GQfluffy wrote:JLAmber wrote:The first batch of 18 KC-767s won't be available until 2017, so we should see KC-135s in service well beyond 2020. What plans there are to account for the lesser numbers is anybody's guess.
There are only 50 airframes to be built (before this order), and we have to wait another 5 years?

According to the link in Today's Daily the maiden flight is scheduled for 2015, so the reports of deliveries commencing early 2017 would seem to be on the money. Flat out the 767 line can run at 4 frames per month so (if we take the 18 government funded-build aircraft as the total that will be delivered by the end of 2017), the rest of the build could be completed by late 2021/early 2022, if so required. Looking through a few magazine articles on the KC-135, there are many mentions of the escalating cost of maintenance on the type and the fact each frame will essentially need to be rebuilt and re-skinned from 2018. I guess this would be the time when large scale retirements will begin, so the timing of the project would seem to fit rather better than the constant delays suggest.
Fumanchewd wrote:Yeah, you're right. Its good that Boeing won. European Government Paid EADS didn''t want the 35$B USD contract anway!
You totally misunderstood what I was saying. Of course the top brass at EADS wanted the contract (as much for the prestige as the money), what I was pointing out is that the company as a whole will be better off without the hassle involved. Government projects always require relentless micro-managing of every little detail, rather than civil customers who tend to be more trusting and less bureaucratic towards their suppliers. To give you an example, during my first stint at Airbus, we had an airline executive come to tour the site after hammering out the final details of a large single-aisle order. His exact words were "This is what I want, this is when I want it, this is how much we agreed to pay. Make sure there's a progress update on my desk on the first working day of each month, let me know immediately if there's any problems. Now off you go and build me some planes" (I never did establish whether he was related to ANCFlyer

). Meanwhile, the EFA material guys at the same site were all away being given a lecture on managing a material supply chain that they has successfully kept ahead of schedule on without said lecture, but the MOD insisted that they were taught how to do the jobs they were already doing to a greater than expected standard anyway. Such is the way when dealing with civil servants.
The other point I was making is that the 767 line (50 orders outstanding, likelihood of a few of those being converted to 787?) will be kept in work for that bit longer by this order, whereas the A330 line (351 orders outstanding, more on the horizon) would just be busier and would probably have to look at a major build-rate adjustment. With supply chains already strained by single aisle production running at record rates, and the impending commencement of the A350 line proper, it would be difficult for Airbus to force the extra numbers through the system and they may well have seen delayed deliveries. It wouldn't surprise me if this was also a consideration when awarding the contract.
ShyFlyer wrote:I expect EADS to protest this, just as I would have expected Boeing to protest had the contract gone to EADS.
There is a ten day period where EADS will be allowed to appeal before the deal is finally rubber-stamped. Noises coming from the French union that represents EADS workers over there suggest they have already been told an appeal won't happen. There are also some rumours from oft-reliable sources at Airbus UK that this is the case.
It's interesting to note that the UK, though officially disappointed by the decision, was probably no worse off for Boeing winning the contract - Boeing's airborne refuelling systems are built here by Cobham Aerospace:-
http://www.cobham.com/media/247963/370%20kc_46a.pdf
A million great ideas...