PPRuNe Forums - View Single Post - F-35 Cancelled, then what ?
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Old 19th Sep 2013, 22:50
  #3288 (permalink)  
SpazSinbad
 
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Bogdan: $857 -22% less - real estimate lifecycle costs accurate

Good for them and good for you... we will see eh. But I'll not watch the Dutch TV news - English web news reports will do fine. Meanwhile 'the SHERIFF' says this:

Twenty-Two Percent is Real 19 Sep 2013 John A. Tirpak
"Press reports about F-35 lifecycle costs—indicating that the new estimate is $857 billion versus the previous estimate of $1.1 trillion, or 22 percent less—were accurate, said F-35 Program Executive Officer Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan. "We're working well" with the Pentagon's independent cost-assessment shop to get to figures both teams can agree on, he said during a Sept. 17 interview. One difference of opinion: the cost-assessment office's estimates assume seasoned maintainers will be doing the repair work, since senior people have been tapped for the program so far. But eventually those jobs will be done by two-stripers, said Bogdan. Such assumptions make a "huge difference" in cost over the 53 years for which the cost estimators are required to forecast. Bogdan asserted that opponents of the F-35 have "too many opinions, not enough facts." He considers himself an honest broker and is not afraid to tell bad news about the F-35, or in this case, good news."
Twenty-Two Percent is Real
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Turning the Corner 19 Sep 2013 John A. Tirpak
"The F-35 program is "really, really close" to turning the corner and becoming a truly healthy program, Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan, F-35 program executive officer, told the Daily Report. He said he'll be satisfied the program has really turned around when production "really starts to ramp up" and after the next year or so of software and weapons testing—all the "really hard stuff" of operational testing. Once past that point, Bogdan said he thinks the program will not only be on track, but will cost less than fourth generation fighters. Progress has been good and costs are consistently coming down, he noted in the Sept. 17 interview. In his speech that same day at AFA's 2013 Air and Space Conference in National Harbor, Md., Bogdan said the services "are committed not to breaking this program" and will do what's necessary to keep it moving forward. In 10 years, Bogdan predicted, "people will look back and say, 'What was all the fuss about?'" The F-35, he said, will by then be seen as the obvious solution to "what we need" and will still have "great growth potential.""
Turning the Corner

Last edited by SpazSinbad; 19th Sep 2013 at 23:05. Reason: 2nd QUOTE
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