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#11
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You talk as if the C-141B engines were not changed regularly.
I'm sure they were changed regularly. And that was my point- when "changed", fresh motors are installed and new parts are required to rework those motors (at some point). As time goes by, spare parts become VERY expensive. Robbing would not be the work I would use. My aviation experience comes from "shooting them off the pointy end" and "robbing" is just a nickname for cannibalization (which is what you call pulling from one bird to install in another). Nothing was meant by it- it's a very common aviation term. Robbing quickly triples the man-hours and is always my last resort. Larry AECS (AW/SW/MTS) Disabled Combat Veteran USN Retired 20 years of Navy in my rear view mirror and getting further away every day ;-) "Tex Houston" wrote in message ... "Larry" wrote in message ... Tex suggested: Should there not be a lot of TF-33 engines in the stockpile from retired C-141B aircraft? Robbing engines from other birds is not a solution. High-time motors are still required to be reworked with new internal components at specific intervals. As the demand goes down, the service is forced to contract out for small quantities of replacement parts at "sky high" prices. There is also the economy issue: the old motors also burn a lot of fuel and there will be a definite savings "per flight hour" that helps to offset the cost of new motors. I know about engines being reworked. You talk as if the C-141B engines were not changed regularly. In the case of "pay me not or pay me later the services will almost always elect to "pay me later. Robbing would not be the work I would use. It would only be appropriate if the C-141 airframes were still being used. Salvaged seems to describe the situation best. Tex |
#12
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![]() "Jim Atkins" wrote in message t... If the AF plans to keep the big bad BUFF around much longer, seems like reengining is a must- where do you get those ancient TF-33 parts? Aside from the obvious fuel economy issues, seems like maintenance costs (rational for the new tankers) have to be sky-high. There's a small hill out in the desert made of TF-33s in storage/transport cans. |
#13
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I believe what Vlado is referring to is a recent re-opening of the B-52
reengining project. A recent Jane's Defense Weekly article said that the earlier decision about reengining back in the '95 timeframe (ergo, the maintenance cost savings based on the big TF-33 stockpile outweighed fuel consumption savings) was flawed. The article contained a *new* photoshopped picture of a 4-engine BUFF. "Thomas Schoene" wrote in message nk.net... "MLenoch" wrote in message Is the program to re-engine B-52 aircraft running? Not AFAIK. They tried to get it in under some sort of fuel economy program that would have made it easier to lease the engines, but I don't think anyone bought it. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "If brave men and women never died, there would be nothing special about bravery." -- Andy Rooney (attributed) |
#14
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"Jim Atkins" wrote in message
t... If the AF plans to keep the big bad BUFF around much longer, seems like reengining is a must- where do you get those ancient TF-33 parts? There must be plenty of TF-33 parts around. You have almost 100 BUFFs with 8 engines, now consider how many spares need to be in the supply pipeline............... Australia is managing with the 35 x F-111's and they make what can't be obtained. Aside from the obvious fuel economy issues, seems like maintenance costs (rational for the new tankers) have to be sky-high. The cost of changing from one engine type to another, including spares pipeline, spares, overhaul facilities etc etc are enormous for most aircraft and take a long time to pay back (Caribou turbine conversions excepted). -- The Raven http://www.80scartoons.co.uk/batfinkquote.mp3 ** President of the ozemail.* and uunet.* NG's ** since August 15th 2000. |
#15
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"The Raven" wrote:
"Jim Atkins" wrote: If the AF plans to keep the big bad BUFF around much longer, seems like reengining is a must- where do you get those ancient TF-33 parts? There must be plenty of TF-33 parts around. You have almost 100 BUFFs with 8 engines, now consider how many spares need to be in the supply pipeline............... Down in Miami, for example, there are countless engine shops and repair stations specializing in JT-3D/TF-33 maintenance (I labored in these sweatshops myself as an A&P). Many of the engines weren't even going back on airplanes and were rebuilt with the fans removed for industrial use (powerplants for pipelines etc.) JT-3D/TF-33 parts galore. And should they run out of parts, the most sensible engine change would be the even more ubiquitous JT-8D engines used on 727, 737, DC-9 and MD-80 A/C. -Mike Marron |
#16
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"The Raven" wrote in message
There must be plenty of TF-33 parts around. You have almost 100 BUFFs with 8 engines, now consider how many spares need to be in the supply pipeline............... Australia is managing with the 35 x F-111's and they make what can't be obtained. The F-111s use TF30s. Different engine altogether. The cost of changing from one engine type to another, including spares pipeline, spares, overhaul facilities etc etc are enormous for most aircraft and take a long time to pay back (Caribou turbine conversions excepted). Last I knew, the idea was to lease the engines and pay by the hour for actual run time. Overhauls would be on the owner, probably piggy-backed on their commerical lines. The theory (no comment on practice) is that the Air Force can thus spread the costs across the remaining 30-year life of the planes. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "If brave men and women never died, there would be nothing special about bravery." -- Andy Rooney (attributed) |
#17
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"Matt" wrote in message ...
It's kinda-on, but I believe they're currently arguing about 4 vs 8 engines. The proposed 4-engine conversion uses the same engine fitted to the 767, so it looks kind of ... dorky, I guess is the word. "MLenoch" wrote in message ... Is the program to re-engine B-52 aircraft running? I think the proposal was to lease Rolls Royce RB211-535E4s. They're used on the 757. Only ever seen one pic of the proposal - does look kind of ...odd! David |
#18
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"Thomas Schoene" wrote in message
nk.net... "The Raven" wrote in message There must be plenty of TF-33 parts around. You have almost 100 BUFFs with 8 engines, now consider how many spares need to be in the supply pipeline............... Australia is managing with the 35 x F-111's and they make what can't be obtained. The F-111s use TF30s. Different engine altogether. Agreed the engines are different but the point was that a small country can maintain 35 "obsolete" aircraft and produce all the necessessary engine parts. The US B-52 fleet by comparison is massive so, one would assume that would be a more economically viable solution. The cost of changing from one engine type to another, including spares pipeline, spares, overhaul facilities etc etc are enormous for most aircraft and take a long time to pay back (Caribou turbine conversions excepted). Last I knew, the idea was to lease the engines and pay by the hour for actual run time. Overhauls would be on the owner, probably piggy-backed on their commerical lines. That's a valid way to do it. Some airforces already use commercial lines for engine repairs and overhauls. The theory (no comment on practice) is that the Air Force can thus spread the costs across the remaining 30-year life of the planes. True, but the cost of such changes often represents a huge spike in the overall life cycle cost with comparitively little time to recover the costs through lower operating expenses etc......... -- The Raven http://www.80scartoons.co.uk/batfinkquote.mp3 ** President of the ozemail.* and uunet.* NG's ** since August 15th 2000. |
#19
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![]() "The Raven" wrote in message ... Agreed the engines are different but the point was that a small country can maintain 35 "obsolete" aircraft and produce all the necessessary engine parts. The US B-52 fleet by comparison is massive so, one would assume that would be a more economically viable solution. The Raven I'd hardly call the 93 plane B-52 fleet vs 35 F-111s as 'massive'. Tex Houston |
#20
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"Tex Houston" wrote in message
... "The Raven" wrote in message ... Agreed the engines are different but the point was that a small country can maintain 35 "obsolete" aircraft and produce all the necessessary engine parts. The US B-52 fleet by comparison is massive so, one would assume that would be a more economically viable solution. The Raven I'd hardly call the 93 plane B-52 fleet vs 35 F-111s as 'massive'. 35x2 engines versus 93x8............plus whatevers in the pipeline. -- The Raven http://www.80scartoons.co.uk/batfinkquote.mp3 ** President of the ozemail.* and uunet.* NG's ** since August 15th 2000. |
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