Boeing KC-767

KC-767
General information
TypeTanker/transport
National originUnited States
ManufacturerBoeing Integrated Defense Systems
StatusIn service
Primary usersItalian Air Force
Japan Air Self-Defense Force
Number built9 (8 originally built, 1 converted)[1]
History
Manufactured2003–present
First flight21 May 2005
Developed fromBoeing 767
Developed intoBoeing KC-46 Pegasus

The Boeing KC-767 is a military aerial refueling tanker and transport aircraft developed from the Boeing 767-200ER. The tanker received the designation KC-767A, after being selected by the U.S. Air Force (USAF) initially to replace older KC-135Es. In December 2003, the contract was frozen and later canceled due to corruption allegations.

The tanker was developed for the Italian and Japanese air forces, who ordered four tankers each. Financing of the development of the aircraft has largely been borne by Boeing, in the hope of receiving major orders from the USAF. Boeing's revised KC-767 proposal to the USAF was selected in February 2011 for the KC-X program under the designation KC-46.

  1. ^ "KC-767 Aerial Refuelling Tanker/Transport Aircraft". AirForce Technology. 5 December 2022. Archived from the original on 27 December 2023.