C-17 Globemaster III vs A400M Atlas Aircraft Comparison

The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III and Airbus A400M Atlas represent two philosophies in modern military airlift. While the C-17 has proven itself as the backbone of American strategic airlift for three decades, the European A400M offers a newer design intended to bridge tactical and strategic roles. This comprehensive comparison examines how these aircraft stack up across all critical performance areas.

Origins and Development

C-17 Globemaster III:

  • Manufacturer: Boeing (formerly McDonnell Douglas)
  • First flight: September 15, 1991
  • Service entry: January 1995
  • Development cost: Approximately $40 billion
  • Program history: Initially troubled, became highly successful
  • Production: 279 aircraft built before line closure in 2015

Airbus A400M Atlas:

  • Manufacturer: Airbus Defence and Space
  • First flight: December 11, 2009
  • Service entry: August 2013
  • Development cost: Approximately $25 billion
  • Program history: Significant delays and cost overruns
  • Production: Ongoing, approximately 120 delivered

Performance Specifications

Maximum Payload:

  • C-17: 170,900 pounds (77,519 kg)
  • A400M: 81,600 pounds (37,000 kg)
  • Advantage: C-17 carries more than double the A400M

Range (with maximum payload):

  • C-17: 2,420 nautical miles
  • A400M: 1,780 nautical miles
  • Advantage: C-17 by approximately 35%

Maximum Range (minimal payload):

  • C-17: 5,200 nautical miles
  • A400M: 4,800 nautical miles
  • Advantage: C-17, though closer

Cruise Speed:

  • C-17: Mach 0.77 (450 knots)
  • A400M: Mach 0.68 (400 knots)
  • Advantage: C-17 is approximately 12% faster
C-17 Globemaster III cockpit
The C-17 Globemaster III features a modern glass cockpit designed for a crew of two pilots. Photo: DVIDSHUB/Public Domain

Cargo Compartment Comparison

C-17 Cargo Bay:

  • Length: 88 feet (26.8 m)
  • Width: 18 feet (5.5 m)
  • Height: 12.4 feet (3.8 m)
  • Floor area: 1,584 square feet

A400M Cargo Bay:

  • Length: 57.6 feet (17.7 m)
  • Width: 13.1 feet (4.0 m)
  • Height: 12.5 feet (3.8 m)
  • Floor area: 755 square feet

The C-17’s cargo bay is over twice the size of the A400M’s, enabling carriage of larger vehicles and more 463L pallets simultaneously.

Vehicle and Equipment Capacity

C-17 Can Carry:

  • 1 M1 Abrams main battle tank (70 tons)
  • 3 AH-64 Apache helicopters
  • 2 M2 Bradley fighting vehicles
  • 3 Stryker armored vehicles
  • 18 463L cargo pallets
  • 188 passengers or 102 paratroopers

A400M Can Carry:

  • Cannot carry M1 Abrams (too heavy)
  • 2 NH90 helicopters
  • 1 Boxer armored vehicle
  • 1 Piranha armored vehicle
  • 9 463L cargo pallets
  • 116 passengers or 116 paratroopers

The C-17’s ability to carry main battle tanks represents a critical strategic capability the A400M cannot match.

A400M Atlas during Exercise Razorback
U.S. and French forces with an Airbus A400M Atlas during Exercise Razorback, demonstrating the aircraft’s unprepared field capability. Photo: DVIDSHUB/Public Domain

Short Field Performance

Both aircraft were designed for austere airfield operations, but they approach this differently:

C-17:

  • Takeoff distance (max gross weight): 7,740 feet
  • Landing distance: 3,500 feet on paved runways
  • Can operate on semi-prepared surfaces
  • Designed for 3,000 ft x 90 ft runways
  • Uses thrust reversers in flight for tactical descent

A400M:

  • Takeoff distance: 3,215 feet (at reduced weight)
  • Landing distance: 2,165 feet
  • Specifically designed for unprepared strips
  • Can operate on grass, dirt, and sand
  • Low-pressure tires for soft field operations

The A400M offers superior short-field performance, particularly on unprepared surfaces. However, this comes at the cost of payload capacity.

Propulsion Systems

C-17 Engines:

  • 4 x Pratt & Whitney F117-PW-100 turbofans
  • Thrust: 40,440 lbf each (180 kN)
  • Total thrust: 161,760 lbf
  • Fuel consumption: Approximately 17,000 lb/hr cruise
  • Directed-flow thrust reversers for short-field landing

A400M Engines:

  • 4 x Europrop TP400-D6 turboprops
  • Power: 11,000 shp each
  • Propellers: 8-blade Ratier-Figeac FH386, counter-rotating
  • Fuel consumption: Approximately 8,500 lb/hr cruise
  • Propeller reversing for short-field capability

The C-17’s turbofan engines provide higher speed and altitude capability, while the A400M’s turboprops offer better fuel efficiency and low-speed performance for tactical operations.

Airdrop Capabilities

C-17 Airdrop:

  • Simultaneous airdrop of up to 102 paratroopers
  • Heavy equipment drops up to 60,000 lbs per load
  • Container Delivery System (CDS)
  • Joint Precision Airdrop System (JPADS) compatible
  • Low Altitude Parachute Extraction System (LAPES)

A400M Airdrop:

  • 116 paratroopers via simultaneous side doors
  • Heavy equipment drops up to 35,000 lbs
  • Gravity extraction and parachute extraction
  • Precision airdrop system compatible
  • Designed for dual side-door paradrop

The A400M excels at personnel airdrop with its side doors designed for high-speed paradrop, while the C-17 maintains advantage in heavy equipment delivery.

Operating Costs

C-17 Costs:

  • Unit cost: Approximately $218 million (final production)
  • Cost per flight hour: $24,000-$32,000
  • Cost per ton-mile: Higher due to greater fuel consumption
  • Maintenance: Well-established supply chain

A400M Costs:

  • Unit cost: Approximately $150 million
  • Cost per flight hour: $15,000-$20,000
  • Cost per ton-mile: Lower due to turboprop efficiency
  • Maintenance: Growing support infrastructure

The A400M offers lower operating costs, but when measured by payload capacity, the cost differential narrows considerably.

Global Operators

C-17 Operators (Active):

  • United States Air Force (222 aircraft)
  • Royal Air Force (8)
  • Royal Australian Air Force (8)
  • Indian Air Force (11)
  • Qatar Emiri Air Force (8)
  • Kuwait Air Force (2)
  • United Arab Emirates Air Force (8)
  • NATO Strategic Airlift Capability (3)

A400M Operators (Current/Ordered):

  • French Air Force (18 delivered, 50 ordered)
  • German Air Force (40 ordered)
  • Spanish Air Force (27 ordered)
  • Turkish Air Force (10 ordered)
  • Royal Air Force (22 ordered)
  • Belgian Air Force (7 ordered)
  • Royal Malaysian Air Force (4 delivered)

Mission Role Comparison

Where C-17 Excels:

  • Strategic intercontinental airlift
  • Outsized cargo (main battle tanks, large helicopters)
  • Maximum payload requirements
  • Speed-critical missions
  • Established operational procedures

Where A400M Excels:

  • Tactical intra-theater airlift
  • Unprepared airfield operations
  • Medium-weight cargo delivery
  • Fuel efficiency on shorter routes
  • Personnel paradrop operations

Production Status

A critical distinction: C-17 production ended in 2015, making remaining aircraft a finite resource. The A400M remains in production with ongoing deliveries expected through the late 2020s.

This production status means:

  • C-17 operators cannot add aircraft without purchasing used
  • A400M operators can expand fleets through new orders
  • C-17 sustainment costs may increase as fleet ages
  • A400M support infrastructure continues developing

The Verdict: Different Tools for Different Jobs

The C-17 and A400M aren’t direct competitors—they serve different niches in the airlift spectrum:

The C-17 remains unmatched for strategic airlift requiring maximum payload, outsize cargo capability, and intercontinental range. No aircraft in production can replicate its ability to deliver a main battle tank to a forward airfield.

The A400M fills the gap between tactical transports (C-130) and strategic airlifters (C-17). Its superior short-field performance and lower operating costs make it ideal for European theater operations and missions not requiring C-17 capacity.

For air forces requiring full-spectrum airlift capability, the combination of both types—or the C-17 paired with C-130s—provides the most operational flexibility. The choice depends on primary mission requirements, operating environment, and budget constraints.

As C-17 production has ended, future procurement decisions increasingly favor the A400M by default. However, the C-17’s capabilities ensure it will remain the gold standard for heavy strategic airlift until potential successors emerge in the 2030s or beyond.

Jason Michael

Jason Michael

Author

Jason covers aviation technology and flight systems for FlightTechTrends. With a background in aerospace engineering and over 15 years following the aviation industry, he breaks down complex avionics, fly-by-wire systems, and emerging aircraft technology for pilots and enthusiasts. Private pilot certificate holder (ASEL) based in the Pacific Northwest.

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