- Reaction score
- 8,490
- Points
- 1,160
The point being, as I understand it, that the CP-140s have had a number of systems grafted onto them over the years so that it has become difficult for the technicians to work on them efficiently.
If the IL-76 were acquired would they have Russian engines or would they be re-engined? In either case maintaining them would be no picnic. Would they soldier on with the Russian controls and comms or would they need to be refitted for Western Avionics? Would the new wiring fit in the existing runs? Would hydraulic valves and solenoids be available? If not do you have to fit something else into the space designed for a very different original component?
Those are the apples that I was comparing - not the aircraft, not even the nature of the problems, just the fact that the work load of the guys maintaining the aircraft would be a right mess. How would you train them? Are there manuals available? Simulators? How easy is it for someone who has "grown up" working on Western kit to learn to work with foreign kit?
Personal experience: Working with processing equipment in the 80s and 90s. I learned on American PLCs - logic was ladder logic, left to right, left side hot. Europeans were supplying kit that was either using boolean algebra or else Reverse Polish Notation. No fun at all trying to work with north American trades trying to figure out how these black boxes were wired in and how they were to work with locally acquired components because the components supplied from Europe were not readily available and cost 5 times what the local variant cost.
I can't begin to imagine being responsible for keeping that type of fleet in the air.
If the IL-76 were acquired would they have Russian engines or would they be re-engined? In either case maintaining them would be no picnic. Would they soldier on with the Russian controls and comms or would they need to be refitted for Western Avionics? Would the new wiring fit in the existing runs? Would hydraulic valves and solenoids be available? If not do you have to fit something else into the space designed for a very different original component?
Those are the apples that I was comparing - not the aircraft, not even the nature of the problems, just the fact that the work load of the guys maintaining the aircraft would be a right mess. How would you train them? Are there manuals available? Simulators? How easy is it for someone who has "grown up" working on Western kit to learn to work with foreign kit?
Personal experience: Working with processing equipment in the 80s and 90s. I learned on American PLCs - logic was ladder logic, left to right, left side hot. Europeans were supplying kit that was either using boolean algebra or else Reverse Polish Notation. No fun at all trying to work with north American trades trying to figure out how these black boxes were wired in and how they were to work with locally acquired components because the components supplied from Europe were not readily available and cost 5 times what the local variant cost.
I can't begin to imagine being responsible for keeping that type of fleet in the air.