GO!!! said:The Dash 8 is a high maintenance beast, and better suited to extreme cold than heat.
Dissident said:Whas it not the Dash-8 that was labeled a gas guzzler? Or am I thinking of another plane?
The CPC had best come around and NOT use these issues as an election platfrom -- or a bunch of us will lose faith...
GO!!! said:The Dash 8 is a high maintenance beast, and better suited to extreme cold than heat.
GO!!! said:Relatives of mine have flown Dash 8 100s and 300s in the Middle East and North Africa, and they stated that it was simply ill suited to the effects of dust and heat. They ended up returning the aircraft before the lease was up and using the EMB 120 instead.
I will defer to the knowledge of an aesop though!
As an EX AME, Canada has a great aviation industry, Most people that work for Boeing are Canadians. People like you destoryed our own. IE The Bobcat APC, Arrow, etc. We have lots of companies that can build better. It is that we don't invest in them. We dick around, and complain about how must it will cost.Big Foot said:I don't really see the need to build in Canada. We need to face the facts here, Canada does not have a huge aviation industry, especially in terms of a heavy lift building capability. We should really leave the building of these projects to the people who have experience and the expertise to build aircraft to the required specs. Forget Canadian industry, look at cost efficiency.
,GO!!! said:It is not the government's job to sustain industry.
It is the government's job to represent us, the taxpayer, by purchasing the best equipment at the lowest price.
If industry cannot generate enough business to sustain itself without government contracts, it is not an industry that should be getting much attention from my elected officials, IMHO.
The aforementioned Avro Arrow, the LSVW, the Iltis, and the Bobcat APC are all examples of terrible projects and acquisitions that should have been scrapped the minute they failed the requirement tests or ran a day over on the timeline.
Military contracts are extemely lucrative, and if our industry cannot provide working demo vehicles, or build them in a timely manner, we should look elsewhere.
My life depends on the kit we buy. When we lose focus of the objective; of cost - effective, functional, timely gear, and start looking at defence contracts as a "create work" projects for unproductive industries, and political payoff, then we are already setting ourselves up for failure.
Many industries (oil,lumber,gold for example) are able to effectively produce for the marketplaces' demands even with the wild fluctuations of that commodity. If the defence industry cannot adapt, it should perish.
GO!!! said:Finally, "we" did produce the LAV and AVGP families here in canada. But last time I checked, General Dynamics is a US company, and most of the profit returns to them, and most of the components are from the US. So are they really a "canadian" solution?
DG-41 said:I don't know why so many people are so down on the Iltis though. It's a great little vehicle.
DG
Big Foot said:I don't really see the need to build in Canada. We need to face the facts here, Canada does not have a huge aviation industry, especially in terms of a heavy lift building capability. We should really leave the building of these projects to the people who have experience and the expertise to build aircraft to the required specs. Forget Canadian industry, look at cost efficiency.
GO!!! said:It is not the government's job to sustain industry.
It is the government's job to represent us, the taxpayer, by purchasing the best equipment at the lowest price.
If industry cannot generate enough business to sustain itself without government contracts, it is not an industry that should be getting much attention from my elected officials, IMHO.
The aforementioned Avro Arrow, the LSVW, the Iltis, and the Bobcat APC are all examples of terrible projects and acquisitions that should have been scrapped the minute they failed the requirement tests or ran a day over on the timeline.
Military contracts are extemely lucrative, and if our industry cannot provide working demo vehicles, or build them in a timely manner, we should look elsewhere.
My life depends on the kit we buy. When we lose focus of the objective; of cost - effective, functional, timely gear, and start looking at defence contracts as a "create work" projects for unproductive industries, and political payoff, then we are already setting ourselves up for failure.
Many industries (oil,lumber,gold for example) are able to effectively produce for the marketplaces' demands even with the wild fluctuations of that commodity. If the defence industry cannot adapt, it should perish.
KevinB said:Well somewhere between GO!!! and Recce41 is a medium.
While I agree in principle with GO!!! - however some items we as Canadians MUST maintain a manufacturing ability.
Specifically: Small Arms (minimum) and Ammunition for all weapons systems.
The above fields we must bite the bullet and accept that we need that capability and hopefully we have enough of a demand that it keeps the field competitive and we don't pay (like we do now) thru the nose.
If one can work into specialized niches and take advantages of economies of scale with our allies when can ensure in other areas that we at least have some items that we can barter to ensure we are supplied in the event of a crisis of national interest.
99.9% we will best be suited to tagging on to US .mil orders - hopefully often enough that they will cross pollenate the border in trade quid pro quo.
daniel h. said:Maybe the buyWe had the 4th largest industrial economy in 1945 when the government was intervening more in the economy during the war...now we are number 15 and dropping. I do however think our business class is lazy and pathetic.