Kunsan receives CCIP aircraft

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Alice Moore
  • 8th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
The 8th Fighter Wing received its initial group of Block 40 F-16 Fighting Falcons here this week under the Common Configuration Implementation Program (CCIP). 

The aircraft arrival marked the first group of upgraded F-16s flown to Korea. The aircraft were flown to Kunsan Air Base from Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska by members of the 80th Fighter Squadron. 

The intent of the wing receiving the aircraft is to increase mission capability. 

"The air frame and avionics are newer, which will help our combat readiness," said Lt. Col. Thomas Klopotek, 80th FS commander. "The aircraft provides us with better communications and advanced technologies, which will make things easier for the pilots as well as the maintainers." 

Colonel Klopotek said the CCIP modification provides significant avionics upgrades to Block 40 and 50 F-16s. The upgrades ensure state-of-the-art capability well into the 21st century. 

Some of the avionics changes include the Link 16 Mutifunctional Information Distribution Sytem (MIDS), the Joint Helmet-Mounted Cueing System (JHMCS) and a modular mission computer. 

Kunsan currently flies non-CCIP Block 40 F-16s, in the 35th Fighter Squadron, said Lt. Col. Shane Riza, 80th FS director of operations, who was also one of the pilots who flew the upgraded fighters here. 

"This aircraft has brand new modifications, which gives us a lot of datalink capability," Colonel Riza said. "It also provides us a helmet mounted sight and a better radar capability than the Block 30. We are more capable now with this aircraft." 

Colonel Klopotek said the helmet mounted sight provides many benefits for F-16 pilots. The helmet is connected via cable from the plane to the pilot who wears and provides important information displayed directly into the pilot's field of view. With Link 16 datalink, a pilot a pilot is able to know what other platforms are tracking and the helmet adds increased situational awareness. 

Colonel Riza added, "whereever you're looking, that's exactly where you can cue any weapon or sensor on the airplane," he said. This provides us a lot better combat capability." 

Although, the new aircraft provides better combat capability, the arrival of the new Block 40s does present some challenges. 

"The new technology can be a bit of information over load," Colonel Klopotek said. "One of the training challenges we face is how we're going to learn to prioritize and adapt our current training habits form the Block 30 aircraft into the new capabilities and technologies that we can leverage in Block 40." 

With the first batch of CCIP aircraft arriving, members of the 80th FS welcome their newest addition. 

"We're proud to be selected as the squadron that will undergo this transition in Korea. We're not the first unit in the Air Force to have gone through CCIP. We hope to take past CCIP fighter squadron transition experiences and incorporate them to make our conversion faster. We then can be that test bed for other units on the peninsula that will go through the same upgrades in the future." 

Additional upgraded Block 40s are expected to arrive here by early spring.