Alaska Air Show Association

A Non-Profit 501C(3) Corporation

Alaska Air Show Association On June - 11 - 2007

Elmendorf officially received its first C-17 Globemaster III, named the “Spirit of Denali”. It was delivered by Alaska’s Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell.

F22 Raptor Arrival Ceremony

Welcoming America's Most Advanced Fighter
Elmendorf AFB, Alaska
August 8th, 2007

12 Photos

C17 Globemaster Arrival Ceremony

Alaska receives its first C-17 Globemaster
Elmendorf AFB, Alaska
June 11th, 2007

8 Photos

Arctic Thunder 2006

2006 Air Show
Elmendorf AFB, Alaska
August 12 & 13, 2006

24 Photos

Performers - AT 2008

Performers for Arctic Thunder 2008

19 Photos

2008 UAA scholarship winners

2008 UAA scholarship winners

1 Photos

oneoffs

7 Photos

2010 Performers

8 Photos

Elmendorf is the Pacific Air Forces second location for it’s C-17s.

The nation’s newest airlifter will allow Elmendorf to improve its ability to accomplish the mission of global reach by delivering people and supplies anywhere – anytime.

The C-17 mission will be operated and maintained by the active duty Air Force and Alaska Air National Guard. The C-17 replaces the C-130 in the 517th Airlift Squadron and is a new platform for the Guard.

Alaska provides a unique advantage for global delivery because it is strategically located near the center of the northern hemisphere. The airlift mission at Elmendorf will transform with the change to C-17s. Global direct delivery will be the mission focus, while continuing to work closely with the Army supporting Fort Richardson Soldiers and the Stryker Brigade.

The Globemaster, a Boeing aircraft first built in 1993, is considered the most flexible cargo carrier in the Air Force. In replacing the smaller C-130 it can speedily deliver scores of troops and their gear to various war zones, directly through a landing or by parachute.

The plane is nearly 175 feet nose to tail and has a wingspan almost as long – 170 feet. Its four engines are those that power Boeing’s 757 passenger jet. Its maximum gross takeoff weight – the heaviest it can be and still get off the ground – is more than a half-million pounds. The Globemaster can do something that Bush pilots are likely to admire: As large as it is, this beast of a plane can land on a runway made of gravel or crushed rock, one as short as 3,500 feet.

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