Wed 16 Jul 2008
Sesame 1-2-3-4
Posted by Ricardo under General, Personal
[2] Comments
For anyone who had a childhood.
Wed 16 Jul 2008
Posted by Ricardo under General, Personal
[2] Comments
For anyone who had a childhood.
Wed 16 Jul 2008
Posted by Ricardo under Flying, General
No Comments

What happens when the domestic shoo-in for a $40 billion contract for military aerial tankers loses to a foreign consortium? They put out a press release, of course.
But what to argue? Government misconduct? Nope. Problems with foreign involvement? Nope.
“No fair. Their plane is bigger than ours?”
DING DING DING

As far as military contracting goes, truth be told, there isn’t a lot of consumer-style marketing involved. But it is, nonetheless, somewhat disappointing that after losing what was the most important US aerospace contract after the Joint Strike Fighter (you know which one–the plane that scares that can scare enemies into submission using its helmet alone), that Boeing would recycle its marketing bullet points when it is clear that their loss is the result of a far more complex problem than “mine’s bigger than yours.”
Comparing the A330 platform to the 767 is very much a non-sequitur. When the US Air Force puts out an RFP (as Brazil will do so soon for its multi-billion dollar FX2 project), they’re looking for the plane that fits their strategy the best. To simplify the matter, their choice of KC-30/45 seems to be one of “I’d rather carry more cargo and offload more fuel using less planes”. This is why for each of of Boeing’s selling points there is a clear, all-too-simple answer.
It’s clear Boeing completely misjudged the RFP for this project. Had, say, the 777 been matched up against the KC-30/45 or even the larger 767-400 been lobbed as an alternative, Boeing might have had a chance. For a company that lost the JSF contract and has been in as many imbroglios as it has been recently (and on this very contract), I expected Boeing not to resort to discredited selling points and actually reform the RFP.
Lo-and-behold the RFP has been cancelled, and we’ll see another run-off between Boeing and Northrop-Grumman/EADS by the end of the year. Here’s to second chances.