<BLOCKQUOTE id=quote><font size=1 face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id=quote>quote:<hr height=1 noshade id=quote>
What good does it do the AF to cancel other porgrams to buy the tankers - the only reason the AF needs tankers is to support other aircraft like the F-22 and all!
And someone help me out on this one, as I've yet to read a good answer to this question. Why is the USAF only buying 100 new tankers when they have 230+ KC-135's? I know they do not intend to replace the already modernized KC-135R's, or at least at first as well as the KC-10's but what exactly is the strategy here?
I know that right now the USAF ready rate of the -135's is pretty bad and that maybe only half are able to get up at a moments notice but still - how do you replace so many tankers with just 100 tankers that don't even carry as much fuel as the ones they are replacing?!
Think about it, why was the AF's mandates for an aircraft such the size of the KC-10 when it was and why would that mandate now be for a lot less capability?
And what about the philosophy of the USAF buying a tanker based on a 20+ year old platform? The USAF has gotten 40+ years out of the the KC-135's and I would say that has been a solid return on taxpayers investment. But what if the Air Force instead of the 135's back when they did took "old echnology" B-29's and made tankers out of them? (I know they did, but I'm talking they bought new ones at the time they instead bought KC-135's.)
<hr height=1 noshade id=quote></BLOCKQUOTE id=quote></font id=quote><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" size=2 id=quote>
Cancellations may not be "good" for the Air Force but it may end up being a compromise that the Dept. of Defense and the Congress can live with. Maybe compromise is the answer for the 100 tanker request too. Maybe it's a stopgap and they would prefer to start a "new technology" dedicated tanker design for the future, not an off the shelf commodity aluminum tube twin-jet. Maybe they need smaller, cheaper but more numerous tankers to cover the remaining jobs. Maybe they choose to go low tech here because they are balancing huge technical risk in other programs. There is not an infinite amout of money, even though it looks like it, and there are the costs of prosecuting a hot war to fund. If it gets bad enough, all modernization could get delayed. The people in the field will have priority. According to the stuff presented to Congress, the availability of the -135s is essentially the same as the KC-10, about 80%. It may be taking a lot more resources to "keep 'em flyin" but apparently it is being done. The question is for how long? I still think, if the tankers are in, something else is out.