

Why would Airtanker want to spend their own money to upgrade the aircraft used to support the RAF requirements when the current aircraft fleet fully meets the contract terms? They're a commercial organisation in business to make money for their shareholders. They aren't going to spend money unless they get more money from MoD.Doughnut wrote: ↑Sun Feb 14, 2021 11:22 amIt might be a good time for AirTanker to buy new A330's and convert them, once in service the some of the existing fleet can be upgraded. These upgrades should not cost the RAF, the Contract price is for provision of the AAR service not ownership of the aircraft.
Evidence to back up that statement?
How can it cost extra to remove? They were built as standard A330s in France then flown Spain to be converted to tankers.. at no point would a boom have been fitted that then needed removing..filmman wrote: ↑Fri Feb 12, 2021 11:25 pmUnfortunately, Governments have a record of stupid, penny pinching Private Finance Initiative contacts that cause problems. To "save" money our tanker version had no booms (I believe it cost extra to certify their removal). Apart from the cost of reinstalling them, I understand that recertification would cost £100m. There might also be a significant PFI contractual penalty. But the most important reason for not booming is severe loss of MOD face.
The USA has different political interests, so there might not always want to provide tankers; for instance a re-run of the Falklands War. Can we routinely use RAF assets to support RN "carrier" deployments? The MOD Lacks common sense. Without being to specific, there was one Departmental training course that took 30 mins to decide a strategy, the trainers were surprise and asked were they aware of the actual Committee decision. They said No, it was just common sense! How long has the Tanker contract got left.
Filmman
The UK's configuration had to be separately certificated by Spanish certification agency INTA because it varied from the baseline MRTT.
The A330 type cert doesn't cover the FSTA / MRTT control law modifications for refuelling ops, which reduce manoeuvring limits below what JARs consider safe. As soon as any 'refuelling devices' are deployed you're no longer covered by the civil type cert.
Sir, I refer you to your own question in order to answer your own question.
Mmmmmm.... think it through lad! how did the Nimrods and Hercules get to the Falklands and BACK during the Falklands war? Sadly the Argentinian forces wouldn’t let them land and refuel.....
Why the big sticking point regarding F35A. We are not buying any to my knowledge, we have just seen the SSDR. And only 48 f35b will be purchased and cutting of numbers too our Typhoon fleet. Next step will be Tempest. The Typhoon will soldier on till Tempest replaces it. We do not need the F35A.
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