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To: A.A. Cunningham
OK I will explain it. The Japanese and Italian tankers were sold as basically follow on orders to the 100 airplane tanker lease program. (that was later canceled).

So now instead of making 108 tankers you are making 8. That is a much smaller program and you still have pretty much the same amount of engineering and testing. So to stay in the black you can't man up the way you would have and the schedule tends to slide.

So do you think that is a good predictor to how Boeing would manage a 179 airplane order?

Also if time is so critical there is an easy way to overcome a 2 year slide or delay (if the contract has to be rebid). Increase the delivery rate. You could easily catch up by building 15 airplanes a year. Both the A-330 and the 767 have been built in much higher numbers and this isn't pushing it at all. That would also give you a chance to replace all 500 in only 38 years.

67 posted on 06/21/2008 5:49:46 PM PDT by djwright (I know who's my daddy, do you?)
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To: djwright
So do you think that is a good predictor to how Boeing would manage a 179 airplane order?

A good predictor is actual performance, like Boeing's inability to keep on schedule with the 787, 767 tanker delays and other model production backlogs.

69 posted on 06/22/2008 5:24:20 AM PDT by A.A. Cunningham
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