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US Air Force recalls mothballed B-1B to service from boneyard
A mothballed Lancer is being refurbished for a return to active service with the USAF... among more than a dozen B-1Bs retired to the USAF’s “boneyard” at Davis-Monthan AFB in the Arizona desert in 2021. At the time of the B-1B retirements, the USAF said four of the 17 examples would be stored in “recallable” Type 2000 condition, a state similar to Type 1000.
However, the loss of multiple Lancers in non-combat mishaps in recent years prompted air force officials to begin “regenerating” the decommissioned aircraft. “The fact that our air force can call up an aircraft that has sat dormant for several years, all within a year, is incredible,” Colonel Seth Spanier, commander of the 7th Bomb Wing, said on 18 March.
More B-1Bs may soon follow. The USAF’s other Lancer operator – the 28th Bomb Wing at South Dakota’s Ellsworth AFB – also lost an aircraft in January...
Originally 100 Lancer were built. Of those, 33 were retired by the USAF in 2001 to pay for modernisation efforts at the time... the service currently operates 42 B-1Bs.
According to Davis-Monthan AFB, there are more than 4,400 aircraft, 5,900 engines and 340,000 pieces of aircraft production tooling stored at the Davis-Monthan boneyard, including types operated by all US military services. Many of the aircraft have been cannibalised for parts.
https://www.flightglobal.com/fixed-wing ... 77.article