You definitely get the contract for the best explanation of the president's doomsday aircraft in my opinion , you have the facts to back up your statements
Can I offer a subject for a consideration for a future video? The proposals for the Concorde successor The Aerospatiale ATSF/BAE Alliance. A series of SST proposals from the 1980s-90 that if built would have resulted in an SST with a 200-250 seating capacity.
Consider this: As Petter described, Boeing is on record as having “identified” existing 747’s suitable for the contract. I could very easily believe that not only have they “identified” them, but *have options on them*. Which would mean that when Sierra Nevada (or whoever)gets the contract, Boeing will be in a very strong negotiating position as a SUBCONTRACTOR to the contract winner. All without having to accept fixed-price terms from the government. I think they may have played this just right.
Boeing is notorious about not being able to deliver anything on time, and nowhere near a fixed price. Petter mentioned some examples too. You, as a company with a fixed price contract toward the state and bearing all the responsibility, would you subcontract them?
So Boeing lost the Project Sunrise Contest for Qantas. Rumor was that they offered the 777-200LR as a loaner, to be replaced by the 777X. They would then sell the 777-200LR as converted freighters to UPS or FEDEX. I guarantee Boeing would offer Lufthansa, Korean, or UPS good discounts on the 777X to sell their 747-8’s. SNC doesn’t have that same bargaining chip. So, they’re going to pay a premium or go 747-400.
I suspect Boeing took themselves “out” of the bidding because they wanted the contract to be more flexible given their experience modifying aircraft (specifically the new air force one). They would probably be happy to come back if the “fixed price” terms were modified. Only time will tell if that happens.
Because with all that experience, they still can't figure out how much it costs to modify one? 😂 Oh yeah I forgot, all the capable engineers are gone. Maybe they'll modify it and have it fly right into the ocean... Then blame the pilots. Lol
Militarized A380 would be amusing. There’s also the LM-100J from Lockheed Martin (C-130J commercial) that could also work. The Navy is replacing their E-6s with modified C-130Js so it’s not like a turboprop can’t meet the demand.
the reason why they chose to increase fleet size was probably be because USN chose to go with C-130, note that turboprop has never met the demand for Nightwatch/Looking Glass missions, unlike TACAMO which had traditionally been C-130s during the cold war up until 90s -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USAF EC-135 = Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO 90s-now -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USN E-6 = Looking Glass + TACAMO future -> USAF SAOC = Nightwatch + Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO
Aside from being ponderous and slow, the C--130 is not even remotely big enough to fill the roll required. The C-17 and C-5 are big enough, but not likely to successfully meet the certification process requirements. They will basically have to use a converted 747 just by the requirements laid out. Unfortunately they aren't being manufactured anymore, so used airframes are also in the mix. One also can't imagine the US Air Force procuring European made airframes, thus Airbus won't make the cut either. Just not going to happen.
Not gonna happen. See the USAF Tanker debacle - even if you win the competition, the US is not gonna let a European company supply a mainstay of its operations, even if that means buying an inferior aircraft years later than they wanted them.
A secondary APU might be installed as a backup to provide extra electrical power, but that would add to the weight of the aircraft and an expensive redesign of the airframe to accommodate the unit.
Shame we don't have the L-1011 anymore. A repowered Tristar would have the redundancy, range, capacity and with 3 engines, sufficient electrical power.
@@michaelplunkett8059 A missile strike to the center engine would cause loss of rudder, rear pressure bulkhead, or even the entire tail section. I doubt DoD would accept either trijet design due to this risk.
On the 4 engined aircraft requirement by the DOD i only see the A340 as an alternative to the 747. The A340 is a relative young airframe, lots of them are available , relative cheap to purchase and they were designed to fly long distances. That one also has the benefit that it could theoraticly cruise on 2 of the 4 (modern CFM leap) engines for even longer military missions. On the other hand a non US build aircraft maybe a big nono for the DOD.
the A340 is a crap plane. Also, did you listen to the video? They require an FAA civil certification of the platform which does not exist for an A340 equipped with LEAP engines. There is absolutely no way that Airbus and CFM would underwrite the certification of an A340 NEO for 10 airframes for the US DoD. It makes absolutely no sense.
@@charlottelanvin7095you’re saying absolute nonsense the A340 600 is an absolute beast of an aircraft pilots say that it’s too powerful sometimes lmao get your facts straight
@@charlottelanvin7095why would you equip and A340 with LEAP engines. The A340-500/-600 have RR Trent 500 engines which are nearly twice as powerful as the CFM-56’s
I really hope this comment is sarcastic. The airbus A340 is literally one of the weakest airplanes in history. It takes almost an hour to even get to your cruising altitude because the engines are so weak. The engines were designed for the airbus a320. Of course with them being weaker, they thought adding 2 extra would help. While other aircrafts get to their cruising altitude in around 30 mins, the A340 takes 45 mins to over an hour depending on how heavy. If you were to take these statistics and add all the extra weight of what Air Force One needs, it could take 2 hours just to get to cruising altitude with all the extra special modifications. On top of that, the A340 has one of the most horrendous fuel Efficiency. The only good thing that comes from a A340 is the landing gear. I think it’s pretty cool and unique. But if we are talking about practicality, a CRJ-900 would be better than the A340. All joes aside, the A340 will never be picked for a category such as Air Force One.
They might be aiming to be the company that sells the planes to the eventual contract winner, perhaps making money as a consultant without taking on the cost overrun risks.
@@bigstick6332 They identified to the USAF they identified the planes. Maybe Boeing is looking to be a middle man in the sale of the planes from the current owners to the eventual contract winner.
@@bigstick6332 : Not _much_ money, but it certainly will be _easy_ money. They'll call up their accounting branch, pull out most of the seats, and very little else. Boeing's part in such a transaction might even be finished in a standard work-week.
I was just watching a video on the KC135 tanker, and they confirmed that it could maintain level flight fully loaded with 2/4 engines, and could maintain "long distance glide" with 1/4 engines fully loaded, and level flight with 1/4 engines if "light enough". That is the sort of reliability we need for these mission critical aircraft. Take a 747 and put a380 Engines on it or something.
The difference is that the KC135 has a service ceiling of 50,000+ feet (where all 4 engines are needed) whereas flight with two engines brings them down to pleb altitudes like 35,000 feet.
50,000 is officially confirmed but higher is likely possible. Biggest issues are pressure differential and reserve oxygen for crew (USAF mandates pressure suites above 50k)
Boeing is mature enough to know that one fake contract with fake national security clause can exclude them from international market, especially China. Why A380 went down the tube? I know the answer, do you?
A significant part of the cost for aircraft like this is likely to be from having to take existing aircraft apart and rebuilding them. The labor required to redo the wiring especially, and more so since even Boeing probably doesn't have too many people left who remember putting them together in the first place- there's a learning curve, and whoever has to put these things together will get good at it right about the time the production run ends. Air Force should have done this before the line shut down.
It's not like the 747 line has been down for decades. They delivered the last one earlier this year and Boeing has been building 747s for half a century. I'm sure they've still got plenty of people around who know the 747 design and assembly process in great detail. Institutional knowledge certainly does erode over time, but not THAT fast.
Boeing said building the Air Force ones using existing planes ended up costing more due to disassembly and reassembly than purpose building them from scratch.
@@bullhornzz Indeed, but that wasn't due to loss of institutional knowledge of how to build the things. The line was still running when much of that work was done. I'm certainly not saying that the conversion won't have a lot of difficult work involved - it will - but rather just that loss of institutional knowledge shouldn't be too bad of an issue if they start work on this soon (granted, if it's 5 or 10 years down the road, that's another matter entirely.)
Government contracts can be very difficult to agree to. Often they are not only fixed price but they can include a clause that allows the government to cancel at any time, even after you have spent serious money getting started or even well into the delivery, without paying any cancelation fees. Or they can decide that essential changes must be made that "don't qualify for overruns". My personal family story - my father's company had a fixed price contract to build a pair of buildings at what is now Idaho National Laboratory. But the government engineers did not complete and release the plans to start construction until September, instead of June. As a result, the company was faced with pouring concrete in -40 degree weather, requiring extra high performance jet heating systems, special inflated plastic enclosures, and men working two hours on, two hours off. This resulted in a $300,000 overrun (in 1955) that the government promised to pay but never did. The company was technically bankrupt but was carried by the banks for three years while it recovered.
In the UK it seems to work the other way, where a contract is given and a price agreed and then with continual changes and alterations to the original plan. The added costs of all the alterations blamed on the manufacturer and not the hapless government. Hence the demise of the UK Aircraft industry, as being to expensive!
Not to mention that the government pays when they get around to it -- leading to layoffs because the contractor doesn't have money to pay employees and then to production delays due to retraining both of perishable skills and because the best people found other jobs.
He should have delayed construction for a year. The lack of urgency in getting the plans ready is a give away they weren't too concerned about the completion date. He should have had a clause stating he had the right to delay in the event the plans were late.
@@michaeledwards2251 You've apparently never worked for a government contractor. The government is 100% in charge and it doesn't matter how impossible or ridiculous their expectations, the contractor bears all the liability for everything and the government 0%
I would have chosen the Lockheed C-5 Galaxy from the start. It is probably already hardened against EMP. And it can take the weight of all the special protection. And it has the size for whatever is needed. They could even be configured to load and unload a protected limo in and out of the back without the VIP ever getting out, and still have a fairly spacious area in the plane. Further, that area for the President or other VIP could be a module, designed to jettison with parachutes in the event the airplane is struck and is going to go down badly. There could even be explosives to split the plane like an egg if necessary to get that module out. The airplane itself does not even need massive modification, that module could have most of what is needed for protection. Though I still would protect the aircraft with A few inches of Kevlar composites (or similar) on the entire skin, and an inch or more of titanium (or appropriate alloy) shrouding the engines, fuel tanks, and doors to the landing gear. I would also have a redundant flight instrument and control system inside the pod...perhaps automated...so you really don't need all the controls, instruments, chairs, pilots and such, just wires, the computer, and interface.
nate, your narrative totally cracked me up. the idea of the president being airdropped in a limo from a doomsday plane reminds me of dr. strangelove, but i'd guess that movie was well before your time. we might need to drop in tanks and paratroopers to help him get to wherever he would go in the limo.
@@billmcgahey1926 I haven't seen the movie. Nice to have a good laugh, but the President or VIP (and guests) would exit the limo and enter the pod after the door in the back of the plane closes. After that, they can even open the door again and back out the limo to reduce weight before takeoff. The pod is moveable, sliding on bearings and can be jettisoned, and parachute down. This would only likely happen if the airplane was hit, and not able to make a safe landing at a secure airport. All securing cables/chains can be released from within the pod. It would be protected against intense heat, impact of projectiles, and radiation, airtight/watertight and have its own air supply, and good filtration, after that runs out. It would also float just slightly, maybe 6-12" above the waterline. In a pinch, the pod could be put on any C-5 Galaxy, but with reduced capabilities (can't fly the plane from it). This might be useful if you are bringing in a VIP to a country at war.
@@billmcgahey1926 Having undergone MOPP (Anti-Contimination Warfare Apparrel) many, many times, I'd think not having to be exposed to radiation or biological agents would be a rather good idea instead of having to suit up, just to switch planes.
I worked TACMO in the late 80's when we transitioned from the EC-130Q to the E-6. The E-6B is now getting close to end of life and looks like it will be replaced with a stretched C-130. Funny how it has gone full circle and back to the C-130 after some 30 years.
USAF: "Because we want a plane with the highest likelihood of enduring a Doomsday Scenario, and not a plane that has the greatest odds of causing one in the first place..."
You can add in the T-7A and the MQ-25 as fixed price and over budget. The T-7A was bid was billions lower than the next aircraft up. In my world that was called leaving money on the table and it was a lot left on the table. The KC-46A was 10% low, I think the T-7A was percentage wise quite a bit more though a lot less per aircraft.
I have a fond memory of touring one of the E-4 Alpha to Bravo conversions at the E-Systems (now Raytheon) facility in Greenville TX. The purpose was to install the Faraday cage throughout the interior necessary to insulate the plane from EMP. Pretty much everything had to stripped out before they put it all back together. I was there just as they were beginning work on the cage. Norm Augustine, one time Chairman and CEO of Martin Marietta and later Undersecretary of the Army, wrote a book, Augustine’s Laws, first published in 1986. The first edition was mainly a wry take on defense contracting. One of his Laws is, “Fools rush in where incumbents fear to tread.” Boeing shareholders have contributed a considerable amount of money to national defense over the past 30 years, so if they miss this opportunity probably for the best. The money’s necessary for the next generation commercial aircraft.
It’s not Raytheon anymore either… became L3 now L3/Harris. Nevertheless, if they’re not a player in this contract, it’s because they don’t want to be. Heck, they built the E-4’s. I’m sure they would be a good fit. I recall the original E-4 order was for 8 airplanes. Carter came into office and said something like, ‘We don’t need those things.’ It took E-Systems YEARS to get even 4 of them approved. So I’d bet L3/H is all over the bid. You just won’t hear anything about it. They learned their lesson… don’t talk about this kind of thing to ANYBODY you don’t have to, especially elected politicians, lol.
The facility in Greenville Tx is now L3Harris. Lifers at Greenville consider Raytheon’s management of the facility “the dark years” due to their mismanagement of the modification facility.
@@tlevans62it’s L3Harris in Greenville now. Raytheon sold the facility to L3Communication and got out of the rapid modification game. Serria Nevada Corp is bidding to be the primary contractor as they just built a new facility in Dayton Ohio, a stones throw from Write Patterson AFB, HQ Air Force Material Command.
Thanks. I was thinking there had to be overall EMP protection. Given a metallic airframe would presumably act pretty much like a Faraday cage, it would probably be the case that modern composites would definitely be off the menu. How were the cockpit windows protected? I wonder what magnitude of EMP is covered by design. Did they go into the size of warhead and altitude of the airburst designed to maximise the EMP?
NAOC, pronounced nay (as in yeah or nay) oc (as in october) was the bane of my existence as a young Airman during the second bush administration. I was stationed at the closest active USAF base to his ranch, and they would show up whenever he was in Texas. The obligation only plane that caused more disruption was when the START inspectors showed up.
7:20 The A340 immediately comes to mind 9:54 Airbus “Ooh! Ooh!” 🙋🏼♂️ 15:46 “Lockheed” “Sierra Nevada Corportation” “Who?” ….Giant complex it Dayton (Lived near Dayton for years” They do? Shows gigantic complex at DAY “Strange, you would have thought I’d have noticed that”
I think the reason they chose to increase the number was because USN replaced their E-6s with C-130Js, so they need SAOC planes to handle Looking Glass missions as well, just like before they handed over and merged that role with USN TACAMO. up until 90s -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USAF EC-135 = Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO 90s-now -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USN E-6 = Looking Glass + TACAMO future -> USAF SAOC = Nightwatch + Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO
@@matthewgaines10 Your logic is flawed, it's the other way around. Historically, USAF was the one that piggyback THEIR needs onto USN planes. STRATCOM quite explicitly states that USN E-6s are equipped for dual mission, both flying for USN TACAMO staff and for USAF Airborne Command Post battle staff in the Looking Glass role (in place of USAF EC-135). Now with the USN planes potentially being unable to fulfill the task USAF counted on them (because USN isn't necessarily responsible for planning for USAF needs), there is no reason that USAF would not be responsible for planning their own needs. Actually, see SEAD mission - they rely on joint operations now that USAF no longer has dedicated platform with the retirement of EF-111 (and no, F-16CJs are essentially just HARM shooters).
Yea, he seems to think that none of the branches run missions for the other. He'd be shocked to find out that Marines ride on Navy ships regularly and that the USAF flew drones and spy aircraft off of carriers... If it's not a mission the Navy sees as "sexy" like fighter jets they're not going to heavily fight letting another branch take the budget concerns and risk off of them for it.@@nikujaga_oishii
@@matthewgaines10He's right. There are actually two different USAF missions involved. 1) "Looking Glass" is an airborne command post capable of talking to pretty much everything that SAC HQ can talk to, including transmitting valid launch codes to ICBM silos (but not the USN's SSBNs). It started out in EC-135Cs, and when those got retired in the late '90s, the USAF managed to talk the USN into picking up the mission on its E-6Bs (which are also based on the -135), which were also taking on the TACAMO mission, the USN's version of Looking Glass (which can transmit launch codes to subs). 2) "Nightwatch" is a strategic command post for NCA (the President, or whichever survivor is highest on the succession list). It began on the EC-135J, then moved to the E-4. It's probably best to think of it as the "DEFCON 1 Air Force One"; the VC-25 is designed to support peacetime diplomatic missions, and allots a fair bit of space for guests, reporters, Secret Service ground teams, etc, plus a much higher level of comfort. Nightwatch trades all of those frills for more radios and radiomen plus a few generals and enough supplies to keep everybody fed and watered for up to a week in the air. That's why an E-4 usually follows AFO around, just in case. 3) "TACAMO" is the USN's version of "Looking Glass"; instead of talking to ICBM silos, it's designed to talk to SSBNs and carrier groups. The mission is similar, but more spread out over the world. Originally performed by the EC-130Q, which was replaced by the E-6A (later upgraded to B, which also picked up "Looking Glass" missions as a favor to the USAF). The E-6Bs, E-4Bs, and VC-25s have all been needing replacements for some time now; honestly, everything made from a 707 or old-model 747 needs replacing, but the money hasn't been there for decades, and the programs that *have* gotten money have been horrifically mismanaged (see: E-10, P-8, KC-46, VC-25B). As Mentour mentioned, the USAF wanted to go in with the USN on a new plane for all three of the above roles, but there wasn't money for it at the time. The USN has since gone its own way, with a plan to return to C-130s, which will leave "Looking Glass" without a home. That's why the USAF is looking at a larger buy of SAOCs, in order to have one platform that handles both "Nightwatch" and "Looking Glass" missions in order to save money and resources over time, and to ensure that there are always enough airframes available to carry out both missions.
I kept expecting you to say they might be looking at the A-380... but with Emirates looking to scoop up every last one of those ever made, they'd be expensive.
Expensive isn't the issue. With airlines retiring A380s rapidly these days, they could probably get them quite cheaply, likely much cheaper than the 747-8, of which there aren't that many and which few, if any, existing operators are planning to retire. Modifying them to meet the Air Force's requirements and doing so without sharing some of the country's most highly-classified information with foreign entities is the much bigger problem. Also, 100% of the operators are not in the U.S. (or even in the Americas,) which adds more security issues with the acquisition. Also, while the A380 hull isn't nearly as composite-based as the 787 or A350, it's still made much more of composites than the 747, which makes it much more difficult to harden against EMPs. Using a fully-metal frame makes that job far easier.
@@vbscript2 Hmm, interesting thoughts. Composite planes, though, still have faraday cages built into the skin effectively, in the form of wire mesh for lightning conductivity, so I'm not so sure about the emp hardening problem. Also, my understanding isn't that they're being dumped by airlines, but rather that most airlines just didn't buy many, or even any. This is because in the time it took to design and certify it, almost all airlines had shifted focus from hub and spoke to point to point. The few exceptions are airlines in countries that only have one major airport, the key player being Emirates. They begged both Airbus and Boeing to keep making their super-heavies, and both are currently racing to complete stretched versions of their biggest wide-bodies to satisfy that demand. Until that happens, I believe they've been buying up any and all retired 380s to maintain and grow their fleet... Which I would assume would drive up their prices. As for security concerns, I'm not sure I follow. Technical specs are technical specs and while it may be nice to be able to consult with Airbus engineers in the modification process, there are many ways around that, from just trusting that the modifying company can figure it out to hiring former engineers who worked on it. Remember, _most_ of the top engineers who worked on the most top-secret project of all time were not only foreign, but came directly from our primary enemy. I doubt recruiting assets from _friends_ would be considered any more risky than that... As for security concerns in the planes themselves, no airliner has primary flight systems networked to any external comms in any way, to prevent hackers from causing enormous tragedies, so I don't see the issue there either. Which just leaves pride and a desire for "made in the USA" stickers. While I'm sure that would be an absolute deal-breaker for Air Force One, I'm less sure for non-diplomatic planes. Ah. But then I just though of a much more insurmountable problem: politics. No way would Congress approve the appropriation for such a thing from outside the country. Not enough pork involved, haha! So yeah... Probably not. Why not a large cargo plane though? Surely they're plenty big enough, and some have even more engines.
The US government pressuring Boeing to build aircraft at a loss goes back at least to the Boeing model 299 that would later become the now legendary B-17 heavy bomber of World War 2 fame. That project almost didn't happen several times due to the Army Air Corp demanding a lower per unit price. Thankfully a compromise was reached. Given that military contracts always seem to have budget over runs now days and with what's happened to Boeing with the 737 Max I think Boeing is just trying to cut their losses and not set themselves up to fail.
The real problem is Boeing has mismanaged the both the Air Force One contract and the Air Force Tanker contract. FOD, errors, and non-responsiveness. Add on top of that, they originally lost the tanker contract to Airbus due to because of a corruption scandal, sued to get it back, then performed poorly once they got it back. Boeing used to perform on defense contracts but due to it’s current management, seems to not be able to get themselves together.
@@bigd4366 Maybe. The government is notorious for introducing change after change after change. That gets expensive quickly. Don't know if that is what happened with AF1 or not. The tanker visual system has been a bottleneck from the start. Eyeballs worked just fine on KC-135s.
One of my high school english teachers said "boys show that you are educated and don't use crude words" and gave us examples like "That man is the south end of a horse going north". I will add your "animal sourced fertilizer hits the fan" to the list. I love it. I also enjoy your informative videos, thanks.
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These were temporarily based out of my hometown recently while their home base was going through major renovations. It was pretty cool seeing the most important aircraft in the world in person while they were coming in for landings. (For whatever reason, I never saw them take off.)
The 4 engines aren't just for redundancy ,they need the extra engines for the electrical power they can generate. They are also probably nervous about retrofitting a plane they no longer build and keeping it airworthy for the next 40 years....there are a lot of hidden costs in that.
@@cjmillsnun The thing I don't think you realize is that the newer models of 747 can't be EM hardened to Air Force Standards , so they would have to take an existing 747-200 , which will be at least 32 years old , rebuild it and then keep parts and technical advice for the plane available for the next 40 years. The 747-200 has been out of production since 1991, and there are only 19 left, six of which are operated by the Air Force. I don't think Boeing wants to get locked into maintaining parts and training pilots Engineers and technicians for just six planes for the next 40 years. They want the Air Force to replace their 747-200s , not acquire another one.
@@T_Mo271 Sure, but adding new APUs to an airframe isn't the easiest thing to do. They would need to be mounted in a place where they can both get air intake and have a place to expel their exhaust. Which means they need to be outside the pressure vessel. There's not a lot of unused space outside of the pressure vessel in a 747 (or virtually any other commercial airliner.) Easier to just use the main engines. If you didn't just use the main engines, you'd likely end up having to add pods under the wings for the new APUs anyway, which rather defeats the purpose of not just using the main engines and would require significant design costs.
I retired from the AF 2 years ago and because of my organization’s specific expertise I was involved in the SAOC program and I can assure you that whatever aircraft is finally selected it will not be an Airbus to replace the E4-B …👽👽👽
The US shooting themselves in the foot once again by not choosing the best, just so they can say it's made in america. I swear if the other superpowerbloc wasn't a bunch of murderous dictators.....
doesn't matter - it's the taxpayers' money, so it's unlimited, and spending doesn't need to have any regard for efficiency. There is zero accountability.
@@charlestoast4051 that’s not true at all. In fact, it’s the opposite. The reason Boeing withdrew was because of the requirement by law for the DoD to only sign fixed price contracts. That regulation was created by Congress to prevent projects from runaway costs and save the government money and improve efficiency. If money was unlimited and they didn’t care about efficiency, do you think they’d be flying 50 year old aircraft? Believe it or not, the budget is not unlimited and the U.S. military has a huge lists of financial obligations that don’t allow it to just blow money whenever and wherever it wants.
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@@FlyByWire1 And that fixed price sequence is biting boeing in the rear big time on the new af-1's. They have to strip and gut the entire airframe and rebuild it almost from scratch. Their hindsight is 20-20, not going to do that again. Taking a -400 or 8i down this path is in the same boat, you have to take it all apart and put it back together again.
@ Wait.... Isn't this somewhat normal for aviation? I honestly don't know, but for some reason I recall there being a 5 year overhaul or something for commercial aircraft that basically strips them to the frame and rebuilds them.
@ yep and that’s the hardest part about fixed price contracts. There will always be unforeseen costs that will arise in the project, we can’t predict the future. So whoever wins the contract will either have to come up with a plan to prevent that or just take the loss as Boeing has on previous fixed price contacts.
A340-500 would be interesting choice. Though considering how hard US fought to replace working A330MRTT with non-functioning KC46, they probably won't choose any non-american aircraft.
AF insisted on fixed price contract and Boeing has lost a bunch on AF-1 replacement and the KC-46 under that type of contract. Really, Boeing took themselves out of it.
Love these videos! I know the second requirement was "modification of a second-hand aircraft", but why wouldn't modification of existing C-17 Globemasters (or even modification of C-5 Galaxy's) work here? They're 4-engined and tried-and-tested in the military.
I initially thought the same thing, but the certification process would be cost prohibitive and it's doubtful you could get either airframe certified as designed regardless of modifications made. In fact the modifications required to convert it from military transport to flying command post full of personnel and equipment may make the certification process even more impossible.
I bet it is easier to start from scratch and with an airframe that will have greater longevity with the newest C-17 and C-5 eight and 30 years old respectively.
@@vanguard9067 There would have to be a business case to build such a plane. A clean sheet design through certification is a decade-long process and there would have to be more than 10 planes built (think several hundred minimum) for this to make any sense. The Airbus A380 is considered a business failure because the program lost money since the plane didn't sell i the numbers expected or required to meet break-even revenue. The A-380 couldn't be used as a freighter so it's market was limited to just passenger airlines. A clean-sheet design for a maximum of 10 airframes is a complete non-starter. And there is no current market for 4 engine super-jumbo airframes or Boeing and Airbus would still be building them. And there isn't enough demand to cover the production costs of the few freighters ordered and sold every year.
@@andrewg.spurgeon1736 I totally agree about a clean sheet design. I think ultimately they’ll scrounge up some lower mileage 747’s and some contractor will build out the doomsday planed]s, I have a hard time believing any contractor will do the work FFP because the government does not have a firm set of requirements.
Plus, 380’s can’t even operate out of ‘normal’ airports. Sure, military bases ‘might’ work, but these things go lots more places than big air bases. Personally, I knew early on in the 380 program it would be a big bust. It has NO secondary market (the size thing again… it would be a decent freighter if it fit anywhere). It simply has zero operational flexibility. The 747 can pretty much go to ANY airport that will support its weight. With air re-fueling capability, it can operate light enough to go places you wouldn’t believe. I wouldn’t rule out Boeing building 8-10 more -800’s for something like this. As long as they don’t get into that goofy fixed bid world, who knows!? Disclaimer: I’m not a big Airbus fan. But I will admit, if the 380 was as monstrously successful as the 747, I’d love it. The 747 was a huge home run for Boeing, especially as an aftermarket freighter, flying billboard, delight to fly, passenger loving, President hauling American success story. It has outlived its economic usefulness in the passenger market but still has great value in others (as seen here).
How likely is it that the usaf would do a deal with a European company for a project such as this, when there is American contenders willing and able to do the job, I suspect they would be more inclined to keep it local where possible.
Assuming the target airframe is a Boeing 747, why does it have to be the 747-8i passenger variant? Why couldn’t the “doomsday” retrofit platform be tailored around the much more plentiful 747-8F airframe? I mean, the current E4B’s don’t seem to require the stretched upper deck fuselage type. And besides Boeing and Sierra Systems, there are other possibilities than just Airbus. Lockheed would certainly be capable of an undertaking such as this.
I assume the 5 mile long antenna that sticks out the back is for low frequency communication, which requires a longer antenna. Low frequency has several advantages such as being able to communicate to submarines underwater.
2 questions: What is the role of subcontractors? What are opportunities for service business from related Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul? It may be that Boeing just wants to avoid the obligations (and impacts on its accounting picture) that come with being a prime contractor, and are happy to perform major subcontractor roles, with Sierra Nevada or whoever.
The use of FFP (Fixed Firm Price) contracts was intended for use with production items where risk was minimal and process improvements could drive cost savings. Some aggressive government procurement agents got the bright idea to use FFP on high risk development programs. The contractor is screwed. If you bid the cost of the real risk, you price yourself out of the work. If you bid without covering the risk in your cost, you lose money. Boeing had some poor management after the McD merger who signed up for huge FFP contract that lost billions. Refusing high risk FFP demonstrates a return to more responsible business management.
The next “Doomsday” aircraft fleet will be based on 747, no matter if it will be completed by Boeing or not. And Boeing is poised to make a lot of money out of it in either case scenario. They just don’t want to shoot themselves in the foot by committing to a fixed price low volume and high complexity contract such as this one.
That BIG Antonov was destroyed early in the invasion by Russia. SHAME! Ukraine had great capabilities, but their infrastructure to do this no longer exists.
Having worked at Boeing (and several other major prime contractors of the USAF), their typical strategy is to bid low and get additional funding, even for FFPPIF contracts, since the AF is notorious at changing requirements mid-project, which gives the prime opportunities to add funding. Primes figure that it's in the gov't interest to keep several major prime competitors around (aka BA, NGC, LM) by spreading contracts around, so they can get away with it. Looks like the GAO finally got serious at enforcing FFPPIF to keep the primes honest, which is LONG overdue. (Random aside - Boeing's winning bid was ~50% of another competitor for a major UAV contract ~5 years ago, looks like they'll have to eat the cost of that one too... lol)
@@johnstreet797 Or a joint/partial bid together with SNC, where Boeing's responsibility is limited to eg. the procurement and refurbishing of the planes. This would allow SNC to be entirely focused on the Upgrade and Modification process...
The replacement for the NAOC E4B will probably continue as a 747-8 sourced commercially like the Air Force One replacement but the primary contractor will likely be a specialty prime like L3 with Boeing as a subcontractor to offer its expertise on the 747. This essentially a way for Boeing to be intimately involved with engineering & integration while minimize its financial risk.
what would really be interesting is if maybe the Air force considered the C5M or C17 as possible solutions. They’re already militarized to the highest standard with midair refueling, rugged landing gear for unimproved runway n temp airfields plus buckets of spare parts & frames for ages to come & they could easily be further modified for EMP etc for its mission set. So essentially it’d be just civilizing the interiors for conference rooms, coms stations, berthings, briefing rooms, vvip accommodations etc.
Let's be real: the Starliner spacecraft was a self-inflicted headache, primarily because of all the steps Boeing skipped in an effort to rush something into service, despite being granted a huge sum of money from NASA over and above what SpaceX was awarded to produce their Crew Dragon... essentially, 20% more money to do the same job. Despite this, multiple Crew Dragons have now flown multiple times, with multiple crews aboard them, while Starliner has yet to successfully complete a single uncrewed mission. The bitter pill is, Boeing really have no one but themselves to blame, and between this & the MAX and all their other issues, no one trusts Boeing to get ANYTHING right at this point unless someone is actively looking over Boeing's shoulder. @MentourNow! This is my opinion based on what I have seen & heard in the industry in which I work. Perhaps you have something to add to the discussion....?
Airbus A380 is the obvious choice as I believe it has a bar on board. After destroying the world, the crew will need a place to unwind and relax until their fuel runs out, whereupon they will descend gliding but pleasantly pissed into the burning hellscape below.
Airbus could provide a couple of options, the a340-600 and the mighty a380. However, should the Americans wish to keep the project in-house, there's a left field candidate in the C17 Globemaster III, which could be repurposed for the task. I hear there are a fair few hibernating in various storage facilities around the US.
I was thinking globemaster as an alternative, they're just old airframes but they are built as military vehicles so have some advantages. I think used airframe is simply because 747 is out of production. Any airframe more than a handful of years old is going to have a shorter life and bigger maintenance requirements so 747-8 does seem like the intended aircraft.
I do not understand why Boing does not accept a fixed-price contract. If you offer a fixed price, you just add enough buffer so the risk of cost overruns is low, and you have the chance of making good profit if you manage it well. The only reason when you don't accept a fixed price is if the customer is unable to specify what he wants to a degree that you are able to calculate the costs or if your company is just unable or unwilling to properly calculate development cost. Also keep in mind that we are talking about modifying existing aircraft, not the development a new aircraft, so calculating the cost should be possible with sufficient certainty. Also, if you generally manage to calculate costs development costs properly on average, the occasional cost overrun will be ok because you also will occasionally run unexpectedly high profits. You will only be in trouble if you methodically underestimate costs. Boeing seems to be run neither by engineers nor by businessmen or even accountants, but marketing people living in a made-up reality who fucked up multiple times and now seem scared to do anything now.
That's true, to a point. Boeing had a similar assumption with the VC-25Bs (next Air Force 1) but then they had to modify it to current FAA certification standards... if they have to do the same with these planes, costs become a lot less clear-cut, as I explain in the video.
Harder to sell a high number and even if you win the bid then you still have to deal with inevitable negotiation. Fixed price contracts are inherently risky for the bidder any way you slice it.
@@MentourNow As a defense contractor, if a customer said I had to certify to FAA I'd tell the customer (politely) to go pound sand. That's a gigantic black hole of financial risk. I worked on the FAA board for certifying NVGs for use in civilian cockpits, and it was largest nightmare of bureaucratic red tape, delays, and inability to make a damn decision I have ever had the misfortune to be involved with.
Maybe also an older design, but I think the Lockheed-Martin C5 Galaxy could also be a posible basis for a Doomsday-plane. At least Lockheed-Martin has a design that they could rework into a Doomsday-plane.
Don't know much about it, but that is what I was wondering. Whether an existing military cargo aircraft could be a contender. Especially given that support/ parts from the commercial side for the 747 will be reducing considerably over this aircrafts lifetime, particularly if it will be anything like the current e4
They haven’t made any airframes in decades, not to mention they are very valuable for the Air Force. There are a lot of ex civilian 747-8 about to be available, and they’re all new.
You both misunderstand the point I tried to make, that Lockheed Martin and Skunkworks have made some crazy planes over the years. Boeing doesn’t make airframes also, thay haven’t for years, all airframes are made by external companies. And the C-5 Galaxy might look a lot like a 747, but it a complete diverent design than the 747. In I believe around 2010 C-5 Galaxies where completely overhauled, with new avionics, cleaner engines that burn less fuel. These kind of program’s take time, so I wouldn’t be surprised if there are still some C5’s to be undergo a complete overhaul.
@@benmac940 no. C-5s will be in service for many more decades, but they haven’t been produced since the 70’s. It’s extremely expensive to develop a whole new airframe.
Presumably these planes have a Faraday Cage arrangement built into the interior of the fuselage which should prevent the effects of EMPs from Nukes. They would need something of this kind because these things are packed with modern electronics, even if the avionics are analogue.
A fuselage is already a Faraday cage (even if there are quite a lot of holes that limits the upper working frequency). To harden a plane against EMP you need to ensure that every piece of the fuselage make a good electrical contact all around with the frame and with the other fuselage pieces (the classic glue is not electrical conductive, you need something else to ensure the contact) and you need also to plug any holes to avoid EMP ingress (for example, the windows are made with electrical insulating material and, even if the doors are made with metal, they not ensure a proper electrical contact all around the seam so are still considered as holes; a special conductive gasket placed all around the seam is required to made the joint RF-tight). Finally, you cannot run a cable outside a faraday cage otherwise it will carry the RF energy inside (the outside portion of the cable act as an antenna to pick-up the RF enrgy and the inside portion of the cable also act as an antenna to radiate the RF energy inside the shielded environment!)... all cables that runs outside the fuselage must be filtered and shielded properly. In any case....... a Faraday cage that blocks 100% of the radiation is almost impossible to build (specially if there are size, weight and strict cable management requirements!) so a little part of the RF radiation is supposed to seep inside and the electronic equipments are supposed to be hardened and withstand this noise. BTW, hardening a devices that uses low integration is simple because the bigger is the component the higher is the working voltage and the lower is the input impedance... and the higher is the working voltage and the lower is the input impedance the higher should be the RF pulse in order to generate an issue. Also, you can't damage what doesn't exist. Analog equipments (but also simple digital hardwired equipments) contains less but bigger components than modern equipments (that may contains millions of microscopical transistors enclosed in a very small chip). I work as electronic designer for medical devices..... i'm used to design devices with quite a lot computer-aided bells and whistles but for the safety and emergency part of the device i prefer to stick with plain old analog electronics, plain old simple and hard wired digital electronics and even electromechanics too!
Out of all the Military tactical ground vehicles I can think of, none of them would pass safety standards to be sold to the general public for road use as a new vehicle. Why in the would you require a few custom planes to pass FAA requirements is beyond me.
@@msromike123 I agree you there and there’s also there’s a federal law that will forbid the US Air Force buying European made aircraft to protect our command structure
The 1990 film, "By Dawn's Early Light," is a great film showing the roles of the E-4B NEACP, and the E-3A, Looking Glass, and how they interact. One of the best, most realistic, films showing the 1980's Air Force.
There are not enough of the A340-500 in airworthy condition left. And, as mentioned in another comment, the is absolut zero chance than any non-US made aircraft will ever be used for the signature functions of the USAF, like e.g. AF1, the doomsday A/C or even the tanker fleet. Even if a foreign airframer would win the bidding process, there would be massive interference from congress, even if that would mean that the USAF would get an inferior solution. It has happened before, and it will happen again. To think that will ever change is downright delulu.
@@MattBlue I guess I figured the production run for the -500 and -600 was greater, having seen a few around here at IAD. As for the rest of your comments - Airbus won the tanker contract that beat out the KC-46 (as mentioned in this video) but Boeing cried foul, and with their massive lobbying power in various branches of govt, they got their way. To say it's impossible isn't true though. And as far as that notion ever changing being "delusional" - I'm sure the folks at Lockheed know a bit more about this stuff than you and I, they thought it would be worth it to bid with Airbus on the next tanker acquisition. Of course they pulled out, but Airbus is still in it (likely because the USAF is absolutely furious with the KC-46 acquisition process so far.) The MRTT is (and was) already flying, and offered a much more advanced and cost-effective solution.
@@EstorilEm I stand by my comment. It won't happen. The "buy american" approach will always remain, and any Euro spent on an offer to the american government by AIrbus is a waste of money. I don't think that the next tanker contract will go to Airbus under any circumstances, even if the competive offer would be superior. If I'm proven wrong and the contract goes to Airbus, then we'll talk again.
You can build "newer" avionics packages and systems to withstand EMP bursts, but as you say, it is extremely difficult, time consuming, and costly. Some of the wiring is double-shielded, the instructions are sophisticated, and some people just flat out don't build it correctly.
I think the 747-8 is the best possible answer here by quite a margin. The only other A/C that come to my mind as being remote possibilities as alternatives, to me anyway, would be either converted C-17's (if they are even large enough to accommodate the myriad systems involved) or extremely late build 747-400's. I do not believe The USAF would ever consider handing this project to Airbus although, hypothetically, an an A340-600 or A380 could likely do the job.
2:40: "If the animal source fertilizer would really hit the fan." lol lol -- not only do you have superb information presented in a way that would make some Hollywood productions jealous, you do it with a wonderfully whimsical twist on words. What amazing videos, I've been a fan ever since I watched my first video of yours.
While that sounds great, it probably would not be the military's preferred aircraft. For starters, it would limit the airports and air force bases that the doomsday plane can operate out of. Some airports that were able to accommodate the 747 had to be modified to handle A380s. Also, if the military is willing to use it, and if there are plenty of airports and airbases that can accommodate the a380 doomsday plane, there is the matter of relying on a manufacturer headquartered in Europe and with a good chunk of the assembly line located in Europe, or else outside the US. Given it's a critical and also highly confidential project, relying on a European manufacturer is probably another downside the military will see in an Airbus-made doomsday plane
The Airforce wants to pay around $8 Billion for around 8-10 aircrafts? LOL. By the time the project is done, it would be more than double the cost. Boeing or any other competitor will lose billions and billions on this project on a fixed price contract. The Airforce is trying to nickel and dime, but every one of their projects has became a dismal failure when it comes to cost control. This is not only on Boeing projects, but most military contracts with every other aerospace vendor. If I was Boeing, I wouldn't just walk away from the project, but RUN!
Merry Christmas. Right for Boeing to stay away from this in it's current form. Is the US gov in the mood to sign a fixed price contract with enough headroom to cover possible losses? What happens when they take a few planes planes now and ask for another batch down the road when prices have changed? I have a big problem with using a plane that is no longer in production too. The days of 4 engine airliners are over. They should accept that now and buy planes that are in current production.
It’s good to see that Boeing finally recognized the USAF is NOT the only 400 lbs gorilla in the negotiating room, and finally decided that walking away from a deal that’s not a win-win proposition is the smartest thing to do. Good for them…
Could the winning bidder use 747-400's instead of 747-8's? Or do we think there is there some kind of requirement about maximum age or hours on the airframes? 747-400's should be much easier to acquire, I would think.
Yes, they probably could. Many people seem to think that the plane manufacturer is the only one who can win the contract when that’s far from true. There are many companies, SNC for example, that are very capable of acquiring the aircraft’s and then reengineering them to add all the necessary components.
The only obvious modern alternatives to the 747-800 are the Airbus A380, and or the now retired, but possibly still usable A340s. I don't see the USAF moving to those planes due to their foreign design, and the supply chain for them(i.e. for spare parts supply) is on present within the USAF. They do, however, fulfill the 4 engine requirement. I know the A380 is supposed to be going back into production, so the actual spare parts supply availability should not be an issue, the 747-800 has been out of production for a couple of years, and is widely used in the air freight industry, so I don't think parts availability is a problem for that plane, either. The USAF is already flying the VC-25s, so that supply chain already exists to some extent, but they don't fly any Airbus aircraft of any type, so that supply chain would have to be established from the ground up.
Boeing has been reminded that the Government can be a terrible customer. This type of project is never offered to the bidders as a finished spec. It will often require systems that don't currently exist or force the contractor to deal with never ending change requests. New tech and change orders are huge drivers of cost over runs. I suspect Boeing is no longer interested in funding the Government's acquistion incompetence.
Add to that the frequent rotation the.. crap.. now I can't recall what the people who actually manage the contract are.. but anyway, they often have a 3-5 year rotation, so the people in charge of deciding what the government 'really' wants are not the same people who wrote the original spec.
A government needs to be able to require changes made to keep up. It's not that they want to be bad customers but military demands are vastly different from commercial aircrafts.
Problem with alternative aircraft will probably be a Made in America clause in the military specs. This will preclude the use of Airbus. Just don't know who has 8 or so "spare" 747's lying around...
I think the obvious other candidate for a 4-engine widebody is building them off of the A380 frame, if any of those are on the market used. Issue being, if they're looking for fixed-price contracts on 747-8s I cannot imagine the USAF wants to fork over the money for the larger, more modern airframe, even if it might have some advantages.
@@misterXPlayereasy just offer current owners an offer they can't refuse. Offer Atlas air $30 million more than what they paid few months ago for new/last 747 delivery they would do it in a heart beat.
No one should accept a fixed-price contract for something that isn't fully understood. Such a deal would require a large safety margin, which is directly in conflict with competitive bidding.
Esp when they can change requirements or make new ones up at any time. One of the things that really makes these contracts such a nightmare is that on the government side their is commonly a 3 year rotation, meaning the people you start negation with often are not the people who you end on, and are even less likely to be the people that implement the contract.
After losing over one billion dollars on the latest two Air Force One aircraft, Boeing's board of directors is critical of the companies ability to financially manage these defense projects.
This is what happens when you put bean counters to lead companies like Boeing. Bring the engineers back to the decision makers of budgeting for R&D and suppliers and subcontractors selection process.
You probably won't see this comment since I was mostly off TH-cam during Christmas and it's nearly a week later now, but I used to work for a company that depended on government contracts and actually getting paid was a nightmare. The US government paid whenever they felt like paying but if we missed a deadline -- even by hours and even if it was because we'd been unable to pay our supplies because the government hadn't paid us -- the penalties were massive. It was a constant cycle of lay-offs followed by mandatory overtime followed by more layoffs. Not many companies have the cash reserves to produce all the product before getting paid for the early deliveries and I can't blame Boeing for wanting out of that cash-flow headache.
A to your final question: Clearly both. My guess on the most likely future is that Boeing takes T&M or shared cost sub-contracts accounting for a plurality of the funds from this.
I believe the reason they want 8-10 planes is that they are also replacing the Airborne Launch Control Centres (ALCC) which currently use the 707 based E6 Mercury aircraft. I image they want one replace both platforms with one type of airframe.
@@ahndeux You're the one wordsmithing. Calling it a converted 767 is disingenuous. That implies Boeing / the USAF is buying civilian 767's to convert into tankers. That is simply not true. They are brand new aircraft having never served a different mission. They are purpose built tankers- NOT conversions. Business Insider has to make it digestible for simpletons like yourself. Business insider is not the end-all-be-all when it comes to Aeronautical information.
Suspect the mods on used aircraft even more expensive than a purpose built craft. Pulling and upgrading all hardware allone would add huge cost. Hardening the airframe would be easier in production than with a refit.
Modified C-17 would require the government to ditch the FAA certification requirement. No way that would happen for a C-17 for so few airframes. Especially since the C-17 is made by... wait for it... Boeing.
It looks like Boeing is possibly getting really business smart. The airplanes used for this project could be Boeing 747’s with all the equipment, technology and parts provided by Boeing. A big revenue opportunity. The bid, build and production could be provided by a secondary company possibly Sierra Nevada Corporation (SNC) with support from Boeing. This way Boeing would still get the benefits of the contract without the financial risk or at least having to tie up large amounts of capital for a long period of time before a return. The biggest win, Boeing would still have the prestige of being the main supplier to the us military and even better preventing their main competitors from gaining that prestige. Happy Christmas to you Petter and all your viewers.
I would say the next Doomsday Plane will be another 747 variant and that is the Boeing 747-400. With many airlines retired the -400 since 2010s and covid, i think the US Air Force should choose the -400 as the new Doomsday aircraft because that is actually makes perfect sense in my opinion
Do they need to be commercial planes? I kept thinking about the Lockheed C-5b Galaxy during the video. Airforce One would probably need to be a non military plane as you probably do not want to send an aggressive military message arriving in a bomber at a peaceful conference. But the Doom plane I see no problem :) Or the C-17 Globemaster, even tho it is a little smaller is much newer (some are less than 10 years old) and there have been plenty of them produced.
@@georgegherghinescu Maybe they're not considering the C-5 and C17 since they're designed to be airlifters. They're not really meant to stay up in the air for prolonged periods of time, they're just meant to get stuff from A to B.
@@jameshannay7376 Have you just described a passenger airplane with that 'They're not really meant to stay up in the air for prolonged periods of time, they're just meant to get stuff from A to B.'
That is easy to answer...a Boeing product (plane) itself is doomsday if you get on it. If the plan would be to escape doomsday, why would you want to fly in a plane that in turn will fly you into the ground or literally start coming apart at the seams???
Boeing won the KC-46 thanks to political intervention after Airbus had won. And despite Airbus winning basically any tanker contract at that time and Boeing not even having a proper plane to compete, they changed the parameters after Airbus had won to help Boeing. It’s just one of those ways to get subsidies into Boeing.
And if Airbus didn’t cave and make the Europrop the only available engine for the A400M maybe we might have purchased a few (especially considering we already use RR for our C-130J’s), so don’t sit there and act like Europe doesn’t root for the home team.
@@superskullmaster two completely different things. And of course you can have some home advantage, but this was an extremely strange case in which it was visible that the whole competition was a joke. Btw, the A400M engine was a new development and there were no available engines with that type of output. The A400M has twice the capacity of the C-130 and that’s hardly comparable to the A400M.
@@tobiwan001 In 2003, around the 30 April decision deadline, Airbus Chief Executive Noel Forgeard told reporters that the P&WC proposal was 20 percent cheaper than for the TP400, and that he would have chosen to give the contract to P&WC, but government officials requested an extension for the companies to revise their bids. Before the final bids were modified, sources claimed that P&WC's offering, which had a European production percentage of 75 percent, was lower by USD$400 million.[6] On 6 May, amidst pressure from European political and business leaders, Airbus awarded a USD$3.4 billion contract to Europrop to produce 900 engines for the A400M, despite accusations of European protectionism.[7] A member of Europrop claimed after the decision that the TP400 contract would only increase the costs of the USD$22.7 billion A400M program by about 1-2 percent compared to if the PW180 had been selected.
I can see why Boeing would want to avoid fixed bid. The requirements are fraught with uncertainty, such as rerouting all the wiring to fit current FAA requirements, while simultaneously maintaining analog controls to maximize resiliency.
Boeing has for years grown fat on goverment cost+ contracts where they were Rewarded for cost overruns and delays because the goverment would pay for all of it. There was no incentive to be efficent at all. Once the Feds decided they'd had enough of getting fleeced by various companies, they started implementing fixed cost contracts. Boeing failed to properly adjust and so they ran them like the goverment would pay for it all anyway and pikachu faced when the gov said no. I think boeing is either looking to get another cost+ contract or they genuinely realize they can't do this kind of work due to how poorly their overall project management works.
What about a re-purposed C-5 Galaxy? Almost the same size + 4 engines and the high wing design could accommodate a larger engine. The countermeasures package will need a major reconfiguring, but doable.
Optic fibre for the cable runs. Multiple redundant digital controls and hardened control modules. Expensive to develop and more expensive to get certified. Keep in mind that FADEC runs modern engines. Hardening that alone is not trivial. I doubt that $8bn would cover a "proper" development. There will have to be compromises in performance and reliability to leave to profit. Then there is always the hope of ongoing support contracts, beyond the initial supply.
Since the contract is calling for the use of 2nd hand, 4-engine jets, there are actually quite a few defense contractors that could do it. It's less of an aircraft acquisition than a systems integration contract. Northrop could do it. L3Harris (which has done a LOT of this type work on AFSOC aircraft). Lock-Mart. It's the kind of job L3 would have taken, and maybe subbed some to Lockheed at least before Harris bought them out.
Interesting how a few years ago Airbus bought 4 380s back from an airline. 6 more more could easily be snapped up right now - just a few thoughts thanks for the video Mentour and have a lovely boxing day
@@snorttroll4379 well it was traditional for the king or queen in the UK to give boxes back to people who did service in the year. Its also been used by big landowners in the same vein back in the day. So a nice thankyou in a way.
Go to sponsr.is/cs_mentournow_1223 and use code MENTOURNOW to save 25% off today. Thanks to Curiosity Stream for sponsoring today’s video.
I subscribed 2 years consecutively 2022-24. Trying different things out.
You definitely get the contract for the best explanation of the president's doomsday aircraft in my opinion , you have the facts to back up your statements
Comac C929🐸
2:40 That was a creative way to say the word which I didnt have anticipated XD
Can I offer a subject for a consideration for a future video? The proposals for the Concorde successor The Aerospatiale ATSF/BAE Alliance. A series of SST proposals from the 1980s-90 that if built would have resulted in an SST with a 200-250 seating capacity.
"Animal sourced fertilizer hitting the fan" oh that is a good one. I am so stealing that from you, Petter!
Shit ... I was going to ...
@@Hans-gb4mv Hahaha🤪🤣
Should have been "Animal sourced fertilizer hitting the circular rotating bladed device"
I'm definitely going to make a shirt design featuring this.
@@steveweidig5373or "ventilation apparatus"
Consider this:
As Petter described, Boeing is on record as having “identified” existing 747’s suitable for the contract.
I could very easily believe that not only have they “identified” them, but *have options on them*.
Which would mean that when Sierra Nevada (or whoever)gets the contract, Boeing will be in a very strong negotiating position as a SUBCONTRACTOR to the contract winner. All without having to accept fixed-price terms from the government. I think they may have played this just right.
Heck, even if they don’t have options on the airframes, they probably expect to pick up subcontractor work, without the fixed price risk.
Boeing is notorious about not being able to deliver anything on time, and nowhere near a fixed price. Petter mentioned some examples too.
You, as a company with a fixed price contract toward the state and bearing all the responsibility, would you subcontract them?
So Boeing lost the Project Sunrise Contest for Qantas. Rumor was that they offered the 777-200LR as a loaner, to be replaced by the 777X. They would then sell the 777-200LR as converted freighters to UPS or FEDEX.
I guarantee Boeing would offer Lufthansa, Korean, or UPS good discounts on the 777X to sell their 747-8’s. SNC doesn’t have that same bargaining chip. So, they’re going to pay a premium or go 747-400.
I didn't consider your scenario, but I think you're right. Boeing knows what they're doing. :)
And likely warned current owners they will not look favourably on them in the future if they sell to someone else.
I suspect Boeing took themselves “out” of the bidding because they wanted the contract to be more flexible given their experience modifying aircraft (specifically the new air force one). They would probably be happy to come back if the “fixed price” terms were modified. Only time will tell if that happens.
Because with all that experience, they still can't figure out how much it costs to modify one? 😂 Oh yeah I forgot, all the capable engineers are gone.
Maybe they'll modify it and have it fly right into the ocean... Then blame the pilots. Lol
@@Timpon_DorzThings were changing and have been changing since the start of the project. They're engineers, not mind readers or miracle workers.
roger that
@@jeffhaggarty9879 sorry you never heard of the term extras on the job. Let me know when you grow up and we'll have a conversation.
You remember that Boeing moved to Chicago in order not to meet those engineers? @@jeffhaggarty9879
Militarized A380 would be amusing.
There’s also the LM-100J from Lockheed Martin (C-130J commercial) that could also work. The Navy is replacing their E-6s with modified C-130Js so it’s not like a turboprop can’t meet the demand.
I can’t see a turbo prop working. This aircraft needs to keep up with the VC-25 and other jets. Plus the C-130 is super slow compared to a 747.
the reason why they chose to increase fleet size was probably be because USN chose to go with C-130, note that turboprop has never met the demand for Nightwatch/Looking Glass missions, unlike TACAMO which had traditionally been C-130s during the cold war
up until 90s -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USAF EC-135 = Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO
90s-now -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USN E-6 = Looking Glass + TACAMO
future -> USAF SAOC = Nightwatch + Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO
Aside from being ponderous and slow, the C--130 is not even remotely big enough to fill the roll required. The C-17 and C-5 are big enough, but not likely to successfully meet the certification process requirements. They will basically have to use a converted 747 just by the requirements laid out. Unfortunately they aren't being manufactured anymore, so used airframes are also in the mix. One also can't imagine the US Air Force procuring European made airframes, thus Airbus won't make the cut either. Just not going to happen.
that's what i was thinking. or maybe the Galaxy. Should be cheaper, isn't it?
Not gonna happen.
See the USAF Tanker debacle - even if you win the competition, the US is not gonna let a European company supply a mainstay of its operations, even if that means buying an inferior aircraft years later than they wanted them.
Another issue for the 2 engine airframe is electrical power. All that comm. gear takes a lot of electrical power.
A secondary APU might be installed as a backup to provide extra electrical power, but that would add to the weight of the aircraft and an expensive redesign of the airframe to accommodate the unit.
Nonsense. Apu will boost
Shame we don't have the L-1011 anymore. A repowered Tristar would have the redundancy, range, capacity and with 3 engines, sufficient electrical power.
@@michaelplunkett8059 A missile strike to the center engine would cause loss of rudder, rear pressure bulkhead, or even the entire tail section. I doubt DoD would accept either trijet design due to this risk.
This is not a problem at all.
On the 4 engined aircraft requirement by the DOD i only see the A340 as an alternative to the 747.
The A340 is a relative young airframe, lots of them are available , relative cheap to purchase and they were designed to fly long distances.
That one also has the benefit that it could theoraticly cruise on 2 of the 4 (modern CFM leap) engines for even longer military missions.
On the other hand a non US build aircraft maybe a big nono for the DOD.
the A340 is a crap plane.
Also, did you listen to the video? They require an FAA civil certification of the platform which does not exist for an A340 equipped with LEAP engines. There is absolutely no way that Airbus and CFM would underwrite the certification of an A340 NEO for 10 airframes for the US DoD. It makes absolutely no sense.
@@charlottelanvin7095you’re saying absolute nonsense the A340 600 is an absolute beast of an aircraft pilots say that it’s too powerful sometimes lmao get your facts straight
What about US modified? Airbus has a big manufacturing plant in Alabama.
@@charlottelanvin7095why would you equip and A340 with LEAP engines. The A340-500/-600 have RR Trent 500 engines which are nearly twice as powerful as the CFM-56’s
I really hope this comment is sarcastic. The airbus A340 is literally one of the weakest airplanes in history. It takes almost an hour to even get to your cruising altitude because the engines are so weak. The engines were designed for the airbus a320. Of course with them being weaker, they thought adding 2 extra would help. While other aircrafts get to their cruising altitude in around 30 mins, the A340 takes 45 mins to over an hour depending on how heavy. If you were to take these statistics and add all the extra weight of what Air Force One needs, it could take 2 hours just to get to cruising altitude with all the extra special modifications.
On top of that, the A340 has one of the most horrendous fuel Efficiency.
The only good thing that comes from a A340 is the landing gear. I think it’s pretty cool and unique. But if we are talking about practicality, a CRJ-900 would be better than the A340. All joes aside, the A340 will never be picked for a category such as Air Force One.
They might be aiming to be the company that sells the planes to the eventual contract winner, perhaps making money as a consultant without taking on the cost overrun risks.
They have no 747’s to sell.
@@bigstick6332 They identified to the USAF they identified the planes. Maybe Boeing is looking to be a middle man in the sale of the planes from the current owners to the eventual contract winner.
@@cjmillsnun maybe but that’s not going to make them a lot of money.
@@bigstick6332it would make them more money than the Air Force One deal
@@bigstick6332 : Not _much_ money, but it certainly will be _easy_ money. They'll call up their accounting branch, pull out most of the seats, and very little else. Boeing's part in such a transaction might even be finished in a standard work-week.
I was just watching a video on the KC135 tanker, and they confirmed that it could maintain level flight fully loaded with 2/4 engines, and could maintain "long distance glide" with 1/4 engines fully loaded, and level flight with 1/4 engines if "light enough". That is the sort of reliability we need for these mission critical aircraft.
Take a 747 and put a380 Engines on it or something.
The difference is that the KC135 has a service ceiling of 50,000+ feet (where all 4 engines are needed) whereas flight with two engines brings them down to pleb altitudes like 35,000 feet.
50,000 is officially confirmed but higher is likely possible. Biggest issues are pressure differential and reserve oxygen for crew (USAF mandates pressure suites above 50k)
And that's for an aircraft based on the Boeing 707.
Boeing is mature enough to know that one fake contract with fake national security clause can exclude them from international market, especially China.
Why A380 went down the tube? I know the answer, do you?
A significant part of the cost for aircraft like this is likely to be from having to take existing aircraft apart and rebuilding them. The labor required to redo the wiring especially, and more so since even Boeing probably doesn't have too many people left who remember putting them together in the first place- there's a learning curve, and whoever has to put these things together will get good at it right about the time the production run ends.
Air Force should have done this before the line shut down.
It's not like the 747 line has been down for decades. They delivered the last one earlier this year and Boeing has been building 747s for half a century. I'm sure they've still got plenty of people around who know the 747 design and assembly process in great detail. Institutional knowledge certainly does erode over time, but not THAT fast.
Boeing said building the Air Force ones using existing planes ended up costing more due to disassembly and reassembly than purpose building them from scratch.
@@bullhornzz Indeed, but that wasn't due to loss of institutional knowledge of how to build the things. The line was still running when much of that work was done. I'm certainly not saying that the conversion won't have a lot of difficult work involved - it will - but rather just that loss of institutional knowledge shouldn't be too bad of an issue if they start work on this soon (granted, if it's 5 or 10 years down the road, that's another matter entirely.)
Government contracts can be very difficult to agree to. Often they are not only fixed price but they can include a clause that allows the government to cancel at any time, even after you have spent serious money getting started or even well into the delivery, without paying any cancelation fees. Or they can decide that essential changes must be made that "don't qualify for overruns". My personal family story - my father's company had a fixed price contract to build a pair of buildings at what is now Idaho National Laboratory. But the government engineers did not complete and release the plans to start construction until September, instead of June. As a result, the company was faced with pouring concrete in -40 degree weather, requiring extra high performance jet heating systems, special inflated plastic enclosures, and men working two hours on, two hours off. This resulted in a $300,000 overrun (in 1955) that the government promised to pay but never did. The company was technically bankrupt but was carried by the banks for three years while it recovered.
In the UK it seems to work the other way, where a contract is given and a price agreed and then with continual changes and alterations to the original plan. The added costs of all the alterations blamed on the manufacturer and not the hapless government. Hence the demise of the UK Aircraft industry, as being to expensive!
Not to mention that the government pays when they get around to it -- leading to layoffs because the contractor doesn't have money to pay employees and then to production delays due to retraining both of perishable skills and because the best people found other jobs.
Too brutal.
He should have delayed construction for a year. The lack of urgency in getting the plans ready is a give away they weren't too concerned about the completion date.
He should have had a clause stating he had the right to delay in the event the plans were late.
@@michaeledwards2251 You've apparently never worked for a government contractor.
The government is 100% in charge and it doesn't matter how impossible or ridiculous their expectations, the contractor bears all the liability for everything and the government 0%
Keep up the good work, Petter.
You educate the world.
We’re spoiled.
Bless you.
I would have chosen the Lockheed C-5 Galaxy from the start. It is probably already hardened against EMP. And it can take the weight of all the special protection. And it has the size for whatever is needed. They could even be configured to load and unload a protected limo in and out of the back without the VIP ever getting out, and still have a fairly spacious area in the plane. Further, that area for the President or other VIP could be a module, designed to jettison with parachutes in the event the airplane is struck and is going to go down badly. There could even be explosives to split the plane like an egg if necessary to get that module out. The airplane itself does not even need massive modification, that module could have most of what is needed for protection. Though I still would protect the aircraft with A few inches of Kevlar composites (or similar) on the entire skin, and an inch or more of titanium (or appropriate alloy) shrouding the engines, fuel tanks, and doors to the landing gear. I would also have a redundant flight instrument and control system inside the pod...perhaps automated...so you really don't need all the controls, instruments, chairs, pilots and such, just wires, the computer, and interface.
nate, your narrative totally cracked me up. the idea of the president being airdropped in a limo from a doomsday plane reminds me of dr. strangelove, but i'd guess that movie was well before your time. we might need to drop in tanks and paratroopers to help him get to wherever he would go in the limo.
@@billmcgahey1926 I haven't seen the movie. Nice to have a good laugh, but the President or VIP (and guests) would exit the limo and enter the pod after the door in the back of the plane closes. After that, they can even open the door again and back out the limo to reduce weight before takeoff. The pod is moveable, sliding on bearings and can be jettisoned, and parachute down. This would only likely happen if the airplane was hit, and not able to make a safe landing at a secure airport.
All securing cables/chains can be released from within the pod. It would be protected against intense heat, impact of projectiles, and radiation, airtight/watertight and have its own air supply, and good filtration, after that runs out. It would also float just slightly, maybe 6-12" above the waterline.
In a pinch, the pod could be put on any C-5 Galaxy, but with reduced capabilities (can't fly the plane from it). This might be useful if you are bringing in a VIP to a country at war.
@@billmcgahey1926 Having undergone MOPP (Anti-Contimination Warfare Apparrel) many, many times, I'd think not having to be exposed to radiation or biological agents would be a rather good idea instead of having to suit up, just to switch planes.
I worked TACMO in the late 80's when we transitioned from the EC-130Q to the E-6. The E-6B is now getting close to end of life and looks like it will be replaced with a stretched C-130. Funny how it has gone full circle and back to the C-130 after some 30 years.
So why would they pick a turboprop over a jet?
@@KanyeTheGayFish69 the C-130 does a better job in that roll when on station. That is why.
USAF: "Because we want a plane with the highest likelihood of enduring a Doomsday Scenario, and not a plane that has the greatest odds of causing one in the first place..."
You can add in the T-7A and the MQ-25 as fixed price and over budget. The T-7A was bid was billions lower than the next aircraft up. In my world that was called leaving money on the table and it was a lot left on the table. The KC-46A was 10% low, I think the T-7A was percentage wise quite a bit more though a lot less per aircraft.
I have a fond memory of touring one of the E-4 Alpha to Bravo conversions at the E-Systems (now Raytheon) facility in Greenville TX. The purpose was to install the Faraday cage throughout the interior necessary to insulate the plane from EMP. Pretty much everything had to stripped out before they put it all back together. I was there just as they were beginning work on the cage.
Norm Augustine, one time Chairman and CEO of Martin Marietta and later Undersecretary of the Army, wrote a book, Augustine’s Laws, first published in 1986. The first edition was mainly a wry take on defense contracting. One of his Laws is, “Fools rush in where incumbents fear to tread.” Boeing shareholders have contributed a considerable amount of money to national defense over the past 30 years, so if they miss this opportunity probably for the best. The money’s necessary for the next generation commercial aircraft.
I'm pretty sure E-Systems/Raytheon/RTX people will be heavily involved in this project.
It’s not Raytheon anymore either… became L3 now L3/Harris. Nevertheless, if they’re not a player in this contract, it’s because they don’t want to be. Heck, they built the E-4’s. I’m sure they would be a good fit. I recall the original E-4 order was for 8 airplanes. Carter came into office and said something like, ‘We don’t need those things.’ It took E-Systems YEARS to get even 4 of them approved. So I’d bet L3/H is all over the bid. You just won’t hear anything about it. They learned their lesson… don’t talk about this kind of thing to ANYBODY you don’t have to, especially elected politicians, lol.
The facility in Greenville Tx is now L3Harris. Lifers at Greenville consider Raytheon’s management of the facility “the dark years” due to their mismanagement of the modification facility.
@@tlevans62it’s L3Harris in Greenville now. Raytheon sold the facility to L3Communication and got out of the rapid modification game. Serria Nevada Corp is bidding to be the primary contractor as they just built a new facility in Dayton Ohio, a stones throw from Write Patterson AFB, HQ Air Force Material Command.
Thanks. I was thinking there had to be overall EMP protection. Given a metallic airframe would presumably act pretty much like a Faraday cage, it would probably be the case that modern composites would definitely be off the menu. How were the cockpit windows protected? I wonder what magnitude of EMP is covered by design. Did they go into the size of warhead and altitude of the airburst designed to maximise the EMP?
NAOC, pronounced nay (as in yeah or nay) oc (as in october) was the bane of my existence as a young Airman during the second bush administration. I was stationed at the closest active USAF base to his ranch, and they would show up whenever he was in Texas. The obligation only plane that caused more disruption was when the START inspectors showed up.
7:20
The A340 immediately comes to mind
9:54
Airbus “Ooh! Ooh!” 🙋🏼♂️
15:46
“Lockheed”
“Sierra Nevada Corportation”
“Who?”
….Giant complex it Dayton
(Lived near Dayton for years”
They do?
Shows gigantic complex at DAY
“Strange, you would have thought I’d have noticed that”
I think the reason they chose to increase the number was because USN replaced their E-6s with C-130Js, so they need SAOC planes to handle Looking Glass missions as well, just like before they handed over and merged that role with USN TACAMO.
up until 90s -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USAF EC-135 = Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO
90s-now -> USAF E-4 = Nightwatch | USN E-6 = Looking Glass + TACAMO
future -> USAF SAOC = Nightwatch + Looking Glass | USN EC-130 = TACAMO
USN planes aren’t bought under an USAF contract. Your reasoning is flawed. The USAF isn’t responsible for planning for USN air needs.
@@matthewgaines10 Your logic is flawed, it's the other way around. Historically, USAF was the one that piggyback THEIR needs onto USN planes. STRATCOM quite explicitly states that USN E-6s are equipped for dual mission, both flying for USN TACAMO staff and for USAF Airborne Command Post battle staff in the Looking Glass role (in place of USAF EC-135).
Now with the USN planes potentially being unable to fulfill the task USAF counted on them (because USN isn't necessarily responsible for planning for USAF needs), there is no reason that USAF would not be responsible for planning their own needs.
Actually, see SEAD mission - they rely on joint operations now that USAF no longer has dedicated platform with the retirement of EF-111 (and no, F-16CJs are essentially just HARM shooters).
Yea, he seems to think that none of the branches run missions for the other. He'd be shocked to find out that Marines ride on Navy ships regularly and that the USAF flew drones and spy aircraft off of carriers... If it's not a mission the Navy sees as "sexy" like fighter jets they're not going to heavily fight letting another branch take the budget concerns and risk off of them for it.@@nikujaga_oishii
@@matthewgaines10He's right. There are actually two different USAF missions involved.
1) "Looking Glass" is an airborne command post capable of talking to pretty much everything that SAC HQ can talk to, including transmitting valid launch codes to ICBM silos (but not the USN's SSBNs). It started out in EC-135Cs, and when those got retired in the late '90s, the USAF managed to talk the USN into picking up the mission on its E-6Bs (which are also based on the -135), which were also taking on the TACAMO mission, the USN's version of Looking Glass (which can transmit launch codes to subs).
2) "Nightwatch" is a strategic command post for NCA (the President, or whichever survivor is highest on the succession list). It began on the EC-135J, then moved to the E-4. It's probably best to think of it as the "DEFCON 1 Air Force One"; the VC-25 is designed to support peacetime diplomatic missions, and allots a fair bit of space for guests, reporters, Secret Service ground teams, etc, plus a much higher level of comfort. Nightwatch trades all of those frills for more radios and radiomen plus a few generals and enough supplies to keep everybody fed and watered for up to a week in the air. That's why an E-4 usually follows AFO around, just in case.
3) "TACAMO" is the USN's version of "Looking Glass"; instead of talking to ICBM silos, it's designed to talk to SSBNs and carrier groups. The mission is similar, but more spread out over the world. Originally performed by the EC-130Q, which was replaced by the E-6A (later upgraded to B, which also picked up "Looking Glass" missions as a favor to the USAF).
The E-6Bs, E-4Bs, and VC-25s have all been needing replacements for some time now; honestly, everything made from a 707 or old-model 747 needs replacing, but the money hasn't been there for decades, and the programs that *have* gotten money have been horrifically mismanaged (see: E-10, P-8, KC-46, VC-25B). As Mentour mentioned, the USAF wanted to go in with the USN on a new plane for all three of the above roles, but there wasn't money for it at the time. The USN has since gone its own way, with a plan to return to C-130s, which will leave "Looking Glass" without a home. That's why the USAF is looking at a larger buy of SAOCs, in order to have one platform that handles both "Nightwatch" and "Looking Glass" missions in order to save money and resources over time, and to ensure that there are always enough airframes available to carry out both missions.
Except the Navy has NEVER USED the E-6...🤡
I kept expecting you to say they might be looking at the A-380... but with Emirates looking to scoop up every last one of those ever made, they'd be expensive.
And european.
Expensive isn't the issue. With airlines retiring A380s rapidly these days, they could probably get them quite cheaply, likely much cheaper than the 747-8, of which there aren't that many and which few, if any, existing operators are planning to retire. Modifying them to meet the Air Force's requirements and doing so without sharing some of the country's most highly-classified information with foreign entities is the much bigger problem. Also, 100% of the operators are not in the U.S. (or even in the Americas,) which adds more security issues with the acquisition. Also, while the A380 hull isn't nearly as composite-based as the 787 or A350, it's still made much more of composites than the 747, which makes it much more difficult to harden against EMPs. Using a fully-metal frame makes that job far easier.
@@vbscript2 Hmm, interesting thoughts. Composite planes, though, still have faraday cages built into the skin effectively, in the form of wire mesh for lightning conductivity, so I'm not so sure about the emp hardening problem.
Also, my understanding isn't that they're being dumped by airlines, but rather that most airlines just didn't buy many, or even any. This is because in the time it took to design and certify it, almost all airlines had shifted focus from hub and spoke to point to point. The few exceptions are airlines in countries that only have one major airport, the key player being Emirates. They begged both Airbus and Boeing to keep making their super-heavies, and both are currently racing to complete stretched versions of their biggest wide-bodies to satisfy that demand. Until that happens, I believe they've been buying up any and all retired 380s to maintain and grow their fleet... Which I would assume would drive up their prices.
As for security concerns, I'm not sure I follow. Technical specs are technical specs and while it may be nice to be able to consult with Airbus engineers in the modification process, there are many ways around that, from just trusting that the modifying company can figure it out to hiring former engineers who worked on it.
Remember, _most_ of the top engineers who worked on the most top-secret project of all time were not only foreign, but came directly from our primary enemy. I doubt recruiting assets from _friends_ would be considered any more risky than that...
As for security concerns in the planes themselves, no airliner has primary flight systems networked to any external comms in any way, to prevent hackers from causing enormous tragedies, so I don't see the issue there either.
Which just leaves pride and a desire for "made in the USA" stickers. While I'm sure that would be an absolute deal-breaker for Air Force One, I'm less sure for non-diplomatic planes.
Ah. But then I just though of a much more insurmountable problem: politics. No way would Congress approve the appropriation for such a thing from outside the country. Not enough pork involved, haha!
So yeah... Probably not.
Why not a large cargo plane though? Surely they're plenty big enough, and some have even more engines.
Their national pride wouldn't survive buying a foreign aircraft.
Emirates is nuts. That’s what too much money does to people. 😅
The US government pressuring Boeing to build aircraft at a loss goes back at least to the Boeing model 299 that would later become the now legendary B-17 heavy bomber of World War 2 fame. That project almost didn't happen several times due to the Army Air Corp demanding a lower per unit price. Thankfully a compromise was reached. Given that military contracts always seem to have budget over runs now days and with what's happened to Boeing with the 737 Max I think Boeing is just trying to cut their losses and not set themselves up to fail.
Hardly. Boeing has become absolute experts when it comes to ripping off the US govt while delivering an inferior product late, and over-budget.
The real problem is Boeing has mismanaged the both the Air Force One contract and the Air Force Tanker contract. FOD, errors, and non-responsiveness. Add on top of that, they originally lost the tanker contract to Airbus due to because of a corruption scandal, sued to get it back, then performed poorly once they got it back.
Boeing used to perform on defense contracts but due to it’s current management, seems to not be able to get themselves together.
Nobody made Boeing operate at a loss; they managed that entirely on their own, by repeatedly failing at multiple programs over the last 10+ years.
@@bigd4366 Maybe. The government is notorious for introducing change after change after change. That gets expensive quickly. Don't know if that is what happened with AF1 or not. The tanker visual system has been a bottleneck from the start. Eyeballs worked just fine on KC-135s.
That's expected as newer tech makes sense to install on the go. @@dougball328
One of my high school english teachers said "boys show that you are educated and don't use crude words" and gave us examples like "That man is the south end of a horse going north". I will add your "animal sourced fertilizer hits the fan" to the list. I love it. I also enjoy your informative videos, thanks.
I couldnt imagine more polite and yet exact description of sh!t hitting the fan...
Free range, naturally produced fertilizer hitting the bladed, mechanical air moving device.
Dear Mentour pilot,
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Miro and family
I think they are being sensible learning from their mistakes not acting out of pride.
These were temporarily based out of my hometown recently while their home base was going through major renovations. It was pretty cool seeing the most important aircraft in the world in person while they were coming in for landings. (For whatever reason, I never saw them take off.)
The 4 engines aren't just for redundancy ,they need the extra engines for the electrical power they can generate.
They are also probably nervous about retrofitting a plane they no longer build and keeping it airworthy for the next 40 years....there are a lot of hidden costs in that.
Considering there are airworthy 737-200s and 727s out there. I don't think that's a big issue.
@@cjmillsnun
The thing I don't think you realize is that the newer models of 747 can't be EM hardened to Air Force Standards , so they would have to take an existing 747-200 , which will be at least 32 years old , rebuild it and then keep parts and technical advice for the plane available for the next 40 years.
The 747-200 has been out of production since 1991, and there are only 19 left, six of which are operated by the Air Force.
I don't think Boeing wants to get locked into maintaining parts and training pilots Engineers and technicians for just six planes for the next 40 years.
They want the Air Force to replace their 747-200s , not acquire another one.
Power could come from an APU, don't need a wing-mounted engine just for electricity.
The e-4 also keeps one or two engines running at all times when it's on the ground during operations
@@T_Mo271 Sure, but adding new APUs to an airframe isn't the easiest thing to do. They would need to be mounted in a place where they can both get air intake and have a place to expel their exhaust. Which means they need to be outside the pressure vessel. There's not a lot of unused space outside of the pressure vessel in a 747 (or virtually any other commercial airliner.) Easier to just use the main engines. If you didn't just use the main engines, you'd likely end up having to add pods under the wings for the new APUs anyway, which rather defeats the purpose of not just using the main engines and would require significant design costs.
I retired from the AF 2 years ago and because of my organization’s specific expertise I was involved in the SAOC program and I can assure you that whatever aircraft is finally selected it will not be an Airbus to replace the E4-B …👽👽👽
The US shooting themselves in the foot once again by not choosing the best, just so they can say it's made in america. I swear if the other superpowerbloc wasn't a bunch of murderous dictators.....
I bet that there'd be riots if that ever happens xD
Ah, there goes my dream of seeing an Airbus A400M Atlas in this role. 🙃
@@j_taylor A400M not fast enough. also not US produced.
@@dougball328 i mean, the USAF used Airbus fighter jets so....
What the AF should have done was put orders in for 15 747's before the lines were shut down. Makes too much sense however.
doesn't matter - it's the taxpayers' money, so it's unlimited, and spending doesn't need to have any regard for efficiency. There is zero accountability.
@@charlestoast4051 that’s not true at all. In fact, it’s the opposite. The reason Boeing withdrew was because of the requirement by law for the DoD to only sign fixed price contracts. That regulation was created by Congress to prevent projects from runaway costs and save the government money and improve efficiency. If money was unlimited and they didn’t care about efficiency, do you think they’d be flying 50 year old aircraft? Believe it or not, the budget is not unlimited and the U.S. military has a huge lists of financial obligations that don’t allow it to just blow money whenever and wherever it wants.
@@FlyByWire1 And that fixed price sequence is biting boeing in the rear big time on the new af-1's. They have to strip and gut the entire airframe and rebuild it almost from scratch. Their hindsight is 20-20, not going to do that again. Taking a -400 or 8i down this path is in the same boat, you have to take it all apart and put it back together again.
@ Wait.... Isn't this somewhat normal for aviation? I honestly don't know, but for some reason I recall there being a 5 year overhaul or something for commercial aircraft that basically strips them to the frame and rebuilds them.
@ yep and that’s the hardest part about fixed price contracts. There will always be unforeseen costs that will arise in the project, we can’t predict the future. So whoever wins the contract will either have to come up with a plan to prevent that or just take the loss as Boeing has on previous fixed price contacts.
A340-500 would be interesting choice. Though considering how hard US fought to replace working A330MRTT with non-functioning KC46, they probably won't choose any non-american aircraft.
AF insisted on fixed price contract and Boeing has lost a bunch on AF-1 replacement and the KC-46 under that type of contract. Really, Boeing took themselves out of it.
It’s all about profits. Boeing won’t commit to FFP because it’s too risky for the contractor.
Profits 📈 before patriotic duty. It's just the capitalist way. 😅
Love these videos! I know the second requirement was "modification of a second-hand aircraft", but why wouldn't modification of existing C-17 Globemasters (or even modification of C-5 Galaxy's) work here? They're 4-engined and tried-and-tested in the military.
Wonder if efficiency comes into play.
I initially thought the same thing, but the certification process would be cost prohibitive and it's doubtful you could get either airframe certified as designed regardless of modifications made. In fact the modifications required to convert it from military transport to flying command post full of personnel and equipment may make the certification process even more impossible.
I bet it is easier to start from scratch and with an airframe that will have greater longevity with the newest C-17 and C-5 eight and 30 years old respectively.
@@vanguard9067 There would have to be a business case to build such a plane. A clean sheet design through certification is a decade-long process and there would have to be more than 10 planes built (think several hundred minimum) for this to make any sense. The Airbus A380 is considered a business failure because the program lost money since the plane didn't sell i the numbers expected or required to meet break-even revenue. The A-380 couldn't be used as a freighter so it's market was limited to just passenger airlines. A clean-sheet design for a maximum of 10 airframes is a complete non-starter. And there is no current market for 4 engine super-jumbo airframes or Boeing and Airbus would still be building them. And there isn't enough demand to cover the production costs of the few freighters ordered and sold every year.
@@andrewg.spurgeon1736 I totally agree about a clean sheet design. I think ultimately they’ll scrounge up some lower mileage 747’s and some contractor will build out the doomsday planed]s, I have a hard time believing any contractor will do the work FFP because the government does not have a firm set of requirements.
As you hinted I’d love to see an A380 bid here. It would really legitimize Airbus DS as a real military contractor ! It’s the price to pay for fame :)
Given the A380’s wing spar problems, I wouldn’t count on it.
There is exactly zero chance that Aribus is in this.
Plus, 380’s can’t even operate out of ‘normal’ airports. Sure, military bases ‘might’ work, but these things go lots more places than big air bases. Personally, I knew early on in the 380 program it would be a big bust. It has NO secondary market (the size thing again… it would be a decent freighter if it fit anywhere). It simply has zero operational flexibility. The 747 can pretty much go to ANY airport that will support its weight. With air re-fueling capability, it can operate light enough to go places you wouldn’t believe. I wouldn’t rule out Boeing building 8-10 more -800’s for something like this. As long as they don’t get into that goofy fixed bid world, who knows!? Disclaimer: I’m not a big Airbus fan. But I will admit, if the 380 was as monstrously successful as the 747, I’d love it. The 747 was a huge home run for Boeing, especially as an aftermarket freighter, flying billboard, delight to fly, passenger loving, President hauling American success story. It has outlived its economic usefulness in the passenger market but still has great value in others (as seen here).
what are those@@silaskuemmerle2505
How likely is it that the usaf would do a deal with a European company for a project such as this, when there is American contenders willing and able to do the job, I suspect they would be more inclined to keep it local where possible.
Assuming the target airframe is a Boeing 747, why does it have to be the 747-8i passenger variant? Why couldn’t the “doomsday” retrofit platform be tailored around the much more plentiful 747-8F airframe? I mean, the current E4B’s don’t seem to require the stretched upper deck fuselage type.
And besides Boeing and Sierra Systems, there are other possibilities than just Airbus. Lockheed would certainly be capable of an undertaking such as this.
I assume the 5 mile long antenna that sticks out the back is for low frequency communication, which requires a longer antenna. Low frequency has several advantages such as being able to communicate to submarines underwater.
ELF
thanks for repeating what the video said
The "five mile antenna" is not an antenna - it is a ground plane for the long wire antenna.
The long wire is for sending EAMs to the boomer subs to initiate fence-grabbing time.
Extremely low frequency
The A340-600 with the RR Trent 500 engine would make a good substitute. Still modern and plenty of them around for very little money.
2 questions: What is the role of subcontractors? What are opportunities for service business from related Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul? It may be that Boeing just wants to avoid the obligations (and impacts on its accounting picture) that come with being a prime contractor, and are happy to perform major subcontractor roles, with Sierra Nevada or whoever.
That's possible
The use of FFP (Fixed Firm Price) contracts was intended for use with production items where risk was minimal and process improvements could drive cost savings. Some aggressive government procurement agents got the bright idea to use FFP on high risk development programs. The contractor is screwed. If you bid the cost of the real risk, you price yourself out of the work. If you bid without covering the risk in your cost, you lose money. Boeing had some poor management after the McD merger who signed up for huge FFP contract that lost billions. Refusing high risk FFP demonstrates a return to more responsible business management.
The next “Doomsday” aircraft fleet will be based on 747, no matter if it will be completed by Boeing or not. And Boeing is poised to make a lot of money out of it in either case scenario. They just don’t want to shoot themselves in the foot by committing to a fixed price low volume and high complexity contract such as this one.
Locked C-5 Galaxy. Modify the deck to extend the fuel tanks, install bulkheads, update and upgrade the engines etc. There you go.
In Ukraine there is a company known for building huge planes with four or even six engines.
These would certainly be up to the task.
you mean antonov?
That BIG Antonov was destroyed early in the invasion by Russia. SHAME! Ukraine had great capabilities, but their infrastructure to do this no longer exists.
I don't think ukrainian manufacturers are going to be handed the contract for a US doomsday plane anytime soon
all they need to do is rebuild from ruins and adapt designs to western engines and electronic getting past current and future ukraine security issues
Having worked at Boeing (and several other major prime contractors of the USAF), their typical strategy is to bid low and get additional funding, even for FFPPIF contracts, since the AF is notorious at changing requirements mid-project, which gives the prime opportunities to add funding. Primes figure that it's in the gov't interest to keep several major prime competitors around (aka BA, NGC, LM) by spreading contracts around, so they can get away with it. Looks like the GAO finally got serious at enforcing FFPPIF to keep the primes honest, which is LONG overdue. (Random aside - Boeing's winning bid was ~50% of another competitor for a major UAV contract ~5 years ago, looks like they'll have to eat the cost of that one too... lol)
I predict Boeing gets the contract with better terms.
and with SNC as the sub contractor to do most of the work
It’s almost pure usury at this point.
@@johnstreet797 Or a joint/partial bid together with SNC, where Boeing's responsibility is limited to eg. the procurement and refurbishing of the planes. This would allow SNC to be entirely focused on the Upgrade and Modification process...
The replacement for the NAOC E4B will probably continue as a 747-8 sourced commercially like the Air Force One replacement but the primary contractor will likely be a specialty prime like L3 with Boeing as a subcontractor to offer its expertise on the 747. This essentially a way for Boeing to be intimately involved with engineering & integration while minimize its financial risk.
what would really be interesting is if maybe the Air force considered the C5M or C17 as possible solutions. They’re already militarized to the highest standard with midair refueling, rugged landing gear for unimproved runway n temp airfields plus buckets of spare parts & frames for ages to come & they could easily be further modified for EMP etc for its mission set. So essentially it’d be just civilizing the interiors for conference rooms, coms stations, berthings, briefing rooms, vvip accommodations etc.
Let's be real: the Starliner spacecraft was a self-inflicted headache, primarily because of all the steps Boeing skipped in an effort to rush something into service, despite being granted a huge sum of money from NASA over and above what SpaceX was awarded to produce their Crew Dragon... essentially, 20% more money to do the same job. Despite this, multiple Crew Dragons have now flown multiple times, with multiple crews aboard them, while Starliner has yet to successfully complete a single uncrewed mission. The bitter pill is, Boeing really have no one but themselves to blame, and between this & the MAX and all their other issues, no one trusts Boeing to get ANYTHING right at this point unless someone is actively looking over Boeing's shoulder.
@MentourNow! This is my opinion based on what I have seen & heard in the industry in which I work. Perhaps you have something to add to the discussion....?
Boeing produce/d great C-17. Oh, designed and developed by MD then bought by Boeing
Airbus A380 is the obvious choice as I believe it has a bar on board. After destroying the world, the crew will need a place to unwind and relax until their fuel runs out, whereupon they will descend gliding but pleasantly pissed into the burning hellscape below.
It’s also sad to see the last Boeing 747 roll out of production.
That already happened a year or so ago…
Airbus could provide a couple of options, the a340-600 and the mighty a380. However, should the Americans wish to keep the project in-house, there's a left field candidate in the C17 Globemaster III, which could be repurposed for the task. I hear there are a fair few hibernating in various storage facilities around the US.
I was thinking globemaster as an alternative, they're just old airframes but they are built as military vehicles so have some advantages.
I think used airframe is simply because 747 is out of production. Any airframe more than a handful of years old is going to have a shorter life and bigger maintenance requirements so 747-8 does seem like the intended aircraft.
Ah, but it (C-17) is a Boeing product, unlike the C-5.
Seems like Boeing is being pretty smart-FINALLY!!!
And then a door plug goes on a MAX9.
I do not understand why Boing does not accept a fixed-price contract. If you offer a fixed price, you just add enough buffer so the risk of cost overruns is low, and you have the chance of making good profit if you manage it well. The only reason when you don't accept a fixed price is if the customer is unable to specify what he wants to a degree that you are able to calculate the costs or if your company is just unable or unwilling to properly calculate development cost. Also keep in mind that we are talking about modifying existing aircraft, not the development a new aircraft, so calculating the cost should be possible with sufficient certainty.
Also, if you generally manage to calculate costs development costs properly on average, the occasional cost overrun will be ok because you also will occasionally run unexpectedly high profits. You will only be in trouble if you methodically underestimate costs.
Boeing seems to be run neither by engineers nor by businessmen or even accountants, but marketing people living in a made-up reality who fucked up multiple times and now seem scared to do anything now.
That's true, to a point. Boeing had a similar assumption with the VC-25Bs (next Air Force 1) but then they had to modify it to current FAA certification standards... if they have to do the same with these planes, costs become a lot less clear-cut, as I explain in the video.
Harder to sell a high number and even if you win the bid then you still have to deal with inevitable negotiation. Fixed price contracts are inherently risky for the bidder any way you slice it.
@@MentourNow As a defense contractor, if a customer said I had to certify to FAA I'd tell the customer (politely) to go pound sand. That's a gigantic black hole of financial risk. I worked on the FAA board for certifying NVGs for use in civilian cockpits, and it was largest nightmare of bureaucratic red tape, delays, and inability to make a damn decision I have ever had the misfortune to be involved with.
Maybe also an older design, but I think the Lockheed-Martin C5 Galaxy could also be a posible basis for a Doomsday-plane. At least Lockheed-Martin has a design that they could rework into a Doomsday-plane.
Don't know much about it, but that is what I was wondering. Whether an existing military cargo aircraft could be a contender. Especially given that support/ parts from the commercial side for the 747 will be reducing considerably over this aircrafts lifetime, particularly if it will be anything like the current e4
They haven’t made any airframes in decades, not to mention they are very valuable for the Air Force. There are a lot of ex civilian 747-8 about to be available, and they’re all new.
@@KanyeTheGayFish69 so they will never produce more of them or anything similar that they could share an airframe with?
You both misunderstand the point I tried to make, that Lockheed Martin and Skunkworks have made some crazy planes over the years.
Boeing doesn’t make airframes also, thay haven’t for years, all airframes are made by external companies. And the C-5 Galaxy might look a lot like a 747, but it a complete diverent design than the 747.
In I believe around 2010 C-5 Galaxies where completely overhauled, with new avionics, cleaner engines that burn less fuel. These kind of program’s take time, so I wouldn’t be surprised if there are still some C5’s to be undergo a complete overhaul.
@@benmac940 no. C-5s will be in service for many more decades, but they haven’t been produced since the 70’s. It’s extremely expensive to develop a whole new airframe.
There are low time 747-8 even low time 747-400 built post 2001 that can be fitted and flown for another 40 years.
Presumably these planes have a Faraday Cage arrangement built into the interior of the fuselage which should prevent the effects of EMPs from Nukes. They would need something of this kind because these things are packed with modern electronics, even if the avionics are analogue.
A fuselage is already a Faraday cage (even if there are quite a lot of holes that limits the upper working frequency).
To harden a plane against EMP you need to ensure that every piece of the fuselage make a good electrical contact all around with the frame and with the other fuselage pieces (the classic glue is not electrical conductive, you need something else to ensure the contact) and you need also to plug any holes to avoid EMP ingress (for example, the windows are made with electrical insulating material and, even if the doors are made with metal, they not ensure a proper electrical contact all around the seam so are still considered as holes; a special conductive gasket placed all around the seam is required to made the joint RF-tight).
Finally, you cannot run a cable outside a faraday cage otherwise it will carry the RF energy inside (the outside portion of the cable act as an antenna to pick-up the RF enrgy and the inside portion of the cable also act as an antenna to radiate the RF energy inside the shielded environment!)... all cables that runs outside the fuselage must be filtered and shielded properly.
In any case....... a Faraday cage that blocks 100% of the radiation is almost impossible to build (specially if there are size, weight and strict cable management requirements!) so a little part of the RF radiation is supposed to seep inside and the electronic equipments are supposed to be hardened and withstand this noise.
BTW, hardening a devices that uses low integration is simple because the bigger is the component the higher is the working voltage and the lower is the input impedance... and the higher is the working voltage and the lower is the input impedance the higher should be the RF pulse in order to generate an issue.
Also, you can't damage what doesn't exist.
Analog equipments (but also simple digital hardwired equipments) contains less but bigger components than modern equipments (that may contains millions of microscopical transistors enclosed in a very small chip).
I work as electronic designer for medical devices..... i'm used to design devices with quite a lot computer-aided bells and whistles but for the safety and emergency part of the device i prefer to stick with plain old analog electronics, plain old simple and hard wired digital electronics and even electromechanics too!
Bet they have a couple of valve radios too, just in case
@@teslacoiler Military aircraft have ITO conductive coatings on windows as standard.
Out of all the Military tactical ground vehicles I can think of, none of them would pass safety standards to be sold to the general public for road use as a new vehicle. Why in the would you require a few custom planes to pass FAA requirements is beyond me.
Hmmm some old A340-600s could be an interesting choice. Quite a few in storage and dirt cheap too!
I don't see the US military relying on the EU for these planes.
The A340 is far too underpowered for all that additional equipment and reliability.
Beautiful aircraft. Too late to the party.
@@TacticaLLRA340-300, yes. Looks like the A340-600 has upgraded engines.
@@msromike123 I agree you there and there’s also there’s a federal law that will forbid the US Air Force buying European made aircraft to protect our command structure
The 1990 film, "By Dawn's Early Light," is a great film showing the roles of the E-4B NEACP, and the E-3A, Looking Glass, and how they interact.
One of the best, most realistic, films showing the 1980's Air Force.
I might be American, but seeing an A340-500 version of these (longer range than the 747-8i) would be really cool.
There are not enough of the A340-500 in airworthy condition left. And, as mentioned in another comment, the is absolut zero chance than any non-US made aircraft will ever be used for the signature functions of the USAF, like e.g. AF1, the doomsday A/C or even the tanker fleet. Even if a foreign airframer would win the bidding process, there would be massive interference from congress, even if that would mean that the USAF would get an inferior solution. It has happened before, and it will happen again. To think that will ever change is downright delulu.
@@MattBlue I guess I figured the production run for the -500 and -600 was greater, having seen a few around here at IAD.
As for the rest of your comments - Airbus won the tanker contract that beat out the KC-46 (as mentioned in this video) but Boeing cried foul, and with their massive lobbying power in various branches of govt, they got their way. To say it's impossible isn't true though.
And as far as that notion ever changing being "delusional" - I'm sure the folks at Lockheed know a bit more about this stuff than you and I, they thought it would be worth it to bid with Airbus on the next tanker acquisition. Of course they pulled out, but Airbus is still in it (likely because the USAF is absolutely furious with the KC-46 acquisition process so far.)
The MRTT is (and was) already flying, and offered a much more advanced and cost-effective solution.
@@EstorilEm I stand by my comment. It won't happen. The "buy american" approach will always remain, and any Euro spent on an offer to the american government by AIrbus is a waste of money. I don't think that the next tanker contract will go to Airbus under any circumstances, even if the competive offer would be superior. If I'm proven wrong and the contract goes to Airbus, then we'll talk again.
You can build "newer" avionics packages and systems to withstand EMP bursts, but as you say, it is extremely difficult, time consuming, and costly. Some of the wiring is double-shielded, the instructions are sophisticated, and some people just flat out don't build it correctly.
With Boeing and the Government, there is "always something else going on"...walking distance from BA headquarters to the Pentagon for their lobbyist.
I think the 747-8 is the best possible answer here by quite a margin. The only other A/C that come to my mind as being remote possibilities as alternatives, to me anyway, would be either converted C-17's (if they are even large enough to accommodate the myriad systems involved) or extremely late build 747-400's. I do not believe The USAF would ever consider handing this project to Airbus although, hypothetically, an an A340-600 or A380 could likely do the job.
At this stage, Boeing should probably concentrate on their "ground" strategy: surviving.
2:40: "If the animal source fertilizer would really hit the fan." lol lol -- not only do you have superb information presented in a way that would make some Hollywood productions jealous, you do it with a wonderfully whimsical twist on words. What amazing videos, I've been a fan ever since I watched my first video of yours.
What if Airbus comes in with the A380? It's got 4 engines, and a lot more room for all the new stuff the doomsday planes need, right?
While that sounds great, it probably would not be the military's preferred aircraft. For starters, it would limit the airports and air force bases that the doomsday plane can operate out of. Some airports that were able to accommodate the 747 had to be modified to handle A380s.
Also, if the military is willing to use it, and if there are plenty of airports and airbases that can accommodate the a380 doomsday plane, there is the matter of relying on a manufacturer headquartered in Europe and with a good chunk of the assembly line located in Europe, or else outside the US. Given it's a critical and also highly confidential project, relying on a European manufacturer is probably another downside the military will see in an Airbus-made doomsday plane
The Airforce wants to pay around $8 Billion for around 8-10 aircrafts? LOL. By the time the project is done, it would be more than double the cost. Boeing or any other competitor will lose billions and billions on this project on a fixed price contract. The Airforce is trying to nickel and dime, but every one of their projects has became a dismal failure when it comes to cost control. This is not only on Boeing projects, but most military contracts with every other aerospace vendor. If I was Boeing, I wouldn't just walk away from the project, but RUN!
Merry Christmas. Right for Boeing to stay away from this in it's current form. Is the US gov in the mood to sign a fixed price contract with enough headroom to cover possible losses? What happens when they take a few planes planes now and ask for another batch down the road when prices have changed? I have a big problem with using a plane that is no longer in production too. The days of 4 engine airliners are over. They should accept that now and buy planes that are in current production.
Add 2 engines to a 777X
It’s good to see that Boeing finally recognized the USAF is NOT the only 400 lbs gorilla in the negotiating room, and finally decided that walking away from a deal that’s not a win-win proposition is the smartest thing to do. Good for them…
Could the winning bidder use 747-400's instead of 747-8's? Or do we think there is there some kind of requirement about maximum age or hours on the airframes? 747-400's should be much easier to acquire, I would think.
Yes, they probably could. Many people seem to think that the plane manufacturer is the only one who can win the contract when that’s far from true. There are many companies, SNC for example, that are very capable of acquiring the aircraft’s and then reengineering them to add all the necessary components.
Yup, I was thinking some end of the line 744s would be ideal.
The only obvious modern alternatives to the 747-800 are the Airbus A380, and or the now retired, but possibly still usable A340s. I don't see the USAF moving to those planes due to their foreign design, and the supply chain for them(i.e. for spare parts supply) is on present within the USAF. They do, however, fulfill the 4 engine requirement.
I know the A380 is supposed to be going back into production, so the actual spare parts supply availability should not be an issue, the 747-800 has been out of production for a couple of years, and is widely used in the air freight industry, so I don't think parts availability is a problem for that plane, either. The USAF is already flying the VC-25s, so that supply chain already exists to some extent, but they don't fly any Airbus aircraft of any type, so that supply chain would have to be established from the ground up.
Boeing has been reminded that the Government can be a terrible customer. This type of project is never offered to the bidders as a finished spec. It will often require systems that don't currently exist or force the contractor to deal with never ending change requests. New tech and change orders are huge drivers of cost over runs. I suspect Boeing is no longer interested in funding the Government's acquistion incompetence.
Guess moving corporate HQ to Arlington, VA doesn't mean anything about their government acquisitions??
Add to that the frequent rotation the.. crap.. now I can't recall what the people who actually manage the contract are.. but anyway, they often have a 3-5 year rotation, so the people in charge of deciding what the government 'really' wants are not the same people who wrote the original spec.
A government needs to be able to require changes made to keep up. It's not that they want to be bad customers but military demands are vastly different from commercial aircrafts.
@@charisma-hornum-fries while there are good reasons for why they behave as they do, they still make terrible customers.
Problem with alternative aircraft will probably be a Made in America clause in the military specs. This will preclude the use of Airbus. Just don't know who has 8 or so "spare" 747's lying around...
I think the obvious other candidate for a 4-engine widebody is building them off of the A380 frame, if any of those are on the market used. Issue being, if they're looking for fixed-price contracts on 747-8s I cannot imagine the USAF wants to fork over the money for the larger, more modern airframe, even if it might have some advantages.
Plenty of A380s available, but this will either be a 744 or a 748.
@@cjmillsnun Most likely low hours 747-8's.. trying to find a low hours 747-4's would be a challenge.
@@bubbavonbraun and where can you buy 747-8? They are young and still in service
@@misterXPlayereasy just offer current owners an offer they can't refuse.
Offer Atlas air $30 million more than what they paid few months ago for new/last 747 delivery they would do it in a heart beat.
@@misterXPlayer There are a couple out there. Wouldnt take much for Lufthansa to hand a few over or KAL.
No one should accept a fixed-price contract for something that isn't fully understood. Such a deal would require a large safety margin, which is directly in conflict with competitive bidding.
I have experience of negotiating Government contracts and always walked away if they insisted on punitive uncommercial clauses. Good on Boeing I say.
Esp when they can change requirements or make new ones up at any time. One of the things that really makes these contracts such a nightmare is that on the government side their is commonly a 3 year rotation, meaning the people you start negation with often are not the people who you end on, and are even less likely to be the people that implement the contract.
Signing any fixed price contract with the government is stupid considering how frequently they make changes
After losing over one billion dollars on the latest two Air Force One aircraft, Boeing's board of directors is critical of the companies ability to financially manage these defense projects.
My take as well. Boeing is doing the right thing here, they need to stay away from this one.
defence projects are fun
This is what happens when you put bean counters to lead companies like Boeing. Bring the engineers back to the decision makers of budgeting for R&D and suppliers and subcontractors selection process.
You probably won't see this comment since I was mostly off TH-cam during Christmas and it's nearly a week later now, but I used to work for a company that depended on government contracts and actually getting paid was a nightmare.
The US government paid whenever they felt like paying but if we missed a deadline -- even by hours and even if it was because we'd been unable to pay our supplies because the government hadn't paid us -- the penalties were massive. It was a constant cycle of lay-offs followed by mandatory overtime followed by more layoffs.
Not many companies have the cash reserves to produce all the product before getting paid for the early deliveries and I can't blame Boeing for wanting out of that cash-flow headache.
A to your final question: Clearly both. My guess on the most likely future is that Boeing takes T&M or shared cost sub-contracts accounting for a plurality of the funds from this.
Yeah, they will likely have a place here, but not be responsible for the overall risk.
I believe the reason they want 8-10 planes is that they are also replacing the Airborne Launch Control Centres (ALCC) which currently use the 707 based E6 Mercury aircraft. I image they want one replace both platforms with one type of airframe.
Faced with this problem, I'd be looking to convert some C-17s or adapt some new-build KC-46s. I wouldn't be looking at converting airliners.
I had the same thought. Not an aircraft expert, but you might even be able to pull some old C-5s from the bone yard if you wanted even more size.
I think a converted C-17 is a brilliant idea. I'd never thought about that!
@@ahndeux No need to be a douchebag. The KC-46's are new-production aircraft, they aren't "converted 767s."
@@ahndeux You're the one wordsmithing. Calling it a converted 767 is disingenuous. That implies Boeing / the USAF is buying civilian 767's to convert into tankers. That is simply not true. They are brand new aircraft having never served a different mission. They are purpose built tankers- NOT conversions. Business Insider has to make it digestible for simpletons like yourself. Business insider is not the end-all-be-all when it comes to Aeronautical information.
@@ahndeux What the fuck are you talking about?
I could sit at your feet and learn aviation stuff all day long! Thank you so much for being here!
They should select the A380 and call it 'The Death Star' 😉
Or big mutha
The US Government can purchase one of the privately owned A380s from a Saudi Prince 😂
Suspect the mods on used aircraft even more expensive than a purpose built craft. Pulling and upgrading all hardware allone would add huge cost. Hardening the airframe would be easier in production than with a refit.
My bet is modified C-17. Funny option would be Mod B-52
Modified C-17 would require the government to ditch the FAA certification requirement. No way that would happen for a C-17 for so few airframes. Especially since the C-17 is made by... wait for it... Boeing.
It looks like Boeing is possibly getting really business smart. The airplanes used for this project could be Boeing 747’s with all the equipment, technology and parts provided by Boeing. A big revenue opportunity. The bid, build and production could be provided by a secondary company possibly Sierra Nevada Corporation (SNC) with support from Boeing. This way Boeing would still get the benefits of the contract without the financial risk or at least having to tie up large amounts of capital for a long period of time before a return. The biggest win, Boeing would still have the prestige of being the main supplier to the us military and even better preventing their main competitors from gaining that prestige.
Happy Christmas to you Petter and all your viewers.
I would say the next Doomsday
Plane will be another 747 variant and that is the Boeing 747-400. With many airlines retired the -400 since 2010s and covid, i think the US Air Force should choose the -400 as the new Doomsday aircraft because that is actually makes perfect sense in my opinion
Do they need to be commercial planes? I kept thinking about the Lockheed C-5b Galaxy during the video. Airforce One would probably need to be a non military plane as you probably do not want to send an aggressive military message arriving in a bomber at a peaceful conference. But the Doom plane I see no problem :) Or the C-17 Globemaster, even tho it is a little smaller is much newer (some are less than 10 years old) and there have been plenty of them produced.
USAF and perfect sense?
@@georgegherghinescu Maybe they're not considering the C-5 and C17 since they're designed to be airlifters. They're not really meant to stay up in the air for prolonged periods of time, they're just meant to get stuff from A to B.
@@jameshannay7376 Have you just described a passenger airplane with that 'They're not really meant to stay up in the air for prolonged periods of time, they're just meant to get stuff from A to B.'
That is easy to answer...a Boeing product (plane) itself is doomsday if you get on it. If the plan would be to escape doomsday, why would you want to fly in a plane that in turn will fly you into the ground or literally start coming apart at the seams???
Animal sourced fertilizer - one to remember.
I listened to that multiple times 😂😂😂
I agree with you, 747 is realy very big and beautful plane.
Boeing won the KC-46 thanks to political intervention after Airbus had won. And despite Airbus winning basically any tanker contract at that time and Boeing not even having a proper plane to compete, they changed the parameters after Airbus had won to help Boeing. It’s just one of those ways to get subsidies into Boeing.
And if Airbus didn’t cave and make the Europrop the only available engine for the A400M maybe we might have purchased a few (especially considering we already use RR for our C-130J’s), so don’t sit there and act like Europe doesn’t root for the home team.
@@superskullmaster two completely different things. And of course you can have some home advantage, but this was an extremely strange case in which it was visible that the whole competition was a joke.
Btw, the A400M engine was a new development and there were no available engines with that type of output. The A400M has twice the capacity of the C-130 and that’s hardly comparable to the A400M.
@@tobiwan001 In 2003, around the 30 April decision deadline, Airbus Chief Executive Noel Forgeard told reporters that the P&WC proposal was 20 percent cheaper than for the TP400, and that he would have chosen to give the contract to P&WC, but government officials requested an extension for the companies to revise their bids. Before the final bids were modified, sources claimed that P&WC's offering, which had a European production percentage of 75 percent, was lower by USD$400 million.[6] On 6 May, amidst pressure from European political and business leaders, Airbus awarded a USD$3.4 billion contract to Europrop to produce 900 engines for the A400M, despite accusations of European protectionism.[7] A member of Europrop claimed after the decision that the TP400 contract would only increase the costs of the USD$22.7 billion A400M program by about 1-2 percent compared to if the PW180 had been selected.
I can see why Boeing would want to avoid fixed bid. The requirements are fraught with uncertainty, such as rerouting all the wiring to fit current FAA requirements, while simultaneously maintaining analog controls to maximize resiliency.
Boeing has for years grown fat on goverment cost+ contracts where they were Rewarded for cost overruns and delays because the goverment would pay for all of it. There was no incentive to be efficent at all. Once the Feds decided they'd had enough of getting fleeced by various companies, they started implementing fixed cost contracts. Boeing failed to properly adjust and so they ran them like the goverment would pay for it all anyway and pikachu faced when the gov said no. I think boeing is either looking to get another cost+ contract or they genuinely realize they can't do this kind of work due to how poorly their overall project management works.
What about a re-purposed C-5 Galaxy? Almost the same size + 4 engines and the high wing design could accommodate a larger engine. The countermeasures package will need a major reconfiguring, but doable.
Not impossible
Old, much farther out of production, and reliability is much worse than commercial aircraft.
problem is the C-5s all have a lot of hours on their airframes
Cost per flight hour on a C-5 would put it out of the competition.
@@seanwright7960 No reason you can't fit them with more efficient engines.
I read that Boeing refused to accept terms demanded by the AF, so they chose not to compete on the terms offered.
I honestly think it’s going to be hard to design hardened electronics. I’ll bet that’s a huge issue going forward.
You make it sound like they haven't been working on that for well over half a century. That's pretty funny.
@@TheEudaemonicPlague yeah, and it is always hard and has to be redone over and over as parts age out of production.
Optic fibre for the cable runs. Multiple redundant digital controls and hardened control modules. Expensive to develop and more expensive to get certified.
Keep in mind that FADEC runs modern engines. Hardening that alone is not trivial.
I doubt that $8bn would cover a "proper" development. There will have to be compromises in performance and reliability to leave to profit.
Then there is always the hope of ongoing support contracts, beyond the initial supply.
C-17 Fly by Wire = hardened. Much more complex than just FADEC. Also mil spec data bus. Designed years ago.@@BerndFelsche
It seems to me that there are a few unused A-380's kicking around, which would make Airbus a contender...
I love how you approach topics and speak about them in your videos! Brilliant to watch! Keep up the good work! ❤
Thank you!
Since the contract is calling for the use of 2nd hand, 4-engine jets, there are actually quite a few defense contractors that could do it. It's less of an aircraft acquisition than a systems integration contract. Northrop could do it. L3Harris (which has done a LOT of this type work on AFSOC aircraft). Lock-Mart. It's the kind of job L3 would have taken, and maybe subbed some to Lockheed at least before Harris bought them out.
It would be interesting if Antonov won the contract with a modified An124.
That WOULD be interesting. Not to mention, surprising!
Not going to happen😂
One can dream at least.
A modified An-225 Mriya would be even more interesting. Unlikely, but interesting.
They could try to pay Antonov for the design and build them in the US, effectively making Antonov a US company.
Merry Christmas Petter. Another great video
Thanks, Merry Christmas to you too!
Interesting how a few years ago Airbus bought 4 380s back from an airline. 6 more more could easily be snapped up right now - just a few thoughts thanks for the video Mentour and have a lovely boxing day
why is it called boxing day? is that the day when one opens the boxes?
@@snorttroll4379 well it was traditional for the king or queen in the UK to give boxes back to people who did service in the year. Its also been used by big landowners in the same vein back in the day. So a nice thankyou in a way.