
Tanker 910 during a drop demonstration in December, 2006
'Aerial firefighting' (or 'water bombing') is a method to combat
wildfires using aircraft. The types of aircraft used may be either
fixed-wing or
helicopters. Agents used to fight fires may be either water or specially-formulated fire retardants.
Smokejumpers and Rappellers are also classified as aerial firefighters; being delivered by parachute from a variety of fixed-wing aircraft, or rappelling from various helicopters.
Equipment
A wide variety of helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft are used for aerial fighting.
Helicopters may be fitted with tanks or carry buckets. Buckets are usually filled by submerging in lakes, rivers, reservoirs, or portable tanks. The most popular of the buckets is the flexible
Bambi Bucket. Tanks may be filled on the ground or water may be siphoned from lakes or reservoirs through a hanging snorkel. Popular firefighting helicopters include variants of the
Bell 204 and the
Erickson S-64 Aircrane helitanker. The Erickson helitanker also has a sea snorkel for filling while in flight.
Fixed-wing aircraft are fitted with tanks that can be filled on the ground at an air tanker base or, in the case of
flying boats and
amphibians, by skimming water from lakes, reservoirs, or large rivers.
Various aircraft have been used over the years for firefighting. Though
World War II era
bombers were for a long time the mainstay of the aerial firefighting fleet, newer purpose-built tankers are coming online. The smallest are the
Single Engine Air Tankers (SEATs). These are agricultural sprayers that generally drop about 800 gallons of water or retardant. Medium aircraft include the
S-2 Tracker (
retrofitted with turboprop engines as the S-2T) as used by the
California Department of Forestry & Fire Protection (CDF), as well as
Conair Group Inc. of
Abbotsford,
British Columbia, while the
Douglas DC-4, the DC-7,
C-130 Hercules, Neptune P-2V,
P-3 Orion and others have been used as heavy tankers. The largest aerial firefighters currently in use include two converted
Martin Mars flying boats in
British Columbia, carrying 7,200 U.S. gallons of water or fire retardant each, and
Tanker 910, a converted
McDonnell Douglas DC-10 that can carry 12,000 gallons of water or retardant. The
Russian
Ministry of Emergency Situations operates convertible-to-cargo
IL-76 aerial firefighters that can carry up to 15,000 gallons but have been operating with 11,000 gallon tanking systems, currently being the largest firefighting aircraft, and
Evergreen International Aviation is developing a
Boeing 747 aerial firefighter that can carry 24,000 gallons.
Similar in configuration to the World War II-era
PBY Catalina, the
Canadair CL-215 Scooper, and
Bombardier CL-415 SuperScooper are designed and built specifically for firefighting. The "Super Scoopers" are not common in the United States where only 2 operate seasonally in southern California.
Los Angeles County leases two
CL-415s from the Province of
Québec during the fall when the
Santa Ana winds are at their worst. 6 American owned CL-215s operate for various State and Federal agencies. Critics of scoopers in the US claim that there is not enough suitable water in fire prone states. CL-215s have been employed with success in North Carolina, Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Washington, Alaska, Northern Idaho, and Montana.
French "Sécurité Civile" owns the entire Canadian CL-xxx series, a handful of Grumman Trackers and some Russian
helicopters,
French version more exhaustive. Their pilots are usually recruited amongst the best pilots from "l'Armée de l'Air", usually from "Aéronavale" (Navy pilots on aircraft carriers) or acrobatic teams like "La Patrouille de France". It is a highly risked job that requires very skilled aerial fighters.
Another amphibian is the
Beriev Be-200. It can carry a maximum payload of about 3,170 gallons (12,000 litres) of water, making "scoops" in suitable stretches of water in 14 seconds.
The
O-2 Skymaster and
OV-10 Bronco are used as spotters. The
Beechcraft Baron was long used as a lead plane or air attack ship; more common now is the Beech King Air, used as an air attack ship and lead plane.
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) suddenly 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 crashes of a C-130 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.
Bombardier's
Dash 8 Q Series aircraft are the basis for two new ventures.
Cascade Aerospace has converted two pre-owned Q400s to act as part-time water bomber and part-time transport for
France's Sécurité Civile, one of which is registered
F-ZBMC, while
Neptune Aviation is converting a pre-owned Q300 as a prototype to augment their
P2V aircraft.
Fire retardant
Borate salts were used in the past to fight wildfires but were found to sterilize the soil and were
toxic to animals. Newer retardants use
ammonium sulfate or ammonium
polyphosphate with
attapulgite clay thickener or diammonium phosphate with a
guar gum derivative thickener. These are not only less toxic but act as
fertilizers to help the regrowth of plants after the fire (however, the retardants can be toxic to fish if accidentally dropped in water and then exposed to sunlight). Fire retardants contain
wetting agents,
preservatives and
rust inhibitors and are colored red with
ferric oxide to mark where they have been dropped. Brand names of fire retardants for aerial application are Fire-Trol and
Phos-Chek.
Some water-dropping aircraft carry tanks of a guar gum derivative to thicken the water and reduce runoff.
Tactics

A
Eurocopter Ecureuil dips its
bucket into a swimming pool before returning to drop the water on a wildfire outside of Naples, Italy.

Kern County (California) Fire Department Bell 205 dropping water during a training exercise at the Mojave Spaceport
Helicopters can hover over the fire and accurately drop
water or retardant. The S-64 Helitanker has
microprocessor-controlled doors on its tank. The doors are controlled based on the area to be covered and wind conditions. Fixed-wing aircraft must make a pass and drop water or retardant like a bomber. Spotter aircraft often orbit the fire at a higher altitude to coordinate the efforts of the retardant-dropping aircraft. Lead planes fly ahead of larger airtankers to mark the
trajectory for the drop.
Water is often dropped directly on flames because its effect is short-lived. Fire retardants are often dropped ahead of the moving fire or along its edge and may remain effective for two or more days. This can create an artificial
firebreaks where the terrain is too rugged or remote for ground crews to cut fireline.
Helicopters are also used to deliver firefighters or ignite backburns and
controlled burns. A
driptorch slung beneath the helicopter (''helitorch'') can be used for this purpose. Another device called a Delayed Aerial Ignition Device (DAID) can be used, which shoots a stream of flaming "
ping-pong balls" into the forest. The small plastic spheres which contain
potassium permanganate are individually injected with
ethylene glycol or
glycerine just before they are ejected from the aircraft. This method's delayed oxidation reaction (which results in vigorous fire in just minutes after mixing the chemicals
[1]) poses less of a danger to the helicopter than carrying along materials which are already burning. The ping-pong ball system works best in continuous fuels or in areas where a mosaic burn pattern is desired.
Aerial firefighting is almost always used in conjunction with ground-based efforts, as aircraft are only one weapon in the firefighting arsenal. However, there have been cases of aircraft extinguishing fires long before ground crews were able to reach them.
See also
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Smokejumper
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Fire diving
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Tanker 910
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JRM Mars
External links
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Wildlandfire.com fixed-wing gallery
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wildfirenews.com
★
Associate Airtanker Pilots website
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Air tanker identification by number