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Channex757 wrote:I always think it's a bit odd that programs like this want to reinvent the wheel. There are available wing pods out there right now, for instance on the A330MRTT. Why do the USAF and other stakeholders need something that has to fit precisely to their specifications and instead just buy the proven systems in?
Companies like Cobham could supply the units tomorrow. Or am I overlooking something major? It could potentially save the taxpayers of the USA millions of dollars.
Channex757 wrote:Right, so it's this interaction issue. Thanks for the info. Why is it proving to be a problem? The engine installations are almost identical visually so there must be something that's causing the problems, such as the engine weight or the pipework within the wing.
747classic wrote:The Italian KC-767A was also delayed by wing flutter issues when adding WARPS.
The 767 wing was not designed to accept large external loads outboard of the engines and had to be strengtend and/or modfied at several critical positions for the KC-767A.
KarelXWB wrote:Two 767-2C's seen in the EMC yesterday
PC12Fan wrote:747classic wrote:The Italian KC-767A was also delayed by wing flutter issues when adding WARPS.
The 767 wing was not designed to accept large external loads outboard of the engines and had to be strengtend and/or modfied at several critical positions for the KC-767A.
OK, here's my dumb aeronautical engineering 101 question - would the winglets currently offered on new 767's help with this issue? I'm sure it's been discussed but I'd like to hear a "fresh" reasoning on it.
Regards
WIederling wrote:Throwing resources at a late program make it .... later
(original from "Mythical Man Month: .. throwing manpower at a late ... )
WIederling wrote:
But Boeing boasts Hnow How from deeply ingrained DNA going back five ++ decades of "we know about tankers".
Where is it?
LMP737 wrote:All the people involved in the design and building of the KC-135 retired/passed on. The same can be said for the people involved with the KC-10 over at MD.
KarelXWB wrote:Not so fast. The first aircraft will have to undergo some sort of rework because the initial WARP's are not operational.
747classic wrote:Pentagon approves production (milestone C) of Boeing KC-46 tanker
See : http://www.heraldnet.com/business/penta ... 46-tanker/
KarelXWB wrote:Not so fast. The first aircraft will have to undergo some sort of rework because the initial WARP's are not operational.
Boeing expects to deliver the first batch of combat-ready tankers to the Air Force by January 2018, only five months later than originally planned.
A decision to approve full production — the most lucrative phase — has slipped to March 2018 from September 2017, the Air Force disclosed in March, as a result of cumulative delays in aircraft development from technical issues, such as wiring and the refueling system.
kc135topboom wrote:The USAF awarded the Boeing company a $2.8B contract, today. The contract is to build the first 19 KC-46As in two blocks. LRIP Block 1 will be 7 new tankers followed by block 2 which will be 12 tankers. All 19 KC-46As are expected to be delivered by 24 August 2018. The contract includes spares, spare engines, and wing mounted air refueling pods.
http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companie ... li=BBnb7Kz
mjoelnir wrote:So even for this first contract Boeing has to solve the wing mounted pod issue.
Stitch wrote:mjoelnir wrote:So even for this first contract Boeing has to solve the wing mounted pod issue.
Yes, but Boeing and Cobham PLC have refueled planes from the WARPs so they just need to deal with the flutter issue (which I believe is the problem). The USAF has said they expect the WARPs to be ready by next year (October 2018) which is fine considering I believe only USN / USMC aircraft use them so for normal USAF operations, it's a non-issue not having them equipped. And even then, the center drogue system can refuel USN / USMC aircraft so the KC-46A can be used in mixed-Service operations.
par13del wrote:The experts can confirm, but I think if the centerline is configured for drogue it cannot be reconfigured in flight, the entire mission is single use.
INFINITI329 wrote:Stitch wrote:mjoelnir wrote:So even for this first contract Boeing has to solve the wing mounted pod issue.
Yes, but Boeing and Cobham PLC have refueled planes from the WARPs so they just need to deal with the flutter issue (which I believe is the problem). The USAF has said they expect the WARPs to be ready by next year (October 2018) which is fine considering I believe only USN / USMC aircraft use them so for normal USAF operations, it's a non-issue not having them equipped. And even then, the center drogue system can refuel USN / USMC aircraft so the KC-46A can be used in mixed-Service operations.
I wouldn't say its a non-issue. This tanker was bought to support all DOD aircraft not just USAF aircraft. So this is just as in important as the boom not working
kc135topboom wrote:The KC-46 also has in internal centerline hose and drogue system. I have not heard if there are any issues with that system. Does anyone know anything?
Stitch wrote:INFINITI329 wrote:Stitch wrote:
Yes, but Boeing and Cobham PLC have refueled planes from the WARPs so they just need to deal with the flutter issue (which I believe is the problem). The USAF has said they expect the WARPs to be ready by next year (October 2018) which is fine considering I believe only USN / USMC aircraft use them so for normal USAF operations, it's a non-issue not having them equipped. And even then, the center drogue system can refuel USN / USMC aircraft so the KC-46A can be used in mixed-Service operations.
I wouldn't say its a non-issue. This tanker was bought to support all DOD aircraft not just USAF aircraft. So this is just as in important as the boom not working
But in the interim, you can fuel USAF aircraft off the boom and USN/USMC aircraft off the drogue. The only "loss" at the moment is with the WARPs the KC-46 can re-fuel two USN/USMC frames at the same time versus just one off the drogue.
kc135topboom wrote:The KC-46 also has in internal centerline hose and drogue system. I have not heard if there are any issues with that system. Does anyone know anything?
That appears to have worked without issue.
mjoelnir wrote:The center line system has a higher dispense rate, some receiver aircraft have problems with that.
The wing mounted pods are part of the contract and clearly not ready when all frames should be delivered. The "little" flutter problem seems to need two additional years to be rectified, if no further delays happens.
Stitch wrote:mjoelnir wrote:The center line system has a higher dispense rate, some receiver aircraft have problems with that.
The wing mounted pods are part of the contract and clearly not ready when all frames should be delivered. The "little" flutter problem seems to need two additional years to be rectified, if no further delays happens.
Well that is what flight testing is for.
I'm guessing it's something to do with Cobham's design itself since other 767 tankers (Italy and Columbia, at least) have WARPs and they don't appear to have flutter issues.
mjoelnir wrote:different engines, different flutter. The KC-767 uses GE and the KC46 uses P&W.
mjoelnir wrote:The "little" flutter problem seems to need two additional years to be rectified, if no further delays happens.
Stitch wrote:I'm guessing it's something to do with Cobham's design itself since other 767 tankers (Italy and Columbia, at least) have WARPs and they don't appear to have flutter issues.
scbriml wrote:The Italian tankers were seriously delayed because of flutter issues with their WARPs as well.
11Bravo wrote:Two years for a fix? I'm seeing statements that the 19 tankers will be delivered within two years, not that it will take two years to resolve the flutter issues.
Stitch wrote:I'm guessing the Cobham WARPS are of a different aerodynamic design than the Italian ones so they generate different aerodynamic forces.
mjoelnir wrote:Patent application reveals KC-46 refueling pod fix
https://www.flightglobal.com/news/artic ... ix-428866/
mjoelnir wrote:It should have been a known fact that integrating WARP on the B767 poses problems. Comparing the KC-767A and the KC-46A has to take into account that they neither use the same engine nor the same wing as the other. It is therefor questionable if the KC-767A solution would have been usable on the KC-46A unchanged.
The result is that Boeing will have problems supplying KC-46A as ordered in the agreed time frame. They will be at least not fully functional.
Revelation wrote:All true, and yet the DoD has still gone ahead and signed the $2.8B contract for the first 19 frames presumably knowing all of the above.
KarelXWB wrote:Revelation wrote:All true, and yet the DoD has still gone ahead and signed the $2.8B contract for the first 19 frames presumably knowing all of the above.
Boeing may deliver several aircraft without operational WARP's.
The first 18 KC-46s are now going to be delivered by January 2018 with all the requirements except the WARPs, which will come in October of that year. While Boeing will equip the initial 18 aircraft with refueling boom and centerline drogue refueling capabilities, the WARPs fulfill the Air Force’s required assets available milestone.
Boeing maintains that prolonged conformity and qualification testing needed for Federal Aviation Administration certification — and not a functionality issue — caused the pods to fall a year behind schedule.
“The patent is reflected in the baseline integrated design of the WARPs and was in place at first flight of the KC-46 (Sept 2015),” Boeing says in an email to FlightGlobal. “There is not a problem with the WARPs functionality … the WARP and center line drogue systems performed as planned during Milestone C testing.”
mjoelnir wrote:It should have been a known fact that integrating WARP on the B767 poses problems. Comparing the KC-767A and the KC-46A has to take into account that they neither use the same engine nor the same wing as the other. It is therefor questionable if the KC-767A solution would have been usable on the KC-46A unchanged.