Neptune Aviation Receives First A319 for Next-Generation Waterbomber Conversion

Neptune Aviation Receives First A319 for Next-Generation Waterbomber Conversion

BY KALUM SHASHI ISHARA Published 17 hours ago 0 COMMENTS

Neptune Aviation Services has taken delivery of the first Airbus A319 it plans to convert into a next-generation aerial firefighting tanker, marking a notable shift for a fleet long built around the British Aerospace 146 and Bombardier regional jets.

 

The Missoula, Montana-based operator received the narrowbody at its facility, where engineers will begin the work needed to transform a former passenger jet into a Type 1 air tanker capable of dropping large volumes of retardant on wildfires across the western United States and Canada.

 

Why the A319

 

Neptune's choice of the A319 reflects a broader industry trend. As the global fleet of aging tanker platforms thins out, operators have looked to mid-life narrowbodies that offer modern avionics, fuel efficient engines, and a long runway of available airframes coming off passenger service. The A319 sits in a useful size bracket. It carries enough payload to be classified as a Type 1 tanker, yet remains nimble enough to operate from the shorter, higher-elevation runways common across firefighting bases in the Rocky Mountain West.

 

The company already operates a fleet of nine BAe 146 air tankers, which have served as the backbone of its operation for more than a decade. Those jets have proven reliable, but parts support and airframe availability have grown more difficult as the type ages. The A319 conversion program gives Neptune a path forward with an aircraft that benefits from a much larger global support network.

 

Photo: Neptune

 

Inside the conversion

 

Converting a commercial airliner into a waterbomber is a substantial engineering undertaking. The work involves removing the passenger interior, reinforcing the lower fuselage, and installing a retardant tank system with drop doors cut into the belly of the aircraft. Engineers also have to integrate a control system that allows the flight crew to manage the drop sequence, coverage level, and tank pressurization from the cockpit.

 

Neptune is performing the modification work in-house at its Missoula maintenance base, building on decades of experience converting and maintaining tanker aircraft. The company has indicated that the first airframe will serve as the prototype, with lessons from that build feeding into subsequent conversions.

 

The tank system itself is being designed to carry a retardant load consistent with Type 1 requirements, which in the United States means a minimum capacity of 3,000 gallons. Industry sources suggest the A319 system will likely exceed that figure given the aircraft's payload capability.

 

 

Certification path

 

Before the converted A319 can fight fires, Neptune will need to secure a supplemental type certificate from the Federal Aviation Administration covering the structural modifications and tank installation. The aircraft will also need to be approved by the Interagency Airtanker Board, the body that evaluates whether tankers meet the operational standards required to contract with federal land management agencies such as the US Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management.

 

That approval process includes drop testing, where the aircraft releases retardant over instrumented grids on the ground to measure coverage uniformity and drop pattern. The board uses that data to determine whether the system delivers retardant in a way that effectively slows or stops the spread of fire.

 


 

 

A changing market

 

The aerial firefighting market in North America has shifted considerably over the past decade. Federal agencies have moved away from older, ex-military airframes and toward purpose-converted commercial jets that offer better safety margins, faster transit speeds, and longer service lives. Coulson Aviation operates Boeing 737s converted into tankers, while Aero-Flite flies Bombardier CL-415 amphibians and converted RJ85s. Neptune's move into the A319 positions the company alongside operators that have bet on narrowbody jets as the future of large-tanker firefighting.

 

Demand for these aircraft has grown as wildfire seasons have lengthened and intensified across the American West, parts of Canada, and increasingly in regions like Australia and southern Europe. Federal contracts now routinely call for tankers to be available for longer portions of the year, and several agencies have signaled interest in expanding the active fleet.

 

Neptune's British Aerospace 146 
Photo: AeroXplorer/ Cooper Palubeski

 

Operational outlook

 

Neptune has not publicly committed to a firm in-service date for the first A319, though industry reporting suggests the company is targeting entry into operational service within the next couple of fire seasons, pending certification progress. The company has also indicated it intends to acquire additional A319 airframes to build out a fleet of the type over time, gradually replacing or supplementing its BAe 146s.

 

For Neptune's flight crews, the transition will mean training on a fly-by-wire Airbus, a step up in cockpit technology from the conventional flight controls of the 146. The A319's commonality with the broader Airbus family also opens up a deeper pool of pilots familiar with the type, which could ease recruitment in a tight labor market.

 

 

What comes next

 

The arrival of the first airframe marks the start of what will likely be a multi-year program. Engineers must finalize the tank design, validate it through ground and flight testing, and work through the regulatory approvals needed before the aircraft can join the active tanker fleet. If the program proceeds as planned, the A319 could become a familiar sight over wildfires in the western United States within a few years, gradually taking on more of the work currently handled by the company's aging quad-jets.

 

For enthusiasts watching the evolution of aerial firefighting, the project offers a clear look at where the industry is heading. The era of converted military castoffs is fading. In its place, a generation of modern narrowbodies is moving into the fire line.

 

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Kalum Shashi Ishara
I am an Aircraft Engineering graduate and an alumnus of Kingston University. It was a passion that I have had since childhood driven me to realise this goal of working in the Aviation and Aerospace industry. I have been working in the industry for more than 13 years now, and I can easily identify most commercial aircraft by spotting them from a distance. My work experience involved both technical and managerial elements of Aircraft component manufacturing, Quality assurance and continuous improvement management.

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TAGS

INFORMATIONAL Neptune Aviation Airbus A319 Waterbomber Conversion Aircraft Modification Aerial Firefighting Fire Suppression Wildfire Management Fleet Modernization

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