Aircraft 61-0326

  

The support requirements for Apollo, compiled by NASA's Office of Manned Space Flight (OMSF), originally stated a need for twelve heavily instrumented, long-range, high-speed aircraft to supplement the telemetry and communication support to be provided by the Apollo ships. After program refinement that the aircraft requirement would be eight, six to be on station with two standby spares. 61-0326 was one of the original eight Apollo Range Instrumentation Aircraft stationed out of Patrick Air Force Base, Florida.

Capabilities as of 1996

EC-135E - Basic Telemetry/Cruise Missile Mission Control Aircraft-0. Acquires and tracks TM data using a steerable 7-foot antenna, provides worldwide HF voice communication, and real-time UHF satellite data retransmission. Record, monitors and plays back mission data (2 - 14 track wide-band recorders w/dubbing capability)

1961
Constructed C-135A-BN. Construction Number 18227.

1966
Conversion to EC-135N with electrical and structural modifications at Douglas Aircraft, Tulsa, Oklahoma.

October 31, 1967
Aircraft arrived at Patrick Air Force Base, Florida.

January 1, 1968
Aircraft Online and operational as an Apollo Range Instrumentation Aircraft.

December 1975
Transferred to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 4950th Test Wing, operational as an Advanced Range Instrumentation Aircraft.

November 1, 1984
Converted to EC-135E.

November 1, 1992
Last inventory record WPAFB.

June 1, 1998
AMARC Inventory PCN AACA0122.

January 26, 2009
AMARC Inventory

Credit: Randy L. Losey