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RAF Aircraft Struggling

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Old 4th Jul 2007, 23:27
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RAF Aircraft Struggling

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/6270406.stm

I'm glad to see the Defence Committee, have "real doubts".

Fills me with confidence in politicians, as usual.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 01:29
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Good to see! Although :

Defence minister Lord Drayson said the MoD was buying five large aircraft.

"We are making long-term improvements to our airlift capability, adding a fifth C-17 to the four we are currently buying," he said.

does kinda make it sound like we don't already actually have 4 of them already.....

and:

"It called on the MoD to procure more C-17 large transport planes "given the current operational tempo".

They also said the MoD should look at increasing its A400M order, especially as three Hercules had been lost on operations recently."

does actually require more money.... large aircraft don't just grow on trees folks!
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 01:39
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3 C130Ks

Just a thought but if they want to more rapidly replace the 3 lost C130Ks might they not order 3 more C130Js as I would be confident they would arrive before the A-400Ms and we will be operating a mixed fleet either way?
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 04:42
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"We are making long-term improvements to our airlift capability, adding a fifth C-17 to the four we are currently buying," he said.

does kinda make it sound like we don't already actually have 4 of them already.....
Well, it does a little, but he's refering to the fact that until now, our C17s have been operated on a lease basis as they were originally intended as a gap-filler. Now we're finally buying them out.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 07:50
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Good news...they are needed. However, there is no extra money, someone else will lose out to pay for these!
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 08:11
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The defence committe would be better off directing their doubts at the Treasury rather than the MoD. The MoD know how 'stretched' everyone is, but are way short on funds to do a vast amount about it. Perhaps the committee should write the business case to get more real money out the PMs old department and not just bleat to the converted.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 09:43
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Listening to James Arbuthnot on R4 this morning what struck me most was that it wasn't until CDS was questioned back in March by the Committee that they started to have 'doubts'. This in spite of other headline grabbing failures such as that from the MP/TA soldier a couple of years ago.
I suspect that the hoary old process of assuring your boss that you can do your job with no resources is what has got us to where we are. At least CDS was upfront enough to use a euphimism (I think he said 'gravely concerned') that the politicos understood to mean 'we are going the wrong way down a certain body of water without adequate means of navigation or propulsion'.
Still, Drayson implying we are increasing the size of the C17 fleet by purchasing what is already in use is a criminal excess of spin. One can only hope that his deity (if he has one) is a vengeful one and he will suffer in his own personal hell along with the rest of this 'government' for his economical truths.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 09:43
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Replacement C 130's

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Wasn't it 2 x K's and 1 x J that were lost?

3P

Last edited by threeputt; 5th Jul 2007 at 09:44. Reason: Spelling mistake
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 10:16
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Drayson is an @rse of the first order, lord alone knows where his reputation as a doer rather than a talker comes from.

His much vaunted industrial strategy is dying on its feet and in any case is predicated on some rather incomplete work from Rand Europe among others. The whole "use the CVF contract as a stick to beat industry with" approach is now being exposed as the excuse for further prevarication that it always was.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 10:39
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To be fair, Paul Drayson does not control the purse strings, so does not always have the means to be able to do what he would want to.

Alone among New Labour politicians, he is someone I'd actually defend, however.

He's an impressive bloke, unlike every other Min DP I've met and dealt with - he is charismatic, articulate and straightforward, and speaks very well. He also has a phenomenal grasp and understanding of his brief - he's someone who could talk intelligently about air power and aircraft capabilities to someone like me, and he has a similar grasp of land and sea systems, too. If ever he's looking for a lower-stress job, he'd make a perfect editor for JDW!

He's not the usual pulic school/Oxbridge PPE/Classics barrister/professional politician fop - he's grounded in the real world - he trained as a production engineer (BSc from Aston, and a PhD in Robotics) and is a successful businessman and entrepreneur.

All that only makes him a talker, and not a doer, of course, but I'd rather have a straight-talking, intelligent and interested bloke in the job than a second rate political appointee like Willy Bach, Liz Symons, and the various Tory occupants of the post before them.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 11:35
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Jacko

Wouldn't disagree with your assessments of the previous incumbents and having never met MinDP in person cannot comment on how he comes across. However, he's been in post long enough to have sorted those projects that are urgently required and do not require Treasury refinancing. There are some - MARS tankers (and of course FSTA) that are being held back by process - a process he is i/c of implementing.

Judging by the lack of progress on virtually all fronts procurement-wise, he's talking a good game (as do we all!) and little else.

Last edited by Not_a_boffin; 5th Jul 2007 at 11:37. Reason: pellings
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 15:31
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"If ever he's looking for a lower-stress job, he'd make a perfect editor for JDW!'

You have a sadistic streak a mile wide.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 15:42
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Follow me through

Wasn't it 2 x K's and 1 x J that were lost?

3P
As i recall yes. The "J" was blown up in dramatic style in the desert after hitting a mine upon landing i think. Video of it being destroyed went on Youtube but was taken down shortly afterwards.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 17:11
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Originally Posted by BBC
The committee said that it was "very concerned" that figures for last November showed that only 41 of the 75 RAF Hercules, TriStar and VC-10 aircraft were available to undertake "required tasks".
Sounds like they happened upon a very good day - either that or they knew the committee were coming. Or are they saying 41 were available for the month?
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 17:33
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When (cough, cough), news of the stalling of the Herc foam program hit the press, Lord Drayson called in various civil serpents and mil officers from MOD into his office and read them the riot act. He offered to take the request for funding directly to No 11.

He impressed me then and has impressed me since, (he has sorted out Chinook fiasco), even if he acquired his peerage under New Labour SOPs.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 17:44
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I don't think he impressed the troops on the ground with this one.

http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/De...tMillbrook.htm

seeing that most losses have been with IED's along side the roads this does not give a lot of protection.But i suppose it will be ideal for the fast hit and run attack on some teliban airfield.
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Old 5th Jul 2007, 18:10
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Gar - a lot of the work done in the 'Stan and in the wilds near the Iran/Iraq border requires exactly these sort of vehicles.... (although I'm a traditionalist and believe nothing will ever be more british than a landrover!)
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Old 6th Jul 2007, 12:35
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"..Ageing fleet of aircraft....blah blah..."

How often I hear this phrase, and how it conveniently sidesteps the REAL issue.

The AGE of the aircraft is ALMOST irrelevant - after all, about the only parts of the K's that are ACTUALLY 40 years old are the fuselages. The real issue here is that we cannot fix or service them, because they have LEANed away all our manpower, and we don't have the bits to fix them, because they have 'Just-In-Time'-ed all the spares (now THAT'S a spin-phrase if ever I heard one!

If we somehow managed to aquire, from somewhere, a brand new fleet of K's built to exactly the same specifications as the ones we have, they would require no less (or very little less) maintenance than the '40 year old' ones do. I suspect the same is true of the VC10 and Tristar fleets.

If we could get back the eng manpower, and the spares stocks, we would see availability rocket.

Yes, I KNOW that doesn't address the fatigue issue, but that can be cured (or at least postponed) by bolting on new wings, which puts it straiight into the 'spares' and 'manpower' pidgeonhole in my book.

Another bad decision by a particularly daft bint chasing an OBE...
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Old 6th Jul 2007, 12:56
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If we somehow managed to aquire, from somewhere, a brand new fleet of K's built to exactly the same specifications as the ones we have, they would require no less (or very little less) maintenance than the '40 year old' ones do. I suspect the same is true of the VC10 and Tristar fleets.
That could only have been written by a pilot !

S_H
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Old 6th Jul 2007, 13:23
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Well said SH, though I suspect a fleet of brand new Ks would probably require more maintaining than a fleet of something exceedingly new, shiny and designed for ease of/low maintenance in a modern styleee. Witness the difference in serviceability between, say, the Hawk T1/T1a/T1w fleet at valley (i.e. slim to none) vice the serviceability of the more modern hawk fleets across the world (pretty much the same basic design for the 100 series) and the serviceability is significantly better, but not at the same level that a truly modern aircraft could achieve imho, even on a (relatively) simple airframe.
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