Boeing Ofrece Màs F-18e/f A La Us Navy

SOURCE:Flight Daily News
Super Hornet price cut fighter


Boeing has offered the US Navy its “lowest ever price” for the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet as it tries to capitalise on delays to the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.


The company has offered a flyaway price of $49.9 million for 170 aircraft to be delivered over four years from 2010 to 2013. This compares with the $53.8m for aircraft being built under the current multi-year contract, which ends in 2009.

Aviation plan
The unsolicited proposal has been put on the table as the USN completes a naval aviation plan that will be briefed to the chief of naval operations in late July and which is expected to identify a shortfall of between 50 and 200 fighters because initial operational capability of the carrier-based F-35C has been pushed back to 2015.


At 170 aircraft, Boeing’s follow-on multi-year proposal is for about 80 more Super Hornets than the US Navy is currently programmed to receive. “The exact inventory shortfall depends on F/A-18A-D life, and JSF delivery dates and rates,” says Bob Gower, F/A-18 programme vice-president. “We are offering the most capable Super Hornet at a price that is more affordable than JSF,” he says.


Gower says the price offered represents a reduction of more than 50% from the low-rate initial production Super Hornets, largely due to cost-reduction efforts tied to the two multi-year contracts signed so far – which saved $700m and $1.1 billion respectively over year-by-year procurement. A third multi-year would save an estimated $1.1bn for 170 aircraft, he says, but savings would be less if the navy buys only 92 Super Hornets to complete procurement as programmed.


Boeing plans to build Australia’s 24 Super Hornets within the current multi-year contract – 12 each in 2008 and 2009 – and has agreed a revised delivery schedule with the US Navy to avoid pushing the production rate beyond the 54-a-year capability of current tooling, Gower says. This takes advantage of the fact Boeing is 10 aircraft ahead of schedule in deliveries to the USN and will see annual production increase from 42 to 48 in 2009.



http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2007/06/18/214761/price-cut-fighter.html


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SALUDOS.

disculpen el ingles, alguien lo puede traducir?
 
Resumidamente: la Boeing ofrece un paquete por 170 SH's a la modica de 49.9M
cada uno (precio flyaway), a ser entregados durante el cuatrienio 2010-2013.

O sea, 3.9M mas baratos que los que estan siendo fabricados para el ultimo contrato
que terminan con las ultimas unidades a entregar el 2009.

... y se cagan de la risa de lo nabos que fueron los australianos por pagar mas
del doble que la USNavy :D (nah, joda, en el contrato australiano se incluye el
paquete completo, hasta las papas fritas :D).

Resumidos saludos.
PS: ese cuatrienio 2010-2013 es como muy clave para el reemplazo del Tigre :eek:
 
Estimados,

vean el thread "F/A 18 E/F envejece antes de lo pensado" en la seccion Tecnologia y Armamento Aereo de este mismo foro.

Ahi van a encontrar datos adicionales.

Un Abrazo
 
AHAHA, nah... a mi me interesa que cuadren los numeros de la FACh y no se
queden sin volar los aviones por falta de presupuesto, si llegado el momento
se les aseguran los montos operacionales (como se hizo con los Vipers), yo
feliz que lleguen Eagles, SHs, etc...

Pero el SH y el Eagle (F35 y B60 tambien) tienen algo que me fascina y que
otros aviones por el momento no tienen (y no creo que lo tengan tampoco),
que es AESA y lo que esos radares pueden hacer.

Puede que otros paises puedan desarrollar radares AESA tambien, pero como
los gringos, no creo, van demasiado adelantados en ese campo y eso se tiene
que notar en las performances de sus sistemas.

Y eso vale mas que, como antiguamente, quien tenia el motor mas potente.

Saludos Mario.
 
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