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Army.ca Fixture
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What the CAF wants and what it’ll get are two wildly different items.So why is it an issue now?
Or does the CAF really want P-3’s from the Boneyard?
What the CAF wants and what it’ll get are two wildly different items.So why is it an issue now?
Or does the CAF really want P-3’s from the Boneyard?
I don’t think it’s (exposed wheels) is really an issue for the P-8. The linkage to electronics payload limitations due to limited space related to gear was mentioned, but I don’t see it as any kind of a substantive issue.So why is it an issue now?
Or does the CAF really want P-3’s from the Boneyard?
I can’t say I noticed the wheels not having coverings since I read this thread. I must’ve seen 737s in flight dozens of times… I never once noticed or asked myself about it.Well, in fairness, the facts have been around for more than half a century.
Well if your flying in one and you notice, then something has gone terribly wrong.I can’t say I noticed the wheels not having coverings since I read this thread. I must’ve seen 737s in flight dozens of times… I never once noticed or asked myself about it.
Were geeAs Max mentions
I’m replying to many of you at once. Had Boeing gotten of their butts and made a 797 to replace the 737 doors would have been covering the wheels, and doors for landing hear would be much lighter. Landing gear would likely been lighter. Boeing likely to lose the short haul because they kept kicking the can down the road. But American companies and government will keep it flying.The 737 is far from the only plane with no main wheels doors. The 737 main wheels wells are fitted with a seal and the wheel with a hub to reduce parasite drag. The saving in weight (and thus the reduced induced drag) makes up for it.
The 737 sits too low to fit it with main wheel doors. That was a deliberate design choice from Boeing and operators see no operational benefit from having the main wheel doors hence they were never designed and installed.
Not all Boeing fault. The airlines loved the 737. They like not having to re-cert the pilots for a different type rating. Etc etc. So you know they went back and forth with it. Cost, customers etc. They have taken the 737 out probably as far as it could go. The 737 why great for the flying public it basically opened the skies to everyone at an affordable price.As
Were gee
I’m replying to many of you at once. Had Boeing gotten of their butts and made a 797 to replace the 737 doors would have been covering the wheels, and doors for landing hear would be much lighter. Landing gear would likely been lighter. Boeing likely to lose the short haul because they kept kicking the can down the road. But American companies and government will keep it flying.
This is the mother of all tangents.
Don't forget Nordair operated them from graveled runways through the addition of a deflectors on the nose gear. They were a little noisy though when the odd stone would ping off the lower fuselageAs part of their testing for the first 737, they landed it on the grass field at Hope BC, a picture of it on the field is in the VSA clubhouse.
I flew in on one for crew change in the ArcticDon't forget Nordair operated them from graveled runways through the addition of a deflectors on the nose gear. They were a little noisy though when the odd stone would ping off the lower fuselage
I’m replying to many of you at once. Had Boeing gotten of their butts and made a 797 to replace the 737 doors would have been covering the wheels, and doors for landing hear would be much lighter. Landing gear would likely been lighter. Boeing likely to lose the short haul because they kept kicking the can down the road. But American companies and government will keep it flying.
I wouldn’t. I found the article above informative. Lots of options to get a single aisle up in the air more quickly. Boeing is a few steps behind and did it to themselves.Sounds like you are advocating for a 737 lift kit to accommodate the main gear doors.
I agree with you that Boeing, for a few years there, should have got off their butts.As
Were gee
I’m replying to many of you at once. Had Boeing gotten of their butts and made a 797 to replace the 737 doors would have been covering the wheels, and doors for landing hear would be much lighter. Landing gear would likely been lighter. Boeing likely to lose the short haul because they kept kicking the can down the road. But American companies and government will keep it flying.
This is the mother of all tangents.
At this point in what I’ve learned, i wouldn't say that the landing gear is the problem. It is anachronistic and a symptom of a bigger problem in Boeing, as you said.I agree with you that Boeing, for a few years there, should have got off their butts.
Their priorities were profit, and continually less government oversight. And it caught up with them in some big, big ways. Not to mention how much of a mess some of the military projects ended up being.
But I’m not sure the uncovered landing gear on the 737 is the real ‘smoking gun of laziness’ you’re making it out to be? It works, and has for a while
(The two crash sites on the other hand…)
Air Canada seems to like those with orders for 6 and plans for another 20.At this point in what I’ve learned, i wouldn't say that the landing gear is the problem. It is anachronistic and a symptom of a bigger problem in Boeing, as you said.
From what I can tell, the A321xlr crossed the Atlantic before Boeing’s design cross a computer screen.
Anyway, so we kind of agree.
BoeingAir Canada seems to like those with orders for 6 and plans for another 20.
It’s good to see commonality in the airframe used not just by the USAF in different roles, but allied countries as well.Boeing
"As of June 2022, 15,167 Boeing 737s have been ordered and 11,066 delivered." So more than 4000 more on order to build. They are going to be around for a long time.
Also with the P-8 being picked by more countries and the E-7 entering service with the US. This platform will be around to the end of time.
P-8 Used by RAAF, RAF, RNZAF, Germany on order, USN, South Korea, RNAF, India (and they have a MAD unit on it)
E-7 Used by RAAF, RAF, South Korea, Turkey plus ordered by the USAF. Many other are looking.
Boeing in hindsight wished Airbus had won the contract too. It was a fixed priced contract they low balled to get. They have lost billions on it. That and Force One that Trump made them low ball too. The Boeing CEO has said as much.It’s good to see commonality in the airframe used not just by the USAF in different roles, but allied countries as well.
Makes planning and logistics a lot easier when everybody is showing up with the same airframe for certain tasks, i.e. P8
For the love of ***, I hope Canada just signs on to the P8 program as a customer. We can’t keep the P3 fleet flying forever, and it makes no sense to stuff Block 4 P3 aircraft full of expensive & capable gear if the airframe itself will be retired sooner vs later.
For the same benefits as it would benefit anybody else - common airframe & and solid interoperability. Not to mention the abundance of spare parts & qualified mechanics/techs.
(If we can get a similar capability out of a smaller aircraft produced by Bombardier, that’s another conversation entirely. But SAAB pull the plug on that recently, so I’m not looking at that as a reliable option.)
The Airbus MRTT is also a solid aircraft, and will be used by both us & some European allies in the tanker role.
Airbus earned that business the honest way, by having a solid product to offer to its customers that worked as advertised.
I believe they even reached a milestone & performed some A/A refuels autonomously, something the KC-46 isn’t even close to being able to attempt.
Tanking goes automatic
In-flight refuelling operations are among the most demanding missions. Both the tanker and receiver pilots need to operate in close formation, flying aircraft with different flight envelopes and ranging speeds, in day-and-night and all weather conditions, and above the battlefield…. There are...www.airbus.com
They also won the USAF competition to refresh their tanker fleet, which would have added hundreds of aircraft on order.
If it wasn’t for Boeing intensely lobbying Congress (aka bribing various congressmen with cash payments & the threat of jobs leaving their districts) I imagine the USAF would be flying license-built MRTT’s now without all the headaches the KC-46 has/is giving them.
They’re the most used because it is was the only one. They are used in America by Americans because ‘MericaBoeing
"As of June 2022, 15,167 Boeing 737s have been ordered and 11,066 delivered." So more than 4000 more on order to build. They are going to be around for a long time.
Also with the P-8 being picked by more countries and the E-7 entering service with the US. This platform will be around to the end of time.
P-8 Used by RAAF, RAF, RNZAF, Germany on order, USN, South Korea, RNAF, India (and they have a MAD unit on it)
E-7 Used by RAAF, RAF, South Korea, Turkey plus ordered by the USAF. Many other are looking.