First Flight Anniversary
25 May 1976
49
Years Since First Flight

Boeing E-3 Sentry (AWACS)

The 707-based airborne early warning & control platform that rewrote the rules of air command and control from the Cold War to today

1963
AWACS Requirement Issued
1976
E-3 First Flight
1977
Introduction to Service
68
Produced (1977–1992)

The Boeing E-3 Sentry is the definitive Western Airborne Early Warning & Control (AEW&C) aircraft—an advanced radar, communications and battle-management node built on the proven Boeing 707 airframe. Following the U.S. Air Force’s 1963 requirement for a new “AWACS” to replace the EC-121 Warning Star, Boeing’s solution paired a pulse-Doppler radar in a 30-ft (9.1 m) rotodome with an integrated mission system and long-endurance platform. The first purpose-built E-3 flew on 25 May 1976, and the type entered service in March 1977.

From Desert Storm to Baltic Air Policing, the E-3 Sentry has been the eyes and ears of coalition air power—detecting, directing and deconflicting across vast airspaces.

The architecture centered on Westinghouse’s AN/APY-1/2 radar and a mission suite developed with IBM/Hazeltine, giving the E-3 true “look-down” capability against low-flying targets with robust track-while-scan and data-link integration. Production ran from 1977 to 1992 with 68 aircraft delivered to the USAF, NATO, the UK, France and Saudi Arabia. Later national variants introduced CFM56 high-bypass engines and mission upgrades, while the USAF’s Block 40/45 modernisation created the E-3G standard.

Today, Sentry fleets continue frontline tasking while replacement plans advance—most prominently the transition to the Boeing E-7 Wedgetail for several operators. Yet the core AWACS concept the E-3 proved in service—high-endurance surveillance fused with airborne command and control—remains fundamental to modern air operations.

Operational Chronicle

A detailed timeline of development, deployment, and distinguished service

1963

AWACS Requirement

The USAF issues the Airborne Warning and Control System requirement to replace the EC-121, launching competitive studies for a new radar, mission system and platform.

1972

EC-137D Maiden Flight

The EC-137D testbed (a 707-382B with rotodome) flies on 9 February, supporting the radar fly-off and validating the 707 as the AWACS platform.

1973

Full-Scale Development

USAF approves full-scale development; Westinghouse’s pulse-Doppler radar is selected and pre-production aircraft are authorised to prove the integrated system.

1976

E-3 First Flight

The first production-standard E-3 Sentry flies on 25 May; engineering and operational test and evaluation accelerates ahead of service entry.

1977

Service Introduction

Deliveries begin to the 552nd at Tinker AFB, Oklahoma. Over the next seven years, 34 USAF Sentry aircraft are produced, with additional airframes for NATO and export customers.

1982

NATO Component

NATO takes delivery of the first of its multinational E-3A fleet at Geilenkirchen—forming a unique pooled AWACS force registered in Luxembourg.

1991

Desert Storm

E-3s provide continuous battle-management over Iraq and Kuwait, coordinating air operations and contributing to the majority of coalition air-to-air victories.

1999

Balkans Operations

NATO and national E-3s control complex air campaigns over the former Yugoslavia, integrating large multinational packages and air policing missions.

2001–2014

Homeland & ISAF Tasking

NATO launches Operation Eagle Assist over North America post-9/11; from 2011–2014, NATO E-3s deploy to Afghanistan for airspace management under ISAF.

2011

Libya—Unified Protector

E-3s orchestrate the coalition air campaign enforcing UN resolutions over Libya, coordinating strike, ISR and air-refueling flows.

2021–Present

Transitions & Upgrades

RAF retires its E-3D fleet (2021) as nations progress to the E-7 Wedgetail; USAF E-3G Block 40/45 continues while replacement procurement advances.

Operational Highlights

Major operations where the E-3 Sentry proved decisive in command and control

Operation Desert Storm
1991 • Iraq & Kuwait

E-3s provided round-the-clock battle management, deconfliction and intercept control, underpinning coalition air dominance and air-to-air success.

Balkans Campaigns
1990s • Former Yugoslavia

NATO and national Sentry fleets coordinated complex strike packages, no-fly zones and air policing across contested and congested airspace.

Operation Eagle Assist
2001–2002 • North America

NATO E-3s flew homeland defence missions from U.S. bases after 9/11—an unprecedented collective defence deployment.

Unified Protector
2011 • Libya

AWACS directed the coalition air campaign enforcing UN mandates, synchronising strike, ISR and tanker assets over the Mediterranean.

ISAF Airspace Management
2011–2014 • Afghanistan

NATO E-3s controlled busy multinational air corridors over Afghanistan, enhancing safety and efficiency for combat and support sorties.

Inherent Resolve
2014– • Iraq & Syria

Sentry aircraft supported the coalition campaign against ISIS, providing wide-area surveillance, identification and airborne C2.

Service Record

Key milestones and statistics from the E-3 Sentry’s career

1963
AWACS Requirement
1976
First Flight Year (E-3)
49
Years of History
68
Total Built (’77–’92)

Technical Specifications

Essential details and characteristics of the Boeing E-3 Sentry

Manufacturer
Boeing Defense, Space & Security (based on Boeing 707-320B)
First Flight
25 May 1976 (E-3); EC-137D testbed first flew 9 February 1972
Role
Airborne Early Warning & Control (AEW&C) / Airborne Command & Control
Primary Operators
USAF (E-3G), NATO E-3A Component, Armée de l’Air & de l’Espace (E-3F), Royal Saudi Air Force; RAF retired 2021
Based On
Boeing 707 airframe with 30-ft (9.1 m) rotodome
Service Period
1977 – Present (national fleets vary; production 1977–1992)
Key Operational Variant
E-3G Block 40/45 (USAF modernisation); E-3F/E-3CF (France/NATO) with CFM56 engines
Powerplant
Pratt & Whitney TF33-PW-100A (USAF/NATO originals); CFM56-2 series (RAF/France/Saudi variants)
Radar
AN/APY-1/2 pulse-Doppler radar in rotodome with look-down/track-while-scan capability
Notable Service
Desert Storm; Balkans; Eagle Assist; Libya (Unified Protector); ISAF Afghanistan; Inherent Resolve

Development Story

From AWACS concept to the world’s benchmark airborne C2 platform

The Sentry fused a powerful pulse-Doppler radar, data links and an integrated mission system—turning a proven airliner into a theatre-level command post with eyes over the horizon.

Origins and Requirements

In the early 1960s, the USAF sought a successor to the EC-121 that could detect low-flying threats against ground clutter and manage increasingly complex strike packages. The 1963 AWACS requirement triggered parallel airframe and radar competitions. Boeing’s 707-based EC-137D flew as a systems testbed, while Westinghouse and Hughes competed to supply a pulse-Doppler radar with true “look-down” performance.

After flight trials, Westinghouse’s design was selected and, on 26 January 1973, full-scale development was approved. IBM/Hazeltine provided the mission computer and display suite, enabling multi-sensor fusion and track-while-scan across wide areas. The first production-standard E-3 flew in May 1976; deliveries started in 1977 to the 552nd at Tinker AFB.

Architecture and Variants

The E-3’s 30-ft rotodome houses the AN/APY-1/2 radar; below decks, consoles manage surveillance, identification and control via voice and data links. Early USAF/NATO airframes used TF33 turbofans, while UK, French and Saudi fleets adopted CFM56 engines for better fuel burn, climb and acoustic performance. Continuous upgrades culminated in the USAF’s E-3G Block 40/45, replacing legacy computing, improving tracking and communications, and reducing crew workload.

Service Evolution and Replacement

Sentry fleets have directed air campaigns from the Gulf War and Balkans to Libya, Afghanistan and the fight against ISIS, and they routinely underpin air policing on NATO’s flanks. With 68 airframes built (1977–1992), the type remains in service while several operators transition to the E-7 Wedgetail. Until then, modernised E-3s continue to provide wide-area surveillance and airborne command and control over land and sea.

Enduring Legacy

A theatre-level force multiplier for half a century

The Boeing E-3 Sentry stands as one of the most consequential aircraft of the late-Cold War and post-Cold War eras. From its first E-3 flight on 25 May 1976 through decades of operations across the Middle East, Europe and beyond, the Sentry proved that a high-endurance surveillance and C2 node could knit together complex, multinational air campaigns. With multinational fleets still serving—and replacement programmes underway—the E-3’s blend of wide-area sensing, identification and coordination remains the benchmark for airborne battle management.

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