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Ron Parsons wrote in message ...
In article , (sid) wrote: Ron Parsons wrote in message ... In article , The point was that the wing structure and lift capability are there to be used in a tanker model. However, these aircraft are to be as stock as possible. Thats especially true of those being leased. It would be damned expensive to recertify just a few obsolescent aircraft, so I doubt the AF will spend the money for additional weight certification. I've not heard of a DC power loss problem. Which airliner has this? I should have framed the question this way: How far would either aircraft fly if there is trouble in the E&E bay that compromises the electrical system and you are down to DC power...And then you lose even that? Lets see... 3 AC generators, 2 batteries, 2 T/R's and a HDG. The E&E bay is accessible in flight. In the airliner, there are lavatories and a galley above it, yet I've not heard of any trouble. There has been trouble. The concentration of elictrical system components in the E&E bay represensts a potential single point of failure if damage (as opposed to component failure) occurs there. Where are the bus ties and shunts? On adjacent racks. Trouble in the E&E bay, while rare, is a show stopper...Hopefully on a runway... Here are some examples. http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/group...ty_503084.hcsp Whilst in cruising flight near Paris during an ETOPS flight from Zurich to Washington, DC, abnormal warnings appeared on the flight deck instrumentation and circuit breakers began tripping.... http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief2.asp?...IA116& akey=1 On May 28, 1996, at 1421 eastern daylight time, a Boeing 767-31AER, with Dutch registry PH-MCH, and operated by Martinair Holland as flight 631, received minor damage during an unscheduled landing at Logan Airport, Boston, Massachusetts.... The KC-135 in the era I'm familiar with could complete it's mission on battery power alone but it also had 3 AC generators, 1 battery, 2 T/R's and a HDG. Will a 767 be able to complete a mission on battery power alone? |
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Mary Shafer wrote in message . ..
On 30 Mar 2004 14:25:41 -0800, (sid) wrote: Ron Parsons wrote in message ... In article , (sid) wrote: Ron Parsons wrote in message ... In article , The point was that the wing structure and lift capability are there to be used in a tanker model. However, these aircraft are to be as stock as possible. Thats especially true of those being leased. It would be damned expensive to recertify just a few obsolescent aircraft, so I doubt the AF will spend the money for additional weight certification. The USAF doesn't care about certification, so being stock or not doesn't much matter except for maintenance issues. The USAF will do the usual CAT I/II acceptance testing, which isn't very much like certification. Mary While the military may not care about certification per se, when civil aircraft are bought by the military they don't go beyond the demonstrated parameters that the manufacturers established during certification. At least I'm not aware of any instance in which they did. My point is that this whole KC-767 deal is all about obtaining stock and standard airframes without any costly mods suggested by Mr. Parsons. Boeing has little vested interest in making 767's that could compete with their 777 line. |
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![]() "Mary Shafer" wrote in message ... On 30 Mar 2004 14:25:41 -0800, (sid) wrote: Ron Parsons wrote in message ... In article , (sid) wrote: Ron Parsons wrote in message ... In article , The point was that the wing structure and lift capability are there to be used in a tanker model. However, these aircraft are to be as stock as possible. Thats especially true of those being leased. It would be damned expensive to recertify just a few obsolescent aircraft, so I doubt the AF will spend the money for additional weight certification. The USAF doesn't care about certification, so being stock or not doesn't much matter except for maintenance issues. The USAF will do the usual CAT I/II acceptance testing, which isn't very much like certification. The USAF cares greatly about certification issues. Any modification that violates the civil Type Certificate of the airplane greatly reduces the value of the airplane. The E4Bs have correct civil certification paperwork for any changes made for USAF. Civil certification is a probabilities basis. Perhaps you are unaware that the current Chief Scientist at Dryden is behind the 8 ball over a lack of 25.1309 capability. Manufacturers will no longer participate based on the half assed methods used by her predecessor. |
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