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#31
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In article , "Diamond Jim"
wrote: "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article .com, "~^ beancounter ~^" wrote: in going through some old navy paperwork i came across this.. "the f14 requires 50 to 60 maint hrs every hour it flies, while the super hornet needs 10 to 15 maint hrs for each flight hour... if true, thats a hell of a difference... Those are more or less the numbers that I've heard. BTW, the maint hrs/flt hr is still going down. It's lower on the E/F than the C/D (so I've heard). -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur Having had the additional duties several times as Asst. MaintO and MaintO in a squadron, (for earlier generations of aircraft) and spending a number of years in DOD (mostly DARPA), I can tell you that those figures are pretty solid. The more modern an aircraft is, the more it is "plug and play" to borrow a computer term.the aircraft is. Just about everything is a SECREP (secondary repairable). Organizational Maintenance will unplug and swap boxes, board, modules etc. on the aircraft, replace with new/repaired items, test and if passed "up the system". If it fails then another is plugged in its place. Heck even bad wires are replaced as part of a harness assembly. The SECREP then goes to Intermediate or Depot Maintenance for repair, and after repair it goes back into the supply system. About the only, "old time maintenance" that takes place on an aircraft anymore is cleaning, polishing, fueling, ordnance, maybe a little adjustment on the gun or hard points etc. and occasionally some body work/repair, just about everything else is swapped. This swapping out means that an aircraft can be turned around quickly, and doesn't have to wait until the specified hours of maintenance have been performed. In other words it could actually be back in the air as hours of maintenance are still being performed. When the hours are figured (maintenance hour per hour of flight, mean time between failure) or whatever the "bean-counters" want to know, it usually included all the maintenance hours throughout the system organizational, intermediate, or depot. (New manufactured items are not included in these calculations but may be in other service wide figures. As everything is in the computers, these figures can be easily recovered for an individual part, aircraft, squadron, wing, ship, fleet, service, manufacturer, year, month day, hour, what ever keeps people happy, and employed.) And as with all figures, people can manipulate them to show just about anything they want to show in any light. In fact many build a career on doing just that. Jim, as I think I've mentioned, I've spent a lot of my career working on various radar designs, starting with the pre-production APG-65 in the pre-prod F/A-18A's. The engineering community has spent a huge amount of time and money to make these airborne electronics low maintenance and highly reliable. In terms of reliability, current circuit card designs have reliability lifetimes in excess of the rated airframe life. Some stuff you might never have to take out of the aircraft. That adds a new dimension to maintenance, because if it works out as planned, it's no longer practical to have an "I" shop aboard ship or land base. "O" level pulls the box and in some cases the card from the box. It's cheaper and faster to send a broken card back to depot and replace it from stores. And with the complexity of some of the cards, they might not be repairable in the field anyway. Think of a .020 diameter (0.5mm) solder joint buried under a part with 400 others... This doesn't cover all electronic parts, of course, but certainly a lot. At least of the ones I've been associated with lately. Most everything than can be put on removeable cards, is, and that helps maintenance turnaround time as you have noted. Mean time between critical failure is way up and mean time to repair is way down. cheers -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur |
#32
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![]() "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article , "Diamond Jim" wrote: "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article .com, "~^ beancounter ~^" wrote: in going through some old navy paperwork i came across this.. "the f14 requires 50 to 60 maint hrs every hour it flies, while the super hornet needs 10 to 15 maint hrs for each flight hour... if true, thats a hell of a difference... Those are more or less the numbers that I've heard. BTW, the maint hrs/flt hr is still going down. It's lower on the E/F than the C/D (so I've heard). -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur Having had the additional duties several times as Asst. MaintO and MaintO in a squadron, (for earlier generations of aircraft) and spending a number of years in DOD (mostly DARPA), I can tell you that those figures are pretty solid. The more modern an aircraft is, the more it is "plug and play" to borrow a computer term.the aircraft is. Just about everything is a SECREP (secondary repairable). Organizational Maintenance will unplug and swap boxes, board, modules etc. on the aircraft, replace with new/repaired items, test and if passed "up the system". If it fails then another is plugged in its place. Heck even bad wires are replaced as part of a harness assembly. The SECREP then goes to Intermediate or Depot Maintenance for repair, and after repair it goes back into the supply system. About the only, "old time maintenance" that takes place on an aircraft anymore is cleaning, polishing, fueling, ordnance, maybe a little adjustment on the gun or hard points etc. and occasionally some body work/repair, just about everything else is swapped. This swapping out means that an aircraft can be turned around quickly, and doesn't have to wait until the specified hours of maintenance have been performed. In other words it could actually be back in the air as hours of maintenance are still being performed. When the hours are figured (maintenance hour per hour of flight, mean time between failure) or whatever the "bean-counters" want to know, it usually included all the maintenance hours throughout the system organizational, intermediate, or depot. (New manufactured items are not included in these calculations but may be in other service wide figures. As everything is in the computers, these figures can be easily recovered for an individual part, aircraft, squadron, wing, ship, fleet, service, manufacturer, year, month day, hour, what ever keeps people happy, and employed.) And as with all figures, people can manipulate them to show just about anything they want to show in any light. In fact many build a career on doing just that. Jim, as I think I've mentioned, I've spent a lot of my career working on various radar designs, starting with the pre-production APG-65 in the pre-prod F/A-18A's. The engineering community has spent a huge amount of time and money to make these airborne electronics low maintenance and highly reliable. In terms of reliability, current circuit card designs have reliability lifetimes in excess of the rated airframe life. Some stuff you might never have to take out of the aircraft. That adds a new dimension to maintenance, because if it works out as planned, it's no longer practical to have an "I" shop aboard ship or land base. "O" level pulls the box and in some cases the card from the box. It's cheaper and faster to send a broken card back to depot and replace it from stores. And with the complexity of some of the cards, they might not be repairable in the field anyway. Think of a .020 diameter (0.5mm) solder joint buried under a part with 400 others... This doesn't cover all electronic parts, of course, but certainly a lot. At least of the ones I've been associated with lately. Most everything than can be put on removeable cards, is, and that helps maintenance turnaround time as you have noted. Mean time between critical failure is way up and mean time to repair is way down. cheers -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur Thats a similar design being used on the AH-64D Longbow Apache... For some (But not all) electronic systems, the Support maintenance folks can pull circuit cards and replace them right on the aircraft to repair a fault. Verses shipping a much bigger assembly back to depot / manufacturer for repair. |
#33
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![]() "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article , "Diamond Jim" wrote: "Harry Andreas" wrote in message ... In article .com, "~^ beancounter ~^" wrote: in going through some old navy paperwork i came across this.. "the f14 requires 50 to 60 maint hrs every hour it flies, while the super hornet needs 10 to 15 maint hrs for each flight hour... if true, thats a hell of a difference... Those are more or less the numbers that I've heard. BTW, the maint hrs/flt hr is still going down. It's lower on the E/F than the C/D (so I've heard). -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur Having had the additional duties several times as Asst. MaintO and MaintO in a squadron, (for earlier generations of aircraft) and spending a number of years in DOD (mostly DARPA), I can tell you that those figures are pretty solid. The more modern an aircraft is, the more it is "plug and play" to borrow a computer term.the aircraft is. Just about everything is a SECREP (secondary repairable). Organizational Maintenance will unplug and swap boxes, board, modules etc. on the aircraft, replace with new/repaired items, test and if passed "up the system". If it fails then another is plugged in its place. Heck even bad wires are replaced as part of a harness assembly. The SECREP then goes to Intermediate or Depot Maintenance for repair, and after repair it goes back into the supply system. About the only, "old time maintenance" that takes place on an aircraft anymore is cleaning, polishing, fueling, ordnance, maybe a little adjustment on the gun or hard points etc. and occasionally some body work/repair, just about everything else is swapped. This swapping out means that an aircraft can be turned around quickly, and doesn't have to wait until the specified hours of maintenance have been performed. In other words it could actually be back in the air as hours of maintenance are still being performed. When the hours are figured (maintenance hour per hour of flight, mean time between failure) or whatever the "bean-counters" want to know, it usually included all the maintenance hours throughout the system organizational, intermediate, or depot. (New manufactured items are not included in these calculations but may be in other service wide figures. As everything is in the computers, these figures can be easily recovered for an individual part, aircraft, squadron, wing, ship, fleet, service, manufacturer, year, month day, hour, what ever keeps people happy, and employed.) And as with all figures, people can manipulate them to show just about anything they want to show in any light. In fact many build a career on doing just that. Jim, as I think I've mentioned, I've spent a lot of my career working on various radar designs, starting with the pre-production APG-65 in the pre-prod F/A-18A's. The engineering community has spent a huge amount of time and money to make these airborne electronics low maintenance and highly reliable. In terms of reliability, current circuit card designs have reliability lifetimes in excess of the rated airframe life. Some stuff you might never have to take out of the aircraft. That adds a new dimension to maintenance, because if it works out as planned, it's no longer practical to have an "I" shop aboard ship or land base. "O" level pulls the box and in some cases the card from the box. It's cheaper and faster to send a broken card back to depot and replace it from stores. And with the complexity of some of the cards, they might not be repairable in the field anyway. Think of a .020 diameter (0.5mm) solder joint buried under a part with 400 others... This doesn't cover all electronic parts, of course, but certainly a lot. At least of the ones I've been associated with lately. Most everything than can be put on removeable cards, is, and that helps maintenance turnaround time as you have noted. Mean time between critical failure is way up and mean time to repair is way down. cheers -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur I certainly didn't mean to give the impression that the lower maintenance hours was due only to "pull and swap" maintenance. The improvement in design, materials, etc. has increased reliability immensely, especially in the electronics field. I also agree that the Intermediate Maintenance workload has been reduced in many ways. Not only is it cheaper and quicker in many cases to draw a spare from the supply system and send the defective one back to depot maintenance for repair, it is also economical in many cases to toss the defective one into the recycle bin to be sold as scrap. Now if someone could just figure out how to do the same with hydraulics. |
#34
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"Now if someone could just figure out how to
do the same with hydraulics"... hydraulics is a whole diff ballgame, i take it?... |
#35
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Everything's ball bearings these days...
Chuck W Sharc, NAR Section 613 www.flysharc.org Sharc, the section where two out of three certification flights always work just fine! |
#36
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![]() "~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message oups.com... "Now if someone could just figure out how to do the same with hydraulics"... Generally if the hydraulic actuator is bad (leaking, not working properly) you take it off and ship it off to be overhauled. Sometimes the problem is rigging which can be fixed on the airplane. In the case of electrical part of the actuator the servovalve (something I've actaully worked with) you have to ship the actuator it's attached to back to an overhaul shop where it is removed and then shipped on to either the manufacturer or a specialty shop. Very few stand alone specialty shops, some of the bigger airlines have servovalve shops but in general 80-90% of your servovalves are repaired by the manufacturer. I've been approached a couple of times about doing Boeing servo-valves and when I point out what is involved in doing a fresh setup the manager rapidly loses interest. There is a little "tribal knowledge" which isn't in the manual involved in tuning a servovalve. And if you don't get it right you will probably get the "mystery auto-pilot disconnect" problems that are damn near impossible to diagnose. I'll note all of my on-aircraft repair experience was electrical. My hydaulic work was limited to overhaul shops unless I was working an auto-pilot problem on an airplane. hydraulics is a whole diff ballgame, i take it?... |
#37
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![]() There's a very interesting article in the current issue of Combat Aircraft, Vol 7, No. 6. It's by Tom Cooper and Liam F. Devlin and titled "Iran: A Formidable Opponent?" I was looking at the Cooper and Devlin article again last night and wanted to add a little more information. They state that they obtained a 1999 US intelligence community document through the Freedom of Information Act that indicates that the US estimated that the Iranians had 28 active F-14s and 29 in storage at that time. However, they said that the Iranian government has also released photos and videos of F-14s in operation after 1999 and that by comparing tail numbers, the authors determined that the active number of aircraft is more like 44 instead of 28. That doesn't seem unreasonable, although I'd love to know more about how they did this analysis. That's an awful lot of planes to count based upon photos and videos, and my guess is that they might have had some flightline shots that depicted a lot of F-14s in service. They also indicate that the Iranians probably had about 135 AIM-54 Phoenix missiles after the Iran-Iraq war, but that by the 1990s, only about 40% of these could be considered operational. The Iranians put a lot of effort into upgrading the missiles to extend their shelf life, however. Reading between the lines, the authors imply that their information on the Iranian aircraft fleet started to dry up around 2000 or so. My guess is that they had some good contacts with the older F-14 and other pilots, and that some of these left the country after they retired. But by the late 1990s, this was much more rare. Like I said, it's a really interesting article. The authors have clearly done a lot of impressive research. My only question is about how reliable the information is. D |
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