

January 1945: the USS Segundo is shown in a sub nest at Guam in between her second and third war patrols. She appears bottom left of this photo with the hull number 398 painted on her bow.

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Engine fire forces B-52 bomber to make emergency landing at Minot AFB

A B-52H Stratofortress assigned to the 23rd Expeditionary Bomb Squadron takes flight from Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, Feb. 7, 2024, in support of a bomber task force mission. The aircraft and crew are deployed from Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota. (Capt. Stephen J. Collier/Air Force)
 

A single-engine fire forced a B-52H Stratofortress bomber to make an emergency landing at Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota, early Feb. 23, the service confirmed Tuesday.

No airmen were injured in the incident, which occurred shortly before 1 a.m. local time. Minot firefighters extinguished the flames on base.

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Australia to more than double naval surface fleet, grow defense budget

Australia’s Hobart-class destroyers are to receive upgrades at the Osborne Naval Shipyard. (Gordon Arthur/Staff)

CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand — The Royal Australian Navy will have its largest fleet since the end of World War II if it implements recommendations from a new independent review of its surface combat ships.

The government’s “Enhanced Lethality Surface Combatant Fleet” review, released Feb. 20, advocates for a flotilla of 26 warships, more than double the 11 hulls the service currently possesses. The government has accepted the recommendations except for one regarding the continuation of an upgrade for aging Anzac-class frigates.

“The size, lethality and capabilities of the future surface combatant fleet ensures that our Navy is equipped to meet the evolving strategic challenges of our region,” Chief of Navy Vice Adm. Mark Hammond said in a statement following the report’s unveiling.

Jennifer Parker, an expert associate at the National Security College within the Australian National University, told Defense News the force could achieve its new goal, even if “plans of this magnitude are going to have challenges.”

The plan

To supplement its forthcoming nuclear-powered submarines, to be acquired under the AUKUS agreement with the U.K. and U.S., the future surface combatant fleet will feature nine so-called tier 1 destroyers and frigates, 11 smaller tier 2 frigates, and six optionally manned vessels.

Tier 1 vessels will comprise three existing Hobart-class air warfare destroyers — to receive an upgrade to the Aegis combat system and the installation of Tomahawk missiles — and six new Hunter-class anti-submarine frigates. BAE Systems was originally supposed to produce nine frigates, with the first to be commissioned in 2034.

Parker, a former naval officer, said the most significant problem for the service is a looming capability gap, as the first-of-class Anzac frigate will not sail again, and a second is set to retire in 2026, meaning the Navy will have nine total warships by the end of this decade.

“Most predict an increased period of risk in the late 2020s, and that is where Australia has the capability gap,” Parker said, noting the the service should consider how to maximize its remaining capability and operational availability during this time.

With this pending shortfall, the review recommended commissioning 11 general-purpose frigates at least the size of the Anzacs to “provide maritime and land strike, air defence and escort capabilities,” the government explained in a summary of the report.

Australia plans to procure the first three frigates from overseas, with the remainder constructed in Henderson, Western Australia. The Navy has narrowed contenders to Germany’s MEKO A-200, Japan’s Mogami class, South Korea’s FFX Batch II/III, and Spain’s Alfa 3000. The government will make a selection next year, with the first delivery scheduled in 2030.

The planned six large optionally crewed surface vessels are based on an American design and feature 32 missile cells. Built in Henderson and destined to enter service from the mid-2030s, Parker said these are not traditional surface combatants because “their role will be to extend the magazine capability” of other ships.

Although Defence Minister Richard Marles said they would be crewed, Parker predicted they could end up as unmanned platforms.

“There are legal issues with lethal autonomous weapons and operating uncrewed surface vessels, so until those legal issues are overcome, the Australian government wasn’t about to announce that we’re going to have some sort of floating magazine that can launch missiles,” she said.

Apart from surface combatants, the review proposed a fleet of 25 “minor war vessels” for constabulary tasks. These include six Arafura-class offshore patrol vessels, or OPV, slashed from the original 12 that Luerssen Australia is constructing.

“The OPV is an inefficient use of resources for civil maritime security operations and does not possess the survivability and self-defence systems to contribute to a surface combatant mission,” the review stated.

The money

Marles said the entire plan is “fully funded” thanks to an additional AU$11.1 billion (U.S. $7.3 billion) allocated over the next decade, including AU$1.7 billion (U.S. $1.1 billion) in the next four years.

Parker said this amount is “probably feasible,” but added that the Treasury plans to only increase defense spending from 2027 to 2028. “I don’t know how they’re going to be able to resource those things without increasing defense spending in May,” she explained.

But even with the budget allocation, it doesn’t mean the Defence Department can spend that money, she said.

“They still need to go through the approval processes for that specific project,” she added. “I think the challenge is they need to convince the Australian public that defense requires increased spending.

Marles had promised defense expenditure would move from an anticipated 2.1% of gross domestic product by 2030 to 2.4% by that time, but Parker said that is insufficient to fund so many naval acquisitions.

The people

Amid the plans for new construction, a new shipbuilding plan is due later this year.

Parker noted many questions remain over that sector’s workforce, but a nationwide approach addressing education, migration and infrastructure factors would help.

But another challenge is crewing. The Defence Department planned to raise the number of military members by 2,201 in the 2022-2023 time frame, but instead it suffered a net loss of 1,389 uniformed personnel.

Gordon Arthur is an Asia correspondent for Defense News. After a 20-year stint working in Hong Kong, he now resides in New Zealand. He has attended military exercises and defense exhibitions in about 20 countries around the Asia-Pacific region.

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PHOTOS: Damen unveils design of new multi-purpose support ship – February 27, 2024, by Fatima Bahtić Damen Shipyards Group has unveiled a new ship design based on modern defence and security requirements, the Multi-Purpose Support Ship (MPSS).

Damen

The MPSS 7000 is 107 x 20 metres. It is foreseen that it will be operated by a crew of 48 personnel, with additional facilities for up to 100 special personnel and extra, temporary, accommodation for 42 persons, for example in the event of a disaster relief operation. The MPSS 9000 is 130x 20 meters and is able to conduct even more operations.

The MPSS has been co-developed with the Portuguese Navy. It is a solution for the increasing use of drone technology in combat and surveillance. In addition to its primary function, the MPSS is designed to fulfil a wide range of additional tasks, including auxiliary roles.

Damen

While the electrical, communication and navigation equipment installed on the MPSS will be military class equipment, the vessel will also use commercial off the shelf technology. This includes, for example, the mission specific equipment modules, by which the vessel achieves its multi-functional capability.

In this way, when not required to perform its primary function, the MPSS can be applied to a wide range of duties including managing drones (air, sea, and sub-sea), conducting amphibious support, emergency/disaster relief, search & rescue, diving support, performing submarine rescue operations and helicopter operations.

Damen

“The MPSS range is a response to the increasing use of drone technology that we see in modern combat and surveillance situations. We could see that such capabilities would be of growing importance for countries looking to sustain their sovereignty,” Piet van Rooij, Commercial Manager of Damen’s Defence and Security department, said.

“At the same time, this is a multi-purpose vessel that can be applied to wide range of additional operations…This theme is further developed using commercial off the shelf technology, which ensure the cost-effective construction of a reliable platform. We’re very much looking forward to showcasing this new vessel, including at exhibitions, in the coming months.

Damen has begun construction of the first vessel of this new design.

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German Navy frigate ‘Hessen’ arrives in Red Sea, joins EUNAVFOR Aspides

German frigate Hessen in Crete.
German Navy frigate “Hessen” at berth in Souda, Crete, before her departure for the Red Sea. Image Bundeswehr.

German Navy Frigate ‘Hessen’ Arrives In Red Sea, Joins EUNAVFOR Aspides

German AAW frigate will commence operations protecting shipping in the Red Sea against Houthi attacks, among new reports and speculations over the type’s missile capability at home.

The German Navy F124 Sachsen-class frigate F221 Hessen has arrived in the Red Sea after passing through the Suez Canal on February 24, 2024, as Bundeswehr announced via social media site “X”, formerly Twitter, on February 25, 2024. The ship will now join the EU-organized operation “Aspides”. The EU-mission intends to protect shipping in the Red Sea against missile attacks by Yemen-based Houthi military forces.

EU and German mandates differ for Aspides

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius visited “Hessen” in Crete with the Chair of the Defence Committee Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann. Image Bundeswehr.

The mandate of “Aspides” is to “provide maritime situational awareness, accompany vessels, and protect them against possible multi-domain attacks at sea.“. The approved region of operation will be “the main sea lines of communication in the Baab al-Mandab Strait and the Strait of Hormuz, as well as international waters in the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, the Arabian Sea, the Gulf of Oman, and the (Persian) Gulf.“. Notably EUNAVFOR Aspides does not envisage strikes against land-based targets. The mandate for the German contribution approved by the Bundestag with a significant majority imposes an additional restriction by prohibiting operations north of Oman’s capital of Muscat. Therefore the Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf are excluded from German operations.

Hessen had set sail from Wilhelmshaven on February 8. The frigate arrived in Crete in anticipation of formal approval for EUNAVFOR Aspides from both the EU and the German parliament. She then departed Souda for the Suez Canal on February 21. The ship has embarked 240 personnel including additional medical and naval infantry troops for the mission. The Bundestag-mandated upper personnel ceiling for the operation is 700 personnel. This should allow some leverage for increased contributions and other leverage, such as for logistics support. Hessen will operate with “Aspides” until the end of April. Succeeding units are expected to stay in theatre for up to four months. The current mandate is valid until February 28, 2025.

“Hessen” departing Souda Bay and passing the German MCM boat “Groemitz”, before heading to Port Said. Image Bundeswehr.

Uncertainty over SM-2 interceptor supplies for German frigates

While Hessen got underway, German media reporting also focused on the F124 AAW-frigates, described as the “gold standard” of German naval capability by Bundeswehr officials. In a response to a member of parliament the German Ministry of Defence (BMVg) revealed that the SM-2 Blk IIIA used by Hessen and her sister ships “are out of production“. The most recent order for this missile type for foreign customers via Foreign Military Sales (FMS) dates to 2021. If the revelations are accurate, it implies all Sachsen-class frigates will have to undergo modernization of their combat management system and possibly also hardware upgrades in order to use the newer SM-2 Block IIIC now in low rate initial production. Details on the exact technical issues remain obscure.

The impact of this possible problem on current operations is also not immediately clear. The German Navy as a matter of principle does not comment on weapons loadouts of deployed combatants. Nor does the BMVg provide public insight into existing ordnance stockpiles including SM-2 missiles. Bundeswehr continues to struggle with widely reported shortages of ammunition across all services. Navy Chief Vice Admiral Jan-Christian Kaack repeatedly stressed the importance of ammunition stockpiles since assuming office in March 2022.

Ongoing modernization and readiness challenges for F124-fleet

Frigate “Sachsen” receiving new cells for her Mk 41 in 2023. The Mk 41 in question is the “Strike Length”-variant. Image Bundeswehr via “Presseportal.de”.

The first of class F219 Sachsen had only in December 2023 received a new Mk 41 VLS. The system replaced the previous launcher after suffering damage from a failed SM-2 launch in 2019 off Norway. The replacement experienced considerable delay, resulting in Sachsen operating for five years without her principal weapon system. The hold-up arose both over Germany having to order a bespoke new Mk 41 launcher via FMS and then deferring installation until Sachsen was due for a regular maintenance interval.

Prior to “Aspides” all Sachsen-class frigates were already scheduled to undergo a significant “midlife update”. The contracted work will enable the F124-design to perform detection and tracking, but not direct interception, of ballistic missiles. Related work will integrate new TRS-4D/LR ROT radar sets and updates to the combat management system. The effort will commence this year and conclude in 2028. How the Red Sea-deployment affects this schedule, and specifically work for Hessen is unclear at the present time.

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Lockheed 10A Electra Flies in New Zealand

AFTER MORE THAN TWO DECADES OF RESTORATION AN EXAMPLE OF THE RARE LOCKHEED TWIN TAKES TO THE KIWI SKIES

The culmination of nearly 27 years work as Electra ZK-AFD reaches takeoff speed for the first post-restoration flight. [Photo by Ruth Christie]
The culmination of nearly 27 years work as Electra ZK-AFD reaches takeoff speed for the first post-restoration flight. [Photo by Ruth Christie]
United Fuel Cells

Aviation Museum in Kathmandu

Aviation Museum in Kathmandu

By Zac Yates

After more than two decades of meticulous restoration, an example of Lockheed’s rare 1930s airliner has taken to Kiwi skies. Owner Rob Mackley accompanied test pilot Ryan Southam and engineer Huib Volker of restorers Hawk Aero on the test flight of his Lockheed 10A Electra ZK-AFD (c/n 1145) from Ardmore Airport near Auckland, the flight marking the culmination of nearly 27 years of work.

The type played a key role in developing New Zealand’s “main trunk” airline routes with seven examples serving initially with Union Airways from 1937 and then the New Zealand National Airways Corporation (NZNAC) from 1947, until the five surviving airframes were replaced by the Douglas DC-3 in 1950. It’s believed only one other example of the Lockheed 10 is currently flying worldwide, this being Točná Airport’s L10A OK-CTB (s/n 1091).

The Electra's Pratt & Whitney R-985s come to life. The aircraft is named Kuaka in tribute to an aircraft flown by Bill Mackley, owner Rob Mackley's father. [Photo by Ruth Christie]
The Electra’s twin Pratt & Whitney R-985s come to life. The aircraft is named Kuaka in tribute to an aircraft flown by Bill Mackley, owner Rob Mackley’s father. [Photo by Ruth Christie]

The Electra wears the colors of Union Airways of New Zealand on the port side of the fuselage and is named Kuaka (the Māori name for the bar-tailed godwit), replicating c/n 1045, the fuselage of which is stored at the Museum of Transport and Technology (MOTAT) in Auckland (incidentally another Electra – c/n 1138 ZK-BUT – is also painted as ZK-AFD and on public display at MOTAT.)

Rob Mackley's Electra wears its original Linea Aerea Nacional de Chile markings on one side as seen in this photo taken at Ardmore Airport on December 6th, 2022. [Photo by Richard Currie]
Rob Mackley’s Electra wears its original Linea Aerea Nacional de Chile markings on one side as seen in this photo taken at Ardmore Airport on December 6th, 2022. [Photo by Richard Currie]

As a nod to the history of Mackley’s airframe, the starboard side of the fuselage is painted in the markings of Linea Aerea Nacional de Chile. Built in 1941 for LAN, the aircraft flew more than 11000hr for the Chilean carrier and during its time in South America the aircraft wore several different registrations including CC-226 with the name Diego de Almagro, CC-LCN and CC-CLEA. The aircraft was sold to U.S. interests in 1959, receiving the registration N10310 and flying to Oregon before eventually ending up in Alaska. The Electra was later impounded for unpaid parking fees and was a museum display before being acquired by Mackley in 1997, when it was shipped to New Zealand for airworthy restoration.

Electra ZK-AFD taxis back in from Ardmore's runway after the successful first post-restoration flight on January 31st, 2024. [Photo by Ruth Christie]
Electra ZK-AFD taxis back in from Ardmore’s runway after the successful first post-restoration flight on January 31st, 2024. [Photo by Ruth Christie]

The half-and-half colour scheme on the now-completed aircraft was done as a tribute to Mackley’s father Bill who flew Electras for NZNAC after WW2. The restoration had involved several companies and individuals over the years, Mackley told Vintage Aviation News. “Restoration was started in Rotorua when Wal Delholm and his dad Colin of Avspecs, who worked on the NZNAC Lockheed 10A ZK-AFD after it slid up Flagstaff Hill [in 1943],” Mackley said. “They did the centre section during the early 2000s. Pioneer Aero Ltd re-skinned the outer wings and that is where Huib Volker used to work. Huib did 90% of the restoration with the help of the late Keith Williamson. The Electra will eventually join Mackley’s other aircraft, including a Boeing-Stearman A75N1 and a Cessna O-1G Bird Dog, at Omaka Aerodrome near Blenheim in NZ’s South Island.

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