Lembrar a todos que essas horas de Operação são da USAF...Penguin escreveu:Os graficos sao dinamicos e nao da para copiar, mas o resto...AlbertoRJ escreveu: ACCESS DENIED??
EXCLUSIVE: US Air Force combat fleet's true operational costs revealed
By Stephen Trimble on August 26, 2011 7:34 PM | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBacks (0) |ShareThis
How much does it cost the US Air Force to operate the manned combat fleet?
Winslow Wheeler, of the Center for Defense Information, has obtained actual operational cost per flight hour data over the past 10 years from his sources, and he graciously shared the database with The DEW Line. It is not classified information, but the data is not normally released by the USAF.
Writing about "costs" is always tricky. Numbers can vary dramatically depending on what gets included. In this case, we're talking about operational costs. This includes operations costs, including fuel, parts and maintenance, as well as interim contractor support and manpower. It excludes modifications funded by procurement accounts. The total cost number is divided by the total number of flight hours flown by the fleet, and that is the operational cost per flight hour.
According to Wheeler's sources, operational cost data is not an accurate measure of unmanned air vehicle (UAV) costs or fifth-generation fighter costs, so those are excluded from these tables.
We fed this data into the Google documents tool, and, with some assistance from Flightglobal data journalism consultant Kevin Anderson, produced a series of interactive graphics that you can browse below. The y-axis represents US dollars in constant 2010 values.
Among the surprises, B-2 costs appeared to rise dramatically to over $130,000 per hour after one of the bombers crashed on Guam in March 2008, the C-17A costs less to operate than a C-130H, the B-52H costs more than the B-1B, and the C-5B is more expensive to operate than the C-5A.
E que outras F Aéreas por 'n' motivos podem ter horas de vôo mais baratas ou caras. A frota e a demanda do uso das aeronaves no caso da USAF está encarecendo muito as horas de Vôo de um modo geral desde o 11/09/2001.
Sendo assim aeronaves como o F-15 C e o F-16 estão sofrendo um desgaste muito maior do que o esperado e isso encarece a hora de vôo.
O que quero dizer com isso é que esses valores não se aplicam necessariamente a qualquer operador dessas aeronaves e em alguns casos o valor pode até ultrapassar esses aí como no exemplo aonde, uma determinada F Aérea ao começar a operar uma aeronave qualquer, por conta do volume de treinamento necessário, além da natural adaptação ao uso da nova plataforma além de criação de sobressalentes e regulamentação de estoques sempre terá um valor de hora de vôo bem alto.
Esse números são bom saber, mas na realidade estão "muito distorcidos" em função da atual necessidade de uso dessas aeronaves pela USAF/USN.
[]s
CB_Lima