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#11
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H are looking at it; I have no idea how far up the organisation any of
this has gone. By "IT" do you mean they are repairing your one particular unit or are they looking at the more general issue? I would contact QC or engineering, not just the warrantee repair people. Mark |
#12
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Matt Barrow wrote:
That WAS the PLAN, back a couple years ago when the article was written, but I recall (for what that's worth) that the last one was retired (for carrier operations?) and the advanced Hornet was accelerated into operations. Wasn't that a thread here just a few weeks ago? Matt, See: http://makeashorterlink.com/?Q36E21BDB It's the Google group archive of J. Honecks thread. His first post has a link to an article that indicates the last F-14 squadron was just deployed to the Gulf. Happy Flying! Scott Skylane |
#13
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![]() "Scott Skylane" wrote in message ... Matt Barrow wrote: That WAS the PLAN, back a couple years ago when the article was written, but I recall (for what that's worth) that the last one was retired (for carrier operations?) and the advanced Hornet was accelerated into operations. Wasn't that a thread here just a few weeks ago? Matt, See: http://makeashorterlink.com/?Q36E21BDB It's the Google group archive of J. Honecks thread. His first post has a link to an article that indicates the last F-14 squadron was just deployed to the Gulf. I read Jay's post of "What an amazing run the F-14 has had. It will be terribly sad not to see them flying anymore.... ", but not the article. :~( "The venerable F-14 Tomcat, a mainstay of naval aviation, Hollywood movies and air show awe since the 1970s, will retire for good after a final combat deployment, which began Thursday. " .... "The Tomcats require between 40 and 60 hours of maintenance for every hour in the air, LaBranche said. For the F/A-18s, it's more like 10 to 15." ----------------------------------------------------------- When I was a Norfolk a few years back, (2001) they (F-14's) were already decorating the static displays as "museum pieces". -- Matt --------------------- Matthew W. Barrow Site-Fill Homes, LLC. Montrose, CO |
#14
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Hello Peter,
The indications to me (I am an experienced h/w and s/w design engineer) is that nobody has done any analysis on the failures, and that the failed units are simply repaired and recycled into the production process, or perhaps into "warranty exchange" units, as is normal in the avionics business. If they really did that they would be racking up a huge liability portfolio. In the world of med electronics the FDA would pretty quickly shut down everything from production to sales, followed by a "root canal" type audit of the QC process. If you have the impression that the problem hasn't percolated to upper management you could help that process along by a letter to the CEO. Sometimes that does wonders. In avionics, one tends to get items which are often several years old, when getting a warranty exchange unit. I've had a 10 year old KI229 RMI supplied in this way. That may be ok if it's a full refurb like it is done on engines, IOW where you get a zero-hours paper with it. But from an ethics point of view they should tell you if it's a refurb. I wonder if there is some kind of lemon law for those parts. If you buy a car in California and repair attempts failed x many times you can demand a full refund. Other than that, could there be spikes caused by either the servo motors or by some other gear that fry something? Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com |
#15
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In sci.electronics.design Peter wrote:
wrote Try http://www.rockwellcollins.com/produ...ols/index.html maybe? Well, yes, I am sure if I went through the massive paperwork exercise and installed something like that, or S-TEC, it would work just fine. It might be a silly amount of paperwork, but then you'd more than likely have a reliable autopilot. As it stands, you are getting warranty replacements, but there is a time and hassle factor of getting them swapped out. Somewhere there is a break-even point. It has to be said that the KFC225 does a super job of controlling the aircraft, even in pretty bad turbulence. It just keeps packing up. I am on my 3rd main unit, too (the built-in altimeter and pitch gyro are prone to packing up) Have you checked out the rest of the electrical system on the aircraft? Maybe there is some other problem that is burning this stuff out. This might even involve hooking up some kind of data logger and flying around for a while; some spikes might not show up in ground testing or on short flights. Matt Roberds |
#16
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In sci.electronics.design Brian Whatcott wrote:
On Sat, 24 Sep 2005 01:37:37 GMT, wrote: http://www.rockwellcollins.com/produ...ols/index.html Hmmm...RC try to be customer-responsive these days, but I CAN remember when they upgraded the FMS 800 and the roll command (used to steer to the desired track), was reversed from its previous polarity - made for interesting waypoint/turn capturing! I based my suggestion on a few different observations. I used to work at a flight simulator company and it was a lot easier to make the Collins radios work right than the King ones. At that job, and since then, I have also noticed that the "cheap" avionics package often involves King radios, while the "upgrade" packages involve Collins radios. Finally, I went on a job interview with Collins in 1996 and was totally impressed by the amount of shiny! stuff at the plant in Cedar Rapids. (Got an offer, too, but chose another offer in Dallas over Cedar Rapids. Probably should have picked Cedar Rapids.) Matt Roberds |
#17
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#18
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Hello Peter,
A unit comes back with a "defective" tag on it. It is going to go to the person who originally designed it, and be checked out with lots of instrumentation? Of course not. It will go back into the factory test process, and if it passes the factory test then it is classed as working. That would be a normal process. If there is an obvious fault that will get fixed, and statistically that will likely be the only fault, so that is OK. The problem is with faults that are intermittent, or faults that don't get picked up by the factory test. I've been in electronics design/mfg for 25+ years so know this problem well; in my business we scrap anything that comes back, just to make sure. If intermittent is flagged this should cause more diligence in the repair process. If the test folks can't duplicate the error there should be further investigation, at least in cases that involve a lot more than one unit. That's where the QC system should kick in with its database information. Or in the med biz, that is where the QC system has to come in on a mandatory basis. My warranty avionics bill totals something like US$100,000 and that is mostly Honeywell avionics, added up at list prices, over 2 years. I wonder how they survive. I ran a business for several years and warranty overhead was factored in on a "per product" basis. My boss would probably have fired me with cause if I had ever failed to see an epidemic trend in one of the lines we offered. It never happened but we watched that stuff like hawks. On the part of the user I'd be mighty concerned about what happens after the warranty period ends. After that, every time the servo hangs you'd hear that slurping sound coming from your bank account. Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com |
#19
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Hello Peter,
Absolutely right! But you are assuming that there is a process for feeding back the info from the original pilot. ... Quite scary. In medical, if there isn't a process for that the FDA or another agency shuts the place down. I guess they survive because in a piece of avionics listing at $2000 the materials come to $100-$200. So the actual cost of supply of a replacement is just the latter figure. This ratio would be true for all avionics I've seen - right up to any IFR GPS. I am not a pilot. My guess is that a roll servo failure usually doesn't lead to a crisis situation but I don't know. If that happens on gear that can cause grief the liability can be huge. $200 won't even pay for a single attorney hour. My warranty ended over 1 year ago. Honeywell offered me an indefinite extension on the KFC225, all the time it keeps packing up. I also purchased their extended warranty on all my other Honeywell kit - $4000 for two extra years. I got that back within 6 months when the KI229 RMI packed up (its 3rd failure) - that lists here in the UK at about US$7000. They really need to have someone look into that. Whenever I do that for a client they usually break even on my fees within a month or so, just because of reduced field returns. Others shy away from hiring a consultant or other experts and try to hang on. Long term that won't work. Just imagine if I would realize my dream of becoming a pilot. I'd probably rent because of the cost but what if I didn't and needed an autopilot? After reading your story here would I buy a Honeywell autopilot? Probably not. That's the hidden cost of sub-par designs. Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com |
#20
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In sci.electronics.design Brian Whatcott wrote:
On Mon, 26 Sep 2005 07:13:17 GMT, wrote: I used to work at a flight simulator company and it was a lot easier to make the Collins radios work right than the King ones. Hmmm.... radios are one of the items where simulators invariably use a front panel mock-up with switches and pots signaling the host. Not always. Many of the radios I worked with (business jet and up) were the kind where there was just a control head in the panel and the actual guts (tuner, etc) were someplace else. We used the real control heads and just dispensed with the remote guts. For the Collins radios, you could read the spec, set up the control and data lines to the control head, and get it right fairly quickly. For the King radios, reading the spec was only the first step of a long journey into undocumented goofiness. This pattern repeated itself with other hardware where we used the actual aircraft item complete, such as a FMS. Matt Roberds |
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