View Single Post
  #11  
Old January 7th 04, 04:50 PM
Tarver Engineering
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"fudog50" wrote in message
...
Is that what you call sailors on ships, Tarver? You can call them
whatever you want, but just to let you know, we don't call ourselves
"guys on boats"!!! LOL And what in the world do you know about "where
the rubber meets the deck"??? Please, stick to what you know.


Hmmm, you are on a a Navy flightline and you don't call them "boats".

I think perhaps you are a fraud, foodog.

On Tue, 6 Jan 2004 20:11:19 -0800, "Tarver Engineering"
wrote:


"fudog50" wrote in message
.. .
Guys on boats??? LOL


Sure. Where the rubber meets the deck.

On Mon, 5 Jan 2004 13:56:32 -0800, "Tarver Engineering"
wrote:


"fudog50" wrote in message
.. .
Tarver,
Nice of you to speak for the entire Navy,

Guys on boats like the F-18Es reliability.

but you must be only
speaking of the Contractors, PMA guys and bean counters that can't
see the forest through the trees. COTS is good if you have the

sparing
and support, (rare).

LOL

OK

COTS allows engineers to buy parts, as opposed to designing to now

expired
component Mil-specs. The first real benifit of COTS was seen in

Desert
Storm, where the USAF had greatly improved missiles. Allowing

engineers
to
buy parts to test solid fuels created technology during the 1980s and

the
in
service reliabity data tied to Mil-Hbk 217F. Once an engineer adopts

the
way of thinking that some parts/lines* count is directly tied to

reliabilty,
(statistical) then they will "design for reliability by using less
lines/parts.

* software code.