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ac greatest % of life in the air



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 20th 03, 05:32 AM
patrick mitchel
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Default ac greatest % of life in the air

What ac has spent the greatest % of it's life in the air- excluding the ac
that crashed on it's first flight. Thanks Pat


  #2  
Old November 20th 03, 09:00 AM
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Which SINGLE a/c or which TYPE a/c?

  #3  
Old November 20th 03, 12:54 PM
Dick Latshaw
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"patrick mitchel" wrote in message ...
What ac has spent the greatest % of it's life in the air- excluding the ac
that crashed on it's first flight.


I'll vote for the C141A/B. I know that when they were new at
Charleston, we used to turn them around in a couple of hours and send
them back to SEA.

Regards,
Dick
  #4  
Old November 20th 03, 05:05 PM
patrick mitchel
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Dick Latshaw wrote in message
om...
"patrick mitchel" wrote in message

...
What ac has spent the greatest % of it's life in the air- excluding the

ac
that crashed on it's first flight.


I'll vote for the C141A/B. I know that when they were new at
Charleston, we used to turn them around in a couple of hours and send
them back to SEA.

Regards,
Dick


single ac- I recall reading of a 747 that had spent some remarkable portion
of it's time in the air, earning it's keep- I believe it was a Braniff plane
and the article was in "flying" magazine Pat


  #5  
Old November 20th 03, 09:46 PM
Leslie Swartz
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C-141 a/B a total slacker compared to almost *any* commercial aircraft.

In 1993 we did a study using AFMC and NTSB/FAA flying hours/calendar hours
to build reliability and maintainability models . . . the absolute *worst*
commercial liner was at least a full order of magnitude higher utilization
than the absolute *best* utilized military aircraft.

Steve Swartz

Well, o.k., 7.3 times higher; not quite an order of magnitude but pretty
damn high


"Dick Latshaw" wrote in message
om...
"patrick mitchel" wrote in message

...
What ac has spent the greatest % of it's life in the air- excluding the

ac
that crashed on it's first flight.


I'll vote for the C141A/B. I know that when they were new at
Charleston, we used to turn them around in a couple of hours and send
them back to SEA.

Regards,
Dick



  #7  
Old November 21st 03, 04:55 PM
Leslie Swartz
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20 years of data 1970-1990

Generally speaking, military aircraft rust out before they wear out; vice
versa for civil fleet.

Main result of the finding was that R&M models for civil fleet were pretty
much N/A for military.

Basically a similar missioned/similar sized civil aircraft clocks 5-10
flight hours per flight hour for military aircraft over the same period.

This may have changed, now that ANG/AFRES optempo has increased so much.
But I doubt if they are anywhere near equal yet.

Steve

"Regnirps" wrote in message
...
"Leslie Swartz" wrote:

C-141 a/B a total slacker compared to almost *any* commercial aircraft.

In 1993 we did a study using AFMC and NTSB/FAA flying hours/calendar hours
to build reliability and maintainability models . . . the absolute *worst*
commercial liner was at least a full order of magnitude higher utilization
than the absolute *best* utilized military aircraft.

Did this include the 60's and 70's? They went overhead in three's all day

every
day for years. I don't recall if they were coming from McChord or Ft.

Lewis.
Maybe both. I caught a ride on one at McChord in about '70. Great airsick
machines when loaded with guys sideways in the webbing benches and just a
couple of tiny windows and a pilot who likes to lose altitude by slipping.
Everybody was fine till the last couple of minutes :-)

-- Charlie Springer



  #8  
Old November 20th 03, 07:43 PM
Scott Ferrin
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On Wed, 19 Nov 2003 21:32:47 -0800, "patrick mitchel"
wrote:

What ac has spent the greatest % of it's life in the air- excluding the ac
that crashed on it's first flight. Thanks Pat



My guess would be some commercial aircraft somewhere
  #9  
Old November 21st 03, 12:25 AM
Martin
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My guess would be some commercial aircraft somewhere

Ditto. Commercial aircraft only generate money when their landing
gear is retracted. So there is a large incentive to keep them flying.

On the other hand, most military aircraft actually get relatively
little flying time, except in times of war. This is why the KC-135
tanker fleet is scheduled to fly for at least another 10 years (over
50 years total) and why the B-52 will also be flying into the
forseeable future.

Martin
  #10  
Old November 21st 03, 04:07 AM
WaltBJ
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C124? Old Shaky had to spend a lot of time in the air, it was so slow!
Walt BJ
 




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