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"willdave davenant" wrote in message
om... AF tankers, that is. Or will they? http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,94339,00.html What a crock! Those tankers have been rigorously maintained for their entire lives. Age doesn't enter into it. The B-52 is of the same vintage and continues to provide except service. Until this recent 767 debacle the Air Force said the tankers would not need to be replaced until 2020. As Nader said, this clearly "corporate giveaway" to the ailing Boeing at the expense of the American taxpayers. |
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What a crock! Those tankers have been rigorously maintained for their
entire lives. Age doesn't enter into it. The B-52 is of the same vintage and continues to provide except service. Until this recent 767 debacle the Air Force said the tankers would not need to be replaced until 2020. As Nader said, this clearly "corporate giveaway" to the ailing Boeing at the expense of the American taxpayers. Nonsense! Aluminum fatigues - the KC-135s have all had to have horizontal tails cannibalized from 707s retrofitted to keep them in service. Systems fail and parts are hard to find for aircraft as old as the KC-135s. Airliners have finite lives and the KC-135s are coming to the end of theirs. |
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In article , "James Anatidae"
wrote: "willdave davenant" wrote in message om... AF tankers, that is. Or will they? http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,94339,00.html What a crock! Those tankers have been rigorously maintained for their entire lives. Yes, much money has been spent. Age doesn't enter into it. Age is the entire crux of the question. Metals, especially aluminum fatigues and needs to be replaced. Replacing primary structure is very expensive when it happens. The B-52 is of the same vintage and continues to provide except service. Yes, the B-52 has provided exceptional service. It also has been upgraded when needed, and has a much lower cycle rate than tankers. Until this recent 767 debacle the Air Force said the tankers would not need to be replaced until 2020. The AF was assuming that they would be spending lots of money replacing structure to keep them flying. It's actually better to spend that money on a newer and more efficient machine. As Nader said, this clearly "corporate giveaway" to the ailing Boeing at the expense of the American taxpayers. Until you study the alternatives. Nader is mostly good at getting his name in the papers. -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur |
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![]() "David Lednicer" wrote in message ... What a crock! Those tankers have been rigorously maintained for their entire lives. Age doesn't enter into it. The B-52 is of the same vintage and continues to provide except service. Until this recent 767 debacle the Air Force said the tankers would not need to be replaced until 2020. As Nader said, this clearly "corporate giveaway" to the ailing Boeing at the expense of the American taxpayers. Nonsense! Aluminum fatigues - the KC-135s have all had to have horizontal tails cannibalized from 707s retrofitted to keep them in service. Systems fail and parts are hard to find for aircraft as old as the KC-135s. Airliners have finite lives and the KC-135s are coming to the end of theirs. I was involved during the KC-135A to KC-135R upgrades. The one item they could not replace was the Air Frame. People think the Buffs are old. One was a 1954 model. These are really , really old Aircraft and you can only rebuild them so many times before something falls off during flight that brings them down(already happens from time to time). And if anyone wonders what happens when a KC-135 hits something with a fuel load, think of 9-11 except worse. These types of AC are nothing to fool around with nor play Partisan Politics with. |
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"James Anatidae" wrote in message ...
"willdave davenant" wrote in message om... AF tankers, that is. Or will they? http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,94339,00.html What a crock! Those tankers have been rigorously maintained for their entire lives. Age doesn't enter into it. The B-52 is of the same vintage and continues to provide except service. Until this recent 767 debacle the Air Force said the tankers would not need to be replaced until 2020. As Nader said, this clearly "corporate giveaway" to the ailing Boeing at the expense of the American taxpayers. Given that your basic premise is incorrect (yes, those KC-135's do have finite structural lives), you seem to be convinced that this is some kind of military-industrial conspiracy. Uhmmm...have you picked up on the recent wranglings by the RAF, IDF, and IIRC the RAAF in regards to (ahem!) *leasing* tankers (the 767 being a current or likely contender for all of them)? So are you thinking that all of these nations are interested in making a "corporate giveaway" to Boeing? And if your beef is with the 767 itself...Italy has already purchased the first tanker mods, Japan the AWACS mod (and a possible tanker buy in the future?)....so it sounds like a fairly decent airframe for the mission (especially as the E-10 is also going to be a 767-based design). Brooks |
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On Tue, 12 Aug 2003 13:31:31 +0000, Daryl Hunt wrote:
"David Lednicer" wrote in message ... What a crock! Those tankers have been rigorously maintained for their entire lives. Age doesn't enter into it. The B-52 is of the same vintage and continues to provide except service. Until this recent 767 debacle the Air Force said the tankers would not need to be replaced until 2020. As Nader said, this clearly "corporate giveaway" to the ailing Boeing at the expense of the American taxpayers. Nonsense! Aluminum fatigues - the KC-135s have all had to have horizontal tails cannibalized from 707s retrofitted to keep them in service. Systems fail and parts are hard to find for aircraft as old as the KC-135s. Airliners have finite lives and the KC-135s are coming to the end of theirs. I was involved during the KC-135A to KC-135R upgrades. The one item they could not replace was the Air Frame. People think the Buffs are old. One was a 1954 model. These are really , really old Aircraft and you can only rebuild them so many times before something falls off during flight that brings them down(already happens from time to time). And if anyone wonders what happens when a KC-135 hits something with a fuel load, think of 9-11 except worse. These types of AC are nothing to fool around with nor play Partisan Politics with. Wichita, Kansas, January 1965. Fully loaded KC-135 takes off from McConnell AFB and immediately has problems. Pieces falling off, it seems to be turning back to the base, but goes in about 4 miles north of the runway. I don't know if was under control to the end, but it hit about ..5 mile west of the university, about .5 east of an oil refinery, and about .25 mile south of a residential school for the hearing impaired. Nobody made it out, and many killed on the ground. There's a park there now. I still remember seeing the pillar of smoke. Gary -- Gary W. Oehlert (remove x's) |
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And if your beef is with the 767 itself...Italy has already
purchased the first tanker mods, Japan the AWACS mod (and a possible tanker buy in the future?)....so it sounds like a fairly decent airframe for the mission (especially as the E-10 is also going to be a 767-based design). Brooks Also, I'd like to add, the 767 has alot of airtime under the wings, and is "the whore of the north atlantic". (mechanics lingo) She'll take everyone, anywhere and do anything. Our first 767's are at 20 or approaching 20 years of service. The 200ER's been on the north atlantic run since 85. UPS has been flying the **** out of the 767 freighters since 95. I've been a 767 heavy check mechanic since 92, I pushed over 200 767's through, heavy "C" check, and last year was the first time we had ever pulled off a engine pylon. (Boeing calls them engine struts) She'll never be as sleek looking as her smaller sister the 757, or as glamourous as her big sister the 777, but as we say, "when they park the 75's and 77's in the desert, the crews will non-rev back on the 76's". Its a well used and abused airplane, and will make the airlines money for years to come.Its big enough to haul money making cargo in its belly, and pax on top, on long trips, yet small enough not to need all the "attention" that a 4 engined 747, or the temparametal 777 with its 12ft dia. fan engines. The Air Force will just be replacing one workhorse with another. J |
#8
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![]() Why not just buy them outright? According to the budget numbers I've seen, if they bought them outright, they will only be able to buy 1 (yes, one) in the period that they could instead lease 100. |
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"Leadfoot" wrote in message news:cyr_a.10338$2g.6846@fed1read05...
I'm happy that USAF is replacing KC-135's with 767 just concerned about the leasing arrangement. Why not just buy them outright? Cost and available funds. which other USAF (or DOD, for that matter) program are you going to cancel that has the funds programmed in the amount required for such a purchase? The USAF is not the only service looking at or committed to a lease option on tankers. The RAF is going that direction. The Israelis are looking at it now. And IIRC the RAAF has floated the idea as well. Heck, either the RAF or RAAF (can't recall which) is already doing a lease deal on King Airs for nav training and light transport. Have you ever bought a new car with a bank or financing company loan? If so, you did so because the purchase price was too steep for you to handle, and for all intents and purposes you "leased" your car from them until it was fully paid off (not a bad analogy, as the likely outcome of the tanker lease will be a final purchase payment and outright ownership by the USAF). Brooks "Longtailedlizard" wrote in message ... And if your beef is with the 767 itself...Italy has already purchased the first tanker mods, Japan the AWACS mod (and a possible tanker buy in the future?)....so it sounds like a fairly decent airframe for the mission (especially as the E-10 is also going to be a 767-based design). Brooks Also, I'd like to add, the 767 has alot of airtime under the wings, and is "the whore of the north atlantic". (mechanics lingo) She'll take everyone, anywhere and do anything. Our first 767's are at 20 or approaching 20 years of service. The 200ER's been on the north atlantic run since 85. UPS has been flying the **** out of the 767 freighters since 95. I've been a 767 heavy check mechanic since 92, I pushed over 200 767's through, heavy "C" check, and last year was the first time we had ever pulled off a engine pylon. (Boeing calls them engine struts) She'll never be as sleek looking as her smaller sister the 757, or as glamourous as her big sister the 777, but as we say, "when they park the 75's and 77's in the desert, the crews will non-rev back on the 76's". Its a well used and abused airplane, and will make the airlines money for years to come.Its big enough to haul money making cargo in its belly, and pax on top, on long trips, yet small enough not to need all the "attention" that a 4 engined 747, or the temparametal 777 with its 12ft dia. fan engines. The Air Force will just be replacing one workhorse with another. J |
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