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Figure 1. North America – motor vehicle industry footprint, 2010 http://revel.unice.fr/eriep/index.html?id=3369 ![]() Most of the North American automobile plants have figured out how to achieve quality despite regional differences. Maybe instead of the automobile companies borrowing executives from Boeing, Boeing should be recruiting from the automobile industry? Just a thought.
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1977 911S Targa 2.7L (CIS) Silver/Black 2012 Infiniti G37X Coupe (AWD) 3.7L Black on Black 1989 modified Scat II HP Hovercraft George, Architect Last edited by kach22i; 04-23-2019 at 03:32 PM.. |
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I did nothing of the kind, and everyone on this forum knows it.
Kach, it's pretty obvious by now that you are one of the least respected members of this forum. Bald faced lies such as this, and childish accusations of "he started it!", only serve to further cement your position. Don't you ever get tired of this?
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Jeff '72 911T 3.0 MFI '93 Ducati 900 Super Sport "God invented whiskey so the Irish wouldn't rule the world" |
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I worked at SCAB (lol) for a few years when the home building industry was in the crapper. I ran the Brotje machine in the 19 bldg.
Although there were some good workers, there were a lot of people (and managers!) that didn’t need to be there. Or anywhere. I saw stoopid **** happen all the time. Some friends and I used to joke that the 787 must be really over engineered to fly with all the mistakes that happened. The funny thing was management wanted the plane moving down the line no matter how many jobs were not done. We moved it ahead of schedule! Yay! ![]() My neighbor works on the flight line. Smart guy with all the certs and education. He hates it. A friend with 25 years on the flight line in the Air Force said the same thing. I got out as soon as I could to go back to building homes and hope I never have to fly on a 787. Quote:
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Anyone can go back and check this thread, lairs get no respect from me. They might get a laugh out of me, but no respect.
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1977 911S Targa 2.7L (CIS) Silver/Black 2012 Infiniti G37X Coupe (AWD) 3.7L Black on Black 1989 modified Scat II HP Hovercraft George, Architect |
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Once you know how the sausage is made it sort of changes you. The Boeing 737 MAX Is 1 Step Closer to Flying Again -- but Don't Expect to See It Soon Airlines are removing the Boeing 737 MAX from their summer schedules, even as Boeing continues to make progress towards getting its most important jet family back in the air. https://www.fool.com/investing/2019/04/20/boeing-737-max-is-1-step-closer-to-flying-again.aspx Quote:
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1977 911S Targa 2.7L (CIS) Silver/Black 2012 Infiniti G37X Coupe (AWD) 3.7L Black on Black 1989 modified Scat II HP Hovercraft George, Architect Last edited by kach22i; 04-24-2019 at 04:25 AM.. |
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Face it, knucklehead, nobody here respects you. Nobody. |
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My only failure is that I took the bait this time. Javadog, you also seem to have some sort of obsession with me. Please get over it, it isn't good for your health. Now back on topic............the 737. Another case of Boeing milking an old product while Airbus produces a new one? Mar 16, 2018 Boeing’s “Cash Cow” milks out its 10,000th plane https://www.airlinereporter.com/2018/03/boeings-cash-cow-milks-out-its-10000th-plane/ Quote:
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1977 911S Targa 2.7L (CIS) Silver/Black 2012 Infiniti G37X Coupe (AWD) 3.7L Black on Black 1989 modified Scat II HP Hovercraft George, Architect Last edited by kach22i; 04-24-2019 at 05:30 AM.. |
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canna change law physics
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We had the same stories from the UNION mechanics and assemblers in Schenectady as you have in Everette. If there is an issue of low quality, it is a management/plant culture issue, not a worker issue.
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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If everyone ignored the troll and did not respond, he would eventually end up talking to himself.
That would get old. I don't even talk to myself anymore, I don't care for his attitude ![]() |
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I agree on the feeding the trolls, Sammy. Has ruined many good threads here.
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Bill K. "I started out with nothin and I still got most of it left...." 83 911 SC Guards Red (now gone) And I sold a bunch of parts I hadn't installed yet. |
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I always talk to myself, but always lose the argument.
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______________________________ Dave 1969 911T Coupe 1972 911E Targa |
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Not too many people are in a position to pay for that level of engineering and craftsmanship. Best Les
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Best Les My train of thought has been replaced by a bumper car. |
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Lots of snow Porsche away
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Planes are not special, they are just machines, just like a car. There is stringent quality control in production that may exceed that in automotive, but all the same, airplanes are pretty basic machines. Most of the tech in aircraft is 50 years plus old, it takes forever for systems advancements to make their way into aviation due to the certification costs and time. Systems are almost always mature, tried and true before they will implement in an aircraft. At the end of the day, assembly line jobs are the same in aviation as any other industry, carried out by the lowest paid person they can get to do the job. The control doesn't come from the worker on the floor, it comes from the quality systems associated with the process.
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76 911S 86 GMC K1500 78 XS750 cafe racer to be 79 XS750 because one is just not enough |
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At the Sikorsky Factory nearly every issue I faced was caused by management, not the engineers, foremen and workers. In a fit of revelation, Sikorsky decided to take my challenge of doing a Kaisan event (Six Sigma in the 90's). The event covered processes and practices in administrative, engineering and manufacturing - initially focused on my bailiwick, the flight test and production hanger. We found so much institutionalized stupidity that UT/Sikorsky expanded the Kaisan event to include the whole Bridgeport facility. Factories are all about human nature and human's compete against each other, often to the detriment of quality and efficiency. We reduced the flight test acceptance process (leading to "selling" the aircraft to the government via what is called a DD-250) from 14 days to 12. Common sense stuff. We also found that there were DEAD PEOPLE still getting paper copies of the DD-250 sent to their old drop box(es).
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1996 FJ80. Last edited by Seahawk; 04-24-2019 at 09:47 AM.. |
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The Airbus rep was nearly in tears: Like any manager he had cost reduction goals and he knew OOA composite parts we could make was the answer.
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What's scary to me in the end is - the more you know, the scarier this world gets. In every field that I either know experts in, and the very few I consider myself knowledgeable in (hospitals and software) - it's exactly the same... There are %uckwits at every level that can't seem to get fired and produce shoddy work that can kill people, and everywhere the desire to make a buck overrides safety and reason (oh and also the media is full of $hit on almost every technical topic they ever report on)... I liked it more when I was young and blissfully unaware and thought adults were smart. Now I fully realize the idiot that could barely tie his own shoelaces back in highschool has a job, he could be building airplanes, coding driverless automation, digging into gas lines, or just texting while driving and plowing into me... They're everywhere.. Idiocracy has arrived. |
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The mechanical bits of planes are simple, the software that (helps you) fly them is not.
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There is indeed some correlation between aircraft manufacturing and, say, automobile manufacturing, but there are also some important differences. The differences are driven by production volumes. What would be considered a very short, custom, or even "bespoke" production run in the automotive world, for example, might very well be considered a very long production run in aircraft manufacturing.
In what we refer to as the "back shops", or the detail part and small assembly part of aircraft production, they can often be found building the same thing, in the same configuration, day after day, week after week, month after month, and even year after year. These are the parts and assemblies that go on each aircraft (of the same model) for each and every aircraft configuration for each and every customer. It is at this level that we have found that a less skilled, less educated workforce can produce the quality desired. In other words, if it is repetitive enough, and they do enough of it, they get good at it. Once we get beyond that level, however, aircraft manufacturing veers sharply away from automotive and other such production. There is a saying at Boeing that "every airplane is a prototype", and that really is no exaggeration. Once customer specific, or sub model specific differences enter the picture, we will see no two airplanes on the very same assembly line that are alike. And that is where the problems start. You can't just "build it like the last one", because that last one was significantly different than this one. The airplane to airplane variation, even within the same "customer block", is astonishing to anyone not familiar with it. This is where the problem solving skills, the ability to work through and solve new and different problems each and every day plays a vital role in airplane manufacturing. And, ultimately, this is where SCAB fails. They are incapable of working at that level. They can perform the repetitive work just fine, and crank out some very high quality work. No doubt about it. But when it gets down to assembling a new and different variation of a major assembly or installation, they are at a loss. This is what has driven both their markedly lower production rate, and their markedly lower quality. And no, one cannot "manage" their way out of this. The only level at which this is a management problem, or a processes problem, is in that management decided to try to build an item of this complexity with that workforce to begin with. Believe me, SCAB has been the focus of a great deal of management attention, "Kaisan" type process improvement efforts, endless coaching by folks from Everett who are doing this successfully - all for naught. One cannot make a silk purse from a sow's ear. They need to understand the limits of manufacturing capability in that region. And yes, a large part of the problem lies in the fact that Boeing has recruited high level management personnel from the automotive and similar mass production industries. These execs didn't "grow up" in the world or aircraft manufacturing, and cannot understand the nuances of it. It's just another product to them. They have tried and tried to introduce automotive style mass production techniques and philosophies to aircraft manufacturing and have failed miserably. The methods employed to manufacture tens of thousands of the exact same thing just do not transfer well when a "long" production run is several dozen, or maybe a few hundred at the most. That, and the problem solving skills required when "every one is a prototype" are vastly under appreciated by these folks. "We build cars there, why can't we build airplanes there?"...
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Today a lot of human capital was dropped.
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2021 Model Y 2005 Cayenne Turbo 2012 Panamera 4S 1980 911 SC 1999 996 Cab |
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If you can get management to actually pay attention to the details, you can really streamline the process. Unless your managers are idiots. ![]() |
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