JungleJett
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2004
- Posts
- 1,111
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I can see new tankers, but another bomber? what is wrong with the $1 Billion each B-2?
You don't have the first clue what you're talking about. We don't make political decisions for the most part. Sounds like you're just trying to stir up trouble, facts show that you're just an ignorant... you not the first and won't be the last to put on that kind of humiliating display.
When Kelley Johnson was around, they gave him a requirement and kept it at that requirement. Didn't change it every few months forcing the company to redesign. That is what is wrong now.
Wouldn't building airplanes create/sustain high paying manufacturing jobs?
I'm just saying...
both of you guys are describing single mission aircraft. It is easier to do that than it is today. Now a new design has to be multi-mission capable. what ever that is for a bomber..Maybe lowlevel as well as high alt bombing. what ever. When Kelley Johnson was around, they gave him a requirement and kept it at that requirement. Didn't change it every few months forcing the company to redesign. That is what is wrong now.
The A12 actually had two other variants in the works one as an interceptor and the other a bomber. However the AF didnt bite and went with the B1 insteadBut I get the point of your reply.
As far as the bomber goes....
The B-52 is just a bomb truck. Why not buy some 747s, 767s, 777s, or 787s (depending on how much you want to pay and the capability you want to have), put some bomb bays in them, hardpoints on them, electronics and other goodies on the inside, and call it the B-52 replacement? Sure its not perfect, and would require some reworking and modification of the airframe, but you now have a cheap, off the shelf, immensely reliable, available today, subsonic non-stealth bomber. Save the B-1s and B-2s for the more specialized stuff.
If you pick the 767, you now also have commonality with the KC-767 (if that ever shows up) too. Heck, put some detachable refueling equipment on it and some fuel tanks in the bomb bays and let the bomber also be the new tanker. Put a cargo door on it and let it carry a lot of the palletized cargo thats currently being carried around by much more expensive C-17s. Equip it to have other electronics and equipment put in the bomb bays, main deck, or hardpoints and you can replace a lot of the specialized -135 variants running around too.
What it all comes down to is that for many of these jobs, all you really need is a medium-large aircraft that can carry a significant payload cheaply, reliably, safely, over a respectable distance. This aircraft doesn't have to be a new design... Boeing has gotten pretty good at designing airplanes that do just that. Everything beyond that is just what you decide to load onto it that day. Sure, its not going to be as perfect as a special new build design for that specific mission, but we could have it tomorrow instead of 20 years from now, and at a quarter of the cost.
Save the very expensive and specialized aircraft we have in small numbers (B-1, B-2, C-17, KC-10, etc) for when a mission requires its capabilities.
As far as the bomber goes....
The B-52 is just a bomb truck. Why not buy some 747s, 767s, 777s, or 787s (depending on how much you want to pay and the capability you want to have), put some bomb bays in them, hardpoints on them, electronics and other goodies on the inside, and call it the B-52 replacement? Sure its not perfect, and would require some reworking and modification of the airframe, but you now have a cheap, off the shelf, immensely reliable, available today, subsonic non-stealth bomber. Save the B-1s and B-2s for the more specialized stuff.
If you pick the 767, you now also have commonality with the KC-767 (if that ever shows up) too. Heck, put some detachable refueling equipment on it and some fuel tanks in the bomb bays and let the bomber also be the new tanker. Put a cargo door on it and let it carry a lot of the palletized cargo thats currently being carried around by much more expensive C-17s. Equip it to have other electronics and equipment put in the bomb bays, main deck, or hardpoints and you can replace a lot of the specialized -135 variants running around too.
What it all comes down to is that for many of these jobs, all you really need is a medium-large aircraft that can carry a significant payload cheaply, reliably, safely, over a respectable distance. This aircraft doesn't have to be a new design... Boeing has gotten pretty good at designing airplanes that do just that. Everything beyond that is just what you decide to load onto it that day. Sure, its not going to be as perfect as a special new build design for that specific mission, but we could have it tomorrow instead of 20 years from now, and at a quarter of the cost.
Save the very expensive and specialized aircraft we have in small numbers (B-1, B-2, C-17, KC-10, etc) for when a mission requires its capabilities.
Sure would, for people in Europe. The Marine 1 contract and the Tanker projects were both given to European manufactures by the Bush Administration and Bush's Pentagon.Wouldn't building airplanes create/sustain high paying manufacturing jobs?
I'm just saying...
The P-7 was a Lockheed super P-3 with engine and props like the C-130J; it was killed by then Sec of Def Dick Cheney. The 737 P-3 substitute is the P-8. Notice I said substitute, because nothing will ever replace the P-3.Theres something not right with that analysis.
The P-3 replacement, the P-7 is a 737.
I was told that the cost of cutting a bombay in the belly is not that easy, for some reason. Also the Navy was offered a new P-3 "P-3 2000" and it would have been a alot cheaper because of the R&D of the 737.
I have no first hand knowledge, just know a bunch of P-3 guys.